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| FOUNDATION STONE LAID BY THE CENTER OF THE COVENANT | 
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     The completion of the exterior ornamentation of the Mashriqu’l-Adhkár 
in Wilmette, the most hallowed Temple ever to be erected by the followers 
of Bahá’u’lláh, and the crowning glory of the first Bahá’í century, is an 
event of unique and transcendental significance.  Neither the first 
Mashriqu’l-Adhkár of the Bahá’í world, reared in the city of Ishqábád, nor 
any House of Worship to be raised in succeeding centuries, can claim to possess 
the vast, the immeasurable potentialities with which this Mother Temple of the 
West, established in the very heart of so enviable a continent, and whose 
foundation stone has been laid by the hand of the Center of the Covenant 
Himself, has been endowed.  Conceived forty years ago by that little band 
of far-sighted and resolute disciples of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, members of the first 
Bahá’í community established in the Western Hemisphere; blessed and 
fostered by a vigilant Master Who directed its course from the hour of its 
inception to the last days of His life; supported by the spontaneous 
contributions of Bahá’ís poured in from the five continents of the globe, this 
noble, this mighty, this magnificent enterprise deserves to rank among the 
immortal epics that have adorned the annals of the Apostolic Age of the 
Faith of Bahá’u’lláh.  
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     The debt of gratitude owed by the entire Bahá’í world to its 
champion-builders is indeed immeasurable.  The admiration which this brilliant 
exploit has evoked in the breasts of countless followers of the Faith in East 
and West knows no bounds.  The creative energies its completion must unleash 
are incalculable.  The role it is destined to play in hastening the emergence 
of the world order of Bahá’u’lláh, now stirring in the womb of this travailing 
age, cannot as yet be fathomed.  We stand too close to so majestic, so lofty, 
so radiant, so symbolic a monument raised so heroically to the glory of the 
Most Great Name, at so critical a stage in human history, and at so significant 
a spot in a continent so richly endowed, to be able to visualize the future 
glories which the consummation of this institution, this harbinger of an as 
yet unborn civilization, must in the fulness of time disclose to the eyes of 
all mankind.  
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     That so laborious, so meritorious an undertaking has been completed a 
year before its appointed time is a further cause for rejoicing and gratitude, 
 
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and an added testimony to the vision, the resourcefulness, and enterprising 
spirit of the American believers.  
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     No need, however, to dwell at length on their past achievements, 
remarkable and exemplary though they have been, nor is this the time to 
expatiate on the superb spirit that has characterized their stewardship in the 
service of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh.  Tasks of extreme urgency, of great 
magnitude, of the utmost significance await them in this concluding year 
of the first Bahá’í century, and at this hour of great peril, of stress and 
trial for all mankind.  The sacred—the pressing, the inescapable teaching 
responsibilities assumed under the Seven Year Plan must be resolutely faced as 
befits those whose record has shed so brilliant a light on the annals of the 
first Bahá’í century.  The consolidation of each and every nucleus, formed 
so painstakingly in every republic of Central and South America, the formation 
of a Bahá’í Assembly in every virgin State and Province in the North 
American Continent, call for undivided attention, for further heroism, for 
a concerted, a persistent, a herculean effort on the part of the stalwart 
builders of that bounteous Edifice which posterity will recognize as the 
greatest shrine in the Western world.  
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     Nor must the elaborate preparations in connection with the forthcoming 
celebration of the centenary of our glorious Faith be overlooked or neglected, 
if we would befittingly consummate this first, this most fecund, century of 
the Bahá’í era.  An unprecedented, a carefully conceived, efficiently 
co-ordinated, nation-wide campaign, aiming at the proclamation of the Message 
of Bahá’u’lláh, through speeches, articles in the press, and radio broadcasts, 
should be promptly initiated and vigorously prosecuted.  The universality 
of the Faith, its aims and purposes, episodes in its dramatic history, 
testimonials to its transforming power, and the character and distinguishing 
features of its World Order should be emphasized and explained to the 
general public, and particularly to eminent friends and leaders sympathetic 
to its cause, who should be approached and invited to participate in the 
celebrations.  Lectures, conferences, banquets, special publications should, 
to whatever extent is practicable and according to the resources at the 
disposal of the believers, proclaim the character of this joyous Festival.  An 
all-American Convention, at which representatives of Bahá’í centers in every 
Republic in Central and South America will be invited to participate, and 
to which, for the first time, all isolated believers, all groups, and all 
communities already possessing local Spiritual Assemblies will have the right 
to appoint delegates and to share in the election of the National Spiritual 
Assembly, will, moreover, have to be held to commemorate this epoch-making 
event.  A dedication ceremony, in consonance with the solemnity 
of the occasion, and held beneath the dome of the Mashriqu’l-Adhkár, on the 
 
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very day and at the very hour of the Báb’s historic Declaration, followed by 
a public session, consecrated to the memory of both the Báb and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, 
should constitute the leading features of this historic Convention.  
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     For it should be borne in mind that in the year 1944 we celebrate not 
only the termination of the first century of the Bahá’í Era, but also the 
centenary of the birth of the Bahá’í Dispensation, of the inception of the 
Bahá’í cycle, and the birth of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, and commemorate as well 
the fiftieth anniversary of the establishment of the Bahá’í Faith in the 
Western world.  
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     No effort, nor any sacrifice can be deemed too great to insure the 
decisive, the brilliant success of the celebrations which this historic year, 
of such manifold significance, must witness.  He Who in the past has, in 
diverse ways and on so many occasions, graciously and unfailingly guided, 
blessed and sustained the members of this privileged community will, no doubt, 
continue to aid and inspire them to carry to a victorious conclusion the 
unfinished tasks which still confront them, and will enable them to crown their 
labors in a manner that will befit their high destiny.  
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