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Chapter XXIV: Emancipation and Recognition of the Faith and Its Institutions 364 |
While the initial steps aiming at the erection of the framework of
the Administrative Order of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh were being simultaneously
undertaken by His followers in the East and in the West, a
fierce attack was launched in an obscure village in Egypt on a handful
of believers, who were trying to establish there one of the primary
institutions of that Order—an attack which, viewed in the perspective
of history, will be acclaimed by future generations as a landmark not
only in the Formative Period of the Faith but in the history of the
first Bahá’í century. Indeed, the sequel to this assault may be said to
have opened a new chapter in the evolution of the Faith itself, an
evolution which, carrying it through the successive stages of repression,
of emancipation, of recognition as an independent Revelation, and as a
state religion, must lead to the establishment of the Bahá’í state and
culminate in the emergence of the Bahá’í World Commonwealth.
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Originating in a country which can rightly boast of being the
acknowledged center of both the Arab and Muslim worlds; precipitated
by the action, taken on their own initiative, by the ecclesiastical
representatives of the largest communion in Islám; the direct outcome
of a series of disturbances instigated by some of the members of that
communion designed to suppress the activities of certain followers of
the Faith who had held a clerical rank among them, this momentous
development in the fortunes of a struggling community has directly
contributed, to a considerable degree, to the consolidation and the
enhancement of the prestige of the Administrative Order which that
community had begun to erect. It will, moreover, as its repercussions
are more widely spread to other Islamic countries, and its vast significance
is more clearly apprehended by the adherents of both Christianity
and Islám, hasten the termination of the period of transition
through which the Faith, now in the formative stage of its growth,
is passing.
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It was in the village of Kawmu’ṣ-Ṣa‘áyidih, in the district of Beba,
of the province of Beni Suef in Upper Egypt, that, as a result of the
religious fanaticism which the formation of a Bahá’í assembly had
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kindled in the breast of the headman of that village, and of the grave
accusations made by him to both the District Police Officer and the
Governor of the province—accusations which aroused the Muḥammadans
to such a pitch of excitement as to cause them to perpetrate
shameful acts against their victims—that action was initiated by the
notary of the village, in his capacity as a religious plaintiff authorized
by the Ministry of Justice, against three Bahá’í residents of that village,
demanding that their Muslim wives be divorced from them on the
grounds that their husbands had abandoned Islám after their legal
marriage as Muslims.
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The Opinion and Judgment of the Appellate religious court of
Beba, delivered on May 10, 1925, subsequently sanctioned by the
highest ecclesiastical authorities in Cairo and upheld by them as final,
printed and circulated by the Muslim authorities themselves, annulled
the marriages contracted by the three Bahá’í defendants and condemned
the mass heretics for having violated the laws and ordinances
of Islám. It even went so far as to make the positive, the startling and
indeed the historic assertion that the Faith embraced by these heretics
is to be regarded as a distinct religion, wholly independent of the religious
systems that have preceded it—an assertion which hitherto the
enemies of the Faith, whether in the East or in the West, had either
disputed or deliberately ignored.
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Having expounded the fundamental tenets and ordinances of
Islám, and given a detailed exposition of the Bahá’í teachings, supported
by various quotations from the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, from the writings
of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and of Mírzá Abu’l-Faḍl, with special reference
to certain Bahá’í laws, and demonstrated that the defendants had, in
the light of these statements, actually abjured the Faith of Muḥammad,
his formal verdict declares in the most unequivocal terms: “The Bahá’í
Faith is a new religion, entirely independent, with beliefs, principles
and laws of its own, which differ from, and are utterly in conflict with,
the beliefs, principles and laws of Islám. No Bahá’í, therefore, can be
regarded a Muslim or vice-versa, even as no Buddhist, Brahmin, or
Christian can be regarded a Muslim or vice-versa.” Ordering the dissolution
of the contracts of marriage of the parties on trial, and the
“separation” of the husbands from their wives, this official and memorable
pronouncement concludes with the following words: “If any
one of them (husbands) repents, believes in, and acknowledges whatsoever
… Muḥammad, the Apostle of God … has brought from
God … and returns to the august Faith of Islám … and testifies
that … Muḥammad … is the Seal of the Prophets and Messengers,
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that no religion will succeed His religion, that no law will
abrogate His law, that the Qur’án is the last of the Books of God and
His last Revelation to His Prophets and His Messengers … he shall
be accepted and shall be entitled to renew his marriage contract…”
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This declaration of portentous significance, which was supported
by incontrovertible proofs adduced by the avowed enemies of the
Faith of Bahá’u’lláh themselves, which was made in a country that
aspires to the headship of Islám through the restoration of the
Caliphate, and which has received the sanction of the highest ecclesiastical
authorities in that country, this official testimony which the
leaders of Shí’ah Islám, in both Persia and ‘Iráq, have, through a
century, sedulously avoided voicing, and which, once and for all,
silences those detractors, including Christian ecclesiastics in the West,
who have in the past stigmatized that Faith as a cult, as a Bábí sect and
as an offshoot of Islám or represented it as a synthesis of religions—such a declaration was acclaimed by all Bahá’í communities in the East
and in the West as the first Charter of the emancipation of the Cause
of Bahá’u’lláh from the fetters of Islamic orthodoxy, the first historic
step taken, not by its adherents as might have been expected, but by its
adversaries on the road leading to its ultimate and world-wide
recognition.
