The Baha'i World: Volume 28 (1999-2000) ======================================= Exported from Holy-Writings.com on 2026-06-19 1 clipping 1. Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Universal House of Justice, The Baha'i World: Volume 28 (1999-2000), Haifa: Bahá’í World Centre, 2001, bahai-library.com. ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── THE BAHA f 1 wORLD 1999- 2000 156 OF THE BAHA'I ERA THE,, ,, EA_HXI WORLD 1999á2000 AN INTERNATIONAL RECORD BAHA'I WORLD CENTRE HAIFA ©2001 World Centre Publications Order department: 24 Gardiner Close Abingdon Oxon, OX14 34A England Photo cred its: p. 286, 287, 289- courtesy of One Country magazine; p. 64- courtesy of Cindy Hanks; p. 121 - courtesy of the Baha'i International Community Office of Pub lic Information, Paris Office; p. 11 3-courtesy of the Baha'i International Community United Nations Office; p. 11 8- copyri ght Servizio Fotografico. Other photos provided by the Audi o-Visual Department of the Baha'i World Centre. ISBN 0-85398-979-6 (Hardcover) ISBN 0-85398-980-X (Softcover) A Cataloguing-in-Publication number is available from the British Library. THE,. ,. BAH.AI WORLD 1999á2000 Printed and bound in Great Britain by Biddies, Ltd. , Guildford and King's Lynn. CONTENTS Introduction to the Baha'i Community 7 WRITINGS AND MESSAGES Baha'i Sacred Writings 21 From the Universal House of Justice 27 EVENTS 1999- 2000 Mount Carmel Projects: Progress 1999- 2000 35 New National Spiritual Assemblies 43 The Year in Review 47 Parliament of the World's Religions 105 The Baha'i International Community: Activities 1999-2000 111 Establishment of the First Chair for Baha'i Studies 123 Brazil's Response to Who is Writing the Future? 127 Education as Resistance to Forces of Disintegration by Luiz Gushiken 129 The Dangerous Passage to a World Republic by Leonardo Bo.ff 139 Detachment Shall Lead to Redemption by Ricardo Young 148 Update: The Situation of the Baha'is in Iran 157 ESSAYS, STATEMENTS, AND PROFILES A Tribute to Amatu'l-Baha Rul).iyyih Khanum by Violette Nak!Jjawini 167 Some Aspects of Baha'i Scholarship by Peter J Khan 197 Beyond Integration and Separation: The Dynamic Nature of Baha'i Law by Roshan Danesh 223 World Watch by Ann Boyles 265 Profile: Mongolian Development Center 285 Statements by the Baha' i International Community: Current Situation of the Baha' is in Iran 29 1 The Right to Education 295 INFORMATION AND RESOURCES Obituaries 303 Statistics 313 Directory 317 Selected New Publications 325 A Basic Baha'i Reading List 329 Glossary 333 Index 339 JNTRODUCTlQN TO THE BAHA'I COMMUNITY judge in the United States receives an award from the Ameri- A can Bar Association for her work in the development of alternative dispute resolution. In northern Mongolia, people attending the inaugural festivities of a new local center are delighted by performances of traditional music, comedy, and dance, which are followed by a two-day women's seminar. An individual in Guinea, concerned about the practice of female genital mutilation in that country, organizes a meeting to help raise awareness about the problem. In Bolivia, hundreds of people from Quechua, Aymara, Mapuche, Wichi, Guaymi, Kariri Xoco, and Fulni-6 backgrounds attend a conference to discuss the progress of their communities. A community in Portugal organizes a campaign for students to participate in cleaning the local dam that provides drinking water for the city. In front of the president of Mauritius and some two thousand children gathered at the State House to celebrate peace, a twelve-year-old girl sings "Citoyen du Monde" ["World Citizen"] , which so moves the dignitaries that they ask for it to be sung several times so that the other children can learn it. Students from Canada, Ghana, Macau, Sri Lanka, Togo, the T HE B AI-IA.'f W ORLD United States, and other countries constitute the first undergraduates of an academy in Switzerland whose vision is "to become a microcosm of the world and to eventually welcome to its campus at least one student from each country on the planet." Although they come from diverse backgrounds and far-flung areas of the planet, these people all share a united view of the world, its future, and their role in shaping it. They are Baha'is. The Baha' i international community, comprising members of the Baha'i Faith from all over the globe, now numbers some five million souls. They represent 2,112 ethnic and tribal groups and live in nearly 130,000 localities in 190 independent countries and 45 dependent territories or overseas departments. What was once regarded by some as a small, obscure sect was reported by the Britannica Book of the Year 1992 to be the second-most widely spread independent religion in the world, after Christianity. Its membership cuts across all boundaries of class and race, governing itself through the establishment of local and national elected bodies known as Spiritual Assemblies. Its international center and the seat of its world-governing council, known as the Universal House of Justice, are located in the Holy Land, in Haifa, Israel. This article offers a brief introduction to the Baha'i community, its history, its spiritual teachings, and its aims and objectives. Origins In 1844, in Persia, a young siyyid (a descendant of the Prophet MuI:iammad) named Mirza 'Ali-MuI:iammad declared Himself to be the Promised Qa'im awaited by Shiah Muslims. He adopted the title "the Bab," which means "the Gate," and His teachings quickly attracted a large following. Alarmed by the growing numbers of "Babis," as His followers were known, the Muslim clergy allied themselves with ministers of the Shah in an effort to destroy the infant Faith. Several thousand Babis were persecuted, tortured, and killed in the following years, but the growth of the new religion continued even after the Bab Himself was imprisoned and later executed in July 1850. The horrific treatment of the Babis at the hands of the secular and religious authorities was recorded by a number of Western diplomats, scholars, and TI-IE BAHA'I C OMMUNITY travelers, who expressed their admiration for the character and fortitude of the victims of the persecution. The Babi religion sprang from Islam in the same manner that Christianity sprang from Judaism and Buddhism from Hinduism. It was apparent early in the Bab's ministry that the religion established by Hirn was not merely a sect or a movement within Islam but an independent Faith. Furthermore, one of the main tenets of Babi belief was the Bab's statement that He had been sent by God to prepare the way for One greater than Himself, Who would inaugurate an era of peace and righteousness throughout the world, representing the culmination of all past religious dispensations. Mirza I:Iusayn- 'Ali was one of the leading adherents of the Babi Faith who was arrested and imprisoned during the tumultuous years of the Bab's brief ministry. He was spared from execution but was banished from Persia to Baghdad, Constantinople, Adrianople, and finally the penal colony of Acre in Palestine. Thus, the Persian government, which had secured the support of the rulers of the rival Ottoman Empire in suppressing the new movement, expected that His sphere of influence would be severely limited. During His initial imprisonment Mirza I:Iusayn-' Ali had received the first divine intimations that He was the Promised One of whom the Bab had spoken. He adopted the title Baha'u'llah, which means "the Glory of God," and publicly declared His mission on the eve of His exile from Baghdad, in April 1863. Bahci'u'llah was still nominally a prisoner when He passed away near Acre in May 1892, although the authorities had gradually loosened their restrictions as they became acquainted with Him and the nature of His teachings. During the long years of His exile Baha'u'llah revealed the equivalent of more than one hundred volumes of writings, consisting of the laws and ordinances of His dispensation, letters to the kings and rulers of the East and the West, mystical teachings, and other divinely inspired writings. In His Will and Testament, Baha'u'llah appointed His eldest son, 'Abbas Effendi, who adopted the title 'Abdu'l-Baha ("the Servant of Baha"), as His successor and sole authoritative interpreter of His teachings. 'Abdu'l-Baha had shared His Father's long exile and imprisonment and was freed only after a new regime was installed by the "Young Turk" movement in 1908. Shortly thereafter, at an advanced age, He embarked on an arduous journey to Europe and America where, from 1911 to 1913, He proclaimed Baha'u'llah's message of universal brotherhood and peace to large audiences, consolidated fledgling Baha'i communities, and warned of the potential catastrophe looming on Europe's darkening horizon. By the outbreak of World War I in 1914, 'Abdu'l-Baha had returned to His home in Haifa, just across the bay from Acre, and devoted Himself to caring for the local people, fending off famine by feeding them from stores of grain He had safeguarded for just such an eventuality. 'Abdu'l-Baha's humanitarian services and His promotion of intercultural harmony were recognized by the British government, which, at the end of the war, conferred upon Him a knighthood, a title He acknowledged but declined to use. He passed away in 1921 and is buried on Mount Carmel in a vault near the spot where He had interred the remains of the Bab some years before. Among the legacies that 'Abdu'l-Baha bequeathed to history was a series ofletters called the Tablets of the Divine Plan, which He had addressed to the Baha'is ofNorthAmerica during the years of World War I. These fourteen letters directed the recipients to scatter to countries on all continents and share with their populations the teachings of Baha'u'llah- a mandate that led to the global expansion of the Baha'i community. Another legacy of 'Abdu'l-Baha is His Will and Testament, which Baha'is regard as the charter of the administrative order conceived by Baha'u'llah. In this document, 'Abdu'l-Baha appointed His eldest grandson, Shoghi Effendi, as His successor, to act as Guardian of the Baha'i Faith and authorized interpreter of its teachings. During the period of his Guardianship, from 1921 to 1957, Shoghi Effendi concentrated on four main areas: the development of the Baha'i World Centre in the environs of Haifa; the translation and interpretation of the Baha' i sacred writings; the rise and consolidation of the institutions of the Baha'i administrative T HE B AHA' I C OMMUNITY order; and the implementation of 'Abdu'l-Baha's plan for the propagation of the Baha' i Faith around the world. At the Baha'i World Centre, Shoghi Effendi effected the construction of a superstructure for the mausoleum containing the remains of the Bab, which had been brought secretly from Persia and interred by 'Abdu'l-Baha in a spot designated by Baha'u'llah on Mount Carmel. Shoghi Effendi beautified and expanded the simple native stone structure, which is today a site of pilgrimage for Baha'is from all over the world. He enhanced the Baha'i properties and initiated construction of the International Baha'i Archives Building to house the original Baha'i scriptures and artifacts from the early days of the Baha'i Faith. This building, the first on the arc-shaped path on the site designated as the world administrative center of the Baha'i community, was completed in 1957. Shoghi Effendi's actions laid the foundations, literally and figuratively, for the further development of the Baha'i World Centre. Shoghi Effendi was also instrumental in interpreting the writings ofBaha'u'llah and 'Abdu' l-Baha and in translating them from the original Persian and Arabic into English. The Guardian had served as secretary to 'Abdu'l-Baha for a number of years and was a student at Oxford University at the time of his Grandfather's passing. Shoghi Effendi's mastery of Persian, Arabic, and English, coupled with the authority conferred upon him as the appointed interpreter of the Baha'i writings, made him uniquely qualified to undertake their translation. He also translated a history of the Babi Faith, authored a history of the first century of the Baha'i Faith, God Passes By, and wrote thousands of letters to communities and individuals around the world, elucidating passages from the writings and giving direction and impetus to Baha'i activities. Development of the Administrative Order Shoghi Effendi's work in developing the Baha' i administrative order is one of the most dramatic legacies of his years as Guardian. The first step in this development was to encourage the organized, planned expansion of Baha'i communities in places where local and national Baha'i councils, known as Spiritual Assemblies, would eventually be established. The Guardian effected this global expansion of Baha'i communities through a series of international plans of varying duration, during which twelve National Spiritual Assemblies were elected. At the time ofShoghi Effendi's sudden passing in 1957, the Baha'i community was in the middle of a global plan of expansion and consolidation called the Ten Year Crusade. During this period, which concluded in 1963- the centenary ofBaha'u'llah's declaration of His mission in the Garden ofRiqvan in Baghdadthe goal was to open 132 new countries and major territories to the Faith and to expand existing communities in 120 countries and territories that had previously been opened. These ambitious targets were actually exceeded by the end of the plan, in spite of the difficulties posed by the Guardian's death. 'Abdu'l-Baha, in His Will and Testament, had authorized the continuation of the Guardianship through the appointment by the Guardian of a successor from among his own sons, should he have them, or other direct descendants of Baha'u'llah. Such a designation was dependent upon the decision of Shoghi Effendi as to whether an individual could be named who met the demanding spiritual qualifications specified by 'Abdu'l-Baha. Shoghi Effendi had no children and died without designating such a Guardian to follow him. He had, however, taken steps toward the election of the Universal House of Justice, the supreme governing body of the Baha'i Faith which was to function, with him, as one of the two authorized successors provided for in the writings of Baha'u'llah and 'Abdu'l-Baha. He had also appointed a number of individual Baha'is to an auxiliary institution of the Guardianship called Hands of the Cause of God. These individuals had been charged with protecting the unity of the faith and collaborating with National Spiritual Assemblies around the world to ensure that the goals of the Ten Year Crusade were won. Upon Shoghi Effendi's passing, these men and women guided the Baha'i community to complete the plan initiated by the Guardian and to hold the first election of the Universal House of Justice in 1963. Conceived by Baha'u'llah Himself, the institution of the Universal House of Justice is established on principles laid down in the Baha'i sacred writings. Its election, by the members of the TI-IE B AI-IA'f C OMMUNITY fifty-six National Spiritual Assemblies that existed in April 1963, clearly demonstrated the principle of unity so central to the Baha'i Faith, with the nine members corning from four continents and representing a variety of religious and ethnic backgrounds. Based on the authority conferred on it by the Founder of the Faith, the Universal House of Justice stands as the acknowledged central authority in the worldwide Baha'i community and has, during the past thirty-six years, launched six global plans for the advancement of the Faith. From a worldwide population of 408,000 in 1963, the Baha'i community has grown to approximately five million members; the number of National and Regional Spiritual Assemblies has grown from 56 to 181; and the number of Local Spiritual Assemblies has increased from 3,555 to some 12,500. Baha'is live in 235 countries and territories around the planet. Spiritual and Moral Teachings and Baha'i Community Life The force that unites this diverse body of people is the vision achieved through their belief in Baha'u'llah as a Manifestation of God, in the social and administrative structures He established, and in the spiritual and moral teachings He propagated. Central to these spiritual teachings is the concept that there is only one God and that the world's great religions have been established by Messengers or Manifestations of this Divine Reality-Abraham, Krishna, Moses, Buddha, Zoroaster, Jesus, and Muhammad- who have been sent throughout history to deliver a divine message commensurate with humanity's stage of development. The spiritual essence of all the major religions, in the Baha'i view, is the same: humanity has been created to know and to worship God. Only the religions ' social teachings change through this process of progressive revelation. The Baha'i perspective sees the cumulative benefits of progressively revealed religions as fundamental to an "everadvancing civilization." What divides various religious communities, Baha'is believe, comes not from God but from humanity and its accretions to the essential religious teachings brought by each divine Messenger. At this stage of humanity's development, the unity of the human race must be recognized, the equality of women and men must be established, the extremes of wealth and poverty must be THE B AHA'f W ORLD eliminated, and the age-old promise of universal peace must be realized. Likening the development of the human race to that of an individual, the Baha'i writings say that we have passed through stages analogous to infancy and childhood and are now in the midst of a tumultuous adolescence, standing on the threshold of maturity. Baha'u'llah taught that humanity is destined to come of age, but the course it takes to achieve that goal is entirely in its own hands. To promote the development of a society in which Baha'i ideals can be fully realized, Baha'u'llah established laws and moral teachings that are binding on Baha'is. Central to these is daily obligatory prayer. Study of and meditation upon the Baha'i sacred writings each morning and evening is also enjoined. Baha'is between the ages of fifteen and seventy, with certain exceptions, observe an annual nineteen-day, dawn-to-dusk fast. Baha'u'llah referred to prayer and fasting as the "twin pillars" of faith, an indication of their importance and the benefits to be gained from them. He also raised work to the level of worship. The main repository of Baha'u'llah's laws is a volume entitled the Kitab-i- Aqdas, or the Most Holy Book. There are no dietary restrictions in the Baha'i Faith, but the consumption of alcohol and the use of narcotic and hallucinogenic drugs are forbidden, as they affect the mind and interfere with spiritual growth . Baha' u'llah counseled Baha'is to be honest and trustworthy, to render service to humanity with an abundance of deeds rather than mere words, to be chaste in their relationships with others, and to avoid gossip and backbiting. He forbade lying, stealing, adultery, sodomy, and promiscuity. The importance of the family is central to Baha'i community life, as is the moral and spiritual education of children. Baha'is often gather together in their communities to study the sacred writings of their Faith and to pray, but a central feature in Baha'i community life is a meeting called the Nineteen Day Feast, at which all members join in worship, consult about community affairs, and socialize. Pending the further development of Baha'i communities, these meetings often occur in rented facilities , people's homes, or in a local Baha'i center. The Baha'i TI-IE B AI-IJ-\' f C OMMUN ITY writings call for the erection in each community of a beautifully designed House of Worship, surrounded by gardens and functioning as a spiritual center of activity. A variety of social and humanitarian institutions are also to be established around it. A Baha'i House of Worship presently exists on each continent, and sites have been purchased around the world for the construction of many more. They are open to people of all faiths-or those professing no particular faith- for prayer and meditation. Services are nondenominational. There are no sermons, only readings and prayers from the Baha'i writings and scriptures of other faiths with music by an a capella choir. This preserves the sacredness of the experience of hearing and meditating upon the Holy Word without the interference of man-made concepts. Aims, Objectives, and Activities As the Universal House of Justice stated in a message addressed to the peoples of the world, written in October 1985 on the eve of the United Nations International Year of Peace, "Acceptance of the oneness of mankind is the first fundamental prerequisite for the reorganization and administration of the world as one country, the home of humankind." The ultimate aim of the Baha'i Faith is the establishment of unity among all the peoples of the world, and it is because of its orientation towards unity on an international scale that the Baha'i community has been active at the United Nations since that organization's inception. Today the Baha'i International Community, an active non-governmental organization (NGO) that represents the collective voice of national Baha'i communities around the world, enjoys special status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). It is particularly involved in addressing human rights issues, the needs of women and children, and environmental concerns, as well as pursuing sound, sustainable development policies. To coordinate its international efforts in these areas, the Baha' i International Community's United Nations Office and Office of Public Information, as well as Offices of the Environment and for the Advancement of Women, collaborate with National Spiritual Assemblies around the world. The Baha'i International Community's activities at the United Nations have earned it a reputation as one of the most effective religious NGOs in the UN system. Its national and international representatives have taken active roles in the major world summits and NGO forums sponsored by the United Nations during the past decade. Baha'is look towards a day when a new international order will be established, a commonwealth to which all the nations of the world will belong. As Shoghi Effendi wrote in 1936: The unity of the human race, as envisaged by Baha' u'llah, implies the establishment of a world commonwealth in which all nations, races, creeds and classes are closely and permanently united, and in which the autonomy of its state members and the personal freedom and initiative of the individuals that compose them are definitely and completely safeguarded. This commonwealth must, as far as we can visualize it, consist of a world legislature, whose members will, as the trustees of the whole of mankind, ultimately control the entire resources of all the component nations, and will enact such laws as shall be required to regulate the life, satisfy the needs and adjust the relationships of all races and peoples. A world executive, backed by an international Force, will carry out the decisions arrived at, and apply the Jaws enacted by, this world legislature, and will safeguard the organic unity of the whole commonwealth. A world tribunal will adjudicate and deliver its compulsory and final verdict in all and any disputes that may arise between the various elements constituting this universal system. 1 Shoghi Effendi went on to describe the tremendous benefits to humanity resulting from such a world order: The enonnous energy dissipated and wasted on war, whether economic or political, will be consecrated to such ends as will extend the range of human inventions and technical development, to the increase of the productivity of mankind, to the extermination of disease, to the extension of scientific research, to the raising of the standard of physical health, to the sharpening and refinement of the human brain, to the exploitation of the unused and unsuspected resources of the Shoghi Effendi , Th e World Order of Baha 'u '!Lah: Selected Letters, I st pocket sized ed. (Wilmette: Baha'i Publishing Trust, 1991 ), p. 203. T HE B AHA'f C OMMUNITY planet, to the prolongation of human life, and to the furtherance of any other agency that can stimulate the intellectual, the moral, and spiritual life of the entire human race. 2 To make its aims and objectives widely known and to promote its perspective on various issues, the Baha'i International Community not only collaborates with like-minded organizations in and out of the United Nations, but it engages in public information efforts to bring the spiritual and social principles of the Faith to the attention of people everywhere. The persecution of the Baha'is in Iran since the 1979 Iranian revolution has prompted wide dissemination of information about the Baha'i Faith in the international news media. More than two hundred members of the Faith have been executed for their belief, considered as heresy by the regime, and thousands more have been imprisoned, fired from their jobs, or have had their homes confiscated or their pensions cut off as a result of government orders. Baha'is around the world have responded in unity to this ongoing persecution in Iran-the land in which their religion was born-by petitioning their governments to take action against this injustice; it is, to some degree, as a result of these efforts that the persecutions have not been more extreme, although Iran's Baha'is still face the possibility of arbitrary imprisonment and execution, and are still denied fundamental rights and freedoms .3 The Baha' i community has also taken a proactive approach in promulgating its views. The statement on peace issued by the Universal House ofJustice in 1985, entitled The Promise of World Peace, sparked a worldwide campaign of presentations and public education projects throughout the International Year of Peace and since, aimed at government figures , leaders of thought, and the general population. The centenary of Baha'u'llah 's passing in 1992 was commemorated, in part, with the publication of a statement detailing His life, teachings, and mission, designed to increase knowledge of the Baha'i Faith among members of the public. A statement presenting the Baha'i perspective on social development, World Order of Baha 'u 'llah, p. 204. See pp . 15 7- 64 and 29 1- 94 for furth er information on th e con tinuing persecution ofiran 's Baha ' i community. The Prosperity ofHumankind, was disseminated at the World Summit for Social Development in Copenhagen in March 1995, and later that year a statement entitled Turning Point/or All Nations was released as a contribution to discussions on the future of the United Nations during its fiftieth anniversary. In 1999, the Baha'i International Community released Who Is Writing the Future? Reflections on the Twentieth Century. The Baha'i community has also been continually engaged in a series of international teaching plans. It has seen rapid expansion in different parts of the world, perhaps most notably in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, where national Baha'i communities have been established in recent years following the collapse oflong-standing political barriers. New national governing bodies are also being formed elsewhere, as the Universal House of Justice deems communities to have reached a sufficient level of maturity. The existence and growth of the Baha'i community offers irrefutable evidence that humanity, in all its diversity, can learn to live and work together in harmony. While Baha'is are not unaware of the turmoil in the world surrounding them, their view is succinctly depicted in the following words, taken from The Prosperity ofHumankind: A world is passing away and a new one is struggling to be born. The habits, attitudes, and institutions that have accumulated over the centuries are being subj ected to tests that are as necessary to human development as they are inescapable. What is required of the peoples of the world is a measure of faith and resolve to match the enormous energies with which the Creator of all things has endowed this spiritual springtime of the race. 4 The source of this faith and resolve is the message of hope offered to humanity by the teachings of Baba 'u' llah. It is a message that deserves the thoughtful consideration of all those who yearn for peace and justice in the world. Baha' i International Communjty's Office of Public Information, The Prosperity of Humankind ( l 995). See The Baha 'i World 1994- 95, pp. 273- 96, for the complete text of th is statement. BAHA'f SACRED WRITINGS From the Writings of Baha'u'llah aving created the world and all that liveth and moveth H therein, He, through the direct operation of His unconstrained and sovereign Will, chose to confer upon man the unique distinction and capacity to know Him and to love Him- a capacity that must needs be regarded as the generating impulse and the primary purpose underlying the whole of creation ... Upon the inmost reality of each and every created thing He hath shed the light of one of His names, and made it a recipient of the glory of one of His attributes. Upon the reality of man, however, He hath focused the radiance of all of His names and attributes, and made it a mirror of His own Self. Alone of all created things man hath been singled out for so great a favor, so enduring a bounty. These energies with which the Day Star of Divine bounty and Source of heavenly guidance hath endowed the reality of man lie, however, latent within him, even as the flame is hidden within the candle and the rays oflight are potentially present in the lamp. The radiance of these energies may be obscured by worldly desires even as the light of the sun can be concealed beneath the dust and dross which cover the mirror. Neither the candle nor the lamp can be lighted through their own unaided efforts, nor can it ever be possible for the mirror to free itself from its dross. It is clear and evident that until a fire is kindled the lamp will never be ignited, and unless the dross is blotted out from the face of the mirror it can never represent the image of the sun nor reflect its light and glory. And since there can be no tie of direct intercourse to bind the one true God with His creation, and no resemblance whatever can exist between the transient and the Eternal, the contingent and the Absolute, He hath ordained that in every age and dispensation a pure and stainless Soul be made manifest in the kingdoms of earth and heaven ... These Essences of Detachment, these resplendent Realities are the channels of God's all-pervasive grace. Led by the light of unfailing guidance, and invested with supreme sovereignty, They are commissioned to use the inspiration of Their words, the effusions of Their infallible grace and the sanctifying breeze of Their Revelation for the cleansing of every longing heart and receptive spirit from the dross and dust of earthly cares and limitations. Then, and only then, will the Trust of God, latent in the reality of man, emerge, as resplendent as the rising Orb of Divine Revelation, from behind the veil of concealment, and implant the ensign of its revealed glory upon the summits of men's hearts. ....i,-i All praise and glory be to God Who, through the power of His might, hath delivered His creation from the nakedness of nonexistence, and clothed it with the mantle of life. From among all created things He hath singled out for His special favor the pure, the gem-like reality of man, and invested it with a unique capacity of knowing Hirn and of reflecting the greatness of His glory. This twofold distinction conferred upon him hath cleansed away from his heart the rust of every vain desire, and made him worthy of the vesture with which his Creator hath deigned to clothe B AHA' f S AC RED W RITINGS him. It hath served to rescue his soul from the wretchedness of ignorance. This robe with which the body and soul of man hath been adorned is the very foundation of his well-being and development. Oh, how blessed the day when, aided by the grace and might of the one true God, man