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6: Brethren and fellow-mourners in the Faith … |
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Brethren and fellow-mourners in the Faith
of Bahá’u’lláh!
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A sorrow, reminiscent in its poignancy, of the
devastating grief caused by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s sudden
removal from our midst, has stirred the Bahá’í
world to its foundations. The Greatest Holy Leaf,
the well-beloved and treasured Remnant of
Bahá’u’lláh entrusted to our frail and unworthy
hands by our departed Master, has passed to the
Great Beyond, leaving a legacy that time can never
dim.
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The Community of the Most Great Name, in its
entirety and to its very core, feels the sting of this
cruel loss. Inevitable though this calamitous event
appeared to us all, however acute our apprehensions
of its steady approach, the consciousness of its final
consummation at this terrible hour leaves us, we
whose souls have been impregnated by the energizing
influence of her love, prostrated and disconsolate.
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How can my lonely pen, so utterly inadequate to
glorify so exalted a station, so impotent to portray
the experiences of so sublime a life, so disqualified to
recount the blessings she showered upon me since
my earliest childhood—how can such a pen repay
the great debt of gratitude and love that I owe her
whom I regarded as my chief sustainer, my most
affectionate comforter, the joy and inspiration of my
life? My grief is too immense, my remorse too
profound, to be able to give full vent at this moment
to the feelings that surge within me.
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Only future generations and pens abler than mine
can, and will, pay a worthy tribute to the towering
grandeur of her spiritual life, to the unique part she
played throughout the tumultuous stages of
Bahá’í history, to the expressions of unqualified
praise that have streamed from the pen of both
Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, the Centre of His
Covenant, though unrecorded, and in the main
unsuspected by the mass of her passionate admirers
in East and West, the share she has had in influencing
the course of some of the chief events in the annals of
the Faith, the sufferings she bore, the sacrifices she
made, the rare gifts of unfailing sympathy she so
strikingly displayed—these, and many others stand
so inextricably interwoven with the fabric of the
Cause itself that no future historian of the Faith of
Bahá’u’lláh can afford to ignore or minimize.
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How well I remember her recall, at a time when
her faculties were still unimpaired, the gnawing
suspense that ate into the hearts of those who
watched by her side, at the threshold of her pillaged
house, expectant to hear at any moment the news of
Bahá’u’lláh’s imminent execution! In those sinister
hours, she often recounted, her parents had so
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suddenly lost their earthly possessions that within
the space of a single day from being the privileged
member of one of the wealthiest families of Ṭihrán
she had sunk to the state of a sufferer from unconcealed
poverty. Deprived of the means of subsistence
her illustrious mother, the famed Navváb,
was constrained to place in the palm of her daughter’s
hand a handful of flour and to induce her to
accept it as a substitute for her daily bread.
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And when at a later time this revered and precious
member of the Holy Family, then in her teens, came
to be entrusted by the guiding hand of her Father
with missions that no girl of her age could, or would
be willing to, perform, with what spontaneous joy
she seized her opportunity and acquitted herself of
the task with which she had been entrusted! The
delicacy and extreme gravity of such functions as
she, from time to time, was called upon to fulfil,
when the city of Baghdád was swept by the
hurricane which the heedlessness and perversity of
Mírzá Yaḥyá had unchained, as well as the tender
solicitude which, at so early an age, she evinced
during the period of Bahá’u’lláh’s enforced retirement
to the mountains of Sulaymáníyyih, marked
her as one who was both capable of sharing the
burden, and willing to make the sacrifice, which her
high birth demanded.
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How staunch was her faith, how calm her
demeanour, how forgiving her attitude, how severe
her trials, at a time when the forces of schism had
rent asunder the ties that united the little band of
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exiles which had settled in Adrianople and whose
fortunes seemed then to have sunk to their lowest
ebb! It was in this period of extreme anxiety, when
the rigours of a winter of exceptional severity,
coupled with the privations entailed by unhealthy
housing accommodation and dire financial distress,
undermined once for all her health and sapped the
vitality which she had hitherto so thoroughly
enjoyed. The stress and storm of that period made
an abiding impression upon her mind, and she
retained till the time of her death on her beauteous
and angelic face evidences of its intense hardships.
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Not until, however, she had been confined in the
company of Bahá’u’lláh within the walls of the
prison-city of ‘Akká did she display, in the plentitude
of her power and in the full abundance of her
love for Him, those gifts that single her out, next to
‘Abdu’l-Bahá, among the members of the Holy
Family, as the brightest embodiment of that love
which is born of God and of that human sympathy
which few mortals are capable of evincing.
