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Foreword xi |
On the 23rd of May of this auspicious year the Bahá’í world will
celebrate the centennial anniversary of the founding of the Faith of
Bahá’u’lláh. It will commemorate at once the hundreth anniversary
of the inception of the Bábí Dispensation, of the inauguration of the
Bahá’í Era, of the commencement of the Bahá’í Cycle, and of the
birth of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. The weight of the potentialities with which
this Faith, possessing no peer or equal in the world’s spiritual history,
and marking the culmination of a universal prophetic cycle, has been
endowed, staggers our imagination. The brightness of the millennial
glory which it must shed in the fullness of time dazzles our eyes. The
magnitude of the shadow which its Author will continue to cast on
successive Prophets destined to be raised up after Him eludes our
calculation.
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Already in the space of less than a century the operation of the
mysterious processes generated by its creative spirit has provoked a
tumult in human society such as no mind can fathom. Itself undergoing
a period of incubation during its primitive age, it has, through
the emergence of its slowly-crystallizing system, induced a fermentation
in the general life of mankind designed to shake the very foundations
of a disordered society, to purify its life-blood, to reorientate
and reconstruct its institutions, and shape its final destiny.
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To what else can the observant eye or the unprejudiced mind,
acquainted with the signs and portents heralding the birth, and
accompanying the rise, of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh ascribe this dire,
this planetary upheaval, with its attendant destruction, misery and
fear, if not to the emergence of His embryonic World Order, which,
as He Himself has unequivocally proclaimed, has “deranged the
equilibrium of the world and revolutionized mankind’s ordered life”?
To what agency, if not to the irresistible diffusion of that world-shaking,
world-energizing, world-redeeming spirit, which the Báb has
affirmed is “vibrating in the innermost realities of all created things”
can the origins of this portentous crisis, incomprehensible to man,
and admittedly unprecedented in the annals of the human race, be
attributed? In the convulsions of contemporary society, in the
frenzied, world-wide ebullitions of men’s thoughts, in the fierce
antagonisms inflaming races, creeds and classes, in the shipwreck of
nations, in the downfall of kings, in the dismemberment of empires,
in the extinction of dynasties, in the collapse of ecclesiastical hierarchies,
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in the deterioration of time-honored institutions, in the dissolution
of ties, secular as well as religious, that had for so long held
together the members of the human race—all manifesting themselves
with ever-increasing gravity since the outbreak of the first World War
that immediately preceded the opening years of the Formative Age
of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh—in these we can readily recognize the
evidences of the travail of an age that has sustained the impact of
His Revelation, that has ignored His summons, and is now laboring
to be delivered of its burden, as a direct consequence of the impulse
communicated to it by the generative, the purifying, the transmuting
influence of His Spirit.
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It is my purpose, on the occasion of an anniversary of such profound
significance, to attempt in the succeeding pages a survey of
the outstanding events of the century that has seen this Spirit burst
forth upon the world, as well as the initial stages of its subsequent
incarnation in a System that must evolve into an Order designed to
embrace the whole of mankind, and capable of fulfilling the high
destiny that awaits man on this planet. I shall endeavor to review,
in their proper perspective and despite the comparatively brief space
of time which separates us from them, the events which the revolution
of a hundred years, unique alike in glory and tribulation, has unrolled
before our eyes. I shall seek to represent and correlate, in however
cursory a manner, those momentous happenings which have insensibly,
relentlessly, and under the very eyes of successive generations, perverse,
indifferent or hostile, transformed a heterodox and seemingly
negligible offshoot of the Shaykhí school of the Ithná-‘Ash’áríyyih sect
of Shí’ah Islám into a world religion whose unnumbered followers are
organically and indissolubly united; whose light has overspread the
earth as far as Iceland in the North and Magellanes in the South;
whose ramifications have spread to no less than sixty countries of the
world; whose literature has been translated and disseminated in no
less than forty languages; whose endowments in the five continents
of the globe, whether local, national or international, already run
into several million dollars; whose incorporated elective bodies have
secured the official recognition of a number of governments in East
and West; whose adherents are recruited from the diversified races
and chief religions of mankind; whose representatives are to be found
in hundreds of cities in both Persia and the United States of America;
to whose verities royalty has publicly and repeatedly testified; whose
independent status its enemies, from the ranks of its parent religion
and in the leading center of both the Arab and Muslim worlds, have
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proclaimed and demonstrated; and whose claims have been virtually
recognized, entitling it to rank as the fourth religion of a Land in
which its world spiritual center has been established, and which is
at once the heart of Christendom, the holiest shrine of the Jewish
people, and, save Mecca alone, the most sacred spot in Islám.