will have freed himself from the bondage and corruption of the world and all that is therein, and will have attained unto true and abiding rest beneath the shadow of the Tree of Knowledge! And now, concerning thy question regarding the creation of man. Know thou that all men have been created in the nature made by God, the Guardian, the Self-Subsisting. Unto each one hath been prescribed a preordained measure, as decreed in God's mighty and guarded Tablets. All that which ye potentially possess can, however, be manifested only as a result of your own volition. Strain every nerve to acquire both inner and outer perfections, for the fruit of the human tree hath ever been and will ever be perfections both within and without. It is not desirable that a man be left without knowledge or skills, for he is then but a barren tree. Then, so much as capacity and capability allow, ye needs must deck the tree of being with fruits such as knowledge, wisdom, spiritual perception, and eloquent speech. From the Writings and Utterances of 'Abdu'l-Baha Although to acquire the sciences and arts is the greatest glory of mankind, this is so only on condition that man's river flow into the mighty sea, and draw from God's ancient source His inspiration. When this cometh to pass, then every teacher is as a shoreless ocean, every pupil a prodigal fountain of knowledge. If, then, the pursuit of knowledge lead to the beauty of Him Who is the Object of all Knowledge, how excellent that goal; but if not, a mere drop will perhaps shut a man off from flooding grace, for with learning cometh arrogance and pride, and it bringeth on error and indifference to God. The sciences of today are bridges to reality; if then they lead not to reality, naught remains but fruitless illusion. By the one true God! If learning be not a means of access to Him, the Most Manifest, it is nothing but evident loss. The Manifestations of God are .. .in agreement with the view that education exerteth the strongest possible influence on humankind. They affirm, however, that differences in the level of intelligence are innate; and this fact is obvious, and not worth debating. For we see that children of the same age, the same country, the same race, indeed of the same family, and trained by the same individual, still are different as to the degree of their comprehension and intelligence. One will make rapid progress, one will receive instruction only gradually, one will remain at the lowest stage of all. For no matter how much you may polish a shell, it will not tum into a gleaming pearl, nor can you change a dull pebble into a gem whose pure rays will light the world ... That is to say, education cannot alter the inner essence of a man, but it doth exert tremendous influence, and with this power it can bring forth from the individual whatever perfections and capacities are deposited within him. A grain of wheat, when cultivated by the farmer, will yield a whole harvest, and a seed, through the gardener's care, will grow into a great tree. Thanks to a teacher's loving efforts, the children of the primary school may reach the highest levels of achievement; indeed, his benefactions may lift some child of small account to an exalted throne. Thus is it clearly demonstrated that by their essential nature, minds vary as to their capacity, while education also playeth a great role and exerteth a powerful effect on their development. J,,-, Woman's lack of progress and proficiency has been due to her need of equal education and opportunity. Had she been allowed this equality, there is no doubt she would be the counterpart of man in ability and capacity. The happiness of mankind will be realized when women and men coordinate and advance equally, for each is the complement and helpmeet of the other. Jr> To the mothers must be given the divine Teachings and effective counsel, and they must be encouraged and made eager to train their children, for the mother is the first educator of the child. It is she who must, at the very beginning, suckle the newborn at the breast of God's Faith and God's Law, that divine love may enter into him even with his mother's milk, and be with him till his final breath. So long as the mother faileth to train her children, and start them on a proper way of life, the training which they receive later on will not take its full effect. It is incumbent upon the Spiritual Assemblies to provide the mothers with a well-planned program for the education of children, showing how, from infancy, the child must be watched over and taught. These instructions must be given to every mother to serve her as a guide, so that each will train and nurture her children in accordance with the Teachings. Jr> Then it is clear that the honor and exaltation of man must be something more than material riches. Material comforts are only a branch, but the root of the exaltation of man is the good attributes and virtues which are the adornments of his reality. These are the divine appearances, the heavenly bounties, the sublime emotions, the love and knowledge of God; universal wisdom, intellectual perception, scientific discoveries, justice, equity, truthfulness, benevolence, natural courage and innate fortitude; the respect for rights and the keeping of agreements and covenants; rectitude in all circumstances; serving the truth under all conditions; the sacrifice of one's life for the good of all people; kindness and esteem for all nations; obedience to the teachings of God; service in the Divine Kingdom; the guidance of the people, and the education of the nations and races. This is the prosperity of the human world! This is the exaltation of man in the world! This is eternal life and heavenly honor! These virtues do not appear from the reality of man except through the power of God and the divine teachings, for they need supernatural power for their manifestation. It may be that in the world of nature a trace of these perfections may appear, but they are unstable and ephemeral; they are like the rays of the sun upon the wall. As the compassionate God has placed such a wonderful crown upon the head of man, man should strive that its brilliant jewels may become visible in the world . ....10 During thy supplications to God ... consider how thine heart is cheered, thy soul delighted by the spirit of the love of God, and thy mind attracted to the Kingdom of God! By these attractions one's ability and capacity increase. When the vessel is enlarged the water increases, and when the thirst grows the bounty of the cloud becomes agreeable to the taste of man. This is the mystery of supplication and the wisdom of stating one's wants . ....10 The light of the sun becomes apparent in each object according to the capacity of that object. The difference is simply one of degree and receptivity. The stone would be a recipient only to a limited extent; another created thing might be as a mirror wherein the sun is fully reflected; but the same light shines upon both. The most important thing is to polish the mirrors of hearts in order that they may become illumined and receptive of the divine light. One heart may possess the capacity of the polished mirror; another, be covered and obscured by the dust and dross of this world. Although the same Sun is shining upon both, in the mirror which is polished, pure and sanctified you may behold the Sun in all its fullness, glory, and power, revealing its majesty and effulgence; but in the mirror which is rusted and obscured there is no capacity for reflection, although so far as the Sun itself is concerned it is shining thereon and is neither lessened nor deprived. Therefore, our duty lies in seeking to polish the mirrors of our hearts in order that we shall become reflectors of that light and recipients of the divine bounties which may be fully revealed through them. FROM THE UNIVERSAL HOUSEoF JUSTICE S ince its first election in 1963, the Universal House of Justice has directed and coordinated the worldwide activities of the Baha'i community. Originally ordained in the writings of Baha'u'llah, the administrative structure of the Baha'i Faith was defined by 'Abdu'l-Baha and was raised up during the Guardianship of Shoghi Effendi. A solid foundation of Local and National Spiritual Assemblies was laid, and at that historic juncture when the Baha'i Faith had spread widely enough and national communities were stable, the structure was capable of supporting an international governing body, the Universal House of Justice. Baha'is around the world now turn to it for vision and direction, for the further application of the laws of Baha'u' llah, and for inspiration. Ri9van 156 B.E. Message In its message to the worldwide Baha'i community at Ri<;lvan in April 1999, the Universal House of Justice both reviewed the accomplishments of what it termed a "community in a dynamic state of transformation" and surveyed its future prospects. The House of Justice began by noting the momentum generated by the Eighth International Baha'i Convention as the Baha'i community entered the final year of its Four Year Plan. Signs of that momentum were apparent in the establishment of three new National Spiritual Assemblies, 1 progress made on the Mount Cannel Projects at the Baha'i World Centre, an increase in the size of pilgrim groups, and the translation and planned publication of texts from the writings of Baha'u 'llah. The development of training institutes-at that date, 344, which had provided at least one course to some 70,000 people- and the emergence of Regional Baha'i Councils were given as indications of the growing strength of Baha'i communities, as was the involvement of communities and individuals in social and economic development. Accomplishments in external affairs and the increasing use of the arts in the Baha'i community were also noted. Looking ahead, the House of Justice called for the fonnation of more new National Spiritual Assemblies. 2 It also announced two significant upcoming events: the inauguration of the new Centre for the International Counsellors at the Baha'i World Centre with a gathering of Counsellors and Members of the Auxiliary Boards in January 2001, and the official inauguration of the Terraces of the Shrine of the Bab in May 2001. Contrasting "the confident vision that propels the constructive endeavors of an illumined community" with the "tangled fears" of millions around the globe, the House of Justice urged Baha'is everywhere to become fully engaged in pursuit of the ultimate objective of making it possible for the world's peoples "to build a united, peaceful and prosperous life." 26 November 1999 Some seven months later, on the Day of the Covenant, 26 November 1999, the Universal House of Justice took the Sabah, Sarawak, and Slovakia; see The Baha 'i World 1998- 99, pp. 53- 58 . The letter origina ll y ca ll ed for the format ion of new National Spiritual Assemb li es in Latvia, Lithuani a, and Macedonia, but condition s in the latter co untry later prompted the House of Justice to postpone the formation of the National Assemb ly there. TH E U NIVE RSAL H OUSE OF J USTICE opportunity to provide a further review of the community's progress and prospects. It particularly noted the growth of the worldwide network of training institutes and the effort to develop formal programs and systematically deliver courses. By that point, institutes had reached some 100,000 people, resulting in "a greatly strengthened community, internally sound and notably reinforced." Achievements in external affairs, in social and economic development, and in the ability of the Baha'i community to reach out to and win the trust of the general public, governments, and organizations of civil society were also noted. Looking ahead, the Universal House of Justice announced that at Ri<;lvan 2000 the Baha'i community would embark on a worldwide Twelve Month Plan "aimed at concentrating the forces, the capacities and the insights" that had emerged through the Four Year Plan. Following those twelve months, a Five Year Plan will initiate "a series of worldwide enterprises that will carry the Baha'i community through the final twenty years in the first century of the Faith's FonnativeAge." 3 In preparation for those "worldwide enterprises," the Baha'i community must bring institute programs into full operation and further systematize its efforts to teach the Baha'i Faith. "Area Growth Programs" in targeted regions of each continent will contribute to this process, and what is learned from them will be incorporated into future plans. The House of Justice urged that particular emphasis be given to children, and that "definite steps be taken to ensure that the vision of the community fully embraces its younger members." At a moment when "keen interest is being shown by leaders of thought in the destiny of the coming generations," the Universal House of Justice expressed its hope that "the Baha'i community, both in its internal operation and its interactions with society, will convey a sense of confidence in the future of humanity." The Formative Age of the Baha'i Faith began with the pass ing of 'Abdu' l- Baha in 1921. 28December1999 The enrichment of the spiritual life of the Baha'i community was the theme of a letter written on 28 December 1999 by the Universal House of Justice, which said, "In every land we see a growing thirst for spiritual life and moral clarity. There is recognition of the ineffectiveness of plans and programs for human betterment which are not rooted in lives of spiritual awareness and ethical virtue." In this context, the House of Justice announced the universal application of all Baha'i laws pertaining to obligatory prayer, fasting and the recitation of the Greatest Name ninety-five times a day-all of which, it noted, directly foster individual devotional life and so affect the community as a whole. 4 Further, noting that "The spiritual growth generated by individual devotions is reinforced by loving association among the friends in every locality, by worship as a community and by service to the Faith and to one's fellow human beings," the House of Justice called upon Baha'i communities to hold regular worship meetings open to all and to become involved in projects of humanitarian service. Other Letters In a letter dated 24 August 1999, the House of Justice, noting that Turkey is "a land held sacred in the hearts of Baha'is" because of its historic associations with Baba 'u 'llah, expressed its grief at the suffering and loss brought about by the devastating earthquake there. It informed all National Spiritual Assemblies that it had arranged for a financial contribution to be made to the relief effort and for condolences to be extended to the country's president. The passing of Hand of the Cause of God Amatu'l-Baha Rul:iiyyih Khanum on 19 January 2000 occasioned a moving letter of tribute, which was addressed to the worldwide community and was followed shortly after by an account of her funeral. 5 Some laws revealed by Baha ' u ' ll ah in the Kitab-i-Aqdas not yet universa ll y binding a nd are being progressively app li ed by the Universal Ho use of Justice as th e Baha'i community matures. 5 See pp . 167- 96 for a retrospective artic le o n the life of Amatu'l-B a ha Rl'1J:iiyy ih Khan um and the text of the letter of tribute. T HE U NIVERSAL H OUSE OF J USTICE The passing of member of the Universal House of Justice Adib Taherzadeh on 23 January 2000, 6 the subsequent election of Kiser Barnes to the Universal House of Justice, and the appointment of Zenaida Ramirez to the International Teaching Centre were also announced in letters to the Baha'i community. In support of its call for the further development of Baha'i Institutes and the systematic growth of the community, in March 2000 the House of Justice released a seminal document on this topic which offers an overview of the advancement of the institute process since April 1998, when the first document on the subject was released. See obituary, pp. 311 - 12. EVENTS 1999-2000 View of the Shrine of the Bab.fi"om the lower terraces, at dusk. MOUNT CARMEL PROJECTS Progress 1999- 2000 "\l. Then Baha'u' llah visited Mount Cannel as a prisoner of the VV Ottoman empire in the late nineteenth century, He indicated the place on the then barren mountain that would someday become the spiritual and administrative center for Baha'is around the world. On that spot now stands the Shrine of the Bab, the centerpiece for the Baha'i projects on the mountain. Now, a little more than a hundred years after Baha'u'llah's visit, the terraced gardens that complement the Shrine and the buildings that house the administrative center of the Baha'i world will be completed within the next year. The Ric;ivan 1999 message of the Universal House ofJustice set the pace of work for the remaining months of the twentieth century, listing "a chronology of expectations" for the period ahead, and making two significant announcements: first, the holding of a Counsellors ' Conference in the Holy Land in January 2001 to "mark the occupation by the International Teaching Centre of its permanent seat"; and second, following the completion of the Mount Carmel Projects, the holding of dedicatory events between 21 and 25 May 2001. The goals thus set, the Mount Carmel Projects team continued its labors. Terraces of the Shrine of the Bab A major challenge has been to maintain the gardens on the Terraces of the Shrine of the Bab in harmony with the mountain environment. By the summer of 1999, the pattern for a new phase of the landscaping program was established. This program entailed the creation of wildlife corridors to provide a sustainable environment for beneficial birds, insects, and other wildlife that act as natural pest deterrents. The gardens maintenance program will rely on practices such as cultivation, mulching, and plant competition, rather than the extensive use of chemicals. Implementation of this program, however, required the completion of the formal axis of the Terraces, centered around the long stairway that stretches their length, and the gradual extension from this axis into slopes designed as an open garden park bordered on both sides with large strips of natural forest. The Terrace gardens are designed in three zones. The central axis is formal in layout, with lawns, annual flower beds, santolina hedges, geometrically pmned bushes and trees, and other ornamental details. Bordering this axis are transition-garden slopes planted mainly with flowering trees, olive and oak trees, and perennial bushes characteristic of the Middle East. With the completion of the first two zones, the areas beyond were left free to develop into natural forest to serve as wildlife corridors. It was Th e double-storied structure of the nineteenth terrace on Panorama Street. M OUNT C ARMEL P ROJECTS Stone ornaments, paving, and.fountains on the nineteenth terrace, which looks out over Haifa. not long before several small birds indigenous to the mountain returned to nest-blue kingfishers, sunbirds, finches, and quail. Returning, too, were a host of beneficial insects like the ladybird and preying mantis, and animals such as the mongoose, the hedgehog, and the land tortoise. These natural forest areas not only began to provide a protected environment for such creatures, but also served as a buffer zone between the gardens and surrounding residential areas, providing natural barriers to the sights and sounds of the city. In 1994, the Universal House of Justice wrote: "the beauty and magnificence of the Gardens and Terraces now under development are symbolic of the nature of the transformation which is destined to occur both within the hearts of the world's peoples and in the physical environment of the planet." 1 These words continue to provide inspiration for the planning and care of the gardens. On 17 August 1999, a significant milestone in the Mount Carmel Projects was reached when the bridge over Hatzionut Avenue was used for the first time. The bridge connects the terrace of the Shrine of the Bab with the eleventh terrace. Th e Universal House of Justi ce, letter to all National Sp iritu al Assemb li es, 4 Ja nuary 1994. During this period, work gained momentum at the site of the entrance plaza of the Terraces at the junction of Hagefen Street and Ben Gurion Avenue. Excavations of more than one thousand cubic meters of earth were completed, and a large underground mechanical room was constructed to support the elaborate water features designed for the plaza. A tubewell was drilled nearby to supplement water resources for the gardens, extensive plumbing work and installation of pipes was undertaken, and geometric curves and aqua drains were constructed. The concrete structure of the star-shaped central fountain was erected, forming the centerpiece of the plaza. Th e Centre/or the Study o.f the Texts, the International Archives Building, and the Shrine of the Bab. The Centre for the Study of the Texts and the Archives Extension Another landmark in the projects, the completion of the Centre for the Study of the Texts and the Archives Extension, was reached in April 1999. The offices of the building manager, the building facilities manager, and security were soon set up, and other offices gradually moved into the premises. On 4 July 1999, more than 150 key participants from the main contractor's site team, the Mount Carmel Projects team, and the subcontractors of all trades came together with Mr. Giora Perez, the managing director of Perez G.G. Engineers, and Mr. Fariborz Sahba, project manager, to celebrate this achievement. Mr. Sahba, while conveying the appreciation of the Universal House of Justice, expressed his gratitude to all concerned for collaborating to complete the buildings on time and for being conscious of M O UNT C ARMEL PI~OJE CT S quality in all the work accomplished. The spirit of cooperation evident on the site, he said, resulted in the construction of one of the finest quality structures in Israel. Mr. Perez reiterated his deep appreciation for the teamwork and said how his workers would treasure the privilege of participating in these projects throughout their lives. Th e entrance lounge of' the Centre/or the Study of'the Texts. The International Teaching Centre As the Centre for the Study of the Texts and the Archives Extension were completed and occupied, the building of the International Teaching Centre also rapidly approached completion. Production of mill work, such as partitions for the dining rooms, shelves and tables for the mail room, display cabinets for the book center, and panelling for the auditorium, proceeded. The first four levels of the common area will accommodate various departments, and other staff facilities are also located there. By November 1999, millwork had been installed on all these levels, and marble paving in the foyer of the auditorium and the staff dining room at levels four and five had been completed. All levels of the building received their final coat of paint and carpet tiles were laid in the office spaces. By March 2000, the council chamber for the International Counsellors was also completed. Concomitant with the internal finishing work, extensive stone cladding on the external walls was completed, and preparations were made for landscaping around the Teaching Centre complex. Thousands of cubic meters of earth were moved to allow the grading of the slopes, with much of the backfill material coming from the excavations on the Terraces. Green tiles were installed on the Exterior of the new International Teaching Centre building. roof of the Teaching Centre building, hannonizing its appearance with the other buildings on the Arc. New Pilgrim Facilities in Haifa and Bahji In its Ric;lvin 1999 message, the Universal House of Justice conveyed its decision to implement an expanded pilgrimage program, raising the number of pilgrims from groups of 100 to 150, upon completion of a new pilgrim reception centre in Haifa, located on Hatzionut Street across from the Monument Gardens. The new property comprises two structures which formerly served as medical laboratories. While the original fa<;;ades of the two buildings on the property were restored, their interiors were fully remodelled to create large formal spaces. Restoration work commenced in July 1998 and was completed by March 2000. A hall, with a seating capacity of 350, was created in the main level of one building, which also contains a lounge, kitchen, and dining facilities. Reception areas and offices were created in the other building, and a pedestrian bridge now connects the two. The Universal House of Justice also approved architectural plans "for a much needed facility to be built at Bahji to accommodate pilgrims and other Baha' i and non-Baha'i visitors." 2 Excavations began on 9 April 2000 and a week later an official The Uni versal Hou se of Ju stice, message to the Ba ha' is of the world , 2 l April 2000. M OUNT C Al:ZMEL PROJECTS ceremony was organized by the Baha'i World Centre to mark the commencement of work. Prominent among the 160 invitees were the mayor of Acre and others from the municipality. Representatives from the Greek Orthodox Church and the Islamic Waqf also attended, as did Professor Moshe Sharon, incumbent of the Chair for Baha'i Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The Baha'i World Centre was represented by Albert Lincoln, secretary general of the Baha'i International Community, and Fariborz Sahba, architect and project manager. A bird s eye view of the progress on the Terraces and the Arc. Recognition of the Projects Since excavations for the construction of the Terraces commenced in May 1990, the face of Mount Carmel has been transformed. And although they are not yet fully complete, the Terrace gardens are now attracting world attention. On 25 May 1999, at a ceremony held at the residence of the president oflsrael in Jerusalem, the Baha'i World Centre received the Magshim '99 Award for the Terraces of the Shrine of the Bab. The Terraces project was one of five selected for the award, given by the Council for a Beautiful Israel, a non-governmental organization. Mrs. Aura Herzog, widow of the late president of Israel Chaim Herzog and international president of the Council for a Beautiful Israel, presented the award to Fariborz Sahba, who received it on behalf of the Baha'i World Centre. In her introductory remarks, Mrs. Herzog said, "This is the second time that the renowned Baha'i gardens have won the MagshimAward .. .this time for the extraordinary final stage of the terraces development that has taken place over the last decade. Today, the gardens are of umnatched beauty, and they were judged without rival. . . We have even heard them categorized as ... one of the wonders of the world." The Fourteenth International Agricultural Exhibition (Agritech '99), organized by the Israel Export Institute, was held in Haifa from 5 to 9 September 1999. Some nine thousand participants from around the world converged on Haifa for this event. More than two hundred ministers and high ranking officials from many nations were escorted to the Shrine of the Bab and the Terraces on an official visit. Baha'i ushers, many of whom were attired in their national costumes, represented a wide spectrum of nationalities and presented a visible testimony to the worldwide scope of the Baha'i community. Throughout the tour, Agritech participants remarked on the beauty of the gardens. One of the ministers commented, "In a beautiful environment people tend to become beautiful. I feel in this beautiful and special atmosphere I can recognize beauty in others." The booklet The Bahri 'i Shrine and Gardens on Mount Carmel, Ha?fa- Israel, first published by the municipality of Haifa early in 1999, is now available in Japanese, .Chinese, Arabic, and Portuguese, as well as French, German, Hebrew, Russian, Spanish, Italian, and English. The booklet contains photographs of the Shrine of the Bab, the surrounding terraces, and the buildings on the Arc . It also describes the historical roots of the Baha'i Faith in the Holy Land. Several Israeli publications carried articles highlighting the beauty of the gardens and focusing on the historical connection between the Baha'i Faith and the Holy Land. The Shrine of the Bab and the Terraces were also filmed as one segment in the world-wide coverage of millennium celebrations, broadcast on 1 January 2000 on BBC and ABC. It is estimated that the program was seen by close to a billion viewers. New NATIONAL ,\SPIRITUAL J-iSSEMBLIES T he Baha'i Faith was first introduced to the Baltic States in 1927, when Martha Root-journalist and preeminent international teacher of the religion-visited the region. Sixty-five years later, in 1992, the collapse of the Soviet Union made possible the fonnation of the first Regional Spiritual Assembly of the Baltic States, to administer the Baha'i communities of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. At Ric;!van 1999, owing to the maturation of the Baha'i communities in these countries, separate National Spiritual Assemblies were established in Latvia and Lithuania, and the former Regional Spiritual Assembly of the Baltic States became the National Assembly of Estonia. Consequently the total number of National Spiritual Assemblies around the world reached 181. Nearly eighty years ago, 'Abdu'l-Baha specified the purpose of these institutions in His Will and Testament, describing them as "secondary Houses of Justice." Their function is not only to manage the needs of each national Baha'i community and to act as a representative of the Baha'is to the civil authorities, but also TI-IE BAHA'I W ORL D Members of the.first National Spiritu al Assembly of Latvia with Counsellors Mai/a Philainen, Hartmut Grossman, and Polin Rc!fat (rear row, .fi'om leji to right). to serve as the electorate for the Universal House of Justice. The first of these secondary Houses of Justice was established in 1923, under the direction of Shoghi Effendi, and given the temporary appellation National Spiritual Assemblies. The Universal House of Justice decides when a national community has progressed enough to warrant the formation of a National Assembly. In addition to unifying and coordinating the activities amongst the Local Spiritual Assemblies and Baha'is within their respective countries, National Assemblies constitute the major links between the national communities and the Universal House of Justice. The Assemblies are elected in a unique democratic process, without campaigning or nominations. Delegates from proportionally assigned electoral units within each country come together annually to vote for the members of that country 's National Assembly. Latvia The first Baha' i national convention of Latvia was held in the House of Architects, in the Old Town of Riga, on 29 and 30 April 1999. Approximately forty people attended, including Maija Philainen and Polin Rafat, both members of the Continental Board of Counsellors in Europe; members of the former Regional Assembly also attended. Hartmut Grossman, Counsellor member of the International Teaching Centre, represented the Universal House of Justice. Mr. Grossman read the message of the Universal House of Justice to the Latvian community, which expressed its "hope that the deliberations of that gathering [the national convention] have N EW N ATIONAL SPIRITUAL A SSHlBLIES provided direction for your future initiatives and will result in glorious victories throughout your country." Members representing seven different nationalities and ethnic groups were elected to the new National Assembly at the convention. During the convention proceedings, the Assembly consulted with delegates on a number of issues immediately facing the Latvian Baha' i community, such as the advancement of efforts to spread the Baha' i teachings within the country, training institutes, and the consolidation and training of local communities. Sylvia Vice, an ethnic Latvian who grew up in Canada but returned to Latvia in 1989, gave a personal account of the early history of the Baha'is in that country. All Local Spiritual Assemblies in Latvia are registered with the government, and