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Such a verdict, fraught with incalculable possibilities, was immediately
recognized as a powerful challenge which the builders of the
Administrative Order of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh were not slow to
face and accept. It imposed upon them a sacred obligation which
they felt ready to discharge. Designed by its authors to deprive their
adversaries of access to Muslim courts, and thereby place them in a
perplexing and embarrassing situation, it became a lever which the
Egyptian Bahá’í community, followed later by its sister-communities,
readily utilized for the purpose of asserting the independence of its
Faith and of seeking for it the recognition of its government. Translated
into several languages, circulated among Bahá’í communities in
East and West, it gradually paved the way for the initiation of negotiations
between the elected representatives of these communities and the
civil authorities in Egypt, in the Holy Land, in Persia and even in the
United States of America, for the purpose of securing the official recognition
by these authorities of the Faith as an independent religion.
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In Egypt it was the signal for the adoption of a series of measures
which have in their cumulative effect greatly facilitated the extension
of such a recognition by a government which is still formally associated
with the religion of Islám, and which suffers its laws and regulations
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to be shaped in a great measure by the views and pronouncements
of its ecclesiastical leaders. The inflexible determination of the
Egyptian believers not to deviate a hair’s breadth from the tenets of
their Faith, by avoiding all dealings with any Muslim ecclesiastical
court in that country and by refusing any ecclesiastical post which
might be offered them; the codification and publication of the fundamental
laws of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas regarding matters of personal status,
such as marriage, divorce, inheritance and burial, and the presentation
of these laws to the Egyptian Cabinet; the issuance of marriage
and divorce certificates by the Egyptian National Spiritual Assembly;
the assumption by that Assembly of all the duties and responsibilities
connected with the conduct of Bahá’í marriages and divorces, as well
as with the burial of the dead; the observance by all members of that
community of the nine Holy Days on which work, as prescribed in the
Bahá’í teachings, must be completely suspended; the presentation of
a petition addressed by the national elected representatives of that community
to the Egyptian Prime Minister, the Minister of the Interior
and the Minister of Justice (supported by a similar communication
addressed by the American National Spiritual Assembly to the
Egyptian Government), enclosing a copy of the judgment of the
Court, and of their national Bahá’í constitution and by-laws, requesting
them to recognize their Assembly as a body qualified to exercise
the functions of an independent court and empowered to apply, in all
matters affecting their personal status, the laws and ordinances revealed
by the Author of their Faith—these stand out as the initial consequences
of a historic pronouncement that must eventually lead to the
establishment of that Faith on a basis of absolute equality with its sister
religions in that land.
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A corollary to this epoch-making declaration, and a direct consequence
of the intermittent disturbances instigated in Port Said and
Ismá’ílíyyih by a fanatical populace in connection with the burial of
some of the members of the Bahá’í community, was the official and no
less remarkable fatvá (judgment) issued, at the request of the Ministry
of Justice, by the Grand Muftí of Egypt. This, soon after its
pronouncement, was published in the Egyptian press and contributed to
fortify further the independent status of the Faith. It followed upon the
riots which broke out with exceptional fury in Ismá’ílíyyih, when
angry crowds surrounded the funeral cortège of Muḥammad Sulaymán,
a prominent Bahá’í resident of that town, creating such an
uproar that the police had to intervene, and having rescued the body
and brought it back to the home of the deceased, they were forced to
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carry it without escort, at night, to the edge of the desert and inter
it in the wilderness.