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Banishing from her mind and heart every earthly
attachment, renouncing the very idea of matrimony,
she, standing resolutely by the side of a
Brother whom she was to aid and serve so well,
arose to dedicate her life to the service of her Father’s
glorious Cause. Whether in the management of the
affairs of His Household in which she excelled, or in
the social relationships which she so assiduously
cultivated in order to shield both Bahá’u’lláh and
‘Abdu’l-Bahá, whether in the unfailing attention
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she paid to the everyday needs of her Father, or in
the traits of generosity, of affability and kindness,
which she manifested, the Greatest Holy Leaf had by
that time abundantly demonstrated her worthiness
to rank as one of the noblest figures intimately
associated with the life-long work of Bahá’u’lláh.
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How grievous was the ingratitude, how blind the
fanaticism, how persistent the malignity of the
officials, their wives, and their subordinates, in
return for the manifold bounties which she, in close
association with her Brother, so profusely conferred
upon them! Her patience, her magnanimity, her
undiscriminating benevolence, far from disarming
the hostility of that perverse generation, served only
to inflame their rancour, to excite their jealousy, to
intensify their fears. The gloom that had settled
upon that little band of imprisoned believers, who
languished in the Fortress of ‘Akká contrasted with
the spirit of confident hope, of deep-rooted optimism
that beamed upon her serene countenance. No
calamity, however intense, could obscure the
brightness of her saintly face, and no agitation, no
matter how severe, could disturb the composure of
her gracious and dignified behaviour.
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That her sensitive heart instantaneously reacted to
the slightest injury that befell the least significant of
creatures, whether friend or foe, no one who knew
her well could doubt. And yet such was the restraining
power of her will—a will which her spirit of
self-renunciation so often prompted her to suppress—that a superficial observer might well be led
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to question the intensity of her emotions or to
belittle the range of her sympathies. In the school of
adversity she, already endowed by Providence with
the virtues of meekness and fortitude, learned
through the example and exhortations of the Great
Sufferer, Who was her Father, the lesson she was
destined to teach the great mass of His followers for
so long after Him.
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Armed with the powers with which an intimate
and long-standing companionship with
Bahá’u’lláh had already equipped her, and benefiting
by the magnificent example which the
steadily widening range of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s activities
afforded her, she was prepared to face the storm
which the treacherous conduct of the Covenant-breakers
had aroused and to withstand its most
damaging onslaughts.
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Great as had been her sufferings ever since her
infancy, the anguish of mind and heart which the
ascension of Bahá’u’lláh occasioned nerved her, as
never before, to a resolve which no upheaval could
bend and which her frail constitution belied. Amidst
the dust and heat of the commotion which that
faithless and rebellious company engendered she
found herself constrained to dissolve ties of family
relationship, to sever long-standing and intimate
friendships, to discard lesser loyalties for the sake of
her supreme allegiance to a Cause she had loved so
dearly and had served so well.
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The disruption that ensued found her ranged by
the side of Him Whom her departed Father had
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appointed as the Centre of His Covenant and the
authorized Expounder of His Word. Her venerated
mother, as well as her distinguished paternal uncle,
Áqáy-i-Kalím—the twin pillars who, all throughout
the various stages of Bahá’u’lláh’s exile from
the Land of His Birth to the final place of His
confinement, had demonstrated, unlike most of the
members of His Family, the tenacity of their loyalty—had already passed behind the Veil. Death, in the
most tragic circumstances, had also robbed her
of the Purest Branch, her only brother besides
‘Abdu’l-Bahá, while still in the prime of youth. She
alone of the family of Bahá’u’lláh remained to
cheer the heart and reinforce the efforts of the Most
Great Branch, against Whom were solidly arrayed
the almost entire company of His faithless relatives.
In her arduous task she was seconded by the diligent
efforts of Munírih Khánum, the Holy Mother, and
those of her daughters whose age allowed them to
assist in the accomplishment of that stupendous
achievement with which the name of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
will for ever remain associated.
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With the passing of Bahá’u’lláh and the fierce
onslaught of the forces of disruption that followed in
its wake, the Greatest Holy Leaf, now in the hey-day
of her life, rose to the height of her great opportunity
and acquitted herself worthily of her task. It would
take me beyond the compass of the tribute I am
moved to pay to her memory were I to dwell upon the
incessant machinations to which Muḥammad-Alí,
the arch-breaker of the Covenant of Bahá’u’lláh,
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and his despicable supporters basely resorted,
upon the agitation which their cleverly-directed
campaign of misrepresentation and calumny produced
in quarters directly connected with Sulṭán
‘Abdu’l-Ḥamíd and his advisers, upon the trials and
investigations to which it gave rise, upon the
rigidity of the incarceration it reimposed, and upon
the perils it revived. Suffice it to say that but for her
sleepless vigilance, her tact, her courtesy, her
extreme patience and heroic fortitude, grave complications
might have ensued and the load of
‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s anxious care would have been considerably
increased.