the new National Assembly is currently in the process of seeking registration. Members of the first Na tional Spiritual Assembly of Lithuania, with Counsellors Hartmut Grossman, and Maija Phi/ainen (sea ted in center). Lithuania Lithuania's first National Spiritual Assembly was elected during the country's national convention on 1and2 May, 1999, in Vilnius. Continental Counsellor Maija Philainen attended, as did members of the Auxiliary Board, members of the former Regional Assembly, and thirty-five others, including representatives from all local Baha'i communities in Lithuania and visitors from surrounding countries. The proceedings were conducted in Lithuanian, with translation into English. Hartmut Grossman, representing the Universal House of Justice, conveyed its special message to the Lithuanian Baha'is, which stated in part, "A new chapter in the history of the Faith in your country is opening. You can render no greater service to your people than sharing the life-giving Message of Baha'u'llah with your fellow citizens ... " Mr. Grossman also offered a detailed analysis of the Four Year Plan, focusing particularly on the increase in human resources of the Baha'i community, the development of which requires the effort of each individual and the goal of which is constant progress towards the personal and community ideals set forth by Baha'u'llah in His teachings. A special tribute was paid to Helen Smith, the first Baha'i to settle in Lithuania, who is currently serving as director of the national training institute and was elected to the new National Assembly. The convention also welcomed the first Lithuanian Baha'i fami ly into the community-a couple and their two children, who became Baha'is a few days before the convention, in the town of Krelinga. Seven of the nine members elected to the National Spiritual Assembly were native Lithuanians, and two were pioneers from other countries. The Universal House of Justice expressed high hopes for the region, saying, in a message written shortly after the election of the Assembly, "The doors are open wide for your Baha'i community to attain unprecedented growth in the years immediately ahead." The Future In messages to the Baha'is and the Assemblies of both countries, the Universal House of Justice stressed the importance of unity to the continued success of the Baha'i communities in these countries, which are viewed by much of the outside world as internally divided and lacking social cohesion. The fact that these fledgling Baha'i communities have matured during a time of upheaval gives them the opportunity to serve as a unifying force in a region beset with divisions of nationality, ethnicity, and culture, and the concurrent ills that clinging to these differences bring. THE YEARrN REVIEW n the century and a half since its inception, the Baha'i Faith . I has grown from a small, isolated community into a worldwide body, with more than five million members in virtually every nation in the world . Under the guidance of Baha ' u'llah's administrative framework the community continues to grow, progress, and develop every year. This article surveys events and activities of the Baha' i world during the period between Ric;lvan 1999 and Ric;lvan 2000. Baha'u'llah wrote, "the earth is but one country and mankind its citizens." Baha'is around the world are striving both to unify and to consolidate their own communities and to improve conditions in the wider society by initiating social and economic development projects; promoting the cause of peace and intergovernmental cooperation; implementing programs of moral education; developing human resources through training institutes; increasing racial, ethnic, and tribal harmony through dialogue and cooperation; supp011ing human rights; fostering use of the arts; and promoting scholarship. Internally, the _Baha'is strive to create distinctive communities by such means as establishing local and national Baha'i centers, gaining legal recognition for Baha'i institutions, strengthening relationships with other religions and leaders of thought, and gathering in regional and national Baha'i conferences to consult and build wider bonds of unity. Baha'i community development is designed to promote creativity, build capacity, and develop distinctive social patterns. Beyond these activities, Baha'is are teaching their Faith to the people of the world, an undertaking which 'Abdu'l-Baha called "the greatest of all divine bestowals." This constitutes more for Baha'is than a mere numerical increase; it is a responsibility to humanity- to share the teachings which they believe are the means for the advancement of the whole human race. The sheer number of activities makes this record far from comprehensive. Instead, it aims to provide a general overview of the evolving range and sophistication of both local and national activities, and perhaps give some insight into the challenges of building a global community. Africa ANGOLA- Twenty-one people participated in Angola's first Baha'i study course on the advancement of women, held from 3 to 6 May 1999. The participants in the all-day sessions studied the theme of spiritual empowerment in Baha'u' llah's writings. In addition to Participants in a Baha'i deepening on the empowerment of women in Luanda, Angola, in May 1999. the all-day study sessions, the participants learned and sang new songs. BENIN- The regional women's committee of the Sahel hosted a conference in Parakou in August 1999. More than 150 Baha'is from Benin, Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, and Togo attended the event, which was covered on local radio and regional television. The departmental director of the Ministry for Women's Affairs of Borgu attended. The conference was preceded by two days of workshops, a visit to the authorities of Parakou, and visits to nearby localities. BOTSWANA-The summer school organized by the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Botswana, in collaboration with the Provincial Baha'i Council of the North-West in South Africa, was the first to be held entirely in the Setswana language and the first to be held for all Batswana peoples on both sides of the Botswana- South Africa border. The gathering took place in Mmabatho, South Africa, from 16 to 21 December 1999. Dithapelo Tsa Baha 'i, the first Baha'i prayer book in the Setswana language, was published in September 2000, after five years of effort. It is also the first hardcover book produced by the Botswanan Baha'i community. BURKINA-Four regional women's conferences and four youth conferences were held in Burkina during the period under review. Between November 1999 and January 2000, Burkina's recently formed drama group Light of Unity toured parts of the country and performed before some 4,800 people, of whom more than 350 became Baha'is. The group also met with traditional chiefs and government and religious officials. Jean Jacques Yem of Cote d'Ivoire spent a month in Burkina training Baha'i youth in the use of the arts to teach the Baha'i Faith. CAMEROON- The Baha'i youth of Douala participated in the city's parade to commemorate the International Day of the African Child on 17 June 1999. Later, during a program in the village hall of Akwa, the youth performed a "Dance of Unity" which they had choreographed and sang songs they had composed. The program was presided over by a provincial representative of the ministry Tl IE B AHA'f W OI. SEYCHELLES- In the Seychelles, Baha'i holy days are now regularly announced on radio, TV, and in newspapers. There was also national media coverage of the laying of the foundation stone of the new national center, and a feature program on SBC TV on the statement Who is Writing the Future ?, which also received coverage in the national newspaper Seychelles Nation. SIERRA LEONE-In recognition and appreciation of the constructive ideas offered by two Baha'is during a television interview concerning the peace process, members of the Baha'i community Y- EAR- [N R - EVIEW - of Sierra Leone were invited to participate in two subsequent interviews on national radio in the spring of 1999. The first focused on the role of religion in nation building, and a member of the Local Spiritual Assembly of Freetown gave a Baha'i perspective on the topic. The second interview focused exclusively on the Baha'i Faith. SWAZILAND-Baha'i work in education in Swaziland advanced from the established six preschools and one primary school to include a Baha'i high school, known as Setsembiso Sebunye High School, which opened its doors to 107 students in January 2000. The building, housing the first two forms for a five-year program, will be expanded over the next five years. This will culminate in an education complex on a four-hectare campus for one thousand students by 2005. The school aims to include moral and spiritual education, advanced information technology starting from primary school, and a community development outreach program of service to the greater community. The Baha'is in Swaziland also recently dedicated their new local center in Nginamadolo. The previous local Baha'i center in the area became the first Baha'i primary school and is now administered by the government. TANZANIA- On 3 December 1999, seventeen Baha'is, including thirteen secondary school students, traveled from Iringa to Mbozi to begin a ten-day teaching trip sponsored by the Local Spiritual Assembly of Iringa. The group had prepared for the trip by organizing a program of songs, puppet shows, and introductory A study session/or Baha 'i scouts held in Scio Tome and Principe. Counsellor member of the In ternationa / Teaching Centre Joan Lincoln (rew; sixth/iwn left) with participants in a leaching conference in Maradi, Niga talks about the Baha'i Faith. The group was received warmly in each village they visited, with audiences ranging in size from one hundred to five hundred people. TOGO-Sixty-five members from twelve Local Spiritual Assemblies-four from Burkina Faso and eight from Togo-met in Papri, Togo, for two days in May 1999 to discuss teaching, the advancement of women, children 's education, and the importance of holding Nineteen Day Feasts in their respective Baha' i communities. The first part of the conference was followed by an evening fireside, which was followed by focused teaching campaigns throughout the country. UGAN DA-A large number of religious leaders representing the Catholic Church, the Church of Uganda, Orthodox Christians, other Christian denominations, the Muslim community, and the Baha'i community were invited to a workshop in Kampala on religious tolerance. The workshop was sponsored by the development organizations Always Be Tolerant, SNV Netherlands, GTZ Germany, and the German Development Service and was held on 17 February 2000. Participants discussed the need for religious unity and obstacles to it, the use of consultation and other tools to solve conflicts, particularly in connection to the fourteen-year civil war raging in the north of the country, and prospects for Ugandan social and economic development. George Olinga of the National Spiritual Assembly chaired both the morning and afternoon sessions. Y -EAR IN - R- EVIEW - ZAMBIA-A regional seminar for Baha'i headmen was held in Sinazongwe, Zambia, from 11to13 June 1999, with nineteen traditional leaders attending. The purpose of the meeting was to provide an opportunity for the headmen to meet and interact, to deepen their knowledge of the Faith, and to consult about the best ways to strengthen their respective Baha'i communities. ZIMBABWE- The Local Spiritual Assembly of the Baha' is of Bulawayo organized a seminar called "Curriculum for the Twenty-First Century," held on 9 June 1999. Representatives from twenty-two of the region 's sixty-three primary schools attended, as did seven secondary school teachers and staff and lecturers from the National University of Science and Technology. As part of their attempts to put into practice the Baha'i teachings on education, the Baha ' is of Mubayira inaugurated their first Baha' i preschool in October. --- 7 :"" 7" ... ... ... ... ... Afhcan Baha 'is, including many who traveled fi-om Rwanda to participate in a youth conf erence, pose in fi"onl of' the House of Worship in Kampala, Uganda. The Americas ALASKA-Hundreds of Baha' is from all comers of the state responded to the programs and courses of the Alaska Baha'i Institute, participating in courses, conferences, and training sessions. Two training conferences focused on development skills for Local Spiritual Assemblies, training in the fundamental verities of the Baha'i Faith, skills for teaching, and training for facilitators of the institute 's courses. The ABI developed a statewide network of course facilitators, increasing their number from sixteen to seventy-six facilitators, and brought the institute 's courses to about four hundred people in more than thirty towns and villages. ARGENTINA-Some thirty members of Argentina's Local Spiritual Assemblies gathered at the national Baha'i center in Buenos Aires for two days of consultations in October 1999. Training sessions were held in inter-Assembly cooperation, the training institute process, and the role of officers. In addition, an entire day was spent discussing the role of Assemblies in handling personal matters. Participants were also able to spend half a day in consultation with the National Spiritual Assembly. BAHAMAS-On 21January2000, the Baha'is of the Bahamas were given a thirty-minute slot on national television, free of charge, to air "The Power of Prayer" video program produced by the Baha'i community in the United States. BARBADOS-The national women's committee of the Baha'is of Barbados cosponsored a two-day workshop called "Women Speak Across Faiths-Action and Reflection." The Baha'is participated in panel discussions sponsored by the gender studies department of the University of the West Indies and organized a dance Men and women study training institute ma terials in Sucre, Boli via. Youth at the Third Ba hit 'i Gathering ojAjiáo- Descendants in Brazil. presentation entitled "Healing Battered Women" at the same university. Local daily newspapers covered all of the events. BELIZE- The first national Baha'i children's conference of Belize took place in August 1999, in Belmopan. After prayers there was a discussion of the Baha'i teachings about race unity. Stories, songs, and other activities reinforced the lesson of beauty in diversity. BERMUDA- Bermuda's Baha' i youth workshop met every week during the summer. Workshop members made contributions to the Baha'i summer school in August, held a spiritual gathering later that month, and were guests on the "Baha'i Live" radio program. BOLIVIA- More than six hundred Baha'is, including hundreds of Quechuas and scores of Aymaras from Bolivia and Peru, as well as representatives of the Mapuche from Chile and Argentina, the Wichi from Argentina, the Guaymi from Panama and Costa Rica, and the Kariri Xoco and Fulni-6 from Brazil, attended the second Encounter of the Native Peoples of the Americas, held in Sucre for two days in August 1999. The event reflected the growth of the Baha'i Faith in Quechua and Aymara communities. Participants consulted about the progress of their respective Baha'i communities, specifically examined the elements of their native cultures which help or hinder their Baha'i development, and shared music and dance. BRAZIL- The fifth annual World Citizenship Awards, sponsored by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Brazil, were presented in Rio de Janeiro on 8 December 1999. A jury composed of members of eight non-governmental organizations and the Baha'i community recognized six individuals and four institutions for their outstanding contributions to the development of society and the promotion of peace and understanding. CANADA-In July 1999, the Baha'i community of Canada was invited to offer prayers and readings during the devotional program of a special event at Rideau Hall, the official residence of the governor-general, which was hosted by the wife of the governor-general, Her Excellency Diane Fowler LeBlanc. More than fifteen hundred guests , including diplomats , businessmen, members of NGOs, artists, and academics participated in the "Celebration of Life,'' held to thank those who had worked in various health and peace-related projects. The multifaith devotional program featured prayer, readings, music, a tree planting, and the release of a flight of doves. Representatives of the National Spiritual Assemblies of Alaska, Canada, Finland, Greenland, Norway, the Russian Federation, Sweden, and the United States, as well as members of the Baha'i Council of Lapland, the Auxiliary Board, and Baha' is from ten local communities in the Canadian north, met for the first circumpolar Baha' i conference, held in Yellowknife, North west Territories, from 24 to 26 September. The theme of the conference was "Creating a Culture of Growth in the Circumpolar Regions"- a response to the Ric;lvan 1996 message from the Universal House of Justice, which urged greater cooperation between the North American and Asiatic Baha'i communities. Among the challenges facing Baha'is in the circumpolar areas are recovery from the lingering effects of colonialism, human rights violations, environmental degradation, racism, gender inequality, difficulties facing youth, social scourges such as alcoholism and family abuse, and the pressures of social conformity. In meeting these challenges, the importance of prayer, devotional meetings, and support from other Baha' i communities was stressed. YEAl:( IN RE VIE W CHILE-A National Unity Gathering was held for two days in September 1999 in Santiago. Sponsored by the National Spiritual Assembly, the gathering brought together two hundred Baha'is, including four members of the Continental Board of Counsellors and all nine members of the National Assembly. The conference was designed to focus the community's efforts on two main objectives: increasing the number of institute study circles and teaching more intensively in the Mapuche Indian region in the south and in the northern Copiapo desert. COLOMBIA- Large numbers of Baha'is are now involved in the Ruhi training institute programs with more than 5,300 participants in some 250 study classes throughout the country. COSTA RICA-An interreligious gathering for peace was held on 9 January 2000 as Costa Rica's opening event for the International Year for a Culture of Peace. The activity, which was attended by about two hundred people, took place in front of the Basilica of Los Angeles in Cartago and included statements, prayers, meditations, and songs led by Baha'i, Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, and indigenous representatives. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC-In the smmner of 1999, the Baha'i community of Santiago invited representatives of the media to discuss statements and principles found in the recently released statement, Who is Writing the Future? The exchange took place in front of a live audience with a panel composed of Fernando Perez Memem, editor of the newspaper La Informaci6n; Gladializa Pereyra, television producer and anchorwoman; Jose Gutierrez, radio and television producer; Carlos Manuel Estrella, producer; and Paul Peralta, representative of the Baha'i community. While the panelists offered a variety of viewpoints on the history of mankind, all agreed on the need for the development of more spiritual qualities in the future. EAST LEEWARD ISLANDS- Donald and Christine Brown from Canada visited Antigua and Montserrat during the last months of 1999. On Antigua, Mr. Brown spoke at a public meeting on the Jn Bolivia, Baha 'is are engaged in fam ify literacy projects, which include early literacy for preschool children. Baha'i attitude toward the third millennium. Both were interviewed on radio and television and by two local newspapers. ECUADOR- The Baha'i community of Ecuador engaged in many activities for children and youth. Among them were a regional youth conference that drew fifty-five youth from Chile, Ecuador, and the United States, and a children's camp in Cuicocha, which had thirty-five participants. EL SALVADOR-El Salvador's Baha'i community offered to conduct a training workshop for the country's newly formed national committee on education in human rights and, on 10 December 1999, participated in a commemoration of the fifty-first anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights. A committee composed of members of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a consortium of NGOs, and agencies of the United Nations system organized the event. In January 2000, a Baha'i representative participated in a workshop on "Culture of Peace" in commemoration of the eighth anniversary of the peace accords in El Salvador, which was sponsored by the Commission on Culture of Peace of the Legislative Assembly, the University of Peace of Costa Rica, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Copies of documents produced by the Baha'i International Community relating to the topic were shared with more than seventy participants. FRENCH GUIANA- Baha' is as young as ten years old participated in the Pearls of the Caribbean teaching project, forming a dance group that was used as a catalyst for teaching the Baha' i Faith. During July and August 1999, three Baha'is from Haiti and two Y- IN RE EAR- - VIEW - from Guadeloupe, one from Germany, and one from Quebec, Canada, joined thirteen youth in French Guiana, where they studied material developed by the Ruhi Institute and were taught dances created by the Diversity Dance Workshop . After the two-week program, they gave three presentations to the public, were interviewed for a report on the Baha'i community during a regional news program, and received coverage in three full -page newspaper articles. GRENADA-A Baha'i family prepared and arranged a series of locally produced television programs to proclaim the teachings and principles of the Baha'i Faith in Grenada. GUADELOUPE-In August 1999, the Pearls of the Caribbean teaching project traveled to Guadeloupe where participants joined nine Baha'i youth from Guadeloupe and Martinique and several adults in a human rights education project. The group contacted local authorities to discuss Baha'i involvement in the field of human rights and to obtain permission to perform dances related to the subject. Perfonnances were announced on radio and television and were covered in local newspapers, and one television station produced a twenty-minute interview with a local Baha'i. Th e Sparks of Peace project in Ge0tgetown, Guyana, brought together you th .fi'om all over the Ca ribbean region. GUYANA- For twelve years the Sparks of Peace project has operated during the summer to help create a Caribbean Baha'i youth identity. Twenty-four young Baha'is from Antigua, Barbados, Jamaica, St. Eustatius, St. Lucia, St. Kitts/Nevis, and Trinidad and Tobago composed the team for summer 1999. Based in Guyana, the team first met for two weeks of training and orientation, then formed teams and traveled for some weeks throughout Guyana, teaching the Baha'i Faith. The Local Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Georgetown, Guyana, was able to finalize arrangements related to the acquisition ofland for a local Baha'i center in December. HONDURAS- Six of the nine Pech Indian villages in the Department of Olancho were represented at the Pech Baha'i Congress held in Vallecito from 20 to 21 December. Four of the five chiefs present were Baha'is, joining more than eighty other participants. Also attending were Rolf von Czekus, a Counsellor member of the International Teaching Centre, and Ruth Pringle, a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors for the Americas. Themes of the conference were preserving cultural identity, the growth of the Baha'i community, and improving the quality of bilingual education for children . Sacred Pech music, along with other music, was performed. The secretary of the Federation of Pech Indian Tribes of Honduras expressed his interest in working closely with the National Spiritual Assembly on projects related to the cultural, spiritual, and material progress of the Pech people in the area. MEXLCO- The Baha'i community of La Colima worked with Colima's state agency Integral Development of the Family to give a three-week course entitled "Developing Our Virtues." Classes were held in July and were attended by 120 children between the ages of seven and thirteen. The wife of the governor of the state, Mrs . Hilda Ceballos de Moreno, attended the course's closing ceremony and gave a talk in which she expressed her gratitude to the Baha'i community for making the classes possible and her hope that they would continue. This course was the result of a number of initiatives in the field of moral deve lopment. In another initiative, Baha' is supplied a weekly article called "Baha'i Moral Development Project" to three of the city's most widely read newspapers. The Baha'is also established an annual Baha'i Human Virtues Award, which consists of publicly recognizing students, heads of households, and public school teachers who have distinguished themselves by living a virtuous life. Several local and state government institutions recognized and expressed appreciation for the work. PANAMA- An Encounter of Religions, organized by the Ministry of Women, Youth, Children, and the Family, was held 28 December 1999. An audience of approximately one thousand welcomed the president of Panama, government ministers, and representatives of the Baha' i, Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Muslim, and indigenous faiths. The program consisted of an introductory artistic presentation by the Baha'i youth workshop, a dramatic presentation by the Buddhists, and songs by Christians and Hare Krishnas. The five-minute presentation by each group emphasized goodwill toward the new government and willingness to work together. Participants in a recent institute co urse in Masaya, Nicaragua, display their graduation certificates. PARAGUAY- An international youth conference was held in Paraguay in January 2000, bringing together more than four hundred Baha'i youth to consult about fulfilling the goals set by the Universal House of Justice and their role as Baha'i youth. The conference was envisioned as the first in a series of youth conferences for the Americas. PERU- The first meeting of the National Spiritual Assemblies of the Andean countries took place in Lima during the first three days of October 1999. Members of the National Spiritual Assemblies of Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela attended, as did two members of the Continental Board of Counsellors, to consult on teaching, strengthening Baha'i institutions, training, and social and economic development projects. PUERTO RICO-The services of Cam1en Jovet, a prominent television and radio news personality in Puerto Rico, were formally recognized by the country's Baha'i community in a special ceremony held on 23 April 1999. The Baha'is thanked her for her tireless assistance in the aftermath of Hurricane George and for the recognition she has given the Baha'i Faith over the years. Mrs. Jovet publicly thanked the Baha'is during her nationally broadcast radio program the next morning. ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES- A radio program called "Baha'i Vision," which includes interviews with Baha'is and non- Baha'is and readings from the Baha'i sacred writings on different themes, was aired weekly and reached many of the Caribbean islands. Baha'is also participated in ten call-in radio programs during the last year to share the Baha'i viewpoint on various social issues. In addition, Baha'i activities were announced on radio and television as public service announcements. SURINAME- The "Green Light Project" began in March 1999, as a two-year teaching initiative in the upper Suriname River district of Sipaliwini, which is home to the Sararnaccan tribe and thirty percent of the Baha'i population in that country. The project was designed to bring the Baha'i message to twenty villages and to carry out an educational project through the establishment of regular devotional services, children's classes, and training institutes. The program was developed with the assistance of Baha'i Secon, a foundation for social and economic development functioning under the direction of the National Spiritual Assembly. TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO-Each year the government of Trinidad and Tobago honors citizens who have done outstanding work in different areas of nation building. This year, two of the awards were presented to Baba'is. Henry Collymore received the Trinity Cross- the highest award in the country-for distinguishing himself in the field of medicine and community service. Mansingh Amarsingh was given the Hummingbird Silver Medal for his twenty-five years of service to the nation in sports. The presentations were made by President Arthur N. R. Robinson at his official residence on 31 August 1999. UNITED STATES-In a 7 April ceremony in San Francisco, Dorothy Nelson, senior judge of the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, received the 2000 D'Alemberte/Raven Award for Outstanding Contribution to Dispute Resolution from the American Bar Association's Section of Dispute Resolution. The award recognizes members of the legal profession who have contributed significantly to the field of conflict resolution. James Alfini, chair of the ABA Section on Dispute Resolution, called Judge Nelson "a noted jurist and educator whose early recognition of the need to focus on dispute resolution alternatives has had a profound impact on the growth of the ADR field." In May 1999, Firuz Kazemzadeh, secretary for external affairs of the National Spiritual Assembly of the United States, was named by President Bill Clinton to the nine-member US Commission on International Religious Freedom. The commission studies international violations ofreligious freedom and issues recommendations each year for US responses. Dr. Kazemzadeh's appointment was announced along with the appointment of Laila Al-Marayati, a leading US spokeswoman on Islamic issues, and Charles Z. Smith, a justice of the Washington State Supreme Court. Dr. Kazemzadeh has testified frequently before the House International Relations and Senate Foreign Relations Committees on behalf of the National Spiritual Assembly concerning the religious repression of the Baha'is, particularly in Iran. "The promotion of religious freedom abroad is a priority of the Clinton presidency," the White House news release of 5 May stated. "These three distinguished appointees will further ensure that international religious freedom continues to be an integral part of the administration's foreign policy." On March 9, 2000, the US president organized "A Call to Action: The President's One America Meeting with Religious Leaders." More than 150 religious leaders, including five Baha'is, attended the meeting, whose purpose was to discuss the commitment of the United States' faith communities to improving racial relations. Dr. Robert Henderson, secretary-general of the United States National Spiritual Assembly, spoke to the gathering on behalf of the Baha'is, highlighting the Baha'is' efforts towards race unity. The press release issued by the White House regarding the event specifically mentioned the 110,000 Baha'is in the US, and their creation of "programs, videos, and TV spots which are designed to reach households across the country with positive messages of spiritual solutions to social problems." For the past five years the Persian-language Baha'i radio program "Payam-e Doost" has been broadcasting from the Washington, DC, area in the United States in order to disseminate accurate information about the Baha'i Faith to Persian-speaking audiences. On 14 November 1999, "Payam-e Doost" was broadcast for the first time on the World Wide Web, marking the first time a radio program produced by Baha'is has been available throughout the world on the Internet. 