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This judgment was passed as a result of the inquiry addressed in
writing, on January 24, 1939, by the Egyptian Ministry of the Interior
to the Ministry of Justice, enclosing a copy of the compilation of
Bahá’í laws related to matters of personal status published by the
Egyptian Bahá’í National Spiritual Assembly, and asking for a pronouncement
by the Muftí regarding the petition addressed by that
Assembly to the Egyptian Government for the allocation of four plots
to serve as cemeteries for the Bahá’í communities of Cairo, Alexandria,
Port Said and Ismá’ílíyyih. “We are,” wrote the Muftí in his reply of
March 11, 1939, to the communication addressed to him by the Ministry
of Justice, “in receipt of your letter … dated February 21,
1939, with its enclosures … inquiring whether or not it would be
lawful to bury the Bahá’í dead in Muslim cemeteries. We hereby declare
that this Community is not to be regarded as Muslim, as shown
by the beliefs which it professes. The perusal of what they term ‘The
Bahá’í Laws affecting Matters of Personal Status,’ accompanying the
papers, is deemed sufficient evidence. Whoever among its members had
formerly been a Muslim has, by virtue of his belief in the pretensions
of this community, renounced Islám, and is regarded as beyond its
pale, and is subject to the laws governing apostasy as established in the
right Faith of Islám. This community not being Muslim, it would be
unlawful to bury its dead in Muslim cemeteries, be they originally
Muslims or otherwise…”
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It was in consequence of this final, this clearly-worded and authoritative
sentence by the highest exponent of Islamic Law in Egypt, and
after prolonged negotiations, resulting at first in the allocation to the
Cairo Bahá’í community of a cemetery plot forming a part of that set
aside for free thinkers, residing in that city, that the Egyptian government
consented to grant to that community, as well as to the Bahá’ís of
Ismá’ílíyyih, two tracts of land to serve as burial grounds for their
dead—an act of historic significance which was greatly welcomed by
the members of sore-pressed and long-suffering communities, and
which has served to demonstrate still further the independent character
of their Faith and enlarge the sphere of the jurisdiction of its
representative institutions.
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It was to the first of these two officially designated Bahá’í cemeteries,
following the decision of the Egyptian Bahá’í National
Assembly aided by its sister-Assembly in Persia, that the remains
of the illustrious Mírzá Abu’l-Faḍl were transferred and accorded
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a sepulture worthy of his high position, thereby inaugurating,
in a befitting manner, the first official Bahá’í institution of its kind
established in the East. This achievement was, soon after, enhanced by
the exhumation from a Christian cemetery in Cairo of the body of
that far-famed mother teacher of the West, Mrs. E. Getsinger, and its
interment, through the assistance extended by the American Bahá’í
National Assembly and the Department of State in Washington, in a
spot in the heart of that cemetery and adjoining the resting-place of
that distinguished author and champion of the Faith.
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In the Holy Land, where a Bahá’í cemetery had, before these
pronouncements, been established during ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s ministry, the historic
decision to bury the Bahá’í dead facing the Qiblih in ‘Akká was
taken—a measure whose significance was heightened by the resolution
to cease having recourse, as had been previously the case, to any
Muḥammadan court in all matters affecting marriage and divorce, and
to carry out, in their entirety and without any concealment whatever,
the rites prescribed by Bahá’u’lláh for the preparation and burial of
the dead. This was soon after followed by the presentation of a formal
petition addressed by the representatives of the local Bahá’í community
of Haifa, dated May 4, 1929, to the Palestine Authorities, requesting
them that, pending the adoption of a uniform civil law of personal
status applicable to all residents of the country irrespective of their
religious beliefs, the community be officially recognized by them and
be granted “full powers to administer its own affairs now enjoyed by
other religious communities in Palestine.”
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The acceptance of this petition—an act of tremendous significance
and wholly unprecedented in the history of the Faith in any country—according official recognition by the civil authorities to marriage
certificates issued by the representatives of the local community, the
validity of which the official representative of the Persian Government
in Palestine has tacitly recognized, was followed by a series of decisions
exempting from government tax all properties and institutions regarded
by the Bahá’í community as holy sites, or dedicated to the
Tombs of its Founders at its world center. Moreover, through these
decisions, all articles serving as ornaments or furniture for the Bahá’í
shrines were exempted from customs duties, and the branches of both
the American and Indian Bahá’í National Spiritual Assemblies were
enabled to function as “religious societies,” in accordance with the laws
of the country, and to hold and administer property as agents of these
Assemblies.
