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The Promises of Our Departed Master |
From Persia, the cradle of our Faith and the object of our
tenderest affections, there breaks upon us the news of the first
stirrings of that social and political Reformation which, as we firmly
believe, is but the direct and unavoidable consequence of that great
spiritual Revival ushered in by the Revelation of Bahá’u’lláh. These
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social and political forces now released by the Source of such a tremendous
Revival are bound in their turn to demolish one by one the
barriers that have so long impeded its flow, sapped its vitality and
obscured its radiance.
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From a communication addressed to me recently by the National
Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Persia, as well as from reliable
reports submitted by the local representatives of the Persian believers,
and confirmed by the vivid narrative of visiting pilgrims, it
is becoming increasingly manifest that the glowing promises so
many times uttered by our departed Master are, with extraordinary
exactitude and remarkable swiftness, being successively fulfilled.
Reforms of a revolutionary character are, without bloodshed and
with negligible resistance, gradually transforming the very basis
and structure of Persia’s primitive society. The essentials of public
security and order are being energetically provided throughout the
length and breadth of the Sháh’s domain, and are hailed with
particular gratification by that much harassed section of the population—our long-suffering brethren of that land. The rapidity, the
incredible ease, with which the enlightened proposals of its government,
in matters of education, trade and finance, means of transportation
and travel, and the development of the country’s internal
resources, are receiving the unqualified sanction of a hitherto reactionary
Legislature, and are overcoming the resistance and apathy
of the masses, have undoubtedly tended to hasten the emancipation
of our Persian brethren from the remaining fetters of a once
despotic and blood-stained regime. The severely repressive and
humiliating measures undertaken on the initiative of progressive
provincial Governors, and with the connivance of State officials in
the Capital, aiming at the scattering and ultimate extinction of a
rapidly waning clergy, such as degradation, detainment, deportation
and in some cases pitiless execution, are paving the way for the
entire removal of the shackles imposed by an ignorant and fanatical
priesthood upon the administration of State affairs. In matters of
dress; in the obligatory enforcement of a uniform style of national
head-gear; in the strict limitation of the number, the rights and the
prerogatives of high ecclesiastical officials; in the growing unpopularity
of the veil among almost every section of society; in the
marked distinction which unofficially and in various phases of public
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life is being made by an enlightened and pressing minority between
the tottering forms of a discredited Ecclesiasticism and the civil
rights and duties of civilized society; in the general laxity in religious
observances and ceremonies; in the slow and hidden process
of secularization invading many a government department under
the courageous guidance of the Governors of outlying provinces—in
all of these a discerning eye can easily discover the symptoms that
augur well for a future that is sure to witness the formal and complete
separation of Church and State.
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