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It is not my purpose—nor does the occasion demand it,—to write
a detailed history of the last hundred years of the Bahá’í Faith, nor
do I intend to trace the origins of so tremendous a Movement, or to
portray the conditions under which it was born, or to examine the
character of the religion from which it has sprung, or to arrive at an
estimate of the effects which its impact upon the fortunes of mankind
has produced. I shall rather content myself with a review of the
salient features of its birth and rise, as well as of the initial stages in the
establishment of its administrative institutions—institutions which
must be regarded as the nucleus and herald of that World Order
that must incarnate the soul, execute the laws, and fulfill the purpose
of the Faith of God in this day.
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Nor will it be my intention to ignore, whilst surveying the
panorama which the revolution of a hundred years spreads before our
gaze, the swift interweaving of seeming reverses with evident victories,
out of which the hand of an inscrutable Providence has chosen
to form the pattern of the Faith from its earliest days, or to minimize
those disasters that have so often proved themselves to be the prelude
to fresh triumphs which have, in turn, stimulated its growth and
consolidated its past achievements. Indeed, the history of the first
hundred years of its evolution resolves itself into a series of internal
and external crises, of varying severity, devastating in their immediate
effects, but each mysteriously releasing a corresponding measure of
divine power, lending thereby a fresh impulse to its unfoldment, this
further unfoldment engendering in its turn a still graver calamity,
followed by a still more liberal effusion of celestial grace enabling its
upholders to accelerate still further its march and win in its service
still more compelling victories.
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In its broadest outline the first century of the Bahá’í Era may be
said to comprise the Heroic, the Primitive, the Apostolic Age of the
Faith of Bahá’u’lláh, and also the initial stages of the Formative, the
Transitional, the Iron Age which is to witness the crystallization and
shaping of the creative energies released by His Revelation. The first
eighty years of this century may roughly be said to have covered the
entire period of the first age, while the last two decades may be
regarded as having witnessed the beginnings of the second. The
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former commences with the Declaration of the Báb, includes the
mission of Bahá’u’lláh, and terminates with the passing of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá.
The latter is ushered in by His Will and Testament, which
defines its character and establishes its foundation.
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The century under our review may therefore be considered as
falling into four distinct periods, of unequal duration, each of specific
import and of tremendous and indeed unappraisable significance.
These four periods are closely interrelated, and constitute successive
acts of one, indivisible, stupendous and sublime drama, whose
mystery no intellect can fathom, whose climax no eye can even
dimly perceive, whose conclusion no mind can adequately foreshadow.
Each of these acts revolves around its own theme, boasts of its own
heroes, registers its own tragedies, records its own triumphs, and contributes
its own share to the execution of one common, immutable
Purpose. To isolate any one of them from the others, to dissociate the
later manifestations of one universal, all-embracing Revelation from
the pristine purpose that animated it in its earliest days, would be
tantamount to a mutilation of the structure on which it rests, and
to a lamentable perversion of its truth and of its history.