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In Persia, where a far larger community, already numerically
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superior to the Christian, the Jewish and the Zoroastrian minorities
living in that country, had, notwithstanding the traditionally hostile
attitude of the civil and ecclesiastical authorities, succeeded in rearing
the structure of its administrative institutions, the reaction to so momentous
a declaration was such as to inspire its members and induce
them to exploit, in the fullest measure possible, the enormous advantages
which this wholly unexpected testimonial had conferred upon
them. Having survived the fiery ordeals to which the cruel, the arrogant
and implacable leaders of an all-powerful priesthood, now grievously
humiliated, had subjected it, a triumphant community, just
emerging from obscurity, was determined, more than ever before, to
press, within the limits prescribed for it by its Founders, its claim to
be regarded as an independent religious entity, and to safeguard, by all
available means, its integrity, the solidarity of its members and the
solidity of its elective institutions. It could no longer, now that its
declared adversaries had, in such a country, in such a language, and on
so important an issue, made so emphatic and sweeping a pronouncement,
and torn asunder the veil that had for so long been drawn over
some of the distinguishing verities lying at the core of its doctrine,
keep silent or tolerate without any protest the imposition of restrictions
calculated to circumscribe its powers, stifle its community life and
deny it its right to be placed on a footing of unqualified equality with
other religious communities in that land.
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Inflexibly resolved to be classified no longer as Muslim, Jew,
Christian or Zoroastrian, the members of this community determined,
as a first step, to adopt such measures as would vindicate
beyond challenge the distinctive position claimed for their religion
by its avowed enemies. Mindful of their clear, their sacred and
inescapable duty to obey unreservedly, in all matters of a purely
administrative character, the laws of their country, but firmly determined
to assert and demonstrate, through every legitimate means at
their disposal, the independent character of their Faith, they formulated
a policy and embarked in undertakings designed to carry them a
stage further towards the goal they had set themselves to attain.
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The steadfast resolution not to dissemble their faith, whatever the
sacrifices it might entail; the uncompromising position that they would
not refer any matters affecting their personal status to any Muslim,
Christian, Rabbinical or Zoroastrian court; the refusal to affiliate with
any organization, or accept any ecclesiastical post associated with any
of the recognized religions in their country; the universal observance
of the laws prescribed in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas relating to obligatory
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prayers, fasting, marriage, divorce, inheritance, burial of the dead, and
the use of opium and alcoholic beverages; the issue and circulation of
certificates of birth, death, marriage and divorce, at the direction and
under the seal of recognized Bahá’í Assemblies; the translation into
Persian of “The Bahá’í Laws affecting Matters of Personal Status,”
first published by the Egyptian Bahá’í National Assembly; the cessation
of work on all Bahá’í Holy Days; the establishment of Bahá’í
cemeteries in the capital as well as in the provinces, designed to provide
a common burial ground for all ranks of the faithful, whatever their
religious extraction; the insistence that they no longer be registered as
Muslim, Christian, Jew or Zoroastrian on identity cards, marriage certificates,
passports and other official documents; the emphasis placed
on the institution of the Nineteen Day Feast, as established by Bahá’u’lláh
in His Most Holy Book; the imposition of sanctions by Bahá’í
elective Assemblies, now assuming the duties and functions of religious
courts, on recalcitrant members of the community by denying them
the right to vote and of membership in these Assemblies and their
committees—all these are to be associated with the first stirrings of a
community that had erected the fabric of its Administrative Order,
and was now, under the propelling influence of the historic judicial
sentence passed in Egypt, intent upon obtaining, not by force but
through persuasion, the recognition by the civil authorities of the
status to which its ecclesiastical adversaries had so emphatically borne
witness.