1 URUGUAY- The eightieth anniversary of the establishment of the Baha'i Faith in Uruguay was celebrated at a conference held in Montevideo on 18 and 19 September 1999. Isabel de Sanchez, a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors for the Americas, was among the one hundred participants. VENEZUELA- Approximately one hundred youth from most major regions of Venezuela participated in the national youth conference held in Cabudare from 29 July to 1 August 1999. The conference was organized into workshops, which focused on study, living a Baha'i life, the country 's goals for the Four Year Plan, systematization, evaluation, and planning, and service in the areas of institutes, children's classes, use of the arts, and expansion and consolidation projects. On the final day the youth formed groups according to the twelve geographic areas represented at the conference. Each group analyzed the status of the Four Year Plan goals for its own area and then made specific commitments to assist in achieving those goals. Payam-e Doost is access ibl e at < www.baha iradio.org.> WEST LEEWARD ISLANDS-During the course of the past year, Baha'is in the West Leeward Islands have established ongoing children's classes, devotional meetings, and study circles. Members ()/the United States Advisory Commillee on Religious Freedom Abroad, including Secretary of"State Madelein e Albright (seated, thirdfiwn lefi) and Counsellor Wilma Ellis (seated.far right) . Asia ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS- The Local Spiritual Assembly of Port Blair, in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, held a series of public competitions for school children. Different contests were held for children from kindergarten to grade eight, while secondary students were asked to write for five minutes on the question Who is Writing the Future?, a task inspired by the recent statement of the same name by the Baha'i International Community. More than six hundred students participated in the contests, and some 850 people attended the awards ceremony held on 12 November. ARMENIA- The Baha'i institute in Armenia has been offering study courses on "Fundamental Verities,'' and "Arising to Serve,'' and on art, drama, and music. By April 2000, about one-third of the BaM'is in the country had completed the first two of these courses. A postgraduate student named Goar Vardanyan, who is not a Baha'i, wrote a dissertation on the Baha'i Faith, which was received with interest in the scholarly community and published during the summer of 1999. BANGLADESH-Three Baha'is from Bangladesh attended a conference on women and peace held in Dhaka on 2 and 3 October. The gathering was hosted by the NGO Women for Women, and representatives were invited from NGOs for women in SAARC countries (South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation)- Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. The Baha'i representatives took an active part in all of the workshops and plenary sessions, and in some instances selections from the Baha'i writings were shared with the participants. One of the decisions made by all of the participants was to publish a newsletter for children in the SAARC nations, which would carry articles on peace and respect for diversity. The Baha'is also presented two statements to the conference: "Women and the Peace Process" and "Ending Violence Against Women." CAMBODIA- On 25 January 2000, the Baha'is of Cambodia sponsored a high-level interfaith event to which representatives of five major religions were invited. Called World Religion Day, the event was so successful that His Majesty King Norodom Sihanouk sent a letter of gratitude to the Baha'is for organizing it. More than 250 people, including ambassadors, ministers, community leaders, UN workers, and university students, gathered at the Hotel Intercontinental in Phnom Penh to hear presentations from each delegation on the theme of "Unity of Religions." Three prominent newspapers in the country covered the event. Jn Cambodia, an NGO development worker explains th e Bahri 'i concept of equality of' th e sexes. YEA L~ IN R EV 1E\Xl Baha 'is showcase their fitem ture at a book exhibition in In dia. GEORGIA-The institute process in Georgia took a further stride in its development with the holding of a facilitators' course for three days in May. Sponsored by the board of the national training institute, the course brought together twelve Baha'is from five different communities and was a precursor to another tutor training course attended by thi1ty-seven Baha' is. HONG KONG--The Hong Kong Baha'i community's annual Award for Services to Humanity was presented on 12 November 1999. Some 140 people attended, including sixty Baha' is. The secretary of justice, a member of the Legislative Council, the consulgeneral for Chile, a representative of Xinhua News Agency, a leading educator, and other community leaders were among the special guests. Cecilia Chan, a professor at the University of Hong Kong, was given the award for 1999 for her work in the field of moral education. INDIA-Among other engagements during his state visit to India in November, Pope John Paul II attended an interreligious meeting in New Delhi. Representatives of nine religions, including Zena Sorabjee, a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors of Asia, shared the platform with the pope during the 7 November event organized by the Catholic Church, which was telecast live throughout India and the world. Many ambassadors, high-ranking government officials, political and civic leaders, and intellectuals, as well as cardinals, archbishops, and other senior religious THE B AJ-IA'f W ORLD dignitaries were present. Each religious representative had two minutes in which to address the pope and the assembly. The president of India, His Excellency Dr. Kocheril R. Narayanan, gave one of the President's Awards for Remarkable Achievements in the Field of Education to Setwan Yadav, the principal of the JNKT Government High School in Khagaria. The ceremony took place on 5 September in the presence of government ministers and other prominent people. JAPAN-In July 1999, nearly one hundred Baha'is from all over Japan and visitors from every continent spent four days at the foot of Mount Iwate, in the north of the country, attending the annual Baha' i summer school. Nobuko Iwakura, a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors of Asia, delivered the keynote address. The focus of the study sessions was Who is Writing the Future?, a statement released by the Baha'i International Community in 1999. KAZAKHSTAN- More than 270 Baha'is attended the international Baha'i winter school in Almaty for five days in January, including two members of the Continental Board of Counsellors for Asia and fourteen members of National Spiritual Assemblies of Central Asia. The core of the conference was a series of workshops on subjects such as Baha'i community development, the use of the arts, and living a Baha'i life. They also held a memorial gathering for Amatu' l-Baha Ru~iyyih_Khanum , who had died a few days earlier. On 10 December, the Baha' i community of Kazakhstan took part in the second Round Table on Freedom of Conscience, Belief, and Religion. The theme of the event was "State, Society, and Religion," and it was conducted with the assistance of the Office of Democratic Institutes and Human Rights in Almaty. Representatives of many religions, government ministries, and departments participated in the conference, whose purpose was to establish better relations between state, public, and religious organizations. The Baha' is were represented by a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors, an Auxiliary Board member, and a member of the National Spiritual Assembly of Kazakhstan. The meeting concluded with a consensus regarding the need for Y- EAl~- IN R - 1 EV lf\\[ - government to respect international standards on human rights and to search for effective methods of interaction between governmental and religious associations. Th e Baha 'i booth at the Seoul !11temational Co nference of Non- Governmental 01 ganizations, held 10- 15 October 1999 in Korea. KOREA- The 1999 International Conference of Non-Governmental Organizations was held from 10 to 15 October at Olympic Park, Seoul. With more than eight thousand people attending from 107 countries, the event was dubbed by the media the "Olympics of Culture." The theme was "The Role ofNGOs in the 21st Century: Inspire, Empower, and Act!" The principal representative of the Baha'i community to the United Nations, Techeste Ahderom, served as an organizer of activities under the theme of human rights, and a member of the National Spiritual Assembly of Korea worked as director for program planning for the Korean organizing committee and as vice-spokesman during the conference. Other Baha'is served as speakers or in other roles. The program consisted of five plenary assemblies on human civilizations of the past and future, ten thematic meetings on the conference's main topics-peace and security, the environment, education for all, ethics and values, human rights, social and economic development, youth and children, public health, gender equality, and productive aging-workshops, clinics, and regional caucuses. Cultural performances and more than one hundred exhibits enlivened the atmosphere. The president of the Republic of Korea, Dae-Jung Kim, spoke during the opening session, and the secretary-general of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, sent a message on video. The conference was initiated by the Global Cooperation Society International in consultation with the United Nations Economic and Social Council and Kyung Hee University, Seoul. KYRGYZSTAN-Representatives from the National, International and Slavic Universities, Bishkek Autotransport Technical School, and directors and teachers of Bishkek and Tokmok schools attended a conference on "The Baha' i Faith and Education" held in the National Library of Bishkek on 14 December 1999. The purpose of the conference was to inform these leaders of thought about the aims and history of the Baha'i Faith. A book exhibition was held, and the schools' libraries were presented with selections of the Baha'i writings. MALAYSIA- Almost 1,200 Baha'is gathered at four regional conferences held simultaneously on 25 and 26 June 1999, in Malaysia. The programs of the conferences, held in Sungei Petani, Kuala Lumpur, Klang, and Kota Baru, were similar. The first day began with the keynote message from the Spiritual Assembly of Malaysia, followed by a presentation of Who is Writing the Future? and a slide presentation of the construction projects on Mount Carmel at the Baha'i World Centre. The second day was spent in detailed discussions of the region's plan for expanding and strengthening Ba ha 'is in Erdenbulgan, Mongolia , stand in.fi'ont of their new local Baha 'i centa Y- EAl{- 1N R -EV IEW - its Baha'i community. Ten members of the Continental Board of Counsellors for Asia attended the conferences. MONGOLIA- The Baha'is of Erdenbulgan, an isolated village of about three thousand people in the north of Mongolia, dedicated their new Baha'i center in May. Traditional music, dance, and comedy performances delighted the large audience. The town's deputy mayor and education officer attended and spoke wannly of the Baha'is and their contributions to the life of the village, specifically mentioning the three-year-old vegetable growing project. 2 Rosalie Tran, a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors of Asia, opened the center and was the guest of honor at a two-day women's seminar, the first activity to take place there . In October, the National Spiritual Assembly of Mongo lia received registration certificates for the provinces ofDarkhan and Zavkhan, which enables the National Assembly to can-y out Baha'i activities there. Jn Mya nmar; assistants lo the the Auxiliary Board members hold a study course. NE PAL-Bharat Koirala, chainnan of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Nepal, former editor of the Nepalese newspaper Gorkhapatra and founder of the Nepal Press Institute, was given the Knight International Press Fellowship Award in October 1999 which "honors outstanding individuals who have made remarkable contributions to the media in their region of the world." Koirala was singled out for his role in "spearheading many innovative programs in communication to reach the rural masses and for his continued support and struggle for freedom of expres- . SIOn. " See pp. 285- 90 of thi s vo lume fo r a profil e of th e Mongolian Developm ent Center, which sponsors the vegetabl e growing project in Erd enbul gan. In Labipur, two hundred people attended a regional women's conference. The local Baha'is organized food and accommodations for all the participants. "What was rewarding," said one conference attendee, "was the active participation of women in the discussions regarding the progress of the Faith, concern for the welfare of women and children, and issues of health and hygiene and the education of women and children." In a society where the participation of women in the Baha'i community is still quite low, the proportion of female participation in institute courses has risen to thirty percent-a phenomenon that has aroused the curiosity of neighbors. Seeing the change effected in paiticipants, more and more people have attended and graduated from training courses on the Baha'i teachings. PAKISTAN- The local youth committee of Quetta organized a celebration of the country's Independence Day at the national Baha'i center on 13 August 1999. The meeting began with prayers in Urdu and Arabic, followed by singing and a tableau presented by Baha'i children. The Baha'i speaker stated that independence imposes great responsibility on people and that free people must use their freedom for the progress of humankind as well as their own nation. She said that Independence Day was an opportunity to consider one's contribution toward the welfare of all people. Two local newspapers covered the event. PHILIPPINES-On 20 September 1999, the Baha'i community of the Philippines organized the observance of the International Day of Peace, which was hosted by the city government ofMuntinlupa (part of the National Capital Region) and attended by some 2,750 people. About two hundred people were also present at a second venue, the World Peace Park inside the New Bilibid Prisons Reservation. City mayor Jaime R. Fresnedi and vice mayor Vicente Chua led the local dignitaries. Dr. Reynaldo Imperial, chainnan of both the Association for Baha'i Studies in the Philippines and the national education committee, spoke on behalf of the Baha'i community. Bouquets of flowers were laid at the base of the monument at the World Peace Park and prayers were offered followed by the ringing of the Peace Bell. The External Affairs Office of the Baha'i community of the Philippines worked with the United Nations Information Center (UNIC) in its human rights education campaign. The UNIC has invited the Baha'is to participate in planning and consultative meetings for the International Year for the Culture of Peace in the year 2000. SABAH-Following a conference in Kg. Manggis, in the Malaysian state ofSabah, in April 1999, Baha'is undertook a two-week campaign to teach their Faith. Thirty Baha'is carried out teaching and consolidation activities in the villages, resulting in enrollments in the Baha'i community and in existing communities becoming more knowledgeable about the procedures of Baha'i elections. SARAWAK- A special project to open Lusong Laku, in the Malaysian state of Sarawak, to the Baha'i Faith and to teach the Penan tribespeople began successfully in the fall of 1999. Forty-three people enrolled as Baha'is. The Baha'i Office for the Advancement of Women played an active part in a workshop on legal literacy held in Kuching on 5 December 1999. The workshop was organized by the Malaysian National Council of Women's Organizations and sponsored by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation. Subjects covered included the Domestic Act, the Child Protection Act, and family law. A member of Parliament opened the event, and speakers included representatives from the Sarawak Welfare Department, the Royal Police of Malaysia, the One-stop Crisis Centre of Kuching Hospital, and the Association of Women Lawyers. SINGAPORE- In June 1999, the work of Mrs. Shirin Fozdar was recognized in a documentary television program about persons of Indian origin who have made significant contributions to the development of Singapore. Mrs. Fozdar, who was one of the first Baha' i pioneers to that country in 1950, was acclaimed in many circles for her work in promoting the advancement of women. The year 2000 marks the fiftieth am1iversary of the establishment of the Baha'i community in Singapore. Celebrations will be held throughout the country from May to September, based on the theme "Unity in Diversity." SRI LANKA- In 1949, the first Sri Lankan citizens became Baha'is, making 1999 the fiftieth anniversary of the establishment of the Baha'i Faith in the country. The National Spiritual Assembly encouraged Local Spiritual Assemblies and individual believers around the country to organize suitable commemorative events. Young Baha'is trained in leadership and drama by Sri Lanka's national training institute fonned a youth group called the Institute of Positive Behavior. During its first year the group staged shows in twenty localities in Kalutara, Kadugannawa, Dehiowita, Hatton, and the Vavuniya regions in front of eight thousand people. TAIWAN- Following the earthquake in Taiwan on 21 September 1999, the Baha'i community, short of material resources, decided to assist in reconstruction efforts by offering free classes for children in areas damaged by the quake. The Baha'is now offer very successful classes in three locations. One member of the Baha' i community arranged for a one-hour radio program to air every Sunday morning on earthquake-related stress, such as anxiety and depression. THAILAND--The sixth Southeast Asian (SEA) Baha'i Forum, composed of representatives from the National Spiritual Assemblies of Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Sabah, Sarawak, Singapore, and Thailand, was held in Bangkok for two days in September. Zenaida Ramirez, a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors for Asia, guided the consultations on subjects such as the progress of the training institutes, the need for a systematic program for teaching people of Buddhist background, the pooling of professional resources , external affairs, and strategies for establishing ties with leaders of thought. Joint sessions with youth representatives highlighted the need to help prepare Baha'i youth to enter the new century with a clear sense of how to respond to these challenges and echoed the parallel SEA national youth committee conference held at the same time. YEAl~ IN REVIEW UZBEKISTAN-The government of Uzbekistan invited representatives of the country's religions to a press conference held on 12 August 1999, to celebrate the anniversary of the passing of the law on religious liberty. A Baha'i representative spoke to the gathering and was later given assurance that legal registration of additional local Baha'i communities would soon take place. Several communities were formally recognized under the law soon afterwards, to bring registered communities to a total of five: Bukhara, Jizak, Navoi, Samarkand, and Tashkent. VIETNAM- During the serious flooding in Vietnam in late 1999, many local Baha'i communities made contributions of both time and money for the relief of victims. During the year the Baha'i community also formed a women's committee, an external affairs committee, and a legal committee, which will coordinate social and economic development projects such as literacy programs and . . m1croeconom1cs. Taiwanese children participate in a drawing competition on themes such as family, children :S education, and the advancement of women. Australasia AUSTRALIA- More than 450 men and women from some fifteen countries attended the International Women's Conference in Brisbane from 16 to 18 September 1999, making it one of the largest and most diverse women's events ever held in the country. Sponsored by the Office for the Advancement of Women of the Baha'i community of Australia, the conference gathered an outstanding lineup of educators, activists, lawyers, and religious and government leaders from around Australasia and elsewhere to speak on issues related to the advancement of women. Almost one-third of the participants were indigenous Australians. The event was aimed at "forging new partnerships among diverse sectors of society, taking practical measures to promote the advancement of women, and looking towards spiritual and moral values as the key to consolidating gains." The types of partnerships discussed included not only inter- and intragender interactions, but also alliances with businesses, government, like-minded nongovernmental organizations, different cultures, and spiritual groups. Some fifteen plenary sessions and seventy workshops focused on such topics as education, communication and the media, the workplace, women in the United Nations, health and healing, business and technology, diversity, social and economic development, and issues related to indigenous peoples. In response to an invitation from the National Spiritual Assembly of Australia, His Excellency Sir William Deane, governor-general ofAustralia, officially opened the new ACT (Australian Capital Territory) Baha'i center on 10 December. This year's annual Clara and Hyde Dunn Dinner, held in October 1999 in Sydney, featured a lecture by Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, Children at Newport Public School in Australia learn áabout the Baha 'i Faith as part of'a special religious education program. YEAR IN RE VfEW a Baha'i who works for the World Health Organization. The dinner, named after the first Baha'is in Australia, is dedicated to the social ideals they championed. Dr. Kim-Farley's lecture, entitled "Health for All: The Challenge of the New Millennium," was presented to an audience of more than 180 people and addressed the changing needs of a global society in seeking answers to humanity 's health crises. COOK ISLANDS- A national teaching conference was held on 14 August 1999, at the Baha'i center on Rarotonga Island to discuss the hosting of firesides, systematic planning, and teaching the Baha'i Faith. Each Local Spiritual Assembly was encouraged to develop a systematic plan for teaching the Baha'i Faith in its area. EASTERN CAROLINE ISLANDS- The Baha'is of Pohnpei sponsored a seminar for women in October 1999. The sessions on women and finance, moral education, and family consultation were favorably received, and requests were made for similar events to be held in the future. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS-The Baha'is of Koolaupoko, on the island Oahu, entered a float in Kailua's annual Fourth of July parade, winning first prize in the category for religious organizations. The theme of the entry was "1,000 Years of Unity and Aloha." The float was later featured on the evening news of all three local television stations. KIRIBATI- Two Ocean of Light conferences were held in Kiribati early in the year, one on Abemama Island in January 1999, and the other on Kiritimati Island in February. Both meetings were organized by local Baha'is and featured singing and dancing. The morning sessions were composed of presentations on various topics, including teaching and consultation, followed by discussion. MARIANA ISLANDS-About fifty Baha'is assembled at the University of Guam for the Marianas Baha'i summer school held on 22 and 23 May 1999. Through workshop-style courses, Baha'is had the opportunity to study different aspects of the Faith and enjoy the company of their friends . NEW CALEDONIA AND THE LOYALTY ISLANDS- More than ninety Baha'is attended the national winter school held in Yate, New Caledonia, in September. Participants studied the relationship between traditional practices and the Baha'i teachings, among other subjects. In the midst of a nationwide examination of new religious movements, a scholar named Jean Paul Aluze contributed a paper on the Baha'i Faith to a four-volume encyclopedia on the indigenous peoples of New Caledonia and the Loyalty Islands. These detailed synopses of many minority religious groups in the country will be distributed througho ut the French-speaking Pacific. At a time when several established churches have raised their voices in criticism of the New Cal edonian Baha' i community, the author's portrayal of the Baha'i Faith and its community was welcomed by the Baha'is as a positive contribution to the Islands' debate on religious values and pluralism. Among other things, the encyclopedia notes the Baha' i Faith 's forty-year history in the Islands and the fact that it "is recognized as a world religion," something particularly important in the face of local accusations that the Baha' i Faith is a "cult." The encyclopedia will be distributed to institutions of higher learning and libraries throughout the French-speaking world. NEW ZEALAN D- Terrence O'Brien, fonner ambassador of New Zealand to the United Nations, was the keynote speaker at the Association for Baha'i Studies conference held at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand, in July 1999. The conference's theme was "Global Prosperity," and Mr. O' Brien's experience at the United Nations and as director of the Institute for Strategic Studies at Victoria University enabled him to speak about the role of regional and international organizations in world development. He stated that the United Nations is a monumental organization, unprecedented in human history, whose shortcomings can be attributed to its member states, not the UN itself. More than a dozen Baha'is presented papers at the conference. Thirty Baha'i youth participated in a week-long project in January 2000, in memory of Hedi Moani, a New Zealand Baha'i YEA!< IN R - -~ EVIEW - who was murdered because of his beliefS in October. The group embarked on a wide range of voluntary service activities, including helping with environmental clean-up work, assisting at the blood bank, and cleaning the houses of those suffering from arthritis. Some time was spent each afternoon distributing invitations to the public for concerts and talks each evening, which were also organized by the Baha'i youth. PAPUA NEW GUINEA- Dr. Sirus Naraqi , a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors and former resident of Papua New Guinea, was decorated as a Commander of the Order of the British Empire. During a ceremony held at the Government House in Port Moresby on 28 October he was honored for his distinguished services to medicine and science and for contributing to the growth of the nation . Dr. N araqi spent eighteen years as a medical specialist and head of medicine at the University of Papua New Guinea. The presentation was made by the governor-general, Sir Silas Atopare, on behalf of Queen Elizabeth II. SAMOA-In June and July 1999, the Hawaiian and Samoan Baha'i youth dance workshop traveled to Western Samoa and American Samoa, performing more than thirty-five times for some fifteen thousand people. Samoan radio, television, and newspapers covered the workshop, and the performances were well received by the traditional leaders of the village communities they visited. In May, the Samoan Baha' i youth workshop performed and did community service in urban areas of Apia and Pago Pago. After their tour with the Hawaiian youth, the Samoan youth held a fundraiser for a village preschool and perfonned in national public events. SOLOMON ISLAN DS- The seventh annual Blums' Community Service Award program took the form of an interreligious service for unity held in Honiara in September. The award, founded by Baha' is to honor the spirit of the first Baha'i pioneers to the island, was changed this year, said the organizers, "from the normal recognition of service by Solomon Islanders to a worship service as it was felt that this was more appropriate under the present ethnic circumstances in the country." More than three hundred THE B AHA:f W ORLD people attended to listen to the governor-general, Father John Lapli, give an overview of unity, and representatives of several churches and the Baha'i community read selections from their sacred writings. Banners created by students from local primary schools were presented, and several choirs provided music. The entire program was broadcast live on national radio. TONCA- Baha'is in Tonga broadcast a radio program in September 1999 entitled "Prayer." Though the Tongan Baha' is have previously broadcast programs, this was the first show proctuced without any restrictions, and the first on a well-established FM station. They received substantial positive feedback concerning the content. After three years of operation, Tonga's Ocean of Light School has an enrollment of 176 students, including three of the king's grandchildren. This year a kindergarten was built and a pre-high school curriculum was added. The school has received encouragement and assistance from Baha'is in Australia and New Zealand. VANUATU- The Baha'i community of Vanuatu played an important part in the economic summit meeting convened by the Tafea provincial government and held in Isangel, Tanna, from 6 to 8 October 1999. The gathering was held to examine uses of the island's resources. Baha'is were involved in the preparations for the meeting at the national and local levels. As a member of an umbrella group of NGOs, the National Spiritual Assembly of Vanuatu was invited to submit comments on the draft plan and to present information on Baha' i development projects, particularly in the field of literacy. At the local level, Baha'i youth were asked to help construct the meeting house and other facilities for the summit, and they offered to provide musical entertainment in the evenings. The Baha'i community was the only religious group invited to send representatives to the meeting and was able to formally offer the Baha'i perspective on sustainable, human-centered development, bolstered with specific suggestions of lines of action the government could take . Many prominent people attended the final day of the summit, including four government ministers, three members of Parliament, the high commissioners of Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom, representatives of AusAID and the Asian Development Bank, several directorsgeneral of government departments, and the president of the provincial council, who joined the many local leaders already present at the gathering. In all, more than one thousand people were present, including observers. At the signing ceremony, the Baha'is were asked to sign the document on behalf of all of the religious groups in Vanuatu, and afterwards they received a formal delegation from the provincial government expressing appreciation for the contributions made by the Baha'is. WESTERN CAROLINE ISLANDS- The first international Baha'i youth conference to be held in the Republic of Palau, in the Western Caroline Islands, took place in Ngardamau from 18 to 24 July 1999. Nine Baha'is from Palau and nine from Yap explored the theme "Becoming Our True Selves," with sessions offered on Baha'i identity, prayer and meditation, study of the Baha'i writings, living a Baha' i life, and consultation, interspersed with service projects for the State of Ngardmau such as picking up trash, cleaning, and painting. The conference ended with a dramatic performance and a short talk for the public. Th e choir ofthe Baha'i House of Worship in Samoa pelforms on 4 August for the filming of a video series. Europe ALBANIA-The use of Ruhi Institute materials has met with success in Albania. Courses, held once a month in nine communities for four consecutive months, have increased the number ofBaha'is teaching the Faith in their communities