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And when the storm-cloud that had darkened the
horizon of the Holy Land had been finally dissipated
and the call raised by our beloved ‘Abdu’l-Bahá had
stirred to a new life certain cities of the American and
European continents, the Most Exalted Leaf became
the recipient of the unbounded affection and blessings
of One Who could best estimate her virtues
and appreciate her merits.
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The decline of her precious life had by that time
set in, and the burden of advancing age was beginning
to becloud the radiance of her countenance.
Forgetful of her own self, disdaining rest and
comfort, and undeterred by the obstacles that still
stood in her path, she, acting as the honoured
hostess to a steadily increasing number of pilgrims
who thronged ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s residence from both
the East and the West, continued to display those
same attributes that had won her, in the preceding
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phases of her career, so great a measure of admiration
and love.
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And when, in pursuance of God’s inscrutable
Wisdom, the ban on ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s confinement
was lifted and the Plan which He, in the darkest
hours of His confinement, had conceived materialized,
He with unhesitating confidence, invested His
trusted and honoured sister with the responsibility
of attending to the multitudinous details arising out
of His protracted absence from the Holy Land.
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No sooner had ‘Abdu’l-Bahá stepped upon the
shores of the European and American continents
than our beloved Khánum found herself well-nigh
overwhelmed with thrilling messages, each
betokening the irresistible advance of the Cause in a
manner which, notwithstanding the vast range of
her experience, seemed to her almost incredible.
The years in which she basked in the sunshine of
‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s spiritual victories were, perhaps,
among the brightest and happiest of her life. Little
did she dream when, as a little girl, she was running
about, in the courtyard of her Father’s house in
Ṭihrán, in the company of Him Whose destiny was
to be one day the chosen Centre of God’s indestructible
Covenant, that such a Brother would be
capable of achieving, in realms so distant, and
among races so utterly remote, so great and memorable
a victory.
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The enthusiasm and joy which swelled in her
breast as she greeted ‘Abdu’l-Bahá on His triumphant
return from the West, I will not venture to
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describe. She was astounded at the vitality of which
He had, despite His unimaginable sufferings,
proved Himself capable. She was lost in admiration
at the magnitude of the forces which His utterances
had released. She was filled with thankfulness to
Bahá’u’lláh for having enabled her to witness the
evidences of such brilliant victory for His Cause no
less than for His Son.
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The outbreak of the Great War gave her yet
another opportunity to reveal the true worth of her
character and to release the latent energies of her
heart. The residence of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in Haifa was
besieged, all throughout that dreary conflict, by a
concourse of famished men, women and children
whom the maladministration, the cruelty and neglect
of the officials of the Ottoman Government had
driven to seek an alleviation to their woes. From the
hand of the Greatest Holy Leaf, and out of the
abundance of her heart, these hapless victims of a
contemptible tyranny, received day after day
unforgettable evidences of a love they had learned to
envy and admire. Her words of cheer and comfort,
the food, the money, the clothing she freely dispensed,
the remedies which, by a process of her
own, she herself prepared and diligently applied—all these had their share in comforting the disconsolate,
in restoring sight to the blind, in sheltering
the orphan, in healing the sick, and in succouring the
homeless and the wanderer.
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She had reached, amidst the darkness of the war
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days the high water-mark of her spiritual attainments.
Few, if any, among the unnumbered
benefactors of society whose privilege has been to
allay, in various measures, the hardships and sufferings
entailed by that Fierce Conflict, gave as freely
and as disinterestedly as she did; few exercised that
undefinable influence upon the beneficiaries of their
gifts.
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The ascension of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, so tragic in its
suddenness, was to her a terrible blow from the
effects of which she never completely recovered. To
her He, Whom she called ‘Áqá’, had been a refuge
in times of adversity. On Him she had been led to
place her sole reliance. In Him she had found ample
compensation for the bereavements she had suffered,
the desertions she had witnessed, the ingratitude
she had been shown by friends and kindred. No
one could ever dream that a woman of her age, so
frail in body, so sensitive of heart, so loaded with the
cares of almost eighty years of incessant tribulation,
could so long survive so shattering a blow. And yet,
history, no less than the annals of our immortal
Faith, shall record for her a share in the advancement
and consolidation of the world-wide Community
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which the hand of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá had helped to
fashion, which no one among the remnants of His
Family can rival.