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That its initial attempt should have met with partial success, that
it should have aroused at times the suspicion of the ruling authorities,
that it should have been grossly misrepresented by its vigilant enemies,
is not a matter for surprise. It was successful in certain respects in its
negotiations with the civil authorities, as in obtaining the government
decree removing all references to religious affiliation in passports issued
to Persian subjects, and in the tacit permission granted in certain localities
that its members should not fill in the religious columns in certain
state documents, but should register with their own Assemblies their
marriage, their divorce, their birth and their death certificates, and
should conduct their funerals according to their religious rites. In
other respects, however, it has been subjected to grave disabilities: its
schools, founded, owned and controlled exclusively by itself, were
forcibly closed because they refused to remain open on Bahá’í holy
days; its members, both men and women, were prosecuted; those who
held army or civil service appointments were in some cases dismissed; a
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ban was placed on the import, on the printing and circulation of its
literature; and all Bahá’í public gatherings were proscribed.
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To all administrative regulations which the civil authorities have
issued from time to time, or will issue in the future in that land, as in
all other countries, the Bahá’í community, faithful to its sacred obligations
towards its government, and conscious of its civic duties, has
yielded, and will continue to yield implicit obedience. Its immediate
closing of its schools in Persia is a proof of this. To such orders, however,
as are tantamount to a recantation of their faith by its members,
or constitute an act of disloyalty to its spiritual, its basic and God-given
principles and precepts, it will stubbornly refuse to bow, preferring
imprisonment, deportation and all manner of persecution, including
death—as already suffered by the twenty thousand martyrs
that have laid down their lives in the path of its Founders—rather than
follow the dictates of a temporal authority requiring it to renounce its
allegiance to its cause.
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“If you cut us in pieces, men, women and children alike, in the
entire district of Ábádih,” was the memorable message sent by the fearless
descendants of some of those martyrs in that turbulent center to
the Governor of Fárs, who had intended to coerce them into declaring
themselves as Muslims, “we will never submit to your wishes”—a message
which, as soon as it was delivered to that defiant governor, induced
him to desist from pressing the matter any further.
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In the United States of America, the Bahá’í community, having
already set an inspiring example, by erecting and perfecting the machinery
of its Administrative Order, was alive to the far-reaching
implications of the sentence passed by the Muslim court in Egypt, and
to the significance of the reaction it had produced in the Holy Land,
and was stimulated by the courageous persistence demonstrated by its
sister-community in Persia. It determined to supplement its notable
achievements with further acts designed to throw into sharper relief
the status achieved by the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh in the North American
continent. It was numerically smaller than the community of the
Persian believers. Owing to the multiplicity of laws governing the
states within the Union, it was faced, in matters affecting the personal
status of its members, with a situation radically different from that
confronting the believers in the East, and much more complex. But
conscious of its responsibility to lend, once again, a powerful impetus
to the unfoldment of a divinely appointed Order, it boldly undertook
to initiate such measures as would accentuate the independent character
of a Revelation it had already so nobly championed.
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The recognition of its National Spiritual Assembly by the Federal
authorities as a religious body entitled to hold as trustees properties
dedicated to the interests of the Faith; the establishment of Bahá’í
endowments and the exemption obtained for them from the civil
authorities as properties owned by, and administered solely for the
benefit of, a purely religious community, were now to be supplemented
by decisions and measures designed to give further prominence to the
nature of the ties uniting its members. The special stress laid on some
of the fundamental laws contained in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas regarding
daily obligatory prayers; the observance of the fast, the consent of the
parents as a prerequisite of marriage; the one-year separation between
husband and wife as an indispensable condition of divorce; abstinence
from all alcoholic drinks; the emphasis placed on the institution of the
Nineteen Day Feast as ordained by Bahá’u’lláh in that same Book; the
discontinuation of membership in, and affiliation with, all ecclesiastical
organizations, and the refusal to accept any ecclesiastical post—these
have served to forcibly underline the distinctive character of the
Bahá’í Fellowship, and to dissociate it, in the eyes of the public, from
the rituals, the ceremonials and man-made institutions identified with
the religious systems of the past.