and have led to an increase in Baha'i enrollment in the country. In an effort to alleviate some of the suffering due to ethnic strife in Kosovo, the National Spiritual Assembly and individual Baha'i families in Albania hosted Kosovar refugees in their homes. AUSTRIA-In Austria, "Act Now" events were held every three months to provide Baha'i youth and their friends with the opportunity to think critically and take action on themes such as Who is Writing the Future?, thus opening a path for them to engage in a process designed to lead to peace. In November 1997 the Baha'i community of Baden founded "Family Days" in Baden, which has evolved into an annual fourday event with programs and seminars, music, and arts for adults, youth, and children. The municipality and its cultural office, local newspapers, a Catholic parish, and two schools collaborate with the Baha'is on this project. BELARUS- An international youth conference held 28 March 2000 in Minsk brought together some 170 people from Belarus, Canada, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Moldova, and the Ukraine, Women in Brussels, Belgium, preparing to read "Words of Peace" as part of a celebration - for the Week of Peace in Octobei- J 999. Y- EAR- LN R - EVIEW - Participants in Bulgaria 'sfirsl Ruhi training institute in Kostenets, Bulgaria, in Februm y 2000. including many members of the youth committees of central Asia. Just one-third of the attendees were Baha'is. The conference focused on developing artistic skills and featured workshops, a concert, and dramatic performances. Baha'is initiated a teaching project in Minsk afterwards. BELGIUM- The Belgian gove1mnent asked for advice and recommendations from civil society with regard to its projected plan for sustainable growth. The response by the National Spiritual Assembly of Belgium marked the first time the Assembly had officially submitted recommendations to the goverrunent. On 20 April Professor Kamyab Samii, a member of the National Spiritual Assembly, was granted by royal decree, at the request of the University of Louvain-la-Neuve, the civil decoration Officer of the Order of Leopold for his work in education and scientific research . In November, he was also elected as an associate member of the Royal Belgian Academy Council of Applied Sciences. BULGARIA- The second annual One World Peace Tour by a youth dance workshop from the United States took participants throughout Bulgaria, where they performed and assisted the Baha ' i community in its teaching work for almost seven weeks during the summer of 1999. The workshop danced in the parks and streets of several cities, was featured numerous times on radio and television, and performed with the renowned Bulgarian musicians B.T.R. and Kolselo, the latter during a concert held at the National Palace of Culture. CANARY ISLANDS- Women in the Canary Islands organized and participated in celebrations of Peace Week from 15 to 23 October, and in training aimed at helping them to become organizers, public speakers, facilitators, and teachers in support of peace. The effort was part of a broad campaign coordinated by the European Women's Task Force, and similar events were held in nineteen countries throughout Europe. CYPRUS- Twenty-one Baha' is gathered for a teaching conference held at the Baha'i center in south Nicosia on 30 October, where they consulted about the country's goals for the Four Year Plan and planned strategies for reaching greater numbers of people with the Baha'i teachings. CZECH REPUBLIC- Jan Sole, advisor to President Vaclav Havel of the Czech Republic, approached the Czech National Spiritual Assembly, offering to hold a meeting to discuss the role of the religious believer in contempora1y society. He stated that this offer was being made to all state-recognized churches and religions. The gathering took place in Prague on 4 June 1999, when Dr. Sole addressed the twenty-five Baha' is who had come from all over the country. "He spoke for an hour," wrote one observer, "about many subjects related to ethical values in today's society and the role of religion in promoting these values." During the discussion that followed, Dr. Sole said he appreciated the openness, tolerance, and absence of fanaticism of the Baha'is he had encountered. The meeting ended with a promise by Dr. Sole to rep01i back to the president about the gathering, and he expressed the hope that similar events would be held in the future. ESTONIA-Estonia's first national Baha'i summer school was held for five days in July 1999 in Viljandi. Baha' is from Belgium, Canada, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, and the United States were among the eighty-three pmiicipants. The community's winter school was á held in Tartu from 26 to 30 December, and attracted forty people who studied current Baha'i thinking Y-EAR IN - R- EVIEW - regarding community growth in workshops held in English, Estonian, and Russian. FRANCE- The French Diversity Dance Workshop traveled throughout the country in June, meeting with great success. In Sarlat, one show began with an audience of one hundred and ended with more than 450 spectators; in Lot and Garonne, the group won the suppo1i of a government deputy; in Massy, the municipality requested a performance; and the local press in Limousin described their perfonnance with the headline "Emotion is in the Streets." The second annual "Nuit de l 'Espoir" ("Night of Hope") concert, which was first held in 1998 as part of the French Baha'i community's centennial celebrations, took place in Paris on 3 December 1999. It was organized by 9 Productions, a company created by Baha' is and non-Baha'is to promote the Baha'i teachings through the arts. Under the theme of "Together for a Culture of Peace," the "Nuit de l'Espoir" was held in collaboration with UNESCO and featured a blend of songs, dances, and other performances by well-known artists. Proceeds from the event were offered to Les Restos du Coeur, a French charity. The July issue of Le Monde Diplomatique featured an article by William S. Hatcher entitled "Promoting Social Justice, Tolerance and Equality. The Baha'i Faith: Humanism Against Fanaticism." The aiiicle covers the early days of the Baha'i movement and presents it from a global perspective. GERMANY-On 23 January 2000, a thirty-minute documentary film on the history of the Baha'i Faith was aired on the German cable television station Siidwestrundfunk. "On the Way to the Land of Unity-the Baha'i Religion" was filmed in Gennany and at the Baha'i World Centre in Haifa, Israel, and was broadcast in Austria, France, Germany, Luxembourg, and Switzerland to a potential audience of some 130,000 people. On 7 September 1999, the German Baha'i community was represented at a joint press conference of senior representatives of Buddhism, Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and the Baha'i Faith, held in Frankfurt. A joint declaration was released, calling for religious freedom and cooperation between religions. It received widespread attention from the Gennan media, including Germany's major press agency. The Trustee ofI:Iuququ'llah, Hand of the Cause of God 'Ali- Mul).ammad Varqa, traveled to Hofheim in October 1999. Dr. Varqa was accompanied by Counsellor member of the International Teaching Centre Firaydoun Javaheri. Approximately one thousand people from forty-one countries gathered at the conference on I:Iuququ'llah as Dr. Varqa delivered several talks highlighting the spiritual aspects of the law, including its influence on the soul, society, and the development of the Baba 'i community. A new video about I:Iuququ'llah was shown, and there were several artistic presentations. GREECE-Arsis, a Greek organization for the social support of youth, in collaboration with Thessaloniki Baha'is, organized a seminar on "Youth and Their Rights: Creating an Environment for Youth to Develop." Greetings from the mayor ofThessaloniki and the vice-mayor for culture were addressed to the organizers during the event, at which the rector ofLandegg Academy, spoke on human rights. The event, held on 5 May 1999, was featured on national television, and a local private television station aired a thirty-minute interview. On the radio, a twenty-minute interview focused mainly on the Baha'i Faith, and two newspapers printed articles profiling the event. A delegation of members of'the National Spiritual Assembly of Hungw y meets with President Arpad Gonez (center) in May 1999. Y- IN RE L:AR- -VlEW' - HUNGARY-On 11 May 1999, a delegation of four Baha'is met with the president of the Republic of Hungary, Arpact Gonez, and took the opportunity to highlight some activities of the Hungarian Baha'i community. The Baha'i representatives expressed their appreciation for the president's work in human rights and thanked him for the country's consistent support for the Baha'is in Iran. They also mentioned that eighty percent of the Hungarian Baha'i community belongs to the Roma minority and that the equality of all mankind is a crucial issue for the Baha'is. The president welcomed this news, saying that in his opinion making peace with the Roma will be the major task of Hungary for decades to come. On 20 July, several Hungarian Baha'is held a meeting with Florian Farkas, president of the National Roma Association. Mr. Farkas mentioned that he found the principles of the Baha'i Faith very attractive and expressed his hope that collaborative cultural events could be organized between the Roma and Baha'i communities. ICELAND-More than one thousand people came to a fair held on 26 March 2000, in Westfjords in honor of the United Nations International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. Over twenty nationalities had their own booths offering literature, visual and audio-visual material, artwork, and food from their country, and religious and non-governmental organizations also had booths. This is the third time that this occasion has been celebrated. The event was initiated by a Baha'i woman in isafjordhur, who formed a task force with others interested in the issue. It has since been supported by many organizations and the municipalities in the area. The task force has used the event to draw the attention of the Icelandic authorities to the high number of foreigners living in the region, and in May the Icelandic Parliament agreed to establish a Regional Information and Social Center for Newcomers. REPUBLIC OF IRELAND- A multicultural calendar produced by Access Ireland was officially released by the lord mayor of Dublin, Mary Freehill, during an event held 7 September 1999, at her 1 Ba ha 'is in the Netherlands at their booth during the I l iberation Festival in May 1999. official residence . Baha'i holy days are marked on the calendar, along with those of other world religions. ITALY- A spirit of understanding and mutual friendship was experienced by representatives of the twenty religions invited by the Catholic Church to attend the Interreligious Assembly held in the Vatican City from 24 to 29 October 1999. The two Baha'i representatives, Maria Augusta Hedayat and Julio Savi, reported that they "heard the participants speaking of unity of the peoples of the world, of harmony among religions, the end of the conflicts between religions." At the request of the Ministry of Public Education, the Italian Baha'i c01mnunity presented the project "The Earth is But One Country" during a national symposium of educational agencies. The project is aimed at increasing the ability of teachers at all school levels to cope in a multicultural society. All of the material presented at the symposium was compiled on a CD-ROM and distributed to all schools in Italy. LITHUANIA- The first Lithuanian Baha'i summer school , in Kretinga, was held from 30 July to 3 August 1999. Baha'is from every community in Lithuania attended, as well as visitors from Belarus, Estonia, Latvia (which had its own three-day summer school around the same time), Norway, the United Kingdom, and the United States. A member of the Continental Board of Counsellors for Europe spoke on the school's theme, "Who is Baha'u'llah?" The pat1icipants studied a major letter from Shoghi Y EAR IN REV! EW Effendi and were apprised of the newly elected National Spiritual Assembly's plan for the development of the country's Baha'i community. 3 LUXEMBOURG-Every year, the Baha'is of Luxembourg host a formal celebration of the 28 June birthday of His Royal Highness the Grand Duke, which is the same day as the country's National Day. The commemoration for 1999 featured some sixty invited guests, including representatives from different religious communities. NETHERLANDS- "Promoting Positive Messages Through the Media: The Happy Hippo Show" was presented at The Hague Appeal for Peace conference in the Netherlands as an example of how Baha'is are helping create new conditions for understanding, cooperation, and lasting peace in South Eastern Europe. The Hague Appeal was convened by a number of non-governmental organizations in order to mobilize civil society in support of world peace. Participants were able to demonstrate the activities of their respective organizations, draw inspiration from each other's efforts, and consult to plan future projects. Held from 11 to 15 May 1999, the conference drew more than ten thousand people from all over the world, making it the largest civil society peace conference in history. The Netherlands Baha'i community and the European Baha'i Youth Council (EBYC) had exhibition booths in the Global Forum area. The Netherlands community also sponsored its youth dance workshop, Awake, which gave perfonnances on the theme of promoting tolerance. NORWAY- On 11 November 1999, the inaugural conference for the National Dialogue on Religion and Belief took place at the University Aula in Oslo. The Norwegian government intends to initiate a year-long nationwide dialogue ofreligions and spiritual communities on such issues as the family, the environment, justice, gender equality, violence, education, ethics, and religious freedom. The program was composed of short talks, and See pp. 43-46 of this vo lume for more on the e lection of the Nationa l Spiritua l Assemblies of Latvia and Lithuania. THE B AI-IA'f W ORLD representatives from nine major religions, including the Baha'i Faith, read from their sacred texts, with His Majesty King Harald V presiding. Professor Hans Kling spoke about global ethics and the importance of religious dialogue for peace, and the Bishop of Oslo spoke about mutual respect and the issue of teaching religion in schools. Nineteen ninety-nine was the final year of the LOTUS project at the New Era Development Institute (NEDI) in India, marking twelve years of collaboration between the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is ofN01way and the Norwegian Agency for Deve lopment Cooperation (NORAD) . Through the Norwegian Baha'i Committee for Social and Economic Development (NBCSED), the Norwegian Baha'i community and NORAD have funded projects at NEDI that have fostered the development of human resources, regional centers, and the institutional and technical capacity of the institution, During the LOTUS project, NEDI and the Telemark Teacher Training College in Norway signed an agreement regarding the value of academic, cultural and personal exchange, with special emphasis on partnership and bilateral exchange in the field of child and youth education, and environmental and peace education. The NBCSED has also been instrumental in establishing Bistandstorget, an umbrella organization for NGOs within the development field in Norway. This has created a unique opportunity for the presentation and discussion of the Baha'i approach to social and economic development in a professional setting. The Baha' i community is now chairing the board of Bistandstorget for the second consecutive year. POLAN D- On 29 February 2000, for the third consecutive year, a presentation on the Baha'i Faith was made at Kopemik University's Institute of Sociology, in Torun, Poland. The European Family Life Task Force held a conference entitled "My Home" in the national Baha'i center in Poland from 28 to 30 January 2000. The gathering focused on promoting Baha'i values in family life, touching on issues such as hospitality, creating a loving environment, and family consultation. Representatives from Belarus, Moldova, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Slovakia, and the Ukraine attended. PORTUGAL-In July 1999, the Baha'is of Portugal were granted permission to offer an elective class in public high schools entitled "World Citizenship-Morals and Religion According to the Baha'i Teachings." After contacts were established in ten schools and a curriculum was approved by the Ministry of Education, several students in each school selected the course, which was scheduled to begin the following September. To commemorate World Environment Day on 5 June, the Baha'is of Evora, in collaboration with the Ministry of the Environment and with the support of the municipality, organized a "Clean Dam, Live Water" campaign in which more than fifty students from two schools participated. The children, who had previously been given information about the environment, were very receptive to the idea of cleaning the local dam, which provides drinking water for the city. The teachers, too, became enthusiastic and asked to be included in future activities of this type organized by the Baha'is. ROMANIA-In August 1999, forty Romanian Baha'i travel teachers were joined by youth from Bolivia, Canada, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, and the United States, who formed a group called Diversity Dance Theatre of Europe (DDT). The group performed twice a day either in rented halls or in public spaces. The professionalism of the DDT and the subjects they treated in their dances Counsellor Sohrab Yousejfian (left) meets with Dr. Ibrahim Rugova, leader of ethnic Albanians, in Kosovo, Serbia. TH E B AHA.'f W ORLD prompted the national television station and two private stations to invite them to perform live on their shows. As a result of the teaching campaign spearheaded by the DDT, thousands of people directly learned of the Baha'i Faith, and millions of people saw the televised performances. RUSSIAN FEDERATION-The first regional Baha'i school of the Sak.ha Republic was held for three days in July 1999. Forty-seven Baha'is from seven localities were present, as was a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors for Asia and a musical youth group from Kazakhstan . Around the same time, two Baha'is visited various towns in the region, including Yakutsk, Tulagina, Nerungri, Berjigestakh, Khatasi, and Kangalasi. They met with a number of dignitaries, including the minister of Culture, the vice minister of Environmental Protection, and a member of Parliament. They were interviewed for a television news program, donated books to public libraries, taught several children's classes, and visited isolated Baha'is who had not had contact with other Baha'is for a number of years. SICILY-Sicily's first Baha'i youth dance workshop, One Family, was formed in Catania in October 1998, after being inspired by a two-week visit from the dance workshop Panacea, formed by young volunteers serving at the Baha'i World Centre. During 1999, membership grew from ten to thirty-five members, and One Family gave dozens of performances in schools, theaters, public parks, and other locations. The principal of one school at which they performed asked the group to organize a project using music and dance to sensitize students and their families to some of the social problems around them. In December the workshop performed at a Christian oratory, with Christian youth, nuns, and priests in the audience. After the performance the father superior said he was moved by the performance and felt that the group represented a force for peace in the world. SLOVAKIA- A summer school for the Baha'is of Slovakia was held in Bystra from 31 July to 5 August 1999. About ninety people participated in workshops on family life, education, marriage, and teaching the Baha'i Faith. In March, the Voices of Bah a choir visited Bratislava for four days and participated in a series of teaching and proclamation events, culminating in a public concert which drew close to five hundred people. The choir, together with the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, also made the first recording of an oratorio dedicated to Baha'u'llah's Tablet of Carmel. SLOVENIA AND CROATIA-The Baha'i community of Slovenia and Croatia held its seventh annual winter school in the woods of Cerknica, Slovenia, in January 2000. The 28 December letter from the Universal House of Justice regarding the further application oflaws of the Kitab-i-Aqdas was studied and served to inspire the gathering. As part of the popular morning show "Good Morning Croatia," broadcast on Croatian national television, two twelve-minute segments profiling the Indian Baha'i House of Worship were aired, and the editor plans to produce further programs on Baha' i subjects. SPAIN- A public presentation of the Spanish translation of the Kitab-i-Aqdas took place on 12 November at the national Baha' i center in Spain, before an audience of two hundred. Two lectures emphasized the position of the Kitab-i-Aqdas among religious holy books and its significance for Baha'is. From 17 through 25 July, the Baha'i community ofElche, in collaboration with Miguel Hernandez University, organized the second summer course on "Music, the Cultural Feature of Gypsy People." Three Gypsy organizations also assisted in organizing this event, which was sponsored by Elche's city hall and attended by three hundred people. The Trustee ofI:Iuququ'llah, Hand of the Cause of God 'Ali- Mul).ammad Varqa, accompanied by Counsellor member of the International Teaching Centre Firaydoun Javaheri, attended a Span- ish conference on I:Iuququ'llah in Barcelona in October 1999. Nearly five hundred Baha'is from twelve countries attended, and Dr. Varqa gave talks regarding the law of I:Iuququ'llah, its spiritual significance, and its influence on individuals and community development. SWEDEN- More than 120 Baha'is attended the six-day-long Swedish Baha'i summer school in July. The focus of the summer school was The Seven Valleys , one of the primary mystical works of Baha'u'llah, recently translated into Swedish. Baha'i writer Julio Savi came from Italy to conduct classes, some of which focused on Islam, Baha'i identity, and the reality of man. Artistic works were also produced on the themes of The Seven Valleys. SWITZERLAND- On 20 September 1999, representatives of the Baha'i Faith, Buddhism, the Catholic and Protestant churches, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism spoke and prayed before a crowd of three hundred people in Baden. The Baha'i Choir ofZurich/Aargau gave its first public concert at the event. During the afternoon the various religions offered typical dishes from the diverse cultures represented in their communities. The Baha'i speaker quoted 'Abdu'l-Baha concerning neighborliness: "Be kind to the strangers ... Help to make them feel at home; find out where they are staying, ask if you may render them any service; try to make their lives a little happier." This quotation appeared in an article written about this event. Newspapers and the regional radio and television station publicized this activity, which grew out of an interreligious study group in which several Baha'is have been participating over the last year and a half. The 1999 graduation ceremonies ofLandeggAcademy, concomitant with the second international symposium "Converging Realities: On Integrating the Spiritual and the Scientific," took place at the Swiss-based school from 22 to 25 April 1999. Ten young women and men from Canada, Ghana, Macau, Sri Lanka, Togo, the United States, and elsewhere-the founding class of the Academy's bachelor of arts program-were welcomed by the rector and eighty other dignitaries and guests. "In its diversity," said Dr. Hossein Danesh, rector ofLandegg, "the graduating group em- bodies the beginning of the implementation of the vision of the Academy, to become a microcosm of the world and to eventually welcome to its campus at least one student from each country on the planet." Seven master of arts graduates also received their diplomas. Professor Moshe Sharon, incumbent of the Chair for Baha'i Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Hans Hohener, former president of the Swiss Canton of Appenzell Ausserrhoden and long-time minister of Education, gave the keynote addresses at the Converging Realities conference, which attracted a number of accomplished academics. An additional event Baha 'is of Gypsy descent hold a Na w Ritz celebration in Sivas, Turkey. celebrating the tenth anniversary of the World Order Studies certificate program at the Academy was held 24 July. TURKEY- For the second year in a row, the Turkish Atatiirk Thought Society approached the Iskenderun Local Spiritual Assembly for assistance in preparing an artistic program for a celebration of May's National Children's Day. In recent years, the event has been adapted to include children from all cultures and is a national holiday. The Assembly's consultations with the organizers resulted in popular musical and dance performances. Within two days of the devastating earthquake of August 1999, members of the Turkish Baha'i community were on the disaster site endeavoring to help the survivors. A committee formed by the National Spiritual Assembly set up two tents where differ- ent daily activities were provided for nearly one hundred women and children, and a group of Baha'i doctors also volunteered. The tent project continued for six months following the earthquake, and regular visits to relocated families continue. The Turkish-Greek Women's Peace Initiative (WINPEACE), organized a two-day conflict resolution seminar in Ankara, which the rector of Landegg Academy was invited to facilitate jointly with another expert. Financial assistance for the seminar was received from the Soros Foundation. UKRAINE- Baha'i youth and their friends from Belarus, Canada, Croatia, Luxembourg, Moldova, and various parts of the Ukraine gathered in Kiev for three days in July 1999 for the "Act Now" conference, organized by the European Baha'i Youth Council to give further impetus to the European youth movement towards unity and peace. Inspired by the conference's practical workshops, study sessions, and artistic presentations, the youth held several open firesides and welcomed ten people into the Baha'i Faith. The National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Ukraine became legally registered on 27 July 1999, enabling the Assembly to own land, manage funds, publish literature, establish charitable institutions, and sponsor public activities. UNITED KINGDOM-On 3 January 2000, representatives of the Baha'i community of the United Kingdom joined members of eight other major religions in the Royal Gallery of the House of Lords for a major interfaith celebration of the new millennium. The event took place in the presence of the duke and duchess of Gloucester, Dr. George Carey, archbishop of Canterbury, and Prime Minister Tony Blair. A member of each of the religions gave a presentation on shared values, such as community, care and compassion, justice and respect, to an audience of members of Parliament, religious leaders and faith community members from across the country. The British Broadcasting Corporation showed thirty minutes of highlights of the celebration immediately afterwards, and there was national newspaper coverage the next day, sending a highly public signal about the importance of interfaith dialogue. In his welcoming remarks, Chris Smith, secretary of state for Culture, YEAR IN R EVIEW The Unity Dance Workshop pe1formsfor the "Century of Light " awards ceremony in Belfast, Northern Ireand, in November I 999. Media, and Sport, referred to the event as a gathering of the "nine major religions of the United Kingdom," a statement that marks recognition of the Baha'is as a major faith community by the royal family, the government, and the Church of England. Baha'is observed the centenary of the arrival of the Baha'i Faith in the United Kingdom with events around the country. One of the notable events was "The Wayfarer's Journey," a musical drama based on Baha'u'llah's work, The Seven Valleys. Using the famous Cheddar Caves as the venue, the story was told in music, poetry, and art as the audience passed through each cave to experience another aspect of the Faith of Baha'u'llah. Some five hundred people attended the presentation, more than a hundred of whom were not Baha' is. Sixteen members of the European Baha'i Business Forum and representatives from the Baha'is of the United Kingdom attended the Enterprise Summit, which was held in conjunction with the State of the World Forum from 4 to 9 May 1999, in Belfast, Northern Ireland. More than eight hundred people, representing varied sectors of society, were involved. Baha'is shared their perspective on progressive business practices in the changing world economy during the joint plenary sessions, special events, receptions, and informal discussions. More than 1, 100 people, and over two hundred dignitaries attended what is believed to have been the largest public event ever organized by the Baha'i community in the United Kingdom. Held in the Waterfront Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on 18 November 1999, the program included perfonnances from different cultures. Special awards were presented to local people and organizations that fostered equality, peace, elimination of prejudice, and human rights. Ulster Television, Radio Ulster, and regional and local newspapers covered the event. The 1999 Parliament of the World :s Religions bmught more than seven thousand religious representatives j i-0111 around the world to Cape Town, South AFica, in Decembe1'. PARLIAMENT OF THE W,ORLD'S RELIGIONS F or the first week of December 1999, residents of Cape Town, South Africa, witnessed a remarkable metaphor in action. Seven thousand teachers, scholars, leaders, and religious believers gathered, as representatives of hundreds of millions of their coreligionists in some ninety countries, to consult with, learn from, and share fellowship with each other. Religion, so long viewed as divisive in human affairs, has been engaged for several decades in a process of rediscovering itself, chiefly driven by interfaith dialogue. The contraction of borders, economies, and cultures has changed the face of more than governments. Globalization is forc - ing the world's religions to take a fresh look at their existence in a wide spectrum of faiths. The Parliament of the World's Religions represents a high point in this movement towards introspection and consultation. One of the chief results of the Parliament was the seventy-page document A Call to Our Guiding Institutions, a plea to those people and institutions responsible for shaping the future course of humanity- religions; governments; organizations of agriculture, labor, industry, and commerce; educators; the arts and media; science and medicine; and non-governmental organizations. The Call underscores the commonality of moral virtues and their potential role in solving global social problems, touches upon issues as diverse as sustainable development, global governance, media ethics, and debt relief. In short, it offers a blueprint for religious and secular partnership in addressing the new millennium's global challenges. Held six years after the Parliament in Chicago that marked the one-hundredth anniversary of the 1893 World's Parliament of Religions, the 1999 event offered a glimpse of some of the currents in the worldwide interfaith movement. "We find ourselves at a moment when people everywhere are coming to recognize that the world is a global village," the Call says. "Unique to this moment is the possibility of a new level of creative engagement between the institutions of religion and spirituality and the other powerful institutions that influence the character and course of human society . .. What is needed now is a persuasive invitation to our guiding institutions to build new, reliable, and more imaginative partnerships toward the shaping of a better world." "We're convinced that the international interreligious movement is one of the most important features of the modern world," said Jim Kenney, international director of the Council for the Parliament of the World's Religions, which cosponsored the event along with the Parliament of the World's Religions, South Africa. "Our motivation for holding the Parliament comes from the fact that the world is shrinking and that diversity is more and more apparent," said Kenney. "Twenty years ago, a Westerner might never have encountered a Buddhist or a Baha'i or a Muslim or a Hindu. Now ... the followers of all these traditions live adjacent to each other." Events like the Parliament embody an ideal of the Baha'i teachings . In the Kitab-i-Aqdas, the central book of the Baha'i revelation, Baha'u'llah exhorts His followers to "[c]onsort with all religions with amity and concord" and states elsewhere that the doctrines of holy war, ritual impurity, and other hindrances p ARLIANlE NT OF R ELIGIONS to interreligious unity have been categorically abolished. "So powerful is the light of unity," says Baha'u'llah, "it can illuminate the whole earth." 