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The first period (1844–1853), centers around the gentle, the
youthful and irresistible person of the Báb, matchless in His meekness,
imperturbable in His serenity, magnetic in His utterance, unrivaled
in the dramatic episodes of His swift and tragic ministry. It begins
with the Declaration of His Mission, culminates in His martyrdom,
and ends in a veritable orgy of religious massacre revolting in its
hideousness. It is characterized by nine years of fierce and relentless
contest, whose theatre was the whole of Persia, in which above ten
thousand heroes laid down their lives, in which two sovereigns of the
Qájár dynasty and their wicked ministers participated, and which
was supported by the entire Shí’ah ecclesiastical hierarchy, by the
military resources of the state, and by the implacable hostility of the
masses. The second period (1853–1892) derives its inspiration from
the august figure of Bahá’u’lláh, preeminent in holiness, awesome in
the majesty of His strength and power, unapproachable in the transcendent
brightness of His glory. It opens with the first stirrings,
in the soul of Bahá’u’lláh while in the Síyáh-Chál of Ṭihrán, of the
Revelation anticipated by the Báb, attains its plenitude in the
proclamation of that Revelation to the kings and ecclesiastical leaders
of the earth, and terminates in the ascension of its Author in the
vicinity of the prison-town of ‘Akká. It extends over thirty-nine
years of continuous, of unprecedented and overpowering Revelation,
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is marked by the propagation of the Faith to the neighboring territories
of Turkey, of Russia, of ‘Iráq, of Syria, of Egypt and of India,
and is distinguished by a corresponding aggravation of hostility,
represented by the united attacks launched by the Sháh of Persia and
the Sulṭán of Turkey, the two admittedly most powerful potentates
of the East, as well as by the opposition of the twin sacerdotal orders
of Shí’ah and Sunní Islám. The third period (1892–1921) revolves
around the vibrant personality of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, mysterious in His
essence, unique in His station, astoundingly potent in both the charm
and strength of His character. It commences with the announcement
of the Covenant of Bahá’u’lláh, a document without parallel in the
history of any earlier Dispensation, attains its climax in the emphatic
assertion by the Center of that Covenant, in the City of the Covenant,
of the unique character and far-reaching implications of that Document,
and closes with His passing and the interment of His remains
on Mt. Carmel. It will go down in history as a period of almost thirty
years’ duration, in which tragedies and triumphs have been so intertwined
as to eclipse at one time the Orb of the Covenant, and at
another time to pour forth its light over the continent of Europe,
and as far as Australasia, the Far East and the North American continent.
The fourth period (1921–1944) is motivated by the forces
radiating from the Will and Testament of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, that Charter
of Bahá’u’lláh’s New World Order, the offspring resulting from the
mystic intercourse between Him Who is the Source of the Law of
God and the mind of the One Who is the vehicle and interpreter of
that Law. The inception of this fourth, this last period of the first
Bahá’í century synchronizes with the birth of the Formative Age of
the Bahá’í Era, with the founding of the Administrative Order of the
Faith of Bahá’u’lláh—a system which is at once the harbinger, the
nucleus and pattern of His World Order. This period, covering the
first twenty-three years of this Formative Age, has already been distinguished
by an outburst of further hostility, of a different character,
accelerating on the one hand the diffusion of the Faith over a still
wider area in each of the five continents of the globe, and resulting
on the other in the emancipation and the recognition of the independent
status of several communities within its pale.
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These four periods are to be regarded not only as the component,
the inseparable parts of one stupendous whole, but as progressive stages
in a single evolutionary process, vast, steady and irresistible. For as
we survey the entire range which the operation of a century-old Faith
has unfolded before us, we cannot escape the conclusion that from
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whatever angle we view this colossal scene, the events associated with
these periods present to us unmistakable evidences of a slowly maturing
process, of an orderly development, of internal consolidation, of
external expansion, of a gradual emancipation from the fetters of
religious orthodoxy, and of a corresponding diminution of civil disabilities
and restrictions.