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Which of the blessings am I to recount, which in
her unfailing solicitude she showered upon me, in
the most critical and agitated hours of my life? To
me, standing in so dire a need of the vitalizing grace
of God, she was the living symbol of many an
attribute I had learned to admire in ‘Abdu’l-Bahá.
She was to me a continual reminder of His inspiring
personality, of His calm resignation, of His munificence
and magnanimity. To me she was an incarnation
of His winsome graciousness, of His all-encompassing
tenderness and love.
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It would take me too long to make even a brief
allusion to those incidents of her life, each of which
eloquently proclaims her as a daughter, worthy to
inherit that priceless heritage bequeathed to her by
Bahá’u’lláh. A purity of life that reflected itself in
even the minutest details of her daily occupations
and activities; a tenderness of heart that obliterated
every distinction of creed, class and colour; a
resignation and serenity that evoked to the mind the
calm and heroic fortitude of the Báb; a natural
fondness of flowers and children that was so characteristic
of Bahá’u’lláh; an unaffected simplicity of
manners; an extreme sociability which made her
accessible to all; a generosity, a love, at once
disinterested and undiscriminating, that reflected so
clearly the attributes of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s character; a
sweetness of temper; a cheerfulness that no amount
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of sorrow could becloud; a quiet and unassuming
disposition that served to enhance a thousandfold
the prestige of her exalted rank; a forgiving nature
that instantly disarmed the most unyielding enemy—these rank among the outstanding attributes of a
saintly life which history will acknowledge as
having been endowed with a celestial potency that
few of the heroes of the past possessed.
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No wonder that in Tablets, which stand as eternal
testimonies to the beauty of her character,
Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá have paid touching
tributes to those things that testify to her
exalted position among the members of their
Family, that proclaim her as an example to their
followers, and as an object worthy of the admiration
of all mankind.
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‘To my honoured and distinguished sister do thou
convey the expression of my heartfelt, my intense longing.
Day and night she liveth in my remembrance. I dare make
no mention of the feelings which separation from her has
aroused in my heart, for whatever I should attempt to
express in writing will assuredly be effaced by the tears
which such sentiments must bring to my eyes.’
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Dearly-beloved Greatest Holy Leaf! Through the
mist of tears that fill my eyes I can clearly see, as I pen
these lines, thy noble figure before me, and can
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recognize the serenity of thy kindly face. I can still
gaze, though the shadows of the grave separate us,
into thy blue, love-deep eyes, and can feel in its calm
intensity, the immense love thou didst bear for the
Cause of thine Almighty Father, the attachment that
bound thee to the most lowly and insignificant
among its followers, the warm affection thou didst
cherish for me in thine heart. The memory of the
ineffable beauty of thy smile shall ever continue to
cheer and hearten me in the thorny path I am
destined to pursue. The remembrance of the touch
of thine hand shall spur me on to follow steadfastly
in thy way. The sweet magic of thy voice shall
remind me, when the hour of adversity is at its
darkest, to hold fast to the rope thou didst seize so
firmly all the days of thy life.
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Bear thou this my message to ‘Abdu’l-Bahá,
thine exalted and divinely-appointed Brother: If the
Cause for which Bahá’u’lláh toiled and laboured,
for which Thou didst suffer years of agonizing
sorrow, for the sake of which streams of sacred
blood have flowed, should, in the days to come,
encounter storms more severe than those it has
already weathered, do Thou continue to overshadow,
with Thine all-encompassing care and
wisdom, Thy frail, Thy unworthy appointed child.
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Intercede, O noble and well-favoured scion of a
heavenly Father, for me no less than for the toiling
masses of thy ardent lovers, who have sworn
undying allegiance to thy memory, whose souls
have been nourished by the energies of thy love,
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whose conduct has been moulded by the inspiring
example of thy life, and whose imaginations are
fired by the imperishable evidences of thy lively
faith, thy unshakable constancy, thy invincible
heroism, thy great renunciation.
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Whatever betide us, however distressing the
vicissitudes which the nascent Faith of God may
yet experience, we pledge ourselves, before the
mercy-seat of thy glorious Father, to hand on,
unimpaired and undivided, to generations yet
unborn, the glory of that tradition of which thou
hast been its most brilliant exemplar.
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In the innermost recesses of our hearts, O thou
exalted Leaf of the Abhá Paradise, we have reared
for thee a shining mansion that the hand of time can
never undermine, a shrine which shall frame eternally
the matchless beauty of thy countenance, an
altar whereon the fire of thy consuming love shall
burn for ever.
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1. | 17 July 1932, to the Bahá’ís of the West. (See Bahá’í Administration, 1974 edn., pp. 187–196) [ Back To Reference] |