1 The Call was one of two new efforts of this year's gathering intended to stimulate faith groups to take their involvement in the Parliament to the level of joint action. The other was the offering of "Gifts of Service to the World," a listing of several hundred faith-inspired service projects. The Parliament The Parliament opened with a colorful procession of religious leaders and believers through the streets of Cape Town. As several thousand Baha'is, Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, Jains, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Zoroastrians, African indigenous leaders, and others wound their way through the city, they were at times heckled by fundamentalist groups and even threatened with violence. The protests were reflections of the challenges tha surround interfaith dialogue. 2 The daily program of the Parliament began with morning prayers and meditations, followed by numerous workshops and talks, and evening plenary sessions and artistic performances. Scholars, activists, and religious leaders addressed topics ranging from the basic teachings of the world's religions to an exploration of faith -inspired solutions to world problems. "Much time and energy was devoted to discussing practical problems such as poverty and discrimination, social injustice and the stifling of ancient traditions, environmental pollution and global ethics, economic exploitation, and health issues," said Varadaraja V. Raman, professor emeritus of physics and humanities at the Rochester Institute of Technology in the United States and a representative of the Zygon Center for Science and Religion. "Thus, for example, in one session a speaker expounded on the human rights violation suffered by millions of ' untouchables ' in India, while in another, an eminent scholar interviewed some Baha'u'llah, Cleanings .fiwn the Writings ofBaha'u '/Lah (Wilmette: Baha'i Publishing Trust, 1994), p. 288 . For more on interre li gious dialogue, see " World Watch ," pp. 265- 84 . Native American elders on how their religions and cultures have been marginalized in modem America." More than one hundred Baha' is from around the world attended the Parliament and many were integrally involved in its organization and operation, including Dr. Amy Marks, who acted as cochair and spoke during the opening and closing plenary sessions. Several other Baha'is served as trustees on the Parliament's South African and international boards of directors; Lally Warren, a member of the Continental Board of Counsellors for Africa, read a prayer as one of the twenty dignitaries on stage during the opening devotions; Shohreh Rawhani, secretary of the South African National Spiritual Assembly, was a main speaker; nine Baha'is served as representatives to the high-level Parliament Assembly; a Baha'i youth dance group and Kevin Locke, a native American Baha'i, perfonned at two of the plenaries and there were Baha'i booths and displays. During the final three days, an Assembly of some four hundred religious and spiritual leaders gathered for consultations and to make further commitments to joint action. Joining the Assembly were secular leaders from business, agriculture, academia, the media, and international organizations such as the World Bank. The closing ceremony featured a short speech by the Dalai Lama, leader of Tibetan Buddhists. He said he was encouraged that so many people could honor each other's religions and expressed the hope that such meetings would result in concrete social action. A Noble Heritage The 1999 Parliament builds on the World Parliament of Religions, held in Chicago in 1893, which brought together several hundred scholars, theologians, and religious leaders of East and West. The 1893 event is viewed by some as the dawn of interfaith dialogue, and also holds the distinction of being the first time the Baha'i Faith was introduced to the public in the Western hemisphere. 3 3 In his address to the conference, the Reverend Henry H. Jessup, D.D. , director of Presbyterian missionary operations in northern Syria, quoted Ca mbridge Orienta li st E.G. Browne's description ofBaha'u ' ll ah. P ARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS Religious leaders, including Baha'i representative A my Marks (thirdfi-om le.fi), stand with Nelson Mandela, former president of South Africa . The Council for the Parliament of the World's Religions was established after a highly successful 1993 centenary of that event drew more than ten thousand participants to Chicago. Among the major products of the 1993 Parliament was a document called Towards a Global Ethic, a statement of global ethics as defined by the world's major religions. Council officials said they chose South Africa for the 1999 Parliament because of the role that religion played in the struggle against apartheid. "We believe that there is a unique role that religion and spirituality play in social transformation," said Dirk Ficca, executive director of the Council. "It provides resources for the people to get a clear vision of where they might go, and an outline of the most peaceful and just way to get there." Addressing the Parliament, former South African president Nelson Mandela acknowledged, "without the Church and religious institutions, I would never be here today," explaining that it was Christian, Muslim, Hindu, and Jewish religious groups that were instrumental in providing him and other young blacks with an education-and later in giving comfort to political prisoners and their families. "I appreciate the importance ofreligion," he said. "You have to have been in a South African jail under apartheid where you could see the cruelty of human beings to each other in its naked form. Again, religious institutions and their leaders gave us hope that one day we could return." He went on to say that "religion will have a crucial role to play in guiding and inspiring humanity to meet the enormous challenges we face" in the next century. Once the decision was made to hold the 1999 Parliament in South Africa, much of the planning and implementation of the event was turned over to the Parliament of the World's Religions, South Africa (PWRSA), an autonomous interfaith organization. "The South Africa religious community, humble as it was, rose to the immense task of playing host to the Parliament," said Amy Marks, cochair of PWRSA and a member of the South African Baha'i community. "In truth," said Marks, "it can be said that the 1999 Parliament of the World's Religions was achieved on the interreligious foundations built by those who were key players in the struggle áagainst apartheid." The next Parliament was tentatively scheduled for 2005. A welcoming message from the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of South Africa, which appeared on the front page of Vukani, the official newsletter of the Parliament (and which was distributed as an insert in the municipal newspaper Cape Times), summed up the sp irit of the Baha'i contribution to the gathering by speaking of the vast majority of the peoples of the world [who] accept and understand that we are one people- one people rich in the diversity of our cultures, languages, temperaments and thought .. As a new century opens, the overrid ing challenge facing all of the world 's peoples is to understand and who lehearted ly accept ... that the time has come to rise above our petty differences of national and religious rivalries and work constructively and enthusiastically to build new order in th e world. A gathering a/some of the participants at the 1999 Parliament of the World~á Religions in Cape To wn, South A.fi-ica. THEBAHA'f INTERNATIONAL C£tE:'\~~tlY r-y-ihe Baha'i International C01mnunity both encompasses and rep- .l resents, at the United Nations and in other international fora, the more than five million Baha' is living in at least 235 countries and dependent territories around the world. Its 181 national and regional affiliates are engaged in a wide range of activities aimed at realizing the Baha'i Faith's central principles of peace and justice. For the last several years, four major themes-human rights, moral development, the advancement of women, and global prosperity-have shaped the Baha'i International Community's activities at the local, national, and international levels. The Baha'i International Community's United Nations Office and its Office of Public Information play complementary roles in the promotion of this work. The United Nations Office, with over fifty years of experience offering Baha'i perspectives on global issues and supporting UN programs, has in recent years significantly increased efforts aimed at assisting its national affiliates to influence relevant programs and developments in their countries. The Office of Public Infonnation, which also represents 11 1 the Baha'i community internationally, disseminates information about the Baha'i Faith around the world, oversees production of the award-winning newsletter One Country, and maintains the official Web site of the Baha' i International Community. United Nations First affiliated with the UN in 1947, the Baha'i International Community has long supported the work of the United Nations. As an international non-governmental organization (NGO) at the UN, the BIC was granted consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in 1970, with the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in 1976, and with the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) in 1989. A working relationship with the World Health Organization (WHO) was also established in 1989. The BIC has United Nations Offices in New York and Geneva and maintains representations to United Nations regional commissions in Addis Ababa, Bangkok, and Santiago, and to UN offices in Nairobi, Rome, and Vienna. Its Office of the Environment (established in 1988), and its Office for the Advancement of Women (established in 1992) function as adjuncts of its United Nations Office. Over the course of the last decade, the Baha'i International Community's United Nations Office has increasingly encouraged its national affiliates to expand their involvement in the work of the United Nations. Human Rights Education initiative As National Spiritual Assemblies have assumed a greater role in Baha'i diplomatic work, many have joined in a global campaign to encourage active engagement in the UN Decade for Human Rights Education (1995-2004). To promote this Human Rights Education initiative, the Baha'i International Community's United Nations Office developed a training program for national Baha'i communities. Ninety-nine of the National Spiritual Assemblies that have chosen to participate in this global campaign sent representatives to one of fourteen regional diplomatic training sessions held between October 1998 and November 1999. Seminars were offered in Australia, Cameroon, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cote d'Ivoire, Denmark, Romania, Thailand, BAI-IA'l I NTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY Participants in a human rights education training session in Trinidad. Trinidad and Tobago, the Ukraine, the United States, and Uruguay. Materials were made available in English, French, Russian and Spanish, and at least one training session was offered in each of those languages. Moreover, the training sessions themselves were highly participatory, encouraging trainees to draw on their personal experience and to explore how to identify and apply relevant spiritual principles to diplomatic situations they encounter in their own countries. Following the seminars, the trained external affairs representatives briefed their National Spiritual Assemblies on what they had learned in order to help develop national plans for promoting the Decade for Human Rights Education. Many of these same trainees have also begun offering the training to others, thereby systematically increasing the human resources available to carry out diplomatic initiatives at national, regional, and local levels. The United Nations Office is supporting this work with a Human Rights Education Newsletter and a Human Rights Education CD-ROM. Human rights The Baha'i International Community's support for the UN Decade for Human Rights Education is a natural extension of its efforts since 194 7 to promote human rights and responsibilities as the foundation for a peaceful, prosperous, and sustainable world order. This year, as in years past, the Baha'i International Community addressed the UN Commission on Human Rights. Its statement on the right to education was circulated as an official UN document (E/CN.4/2000/NG0/13) in English, French, and Spanish to the Fifty-sixth Session of the Commission, held March- April 2000. 1 The BIC also joined other NGOs in signing joint statements on violence against women, human rights defenders, and the right to education. Preparations are also being closely monitored for the next major UN human rights conference, the World Conference against Racism, to be held in South Africa in September 2001 . Protecting the right of Baha'is throughout the world to practice their faith is also an important aspect of the work of the Baha'i International Cotmnunity's United Nations Office, and a major focus of the office in Geneva. With the help of its national affiliates, the BIC has, for more than twenty years, brought the perilous situation of the Baha'is in Iran to the attention of the international community, providing reliable information to national governments and to the UN offices, co1mnissions, and committees that monitor compliance with the various UN human rights agreements. During the Commission's deliberations on human rights in Iran, the BIC offered an oral update on the situation of the Baha'is in that country. 2 It also monitored sessions of the ECOSOC and the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, where it was anticipated that the issue of the Baha'is might be raised. Advancement of women Fifty-two national Baha'i communities now have Offices for the Advancement of Women, and numerous others have committees or task forces. These offices assist National Spiritual Assemblies in their efforts to promote the full participation of women both in the life of the Baha'i community and in the world at large. They are kept abreast of initiatives at the UN, opportunities for regional involvement, and projects being carried out by other national communities through a newsletter circulated by the Baha'i International Community's Office for the Advancem'ent of Women. For the Baha'i International Community's statement on the right to education , see pp . 295-300. For the Baba ' i International Community 's statement on the current situation of the Baha'is in Tran, see pp. 291 - 94. Fo r additional information, see the artic le on pp. 157- 64 . B AHA'I I NTERNATIONAL c os1M UNITY Throughout this year, the Office has been engaged in a variety of activities pertaining to women and girls. At the .request of African Action on AIDS, an organization dedicated to providing for AIDS orphans in Africa, the Baha'i International Community cohosted a program at its New York office entitled "Celebrating Human Rights by Promoting the Rights of AIDS Orphans." This program honored the president of the Fiftyfourth Session of the General Assembly, Dr. Theo-Ben Gurirab of Namibia, and his wife for their support of this cause. In October 1999 a Millennium Young People's Congress was held in Honolulu, Hawaii, sponsored by Peace Child International, the State of Hawaii, UNEP, and UNESCO. At the Congress, the Baha'i International Community, which has become known as an advocate for the girl child, was invited to serve as one of several mentors for teens from 110 countries. The Community also convened the Advocates for African Food Security: Lessening the Burden for Women, as it has since 1988. At the March 2000 session of the Commission on the Status of Women, the Baha'i International Community continued to exercise leadership in the NGO community. It chaired two important groups for the NGO Committee on the Status of Women: the Planning Group for NGO Consultation Day and the Task Force on National Mechanisms for the Advancement of Women. Speaking on a panel entitled "NGOs for Women 2000: Setting Targets for Beijing + 5," which was organized prior to the Commission by the UN Division for the Advancement of Women, the director of the Office for the Advancement of Women shared her expertise on national machinery for the advancement of women. After surveying the progress various countries had made in establishing mechanisms to ensure that the concerns of women would be taken into account in decision making at every level of government, she focused primarily on constructive examples of countries whose national mechanisms are working. The issue of national mechanisms for ensuring equality was just one of the twelve issues addressed during the eleven days of the March 2000 session of the Commission on the Status of Women, during which governments prepared for the upcoming special session of the UN General Assembly. "Beijing+ 5," as the special session is called, will evaluate progress in implementing the platform for action adopted in 1995 at the Fourth World Conference on Women. At the request of UNIFEM, the Baha'i International Community and the NGO Committee on UNIFEM cohosted two receptions for the UN committee monitoring implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). A number of UN officials and diplomats were among the approximately sixty-five guests who attended the first reception and the eighty who attended the second. Participants in the World Faiths Development Dialogue, held in Washington, DC, November 1999. Environment, development, and global prosperity For the last two years the Baha'i International Community has participated in the World Faiths Development Dialogue (WFDD), sponsored by the president of the World Bank and the archbishop of Canterbury. The second formal session of the Dialogue was held in Washington, DC, in November 1999. Participants from the first WFDD held at Lambeth Palace met at World Bank Headquarters to review progress made by the Dialogue since its inception in February 1998. The historic Lambeth Palace gathering brought together development experts and spiritual leaders from nine major religions for two days of consultation on the relationship between material and spiritual development. The Washington conference drew many of the same high-level participants as the B Al-lA' f I NTERNATIONAL COMMU NITY Lambeth Palace event, as well as the executive director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), to consider an overview of development work involving the World Bank and faith communities and to discuss the future of the Dialogue. Consultations, which centered largely on spiritual values, produced a remarkable consensus around many principles central to the Baha'i understanding of development. Trustworthiness and honesty were repeatedly mentioned as foundations for development. The need to work for global solidarity, for recognition of the unity of the human family, and for a global ethic was highlighted again and again. Representatives of the World Bank and the IMF, in their public remarks, also spoke of spiritual values as being at the heart of development. Indeed, recognition of the need to end the artificial separation between material and spiritual development appears to be growing, as evidenced by the continued attention in development circles being given to the Baha'i statement Valuing Spirituality in Development, which was prepared for the Lambeth Palace event. 3 Participants agreed that the Dialogue should continue for the next five years at least and that the IMF should become a partner in it. A team of independent advisors will make recommendations to the cochairs and the WFDD executive committee regarding the future coordinating structure of the Dialogue, and the high-level group attending these first two meetings will meet again within the next two years. Yet another significant interfaith activity was the third session of the Parliament of the World's Religions, held in Cape Town, South Africa, in December 1999. 4 A representative of the Baha'i International Community participated in drafting A Call to Our Guiding Institutions, the central document of the Parliament, and was one of nine Baha'is accredited to the three-day high level Parliament Assembly. The Baha'i International Community was also represented in Amman, Jordan, at the Seventh World Assembly of the World Conference on Religion and Peace. See Th e Baha 'i World 1997- 98, pp. 233- 59 for the ful l text. For more information on the Parl iament, see pp. 105- 10. THE B AHA:f W ORLD Secretary -general o/ the BJC, Albert Lincoln, greeting Pope John Paul fl in Tel Aviv, during the pope :Sá historic visit to Israel in March 2000. Future of the United Nations In preparation for the Millennium Assembly- as the year 2000 UN General Assembly session has been designated-and its Millennium Summit of heads of state and government, the NGO community has been organizing its own Millennium Forum to be held at UN Headquarters in New York in May 2000. The goal of the Forum is to give organizations of civil society the opportunity to articulate a new vision for the future of the United Nations and for ways whereby the peoples of the world can participate effectively in global decision making. The Baha'i International Community, as cochair of the organizing committee for the Millennium Forum, has been immersed throughout this year in a process intended to bring as many as fourteen hundred representatives of NGOs and other groups of civil society to the United Nations in May 2000. Meetings The Baha'i International Community chaired three NGO committees and task forces this year: the NGO committees on UNIFEM, Freedom of Religion or Belief, and Human Rights; and the NGO task force on National Machinery for Gender Equality. Other meetings and UN sessions monitored by the Baha'i International Co1rununity this year included the Eighth Session of the Commission on Sustainable Development; the Thirty-eighth Session of the Cormnission for Social Development; the Twentyeighth Session of the Economic Commission for Latin America B A I 1A' f I NTERNATIONAL C OMM UN ITY and the Caribbean; the Substantive Session of the ECOSOC; the Second Preparatory Committee for the Special Session of the General Assembly, "World Summit for Social Development + 5"; a high-level meeting of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific to review implementation in Asia and the Pacific of the Beijing Platfonn for Action; the Fifty-fifth Session of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination; the Twenty-first and Twenty-second Sessions of the CEDAW; the Fifty-second World Health Assembly; the first planning meeting of the Fourth World Youth Forum of the United Nations System; meetings of the UNICEF executive board; and the Executive Committee of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees' (UNHCR) Program. Public Information Based at the Baha'i World Centre in Haifa, Israel, with a bureau in Paris, the Baha'i International C01mnunity's Office of Public Information coordinates and stimulates public info1mation work throughout the worldwide Baha'i community. During 1999- 2000 the Office facilitated more than two htmdred visits of some 2,500 people from eighty countries in its special visits program . Among the visitors were ambassadors from Australia, China, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Ecuador, Hungary, India, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Myanmar, Lithuania, Peru, the Philippines, South Africa, Sweden, Thailand, and Uzbekistan. Also visiting were the first lady of Kazakhstan; a member of Parliament from Spain; the titular archbishop of Belcastro; the Members of the Agritech '99 exhibition visiting the Terraces of the Shrine of the Bab in f-laif'a , September 1999. state secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Hungary; the ministers of tourism from Jordan and Israel; Shimon Peres, former prime minister of Israel; four of Israel's Knesset members; the president and members of the Faculty Senate from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The agriculture exhibition Agritech '99 brought a delegation of approximately 240 dignitaries, including ministers and deputy ministers of Agriculture from more than thirty-five countries. Film crews, reporters, and photographers representing national and local media from Canada, France, Germany, Israel, Japan, the Netherlands, Switzerland, the Ukraine, and the United States visited. Resulting coverage included a thirty-minute documentary entitled "On the Way to the Land of Unity-the Baha' i Religion,'' shown on German public television, channel Sudwestrundfunk; an article in Eden, a gardens magazine published and distributed in Germany; a segment on Dutch television entitled "Y2K News"; brief segments showing images of the Baha'i gardens for a millennium television program that was broadcast throughout the world; and a program on Israel's National Geographic Channel. The Baha'i World Web site, 5 now in its fourth year, has experienced a four-fold increase in visits since its launch, and at the end of 1999 averaged approximately 25,000 visits per month. The site is now available in five languages, with the addition of Arabic this year, and there are plans for additional languages. The Paris branch of the Office of Public Information was active in support of the Royaumont Process, which was initiated by the European Union to promote stability and good relations between countries in South Eastern Europe. 6 Training seminars were held in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Macedonia (FYROM), and Romania in 1999. Close and continuous communication was maintained with the representatives of the government of Luxembourg and the office of the EU for the Royaumont Process. In 5 The URL for the Baha 'i World Web site is See The Bahri 'i World J998- 99, pp. 145- 50 for a full report on the Baha'i International Comm unity's involvement in the Royaumont Process. B AHA'f I NTERNAT IONAL C OMMUNITY Jn September 1999, participants in a training seminar in Sarajevo created and ~-. ,. . p e1./0r111ed a dr an1atic sketch about inlerethnic tensions. October 1999, the Romanian Ministry of Education officially adopted "The Happy Hippo Show" 7 as part of a pilot program implemented in three school districts of Bucharest, with the possibility of extension to other cities. The Baha'i community in the Netherlands and the European Baha'i Youth Council, in collaboration with the Office of Public Information in Paris, actively participated in The Hague Appeal for Peace Conference held in The Hague, Netherlands, from 11 to 15 May 1999, marking the hundredth anniversary of the first conference held in the same city. The Baha'is made a presentation that featured a short video highlighting the aims and purpose of the project "Promoting Positive Messages Through the Media: The Happy Hippo Show" and its implementation in Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Romania, and Slovenia. A young Croatian Baha'i radio journalist, Robert Zuber, together with a representative of OPI Paris, cohosted a live adaptation of his weekly radio broadcast- a "Happy Hippo Show" devoted to the subject of multiculturalism. One Country, the quarterly newsletter of the BIC, reached an estimated 50,000 subscribers in its eleventh year of operation. It is published in six languages and is circulated in more than 180 countries, with an electronic edition available on the World Wide Web. 8 Its coverage this year included a profile of the Kalimani For more information on the Royaumont Process and "The Happy Hippo Show," see The Bahri 'i World 1998- 99, pp. 145- 50. The URL for the One Countl" y Web s ite is Women's Group, which exercised skills of consultation and partnership to build a water storage system in an arid region of Kenya; the Uganda Baha'i Institute for Development, which trained community health volunteers and helped to significantly increase immunization rates and raise awareness of basic hygiene in the Kumi and Soroti regions of southern Uganda; the STAR project in the United States, which offers a motivational athletic program and after-school tutorial sessions aimed at empowering and uplifting African American youth; and the Oedi Sewing Club in Botswana, a program that trains mostly poor single mothers in a marketable skill. One Country also continued to profile Baha'i involvement in major international conferences such as the Fortythird Session of the Commission on the Status of Women at the United Nations, the Parliament of World's Religions, and the preparatory meetings for the Millenium Forum. Conclusion During 1999-2000, the Baha' i International Community continued to encourage national support of the UN Decade for Human Rights Education around the world, promoted the advancement of women, encouraged the application of spiritual principles in development, and sought to promote the voice of civil society at the United Nations. In its work with National Spiritual Assemblies around the world, the United Nations, and other NGOs, the BIC continued to pursue its goal of the establishment of a just, peaceful, and prosperous civilization for all humankind. Establishment of the First CHAI! ~OR BAHA'I STUDIES '"l Jhile thousands of volumes have been written about the V V Baha' i Faith during the first centmy and a half of its existence, the vast majority of them have fallen largely outside the boundaries of formal institutional study. Furthennore, this body of literature is primarily of two types: either produced within the Baha'i community for a Baha' i audience, or written by opponents of the Faith with the aim of discrediting and undennining it. The establishment of the first academic Chair for Baha'i Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem-with the mission of promoting understanding of this new Faith and studying its history, its teachings, and its role in the modem world-represents a significant step in the institutionalized study of the Baha'i Faith. In the words of Professor Menachem Magidor, president of the Hebrew University, the establishment of the Chair signifies "interfaith, intercultmal, and interethnic discomse between people of different convictions and different beliefs." And as he remarked at the dedication of the Chair, "While we are definitely a Jewish university, we should be an intellectual bridge between Jewish culture and other religions." The establishment of the Chair was announced on 29 March 1999, 1 and an inaugural ceremony was held on the Mount Scopus campus