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Viewing these periods of Bahá’í history as the constituents of a
single entity, we note the chain of events proclaiming successfully the
rise of a Forerunner, the Mission of One Whose advent that Forerunner
had promised, the establishment of a Covenant generated
through the direct authority of the Promised One Himself, and lastly
the birth of a System which is the child sprung from both the Author
of the Covenant and its appointed Center. We observe how the Báb,
the Forerunner, announced the impending inception of a divinely-conceived
Order, how Bahá’u’lláh, the Promised One, formulated its
laws and ordinances, how ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, the appointed Center, delineated
its features, and how the present generation of their followers
have commenced to erect the framework of its institutions. We
watch, through these periods, the infant light of the Faith diffuse itself
from its cradle, eastward to India and the Far East, westward to the
neighboring territories of ‘Iráq, of Turkey, of Russia, and of Egypt,
travel as far as the North American continent, illuminate subsequently
the major countries of Europe, envelop with its radiance,
at a later stage, the Antipodes, brighten the fringes of the Arctic,
and finally set aglow the Central and South American horizons. We
witness a corresponding increase in the diversity of the elements
within its fellowship, which from being confined, in the first period of
its history, to an obscure body of followers chiefly recruited from the
ranks of the masses in Shí’ah Persia, has expanded into a fraternity
representative of the leading religious systems of the world, of almost
every caste and color, from the humblest worker and peasant to
royalty itself. We notice a similar development in the extent of its
literature—a literature which, restricted at first to the narrow range
of hurriedly transcribed, often corrupted, secretly circulated, manuscripts,
so furtively perused, so frequently effaced, and at times even
eaten by the terrorized members of a proscribed sect, has, within the
space of a century, swelled into innumerable editions, comprising tens
of thousands of printed volumes, in diverse scripts, and in no less than
forty languages, some elaborately reproduced, others profusely illustrated,
all methodically and vigorously disseminated through the
agency of world-wide, properly constituted and specially organized
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committees and Assemblies. We perceive a no less apparent evolution
in the scope of its teachings, at first designedly rigid, complex and
severe, subsequently recast, expanded, and liberalized under the succeeding
Dispensation, later expounded, reaffirmed and amplified by an
appointed Interpreter, and lastly systematized and universally applied
to both individuals and institutions. We can discover a no less distinct
gradation in the character of the opposition it has had to encounter—an opposition, at first kindled in the bosom of Shí’ah Islám, which, at a
later stage, gathered momentum with the banishment of Bahá’u’lláh
to the domains of the Turkish Sulṭán and the consequent hostility of
the more powerful Sunní hierarchy and its Caliph, the head of the vast
majority of the followers of Muḥammad—an opposition which, now,
through the rise of a divinely appointed Order in the Christian West,
and its initial impact on civil and ecclesiastical institutions, bids fair
to include among its supporters established governments and systems
associated with the most ancient, the most deeply entrenched sacerdotal
hierarchies in Christendom. We can, at the same time, recognize,
through the haze of an ever-widening hostility, the progress, painful
yet persistent, of certain communities within its pale through the
stages of obscurity, of proscription, of emancipation, and of recognition—stages that must needs culminate in the course of succeeding
centuries, in the establishment of the Faith, and the founding, in the
plenitude of its power and authority, of the world-embracing Bahá’í
Commonwealth. We can likewise discern a no less appreciable
advance in the rise of its institutions, whether as administrative
centers or places of worship—institutions, clandestine and subterrene
in their earliest beginnings, emerging imperceptibly into the broad
daylight of public recognition, legally protected, enriched by pious
endowments, ennobled at first by the erection of the Mashriqu’l-Adhkár
of Ishqábád, the first Bahá’í House of Worship, and more
recently immortalized, through the rise in the heart of the North
American continent of the Mother Temple of the West, the forerunner
of a divine, a slowly maturing civilization. And finally, we
can even bear witness to the marked improvement in the conditions
surrounding the pilgrimages performed by its devoted adherents to
its consecrated shrines at its world center—pilgrimages originally
arduous, perilous, tediously long, often made on foot, at times ending
in disappointment, and confined to a handful of harassed Oriental
followers, gradually attracting, under steadily improving circumstances
of security and comfort, an ever swelling number of new
converts converging from the four corners of the globe, and culminating
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in the widely publicized yet sadly frustrated visit of a noble
Queen, who, at the very threshold of the city of her heart’s desire,
was compelled, according to her own written testimony, to divert her
steps, and forego the privilege of so priceless a benefit.
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