As the twentieth century rapidly approaches its end, there is a
marked acceleration in the efforts of governments and peoples to reach
common understandings on issues affecting the future of humankind. The 1992
Conference on Environment and Development held in Rio de Janeiro, the 1993
World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna, the 1994 International Conference
on Population and Development in Cairo, the forthcoming March 1995 World Summit
for Social Development in Copenhagen, to be followed in September by the Fourth
World Conference on Women in Beijing, are conspicuous indications of this
acceleration. These events are as capstones to the myriad activities taking
place in different parts of the world involving a wide range of nongovernmental
organizations and networks in an urgent search for values, ideas and practical
measures that can advance prospects for the peaceful development of all
peoples. In this endeavor can be discerned the gathering momentum of an
emerging unity of thought in world undertakings, the realization of which our
sacred scriptures describe as one of the lights of unity that will illumine the
path to peace. The Bahá’ís around the world are, of course, heartened by such
hopeful trends and will continue increasingly to lend moral and practical
support to them as opportunities allow.