of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem on 7 June 1999. Systematic study of the Baha'i Faith at the university began in the mid-1990s, when Professor Moshe Sharon, the Chair's first incumbent, began teaching a class on the history and sacred literature of the Baha'i Faith.2 Professor Sharon's own interest in and study of the Baha'i Faith were the impetus for the creation of the Chair, which was funded by an anonymous private donor. In his inaugural address, Professor Sharon spoke briefly about the history of the Faith and its adherents, naming ignorance as the main enemy of the Baha' is and saying, "The aim of this Chair is to fight ignorance, applying to the study of the Baha'i Faith the strict rules of scholarship." He characterized the responsibility of overseeing the Chair as both "heavy and exciting." The Baha'i World Centre was represented at the function by a delegation which included Albert Lincoln, secretary-general of the Baha'i International Community, who spoke at the ceremony. "The Baha'i Community welcomes the academic undertaking represented by this Chair," he said, "in full realization that the process will not always be a comfortable one ... Whether we like it or not, our understanding of our religion and our community will be affected by the work of this Chair. .. " Mr. Lincoln lauded the university for its "academic values" and "freedom from prejudice." See Th e Bahri 'i World 1998- 99, p. 35. Professor Sharon earned a doctorate from the Hebrew University in 197 l and currently teaches in the university's Is lamic a nd M iddle Eastern Studies department, and has published works in Arabic, Hebrew, and Eng li sh. His researc h interests includ e the early hi story of the Baha'i Faith , early Islamic history, the hi story of the Holy Land under Islam , messianic thought in Islam, Arab ic ep igraphy and papyrology, and the interaction between Judai sm, Christianity, and Is lam. Professor Sharon is currently at work on trans lating the Kitab-i-Aqdas into Hebrew. He a lso has plans to translate othe r major wo rks of the Baha'i Faith into Hebrew. CHAIR FOl~ B AHA'f STUDIES Professor Moshe Sharon (center) and other members of th e Hebrew University delegation at the Seat of the Universal House of Justice.for the commemorative event in Haifa. Secretary -general of the B!C Albert Lincoln stands to the leji. He expressed hope that the creation of the Chair would have a catalytic effect, sparking development at other universities. Following the event at the Hebrew University, a second event commemorating the foundation of the Chair was held on 25 June 1999 at the Baha'i World Centre in Haifa. This gathering focused on the evolution of Baha'i scholarship and the unique nature of the relationship between the Hebrew University and the World Centre, particularly the Centre for the Study of the Texts. The cooperation between these two institutions will allow the university access to historical documents crucial to the development of Baha'i studies. Albert Lincoln once again spoke on behalf of the Baha'i Comm~ity and during his speech read the text of a letter from fonner president of Israel Itzhak Navon to the President of the Hebrew University, congratulating him on the formation of the Chair. Mr. Lincoln also elucidated the commitment of the Baha'i World Centre to working with the university in pursuit of its scholarly goals. A large delegation from the Hebrew University attended, including the president, vice-president, and rector of the university. It marked the first time that the university senate had ever convened outside Jerusalem. Menachem Ben-Sasson, the university 's rector, spoke about the longstanding relationship between the Baha'i Faith and the Hebrew University, which dates back to the founding of the school in April 1925, when Shoghi Effendi wrote in a cable, " . ..B A HA ' 1s HOPE AN D PRAY TH E ESTAB LI SHMENT OF TH IS SEAT OF LEA RN ING M AY CON TRIB UT E TO TH E REV IVAL OF A L AN D OF HA L LOWE D MEM ORI ES FOR US A LL AN D FOR WHI CH A BD U' L-BA HA CH ERI SHED TH E HI GH EST HOP ES ." Dr. Peter Khan, member of the Universal House of Justice, addressed the gathering on the topic of Baha'i scholarship, 3 pointing out that one goal of Baha' i scholarship was the search for unity through study of the Faith and avoidance of the divisiveness of opposing doctrines that has caused splintering in religious thought throughout the ages. "We do not foresee our scholarly activity reducing to a set of schools of thought centered around prominent or charismatic individuals," he said, "rather, we see a community in which there is a sense of equality, not a rigid or stifling egalitarianism but a sense of a community of people searching for the truth, sharing it with each other, and providing mutual encouragement an d supp01i. " Professor Sharon gave a talk on the subject of Baha'i studies, emphasizing the importance of studying the sacred texts in their original languages of Arab ic and Persian and highlighting the cooperation between the Baba' i World Centre and the school. He called the partnership "essential for the achievement of the scholarly goals which lie ahead of us." He also noted the significance of this venture, saying, "There is no doubt in my mind that. .. we are writing a chapter in the history of the Baha'i Faith ... " In January 2000 an account of the proceedings both at the Hebrew University and the Baha'i World Centre, was published by the university. By Professor Sharon's estimation, the research of the Chair will require "a century, if not more" of effort on the part of both the university and the Baha'is. The Chair faces the challenge of studying not just a collection of writings and laws, but a vital and ever-changing community that is emerging from obscurity but is often surrounded by misunderstanding. Baha'is are still in the early phases of the growth of their own understanding about their religion and its community. The establi shment of the Chair will enhance the understanding of the Baha'i Faith not only in academic circles, but also by its practitioners around the world. For an expanded ve rs ion of Dr. KJ1an 's views o n Baha ' i scholarship, see pp. 197- 221. Brazil's Response to WHO rs WRITING THE FUTURE? n 1999 the Baha'i International Community's Office of Public I Information released the statement Who is Writing the Future?, 1 which offers a reflection on the twentieth century from a Baha'i perspective. It opens with a description of the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies' commemoration of the centenary of Baha'u'llah's passing, during which one of the deputies asserted that Baha'u'llah's writings constitute "the most colossal religious work written by the pen of a single man." The statement comprises five sections on themes central to the development of humankind, including the essentially spiritual nature of life, the need for a social and intellectual evolution, and the creation of a unified global society. The Baha' is of Brazil, wishing to share the document with their fellow citizens, initiated the publication of Quern esta escrevendo o .futuro? 25 textos para o Seculo XX! [Who is Writing the Future? 25 Texts.for the XX! Century]. The book is a compilation of twenty-five essays contributed by Brazilian 1. For the text of thi s document, see Th e Baha 'i World 1998- 99, pp. 255- 68. (From left to right) Frei Beto, Luiz Gushiken, Neissan Monadjem, and Jonas Resende participate in a ~~C:=~;.;;::::__J... =--"- -:: panel discuss ion at the release of Quern esta escrevendo o futuro? 25 textos para o Secu lo XXL philosophers, scientists, theologians, journalists, and politicians, each of which offers a response to the vision of the twentieth century proposed in the Baha'i International Community's statement. Though the authors were not Baha'is, Baha'u'llah's vision still resonated with them. Twenty-one photographs by internationally known photojournalist Sebastiao Salgado illustrate the essays. The book was published as a joint venture between the Baha'i community of Brazil and the Brazilian publishing firm Letraviva Editorial, with the authors' rights to the material being transferred to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). It was released in Rio de Janeiro on 8 December 1999, at a seminar sponsored partially by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Ten of the authors participated in panel discussions and offered further views on the book's themes and ideas to the audience of approximately one hundred participants. Canal Futura, a Brazilian cable channel, conducted interviews with the authors, and both the launch of the book and the seminar received coverage in Brazil's national newspapers. Following are three essays from the book, translated from the Portuguese. Luiz Gushiken, labor leader and former federal representative, talks about paradoxes of the twentieth century and the importance of morality in human development as we progress into the next centwy. EDUCATION AS RESISTANCE TO FORCES OF DISINTEGRATION I T he invitation to comment on the text Who is Writing the Future? Reflections on the Twentieth Century is extremely disturbing. In addition to the very breadth of the issue, which mocks us as we face the challenge of unveiling it, this is a document whose vigor, depth, universality, and synthesis intimidate anyone who attempts to expound on it. What follows, then, are modest considerations or, perhaps, concerns of a political militant who, at times, strove to raise some issues relating to strategies for the future. An old Eastern sage says that one of man's most complex challenges is the act of breaking old habits and learning new ones. This difficulty of our spirit in adopting new ways to act is, paradoxically, one of the dilemmas of today's world. Paradoxical because the century that is now ending has unleashed creative forces unheard-of in the history of humankind but, at the same time, is not showing itself to be capable of providing adequate answers to old problems- the impoverished state of huge numbers of people, the disproportionate wealth of certain nations and individuals, the ravishment of nature, rampant individualism, various forms of fanaticism, etc. What is even worse, however, is that instead of being reduced, these multiple problems are, on the contrary, expanding and reaching dangerous and unbearable levels-in spite of the vigorous and increasing mastery of our knowledge in the most diverse areas of science and technology. This seems to be the paradox of the late twentieth century: man can master nature, but not his own nature. In defining strategies that might countervail the evils that assail the world today, this lag is clearly expressed in the preface of this publication, the text of which says: The task of delivering humankind .. .requires that we question some of the most deep-rooted assumptions deve loped in the twentieth century regarding what is right and what is wrong. What are these unquestioned assumptions? The most obvious one is the conviction that unity is a distant, almost unattainable ideal, to be sought only after we have solved-no one knows exactly how- myriad political conflicts, material needs, and injustices . This comment raises the crucial issue of developing alternative strategies for the future and the foolishness of believing in the primacy of old formulas and old mindsets, to the detriment of the new, whose essence is a concerted effort to create broader and broader social units-an effort based on the concept of humankind as a vital source. This is an idea that was in the past evoked by visionaries, but that has today become a necessity corroborated by the evidence of facts . II We belong to a privileged generation of politicians who always ardently sought a "utopia," understood as an expression of a socially necessary and morally justifiable ideal that would promote concrete action and vitalize the spirit. In our political upbringing, of particular importance was the influence of an internationalist ideal as conceived by a variant of WHO lli WRITING TH E F UTURE? revolutionary Marxism and which might be summed up in the renowned phrase, "the proletariat is without nation." That is, only within a worldwide-scale socialist organization would it be possible for humankind to shake off the fetters of capitalism and find new bases to build a more just and humane society. This internationalist ideal shaped our ideas about the future and acted as a kind of strategic focus from which a new institutional, moral, and cultural concept might lead to concrete political actions . The text Who is Writing the Future? raises all these issues once again, but on a higher and deeper level. In 1992, I had the privilege of organizing in the House of Representatives a solemn session honoring Baha'u'llah. On that occasion, the considerations I made regarding our Honoree were entirely relevant in terms of the strategies for the future and I therefore transcribe below an excerpt of my speech in the tribune of the House: "The focal point in the writings of Baha'u'llah is the unity of humankind, expressed in the celebrated phrase: 'The earth is but one country and mankind its citizens."' From this simple sentence derives the most ambitious political project ever conceived: a supranational state, accepted as legitimate by the entire world, endowed with coercive power, expressing the summit of a worldwide organization in which all nations, races, and beliefs are united in a single body, free from the warmongering influence of governments and peoples, with its economic resources duly organized and exploited, its markets duly coordinated and developed, and the distribution of products regulated by equitable principles. A federated system of nations, with legislative, executive, and judiciary powers on a world level, capable of deploying an international military force but allowing for internal armed forces in each country, organized to maintain and uphold the norms of a new international code based on the principles of mutual cooperation, solidarity between peoples, and the protection of humankind. For Baha'u'llah, the great problems of the contemporary world are rooted in social structures and their value systems. A new covenant among nations-setting up new institutions, ordering new and well-defined objective clauses on the rights and obligations of each government, establishing frontiers and limits for each country, and rigidly limiting and controlling the weapons of each country-must become the supreme effort to which the rulers of the world and the entire human race dedicate themselves in order to usher a new age for humankind. As long as this does not happen, according to the prophecies ofBaha'u'llah, it will be impossible for the world to achieve serenity, and humankind will not be able to avoid great tribulations. This new world order, prescribed by Baha'u'llah as the only remedy for the ills of humankind, does not derive from the belief that men and nations are perfect in their moral behavior or devoid of material interests. It does not seek any homogenization of peoples or individuals; on the contrary, it takes into account ethnic, cultural, and linguistic diversities as well as those of thought and habit as natural expressions, and it nurtures the differences in the human race. This new order will in no way conflict with noble and intelligent sentiments of healthy patriotism, but nationalist rage and racial hatred will definitely be abolished. Thus, the imperatives of a world unified upon new bases will increase the autonomy of countries while avoiding the excesses of an exaggerated centralism. The principle of the unity of the human race, the central axis of Baha'u'llah's prophetic revelation, is not an emotional appeal to principles of human fraternity, nor a mere idealist proposition, but rather the objective expression of the current stage of humankind-now pleading for an organic unity on the political sphere, seeing that in the realms of economics and communications interdependence is now taken for granted. The nation-state, bulwark of a certain stage in our development, has become exhausted as a means of organizing humankind. National sovereign states must now evolve into a new system that joins them in a worldwide federated body, whereby the concept of "citizen of a nation" is extended to the concept of "citizen of the world." An issue that is always raised when one debates these matters, usually expressed as an argument to reject the propositions WHO lli WRITI NG THE FUTURE? mentioned above, runs like this: How can an ordinary citizen participate in the building of something as grandiose as a supranational institution ifhe or she is far from the decision-making centers and does not even have the minimum necessary knowledge for such an endeavor? This is a valid objection, albeit badly formulated. A body politic organized on a worldwide basis is certainly the ultimate expression of the principle of the unity of the human species in its institutional form. Bringing it about must result from a joint decision by the great representative leaders of all nations and will constitute the synthesis of a multiplicity of efforts in widely varied fields of human activity. The principle of unity is, above all, a sentiment that, if apprehended by the human spirit-either by logical reasoning, a moral sense, or the evidence of facts-may swiftly become an active principle. This sentiment may be shown in multiple aspects of our lives. In its propagation we will find the bases to teach new values, and the new institutions will structure themselves and acquire legitimacy. When we rebel against all kinds of prejudice- racial, religious, sexual, etc.-it is the principle of the unity of the humanity that pulsates in our hearts. When we exalt ecological values to preserve nature as an attitude to be heeded by every individual, regardless of where one lives, it is the feeling of unity that is moving us. The moral indignation of a citizen from another country in the face of ethnic prejudices that generate violence (against the citizens of Bosnia, for instance) is a feeling that derives from the same principle. And when this very same citizen demands an international force to sustain military action to defend those citizens, he or she is expressing, in his or her own way, the principle of unity in active form. Likewise, when we agree that a certain tyrant, a former head of state such as Pinochet, should be judged by an international court of law, we are expressing the same principle. Thus, the struggle for unity is a manifestation of the will to open up increasingly broad areas in the vast universe of cultural, economic, political, and social relations. It is a manifestation of the will that, at times, expresses a merely bureaucratic view of unity, acknowledging its functional effectiveness, but that, sooner or later, will be adopted by most citizens of the world as a moral imperative. Whatever the reasons that compel individuals to struggle for unity, and regardless of the importance they attribute to these acts, they are certainly following the natural path to the future and are thereby abbreviating the "time of suffering" of the birth of the new world order. III Another strategic aspect of the future world order pertains to the type of relationship between people in their collective processes, that is, the form by which people will get together to decide or settle issues within the scope of the social group to which they belong- e.g., family, neighborhood association, or club of friends--or even within the context of more complex groups, such as public agencies and corporate enterprises. According to an old tradition, the most appropriate form of working in groups is that based on the principle of verticality, of a superior authority, whereby those who are below usually do nothing but take orders emanating from above-offering, at the most, opinions. This authoritarian method is one of the main factors hindering the liberation of creative potentialities inherent in each individual. Contemporary societies are being deprived of a monumental source of human energy because of a pernicious habit intent on perpetuating itself. Many are becoming aware of this flawed model of human relationships and are proposing other forms. The Worker's Party [PT] in Brazil, for instance, has pioneered the principle of "Participative Budgeting" as a distinctive element in its program. This social and political mechanism enables us to increase the participation of people in the destiny of their cities, encouraging popular organization and, through representation, opening up the decision-making process whereby the use of public resources is discussed. Many companies have similar approaches to ensure the participation of all employees in defining products, marketing policies, etc. WI-IO lli WRITING TI-IE F UTURE? However, these extremely propitious initiatives seem to have a major conceptual limitation. In politics, the method of group consultation and participation is understood as an extension of the concept of democracy, a kind of enhanced power sharing (no small feat, actually). In companies, consultation and participation are seen as mere instruments to leverage the organization. As I see it, the framework for consultation and participation should derive from other premises. When we speak of direct participation, we are referring to the direct involvement of ordinary citizens in issues that bear upon them-in the places of actual social intercourse. This implies a multitude of places and relationships in which human energy is actually concentrated and from which a new creative and transforming force will be bred. When different individual capabilities are brought together, the result is more than the mere sum of these skills, for a doubleedged operation is set in motion. First, the faculty of perception is enhanced, making for discoveries or understandings of realities that had heretofore remained hidden or undiscovered. In other words, the scope of our knowledge of increasingly complex levels of reality expands and, therefore, we acquire greater control and command over the object of investigation or debate. Second, the reciprocal influence between participation and enhanced knowledge turns the consultation method into a dynamic, progressive, and proactive factor endowed with synergistic capabilities-quite unlike pyramidal decision structures that are by nature static. Thus, it is not hard to imagine the gigantic force that might be extracted from a society if its members were allowed greater freedom of consultation and participation in decisionmaking processes. But the most important aspect in the consultation and participation method is that is promotes loyalty and commitment among people, a feat that is achieved when individuals are allowed to understand the meaning of what is right and wrong in the issues with which they are involved. Societies have long forgotten and forsaken an ongoing pursuit of justice as an element to stimulate action and propagate loyalty. The notion of justice has always been associated with formal normative precepts (laws, regulations, etc.) and with the institutions that enforce them-either those properly pertaining to justice (the tribunals) or those of a punitive nature (police stations, for instance). However, although fundamental for progress and civilization, this concept of justice, which is predominantly associated with concepts of restriction and punishment, does not measure up to that feeling of "justice" we all have deep within ourselves, telling us what is right and wrong in each concrete expenence. Consultation and participation as elements of interactive processes among people extend and liberate our primal perception of a sense of justice, an attribute inherent in the human spirit that can promote infinitely more powerful forms of commitment and loyalty-and, for this very reason, is also capable of stimulating action. That is why I believe it would not be altogether incorrect to state that consultation is, in and by itself, an expression of justice on the simplest operational level. In this manner, paraphrasing Baha'u'llah: if you base yourself on it, you will see with your own eyes, and not those of others; you will know through your own understanding and not through that of your neighbor. Considering that the behavioral mien that predominates in collective activities is the spirit of distrust and individualism, one may question whether men are prepared to introduce the method of consultation, as outlined above, in their day-to-day matters. This is a cogent doubt and our response to it, as with other great issues, will depend on a tremendous educational effort to make people aware of something that exists potentially in their spirit and has an incomparably superior transforming power over other social mechanisms. The method of consultation and participation, seen from this perspective, is much more than a mere instrument of social action; it is a veritable generative source that forms social units capable of countervailing the dangerous process of social fragmentation that characterizes life in most contemporary societies. As a last observation on the method of consultation, we must stress that it achieves its maximum strength when individuals WHO @WRITING THE FUTURE ? participating in collective processes are imbued with feelings of candor, honesty, and honorable intentions. IV A reflection on the matter of morals is another important aspect in defining the elements that comprise a strategy for the future. Any diagnosis of the serious problems we are now facing will come upon a worrisome phenomenon, namely, the increasing fragility of the moral structure of individuals and contemporary societies. A clue to understanding this complex problem may be found in the history of this century's great ideologies. Capitalist ideology, in its desire to value individualist traits, has in effect led us to neglect the social dimension as the fundamental goal of moral purpose. In capitalism, social problems are seen not as results of specific policies engendered by those who wield economic and political power, but as anomalies of an abstract entity called "marketplace"- the regulation of which, however, is generally abominated. These psychological mechanisms, on the one hand, dilute responsibilities for social ignominies and, on the other, tend to lead us to see the unemployed more as volunteers for idleness than as casualties of economic policies of exclusion. In capitalist ideology, the stimulus toward self-sufficiency and individual competition is taken to such extreme degrees that values that inspire cooperation and solidarity very rarely find a place in people's hearts. But while sophisticated forms of extolling individual values (which this system is prodigal in creating) may at times camouflage its intrinsic perverse selfishness, in the end they cannot but entangle people in the traps of hypocrisy and guilt. It is undeniable that the exacerbation of individualism, which seems to be reaching an apogee now, bears close relationship with the increasingly swift social deterioration of our days and with our enormous confusion regarding values such as liberty and mutual respect. Socialist ideology, in turn, has encouraged people to blame only society for the existing evils and deviations, ignoring individual responsibility and thus paving the way for upsurges of authoritarian and arrogant feelings, and stifling emotions such as respect and compassion. All the violence that has been committed against millions of people in the name of socialism will remain indelibly imprinted on our perception of the twentieth century as a tremendous paradox, whereby policies aimed at a supposed social good transformed the state into a veritable machine of terror. Realizing this particular moral vision certainly implies a new strategy for the moral transformation of individuals. In this process, morality is to be understood not as reverence for human virtues but as an operational principle that stimulates action and is valued as a dynamic factor. In this manner, people will feel impelled both toward their own individual progress and toward the implementation of changes in their environment. Thus, we need a dialectic capable of expressing this double objective: from the personal point of view, it must seek to develop the talents and qualities that distinguish human beings and that constitute their natural gifts; from the social point of view, it must strive to promote the well-being of the human species, assuming justice and solidarity as essential values of social intercourse among individuals and nations. Only by availing themselves of strategic long-range supports, including the perspective of educating future generations, will leaders at all levels, the media, and our various institutions be imbued with convictions consistent enough to build a true civilization, providing society with the skills it needs and counteracting the disruptive forces that are being unleashed at the end of this century. The march of events in the historical stage we are now living in is so vigorous that every gesture and every thought, from the most trivial to the most complex, end up by disturbing and putting our convictions to the test. We must seek new paradigms. For the time being, however, we are unfortunately being engulfed by the greatest of tragedies: our own banalization. Leonardo Baff,' theologian, write1~ and professor at Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, discusses the crisis of destruction fa cing humanity, and the means by which it can be survived. THE DANGEROUS PASSAGE TOA WORLD REPUBLIC ' "} Then a tree has fulfilled its intrinsic potentialities, we say it VV has attained its climax. It then dies and falls. When people have spent their individual energy supply, they grow old and die. When, over the next ten billion years, the sun exhausts its stock of hydrogen and, later, of helium, it will become a shining star and die, slowly turning into a white dwarf and, ultimately, a black hole-but having earlier dragged into itself the entire solar system and our own planet earth. The entire universe and each one of its beings, particularly the organic ones, fall under the law of entropy. They have limited potentialities: one day they will all disappear. Doesn't the same thing happen with social systems? Isn't our system of social intercourse losing or wasting its potentialities and on the way to dissolution? It is undoubtedly facing a major crisis. The question is, is it a crisis of circumstance that, once overcome, will usher in a new age of prosperity, or is it a structural crisis paving the way for a terminal outcome in an intensive care unit? I adopt the hypothesis that we are in the heart of a structural and terminal crisis. It is structural because it affects every aspect, as bacteria take over an entire organism, producing septicemia and, eventually, death. And it is terminal because it represents the depletion of a paradigm-of all energies, all dreams and all strategies that might be able to cope with the system's own internal contradictions. The system marches irrevocably towards death. Nothing can stop this. Is it the end of the world, then? Yes and no. Yes, because it represents the end of this kind of world. No, because the world will go on. The end will bring forth the opportunity for a new world to emerge, that is to say, a new civilizing standard capable of providing us with a new meaning to life and all the peoples of the earth with a new horizon of hope for humankind. This dual perspective of death and life is present in the original Sanskrit meaning of the word crisis. Crisis derives from kir or krl-to cleanse and purify. There is an undeniable affinity between crisis and crucible. The severe process of purification implies death and rebirth: the death of worthless gangue, of aggregates, of contingency; and the rebirth of the gist, of essence, of necessity. Whatever is put into the crucible of a crisis, and remains, acquires the potential or virtuality of founding a new future . It is a catharsis we are undergoing at the present moment. Two Mortal Crises in the Current System Two crises have arisen from our current system of social intercourse, two crises that are unsolvable by the system's intrinsic resources: the social crisis and the ecological crisis. The social crisis plots the rich against the poor as never before in the history of humankind. The production process, by using automated technologies, can produce goods and services with extreme swiftness and on an ever-increasing scale. However, these goods are appropriated exclusively by a small elite of nations or by the upper classes in poor, dependent countries. This logic gives rise to an immeasurable injustice and a widening chasm between the haves and the have-nots. There is a very real risk of a bifurcation in humankind: on the one hand, those benefiting from advances in biotechnology who will live on to age 130, surrounded by every kind of amusement and delight; on the other, the great masses condemned to W I-IO IB WRITING THE F UTURE? suffer every type of want and deprivation, dying as they have always died, before their time. It is all the more serious not only because of the perverse abyss between the ones and the others, but also the absolute lack of humanitarian sensitivity. Our sense of solidarity and responsibility for our neighbors and fellow creatures has become extremely meager. It is in keeping with the logic of the system to exalt the individual, to reward his or her performance and to impose a regime of private appropriation of goods that are produced by the labor of all. This logic inevitably creates inequalities: accumulation on one side, destitution on the other. Today we are moving from dependence to relinquishment. We relinquish those who are dependent, condemned to being seen and treated as economic and social nonentities. How long will they accept the verdict of death hanging upon them? We should not discard serious clashes between the North and the South, between those who are inside and those who are outside the reigning system, leading to unheard-of violence and devastation. The second crisis is ecological. The current consumptionbased system is predatory. By extolling maximum consumption of all natural and cultural goods, it submits all limited natural and cultural resources to a systematic process of depredation. The final result cannot but be the degradation of the quality of life for humans and all other creatures of the biotic community. We have assembled a poisoning machine that destroys and kills the air, the land, the water, the living organisms, the ecosystems and the planet itself. How much violence can earth's system of dynamic equilibrium withstand? What is the limit of its sustainability-which, once disrupted, may bring disastrous consequences for the biosphere? In addition to being homicides and ethnocides, human beings may well tum out to be ecocides and biocides as well. The system is like a wolf, whose nature is to devour sheep. It is of no avail to admonish mercy or to file down its teeth. Voracity is the wolf's intrinsic quality and nothing will stop it from being voracious. Such is our current system of social intercourse, implemented over the last four centuries for all of humankind, that has today achieved worldwide integration. This system lacks THE B ABA'f W ORLD any internal value that might lead it to change its course, or even limit its iniquitous and undesirable effects. Over the next years, these two crises will give the global system an ultimatum. We are groping our way towards a worst-case scenario. It's like an airplane about to take off. After it reaches a certain critical point, it can no longer be stopped. If it does not rise in flight, it will crash at the end of the runway. We are currently all smiles, content in our scientific knowledge, traveling smugly along the broad highway of history, barely aware that up ahead the end of the line and the abyss await us. We hear the bells toll. They toll over the world system, today so arrogantly victorious and alienated from the gravity of the disease that has taken hold of it and will lead to its death. Death may come from the two crises mentioned above. It is highly probable that it will stem from the collapse of the world economic and financial system that currently sustains our societies. The truth will surface. But when it does, it will be too late. We will then see productive capital (roughly 35 trillion dollars) breaking away from speculative capital (about 80 to 100 trillion dollars-no one knows for sure). The latter is solely paper, and pure image. In a major crisis, it will evaporate like a soap bubble, with no sustainability whatsoever, tumultuously dragging towards irrevocable disaster millions of people who will perish like flies-while others will seek refuge, surviving in preserved oases and envying those who died before them. Or perhaps the purifying crisis will arise from ecological havoc. It is not impossible nor improbable that some important link in the earth's systemic equilibrium will burst: the regime of climates, seasons, and drinking water might break down; some horrendous contamination of radioactive waste might spread; the decline in human fertility might not stop (as seen in Central Europe); the outbreak of some deadly bacteria might decimate millions and millions of living creatures, humankind included, putting an end to the great adventure of the species homo sapiens et demens- or most of its specimens. The terrific fall of some low-flying meteor is not entirely avoidable, as has happened many times throughout the history of earth- 67 million years ago just WHO ill WRITING THE F UTURE ? such a piece of flying debris destroyed the greater part of the biosphere and all the dinosaurs. The technical expertise to track an approaching meteorite is still rudimentary. Conclusion: the desolation of tribulation? Once again, yes and no. Yes, because globalization (particularly in its economic expression: competitive and noncooperative) has revealed the interdependencies that exist among all of us and the system's inability to solve humankind's collective problems and avoid the imminent cataclysm. No, because such a cataclysm might pave the way for a new rearrangement of the Earth and of what is left of our tribes. A new kind of civilization will arise, more benevolent towards life, more integrative of differences, more spiritual and more ecological. In every conceivable form, we approach the new millenium ashamed of ourselves, of our lust to subdue, attack, and destroy everything that is not like us-as so many wars have given witness, most recently those in Iraq and Kosovo. Ashamed of the way we treat our children, millions of whom toil as slaves. Ashamed of how we treat our elderly, abandoned in interminable queues in hospitals and welfare agencies. And ashamed of how we systematically prey upon and trample life on this planet, as if it were not our only common home. We are now approaching the dangerous threshold of a purifying Good Friday. But as we have said, it will not be the end of the world. Only the end of this kind of world, worn out in its regenerative capability and lacking in reproductive energy. Another world will ensue. What will it be like? What may grow amidst its ruins? The whitest lilies grow on the darkest swamps. Amidst the ruins of ancient Mayan cities grow the most luxuriant trees. Something similar will happen with the emerging civilization. We are swiftly marching towards one single worldwide society-the first of a unified humankind. We're all arriving there from a lengthy exile, where we have remained insulated in regional cultures in the frontiers of nation-states. We are slowly returning to our common home, earth, and discovering ourselves as part of the human family. But this phenomenon, that Pierre Teilhard de Chardin saw as the emergence of the noosphere (one mind and one heart united in diversity), must still enter human consciousness. To achieve this, we must supersede the current civilizing paradigm-a paradigm that atomizes, divides and contraposesand accept the new one derived from quantum physics, from the new biology, from cosmology, from ecology- in a word, from the sciences of the earth-capable ofrelating, including, and composing everything with everything else. But this new paradigm can become hegemonic only when the old one and the institutions that support it are dismantled. Then, for the first time, we will witness the collective management of the earth and the social administration of the demands of the peoples that inhabit the earth. After World War I, the League of Nations emerged, the first attempt to collectively think through the political problems of humankind. It failed. World War II gave rise to the United Nations. It lingers on, tottering, until today, wholly incapable of coping with the new challenges for which it was not created. We are convinced that after the great and cathartic passing that is to come, there will most certainly be an articulation of peoples and civilizations, rather than of governments. The World Republic will bring about a caring feeling for the earth and its sons and daughters, and will learn to manage our limited resources so that they minimally fulfill the needs of all creatures alive today and of all those still to come. Spirituality and Ethics, the Bases of the New World Society The suffering caused by the collapse of the old world system will convince everyone that it's not possible to establish a new world covenant founded exclusively on human beings . The earth, the ecosystems, and all creatures must be included in a greater sociocosmic covenant of survival and fraternal intercourse. Such a pact is untenable in a culture that has a single paradigm-and a purely rational and material one to boot. The rainbow, symbol of the cosmic alliance between God and the survivors of the Flood, will act as common reference and inspiration. Diversities will coexist and converge into seeking the common good for all. A new sensitivity is thus required, whose roots are to be found in the logic of the heart and in mutual caring. WHO 1S WRITI NG THE F UTURE ? This new sensitivity will give rise to a profound spirituality. Human beings will discover that the spiritual dimension is an objective dimension of the cosmos and of each one of us-the dimension of interiority and of each entity's inherent history, the consciousness that feels itself part of a greater whole, aware of the secret thread that interweaves everything, creating an unfathomable, dynamic, diverse, and converging unit. This living and irradiating guiding thread will be deciphered as God, revealed in our hearts as enthusiasm to live, struggle, create, and mould life and nature in accordance with a purpose of wisdom, love, and beauty. This perspective founds a new ethic, erected on two fundamental values. Without these new values-namely, right measure and essential caring-it will be impossible to preserve both life upon our splendorous blue-white planet and the planet itself. The right measure has assured that the living cosmos is still here with us today and we with it. Cultures survive inasmuch as they abide by this principle, known as the Golden Rule. By abandoning it, they become unstructured and die . Our culture is absolutely devoid of measures in every field. Thus the proximity of its dissolution. And what is the right measure? It is a balance between the more and the less. It is the optimum relative. It is the wisdom to deal with limited resources, both natural and cultural, in such a manner that they last as long as possible or can be regenerated and reproduced. The sustainability of each being and ecosystem depends on the right measure. It is the right measure that allows us to defy the inexorable law of entropy, the unrestrained wear and tear of all things. Without the right measure, everything ends before it should and dies before its time. With the right measure, everything is prolonged and lives longer. The first paragraph of the new world constitution will begin with a solemn proclamation of the holy principle of the right measure. Wasn't it the same with the Greeks and their meden agan (nothing in excess)? With the Romans and their ne quid nimis (nothing in excess)? With the Chinese and their wu-wi and yinyang (the perfect harmony)? Without the right measure, the planet's limited resources will not suffice for all humans and other living creatures. The new constitution will not decree, "Thou shalt not consume"; rather, it will state, "Thou shalt consume with solidarity." It will not say, "Thou shalt not show violence nor the shadowy dimension of human beings," but rather, "Thou shalt show it in the right measure, in a constructive manner, the pathological as pathological, so that it may be countervailed and cured by health and wholeness." Without the right measure, the planet will not withstand the increasing rates of consumption. Without the right measure, the peoples of the earth will not coexist in peace nor will they converge in diversity. Without the right measure, no creative synthesis will be found between the symbolic and the diabolic in human history and in the heart of each one of us. Without the right measure, we will not find the balance between flying upward towards the divine Father/Mother and plunging downward towards the social procurement of our daily bread. Only by joining "Our Father" and "Our Bread" will we be able to truly say "Amen." The second fundamental ethical value of a common future for earth and humankind is essential caring. To care means to enter into a loving relationship with reality and each created being. It is to invest in the heart, in affection, in subjectivity. Things are more than mere things-to-use. They are values we can appreciate, symbols we can decipher. To care means becoming involved with people and things, paying them due attention, placing ourselves close to them, feeling them within our heart, joining them in communion, valuing them, and understanding them in their interiority. Everything for which we care we also love. And we love everything for which we care. When we establish a bond of love between ourselves and people and things, we become concerned for them and learn to feel responsibility for them. As the ancients well taught and as has been repeated by one of the greatest modern philosophers, Martin Heidegger, "the essence of being human is caring." If human beings are not cared for from the day they are born until the day they die, they will become unstructured, wasting away and finally dying. WH O IS WRITI NG THE f U TUl~E ? More than thinking, loving, and creating, humans must know how to care, a prerequisite for every other human expression. Caring determines the minimum ethos for humankind. Caring is the appropriate ethical attitude towards nature and our common abode, earth. Caring will redeem love, life, social intercourse, and the earth. The new millennium will only be ushered in when the ethic of essential caring triumphs. Around the values of right measure and essential caring, there will be woven the social and ecological covenants providing firm bases for the new emerging world society. This new society is suffering labor pains right now, striving to be born in all parts of the world. A little longer, just a little longer, and it will come forth full of life and hope. With the Portuguese poet Camoes, we may also say: After blustery tempest, Gloomy night and sibilant wind, Morning brings forth serene clarity, Hope of safe port and salvation. Ricardo Young, national coordinator of the Pensamento Nacional das Bases Empresariais and foun der of the Brazilian chapter of the World Business Academy, outlines the need.for a spiritual evolution in the fa ce of humanity s declining morality. DETACHMENT SHALL LEAD TO REDEMPTION "\"I Then I read Who is Writing the Future?, I was overcome by VV the pleasant feeling of having been thrust into one of the most beautiful retrospectives of humankind's history, where grandeur and the ability to redeem more than offset weaknesses and v1c10usness. It has become a common theme in the late twentieth century to take the part for the whole, the moment for the process, the fact for history, reaction for reflection, the incidental for the norm. Many times our vision is obscured by hopelessness that the complexity of the world seems to imply. This text, however, affirms the opposite. It focuses on the process that made the twentieth century the most challenging chapter in the history of humankind, wherein humanity, like a pendulum movement, has oscillated from holocaust to awareness of its unity and interdependence. The civilization that has evolved over the last one hundred years represents a geometric progression of achievements that make the preceding centuries pale, however emblematic they might have been. In this setting, the text is extremely insightful, maintaining that social evolution and technological evolution are actually instruments for the ultimate fulfillment of human consciousness and human potential, and establishing a causal relationship between these two aspects. If it's true that humankind's ultimate achievement is consummated in the maximum expansion of its consciousness and spirituality, together with a deep understanding of the meaning of its journey in this cosmic fragment, it follows that we've never been so close to an unprecedented leap in our comprehension of the meaning of life. The intense flow of events that culminated with the technological revolution has eliminated long-standing barriers of time and space, creating a proximity among individuals and a complicity among peoples which, painful as it is, summons everyone to a new dimension of solidarity. The planet no longer passively accepts the wars and abuses of this or that government. The recent examples in Kosovo and East Timor show that humankind is increasingly alert against authoritarian ventures and the disrespect of human rights. In the case of Kosovo, one could not but notice the concern of allied forces to spare lives in their air raids-paradoxical as this might seem. The so-called surgical war would have been unthinkable a few decades ago. We are living in extraordinary times that would have seemed miraculous to our forebears. However, side by side with this, human beings cannot dispel the threat of existential emptiness, the absence of values, the evanescence of references. Paraphrasing Marshall Berman's book about the modem experience, "all that is solid melts into air." In spite of all the revolutions we have made, it seems we've reached the threshold of the twenty-first century without having undergone a major transformation: understanding that the attainment of supreme happiness emanates from within ourselves. What moves human beings closer to the divine is not their ability to manipulate matter or control nature, but their ability to love. Behind every great transformation undergone by humankind, there is a story of faith, persistence, and detachment. Heroic or simple feats spring forth from the detached search for something one believes is essential. In this century, amidst many horrors, we have also seen Gandhis, Mother Teresas, and Mandelas affecting the destiny of millions and helping them through painful passages in their search for dignity and a meaningful life. This is perhaps the last great challenge through which humankind will find redemption from its sufferings in the next century: detachment. The now-global consumer society conjoins with the technological and communications revolution in a very perverse manner. While notions of space and time disappear, local references, values, cultural traditions, and ethics appear to cede to the appeals of a glamorized global consumer society. This is nothing new: the consumer society is one of the landmarks of the twentieth century. What is new is the scale on which this is happening. The media try to lead us to believe that only news has valueand, at the same time, that any news is universal. The death of a child becomes a global fact while violence is banalized, exaggerated ad nauseam by the media. What is the logic of this? Sensationalism thrills people, vampirizes their energies, assures that TV sets are kept on, quantified in ratings that translate simply into greater visibility for advertisers. In the end, advertisers become accomplices to the exploitation of violence, even if their first intention was to promise additional degrees of happiness to spectators who consume their products. A total change in mindset is called for. We must not mistake the enormous material progress achieved by humankind in the twentieth century on the material plane for attainments on the moral, psychic, and spiritual planes. We must achieve an awareness capable of reflecting on the meaning of life, an awareness that strives to sunder values from material security, prestige from power, by seeking out those who may bring human beings into contact with enduring philosophy-that which has existed and guided human existence since time immemorial. Our education must concern itself with this philosophy, with learning to think, with the meaning oflife, with the interdependence of beings, with the planet's systemic unity. We need to have citizens functioning in the world who are aware of their limitations and fascinated by the infinite possibilities of spaceship earth. We need to stimulate a new solidarity that understands that a fairer distribution of the planet's wealth and resources is not a charitable action, but a necessity that imposes itself upon future generations. Financial capital will sooner or later be seen as accumulation of wealth on top of misery and, as such, something unsustainable that will lead to ruin and waste on an unprecedented scale-as the successive crises in Asia, Russia, Mexico, and Brazil have shown. My intention in this article is not to proselytize but to highlight the fact that the "century of light" merely shows us a fascinating course of possibilities: from deliverance from illness to longevity; from mobility throughout the planet to the elimination of distances; from multicultural to intercultural; from a connection between everyone to the integration of the whole. However, these possibilities will be awesome or merely ephemeral depending on how humankind evolves in bringing them about. We must reflect deeply on the role of education and knowledge in building our tomorrow. Citizens of the world are those who acknowledge as their home any place on earth, who appreciate diversity by seeing in it infinite manifestations of unity. Because they understand unity, citizens of the world see the indissoluble role of synergic relationships and of interdependence. Citizens of the world perceive the relativity of the individual but know that only through their own identity will they be able to contribute to a mosaic whose richness is directly related to the multiplicity of manifestations. The splendor of the stained glass in the main nave of Notre Dame Cathedral is not in the evanescent colors of thousands of tiny fragments, nor in the indefiniteness of their shapes. It is the pattern emanating from the thousands of pieces of glass that scintillate when they refract sunlight that leads us to trances of unbelievable beauty. The pattern of light and color emanating from Monet's Water Lilies results from thousands of attempts, expressed in infinite brushstrokes, to reproduce the unique sensation produced by light being reflected in the undulations of water in a small lake in Giverny. The richness of unity is in direct proportion to the richness of the multiples that compose it. Thus, in the times to come, the more planetary the integration of the human species, the greater the need for cultural diversity, for preserving traditions, for cultural identity. When we reflect on education, we must consider two fundamental aspects : the speed with which information transforms acquired knowledge, and the formation of an individual 's character. This means, in practice, teaching how to learn and stimulating the development of critical and autonomous reasoning skills. Domenico de Masi, the Italian sociologist, says the curriculum of the school of the future will have only three disciplines: mathematics (logic), philosophy (perennial knowledge and cognitive skills), and languages (cultural repertoire and the ability to understand and make oneself understood by others). Thus, while the twenty-first century heralds stimulating perspectives, it will also be a century during which humankind will have to reinvent itself Reinventing oneself means gaining an in-depth understanding of our interdependence and our planetary responsibility. Are we prepared for this? Are we intellectually up to this? Have we evolved spiritually enough to attain an adequate awareness of what this represents? I believe that the next decades will be marked by a profound revision of education and society. We know that, in spite of numerous advances in technology, the future will not sustain itself if it continues to be based on the unlimited expansion of the consumer society, on the systematic dissolution of humanist values, on the culture of individualism, and on the expansion of extreme poverty and unemployment. It would be painfully ironic if humankind, after struggling for centuries to free itself from barbarism, were now to succumb to it. We will find a way outand we know it. However, this deliverance can be less or more painful, according to our awareness of what must be done. It seems to me that we must use progress in technology and communications to prepare ourselves for this tomorrow. The media, the entertainment industry and the means of communication in general should, instead of exploiting the darker side of our times and the easy emotions and credulity of citizens, convey the numerous silent and unseen ways by which millions of people Tl-IE B AI-IA'f W ORLD are transforming this planet, day after day, into a better place to live. Instead of trying to control violence through fear, we should consider the causes of violence and demonstrate how to dismantle all fonns of savagery in day-to-day actions. Are people who use chugs, for instance, aware of the direct connection between addiction and organized violence? We must dispel the built-in fear in sensationalism and nurture positive actions. We must stimulate solidarity as a force of collective transformation. We must give voice to the profound revolution now in progress, being carried out by non-governmental organizations and by civil society. We should stimulate voluntary work as a corollary to the increasing idleness that technology creates through unemployment. We must understand the deep changes in the very meaning of work at the onset of the millennium. We certainly have much to do, but nothing that we must do is devoid of a greater meaning. Not for one instant should we belittle the transforming role of education in forming the character of individuals. Nor should we ever scorn the incredible resources that technology has now made available. The act of teaching is also that of learning. Thus, teachers must become the new navigators of our age, disclosing the infinite possibilities of this new world and transforming it in a laboratory of integrated learning. Interdependence, unity, equality, life, justice, and other concepts indispensable to forming the character of individuals must pervade every nook and cranny where education occurs. And we know that education is increasingly occurring everywhere, all the time. Each and every experience has an educational aspect and we are all summoned to become apprentices and teachers at the same time. Are we prepared? The future can be extraordinary. Humankind has not yet awakened to the powers it has developed. Only now are we beginning to perceive the extension of possibilities we have created for our future. Will we be able to think as a unit that is integrated with the planet and its ecosystem, elevating life to its divine condition? The awakening of our consciousness depends on this. We have never been so close to integrating everything in WHO @ W RITI NG THE F UTURE ? the whole- and, at the same time, never has everything seemed so distant from the whole. Spirituality, planetary consciousness, ethical values, an ordering vision, detachment, and loving care are concepts of ultimate importance that will acquire an enhanced sense of urgency in the next millennium. Let us enter this fantastic age with open minds and peaceful hearts. With our eyes focused on the world, let's get down to work, because everything still remains to be done. Update on the Situation of the BAHA'fS INJRAN ince the Islamic revolution in 1979, the approximately three S hundred thousand members oflran's Baha'i community have been the targets of judicial and extrajudicial executions and of anti-Baha'i propaganda, propagated by both the government and the clergy. They have endured severe restrictions on their work, education, cultural and religious activities, and travel. More than two hundred members of Iran's largest religious minority have been killed simply for being Baha'is; thousands more have been imprisoned and tortured. Baha'is are consistently denied pensions, visas, work permits, property rights, legal process, and the prospect of education beyond high school. In the light oflast year's attempted closure of the Baha'i Institute for Higher Education, 1 the authorities' execution of Mr. Ruhu'llah Rawhani, and the sentencing in February 2000 of three Baha'is to death, the situation See The Baha'i World 1998- 99, pp. 15 1- 54 and 287- 93 for a complete report on the attack on the Baha' i Institute for Higher Education (BIHE) . Despite the difficulties following the widespread confiscation of BIHE property and the detention and harassment of its workers by the authorities in Iran, the BIHE has resumed its activities for the new academic year. of the Baha'is remains bleak, in spite of the much-praised ascendance of certain "moderate" factions within the Iranian government. The government's actions contrast sharply with the words of President Khatami during a November 1999 press conference in Paris, when he responded to a question about the Baha' is by saying that no one should be persecuted because of his or her beliefs, and that he would defend the civil rights of all Iranians regardless of their beliefs or religion. Baha'is are regarded as "unprotected infidels" in Iran. The Iranian constitution does not recognize the Baha'is as a religious minority, and their rights can be ignored with impunity. Victims have repeatedly been offered relief from persecution if they recant their faith. The root policy of this sustained, carefully calculated persecution has been given formal expression in a 1991 secret government document on "the Baha'i question," which was acquired and published in 1993 by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. Written and approved by Iran's most senior clerical and civil authorities, including the leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mr. Ali Khamenei, and adopted by Iran's Supreme Revolutionary Cultural Council, it directs not only that the "progress and development" of the Baha'is within Iran's borders "shall be blocked" but also that "a plan shall be formulated to combat and destroy the cultural roots which this group has outside the country." In the face of such an explicitly discriminatory policy, the worldwide Baha'i community continues to labor to keep the case of its Iranian brothers and sisters in the consciousnessand conscience-of the governments and leaders of the world. Recent changes in the situation The most troubling recent development was the February 2000 reinstatement of death sentences on two Baha'is, Messrs. Sims Dhabihi-Muqaddam and Hedayat Kashefi-Najafabadi, who had previously had their sentences quashed twice by the Supreme Court, and the sentencing to death of a third Baha'i, Mr. Manuchehr Khulusi . Mr. Khulusi was arrested in the summer of 1999, and Messrs. Dhabihi-Muqaddam and Kashefi-Najafabadi were arrested BAJ-lA.'fS L I l