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Of particular and historic importance has been the application
made by the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Chicago—the first
center established in the North American continent, the first to be
incorporated among its sister-Assemblies and the first to take the initiative
in paving the way for the erection of a Bahá’í Temple in the
West—to the civil authorities in the state of Illinois for civil recognition
of the right to conduct legal marriages in accordance with the
ordinances of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, and to file marriage certificates that
have previously received the official sanction of that Assembly. The
acceptance of this petition by the authorities, necessitating an amendment
of the by-laws of all local Assemblies to enable them to conduct
Bahá’í legal marriages, and empowering the Chairman or secretary of
the Chicago Assembly to represent that body in the conduct of all
Bahá’í marriages; the issuance, on September 22, 1939, of the first
Bahá’í Marriage License by the State of Illinois, authorizing the
aforementioned Assembly to solemnize Bahá’í marriages and issue Bahá’í
marriage certificates; the successful measures taken subsequently by
Assemblies in other states of the Union, such as New York, New
Jersey, Wisconsin and Ohio, to procure for themselves similar privileges,
have, moreover, contributed their share in giving added prominence
to the independent religious status of the Faith. To these must
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be added a similar and no less significant recognition extended, since
the outbreak of the present conflict, by the United States War Department—as evidenced by the communication addressed to the American
Bahá’í National Spiritual Assembly by the Quartermaster General of
that Department, on August 14, 1942—approving the use of the
symbol of the Greatest Name on stones marking the graves of Bahá’ís
killed in the war and buried in military or private cemeteries, distinguishing
thereby these graves from those bearing the Latin Cross or
the Star of David assigned to those belonging to the Christian and
Jewish Faiths respectively.
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Nor should mention be omitted of the equally successful application
made by the American Bahá’í National Spiritual Assembly to
the Office of Price Administration in Washington, D.C., asking that
the chairmen and secretaries of Bahá’í local Assemblies should, in their
capacity as officers conducting religious meetings, and authorized, in
certain states, to perform marriage services, be eligible for preferred
mileage under the provisions of the Preferred Mileage Section of the
Gasoline Regulations, for the purpose of meeting the religious needs of
the localities they serve.
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Nor have the Bahá’í communities in other countries such as India,
‘Iráq, Great Britain and Australia, been slow to either appreciate the
advantages derived from the publication of this historic verdict, or to
exploit, each according to its capacity and within the limits imposed
upon it by prevailing circumstances, the opportunities afforded by such
public testimonial for a further demonstration on their part of the
independent character of the Faith whose administrative structure they
had already erected. Through the enforcement, to whatever extent
deemed practicable, of the laws ordained in their Most Holy Book;
through the severance of all ties of affiliation with, and membership in,
ecclesiastical institutions of whatever denomination; through the
formulation of a policy initiated for the sole purpose of giving further
publicity to this mighty issue, marking a great turning-point in the
evolution of the Faith, and of facilitating its ultimate settlement, these
communities, and indeed all organized Bahá’í bodies, whether in the
East or in the West, however isolated their position or immature their
state of development, have, conscious of their solidarity and well aware
of the glorious prospects opening before them, arisen to proclaim with
one voice the independent character of the religion of Bahá’u’lláh and
to pave the way for its emancipation from whatever fetters, be they
ecclesiastical or otherwise, might hinder or delay its ultimate and
world-wide recognition.
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To the status already achieved by their Faith, largely through
their own unaided efforts and accomplishments, tributes have been
paid by observers in various walks of life, whose testimony they welcome
and regard as added incentive to action in their steep and laborious
ascent towards the heights which they must eventually capture.
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“Palestine,” is the testimony of Prof. Norman Bentwitch, a
former Attorney-General of the Palestine Government, “may indeed
be now regarded as the land not of three but of four Faiths, because
the Bahá’í creed, which has its center of faith and pilgrimage in
‘Akká and Haifa, is attaining to the character of a world religion. So
far as its influence goes in the land, it is a factor making for international
and inter-religious understanding.” “In 1920,” is the declaration
made in his testament by the distinguished Swiss scientist and
psychiatrist, Dr. Auguste Forel, “I learned at Karlsruhe of the
supraconfessional world religion of the Bahá’ís, founded in the Orient seventy
years ago by a Persian, Bahá’u’lláh. This is the real religion of
‘Social Welfare’ without dogmas or priests, binding together all men of
this small terrestrial globe of ours. I have become a Bahá’í. May this
religion live and prosper for the good of humanity! This is my most
ardent desire.” “There is bound to be a world state, a universal language,
and a universal religion,” he, moreover has stated, “The Bahá’í
Movement for the oneness of mankind is, in my estimation, the greatest
movement today working for universal peace and brotherhood.” “A
religion,” is yet another testimony, from the pen of the late Queen
Marie of Rumania, “which links all creeds … a religion based upon
the inner spirit of God… It teaches that all hatreds, intrigues, suspicions,
evil words, all aggressive patriotism even, are outside the one
essential law of God, and that special beliefs are but surface things
whereas the heart that beats with Divine love knows no tribe nor race.”
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