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Letter of 21 December 1928 |
21 December 1928
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With feelings of profound sorrow I am moved to address you these
few lines mourning the loss which the Cause has undoubtedly
sustained by the passing of one who, for many years and in
circumstances of exceptional significance, rendered the sacred Threshold
distinctive and inestimable services. The hand of Divine Decree has
removed, by the death of our talented and dearly-beloved friend, Mr.
Hippolyte Dreyfus-Barney, yet another outstanding figure in the
Cause of Bahá’u’lláh, who, by his brilliant gifts of mind and heart as
well as by the divers achievements of his life, has truly enriched the
annals of God’s immortal Faith.
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A pioneer of the Cause of Bahá’u’lláh ever since its celestial light
first warmed and illuminated the West, he has, by his close association
with the person of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, by his contact with all sections of
society, by his scholarly presentation of the history and fundamentals
of the Faith, and lastly by his unforgettable share in the settlement of
the complex and pressing issues that called for expert assistance in the
days following ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s passing, achieved a standing which few
have as yet attained.
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The days of his spiritual communion with ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and His
household within the walls of the prison-city of ‘Akká, wherein he
imbibed the principles which he later so ably expounded to the peoples
of the West; his pre-eminent role on his return to Paris in kindling the
torch which is destined to shed eternal illumination upon his native
land and its people; the links of abiding fellowship which he forged
with our Persian brethren in the course of the historic mission entrusted
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to his charge by our Beloved; the seeds which he scattered far and wide
during his subsequent travels to the heart of Asia, throughout India,
beyond the remotest villages of Burma and as far as the eastern
confines of Indo-China; the able support he lent in its initial and
intermediary stages to the case of Bahá’u’lláh’s house in Baghdád; his
unhesitating intervention with State officials in paving the way for
the ultimate emancipation of our Egyptian brethren from the yoke of
orthodox Islám; the stimulating encouragement his visit caused to the
Bahá’í community of Tunis on the northern shores of Africa; and last
but not least the ability and diligence with which he applied himself
to the solution of the delicate and vexing problems of the Holy Land
in the critical years following ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s ascension—all stand out
as memorable landmarks in a life that was as varied in its international
aspects as it was rich in its spiritual experience.
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His gifts of unfailing sympathy and penetrating insight, his wide
knowledge and mature experience, all of which he utilised for the glory
and propagation of the Message of Bahá’u’lláh, will be gratefully
remembered by future generations who, as the days go by, will better
estimate the abiding value of the responsibilities he shouldered for the
introduction and consolidation of the Bahá’í Faith in the Western
world.
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Suffering as he did in his last days from the effects of a slow and
painful illness, he bore heroically his share of the afflictions of the
world, and is now in the realms of blissful deliverance partaking his
full share of the goodly reward which he certainly deserved. To me, and
particularly amid the storm and stress that have agitated my life after
‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s passing, he was a sustaining and comforting
companion, a most valued counsellor, an intimate and trusted friend.
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With much emotion and the deepest sense of gratitude I supplicate
at the holy Threshold—and request you to join with me in my
prayers—for the spiritual advancement in the realms above of a soul
who by the sheer merit of the signal services he rendered already
deserves to rank highly among the departed faithful.
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