« Terug naar enkele weergave Vergelijken: Engels ⇄ Engels Geen vertalingen of parallellen gevonden voor dit document.
Engels — Baha'i Faith, roots of.txt
Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Robert Stockman, Baha'i Faith, roots of, bahai-library.com.
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

World Religions: Belief, Culture, and Controversy http://religion.abc-clio.com/Search/Display/1586898?sid=1586...

print page close window

roots of the Baha'i Faith

The roots of the Baha'i Faith can be traced to the Babi Movement of mid-19th-century Persia (today called Iran),
which was violently persecuted. Among the early converts to the Babi movement was Mirza Husayn-Ali, a
nobleman born in northern Iran whose father was a palace official. As the Babi leadership was executed, one
after another, his role in the movement grew in importance.

In the summer of 1848, he assembled a gathering of the remaining Babi leaders at which he gave each a title; he
took on the title of Baha'u'llah (the Glory of God)óone subsequently endorsed by Babi Movement leader
Ali-Muhammad of Shiraz, who in 1844 had taken the title of the Bab (the Gate) and declared himself to be the
fulfillment of Islamic prophecies. Before his execution, the Bab recognized Baha'u'llah's teenage half-brother
Yahya as a figurehead leader of the Babi community, though he gave Yahya no explicit authority. Considering that
Yahya was completely unknown in the Babi community and was still a youth living in Baha'u'llah's household, the
appointment was probably made to allow Baha'u'llah to run the Babi movement with a minimum of government
interference.

In August 1852, a group of Babis attempted to assassinate the king, resulting in a severe government-sponsored
pogrom against the remaining Babis. Baha'u'llah was arrested and imprisoned for four months.When the Iranian
government released Baha'u'llah from prison, they banished him from Persia. Hence he departed for Baghdad
(capital of modern-day Iraq), a city in the Ottoman Empire frequented by many Iranians intent on performing
pilgrimage to the Shiite shrines nearby.

The next 10 years were highly productive ones, in which Baha'u'llah penned several of his most important works:
The Hidden Words, a collection of ethical and mystical aphorisms); The Seven Valleys and Four Valleys, two
works about the mystic journey of the soul in dialogue with Sufi concepts; and the Book of Certitude, a work
delineating basic theological concepts and principles of personal spiritual development through commentary on
passages from the Bible and the Koran. His efforts to revitalize the Babi community of Baghdad and to revive the
Iranian Babi community were so successful that the Iranian government requested that the Ottomans move him
farther from Iran. On the eve of his departure for Istanbul, Turkey, in April 1863, Baha'u'llah publicly declared to
his companions and close associates that he was the prophetic teacher the Bab had prophesied.

The latter work specified that upon Baha'u'llah's passing, his eldest son, Abbas, was to become his successor;
other tablets praised Abbas as the exemplar of Baha'u'llah's teachings and the official interpreter of Baha'u'llah's
revelation. Consequently, when Baha'u'llah died in 189 at age 75, the 48-year-old Abbas was quickly
acknowledged by all as the rightful head of the Baha'i Faith. He took the title of Abdul-Baha, meaning "servant of
Baha," to underline his subservience to his father's legacy. An attempt by one of Abdul-Baha's half-brothers to
form a rival Baha'i movement garnered virtually no support and died out, though it did cause Ottoman officials to
look at all Baha'is with suspicion and to renew Abdul-Baha's confinement within the city of Acre. The decade of
confinement ended in 1908, when the Young Turks Revolution toppled the Ottoman sultan and converted Turkey
into a secular republic.

1 of 4 02/11/11 12:36 PM
World Religions: Belief, Culture, and Controversy http://religion.abc-clio.com/Search/Display/1586898?sid=1586...

From 1892 to 1908, Abdul-Baha was free to receive visitors and communications, including cablegrams. The
spread of the Baha'i Faith to the United States and subsequently to Europe, Hawaii, Australia, and Japan resulted
in a diverse group of pilgrims entering Acreóstill a prison cityóto meet Abdul-Baha and receive his wisdom. When
Abdul-Baha's confinement ended in 1908, he considered travel. In 1910, he visited Egypt, and in 1911 he
traveled to Europe to meet and encourage that continent's fledgling Baha'i communities. In 1912, he traveled to
North America, arriving in early April (just two weeks before the sinking of the Titanic, a ship many Baha'is had
urged him to take because of its reputation for safety).

His nine-month journey extended as far south as Washington, D.C., as far north as Montreal, Canada, and as far
west as Los Angeles, California. He gave hundreds of speeches to thousands of people gathered in churches,
synagogues, and theosophical lodges. He spoke to the annual Lake Mohonk Peace Conference and the fourth
annual national conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The
result was hundreds of newspaper articles, almost all favorable. He left North America in December 1912,
spending the winter and spring visiting Baha'is from London to Budapest before returning to Palestine months
before the beginning of World War I. A contemplated trip to India was rendered impossible by the war and his
age. He passed away in November 1921 at age 77.

Like his father, Abdul-Baha wrote a will, in which he named his eldest grandson, Shoghi Effendi Rabbani, to be
his successor and vali amrullah (Guardian of the Cause of Allah). As a result, aside from a few small efforts to
split the Baha'i community (none of which garnered more than a few hundred followers or lasted more than a
generation), the Baha'is united by accepting Shoghi Effendi as their new head. Abdul-Baha's will also specified
the system whereby Baha'is would elect nine-member local spiritual assemblies (governing councils of local
Baha'i communities) and delegates who would elect nine-member national spiritual assemblies. The will also
specified that the members of all national spiritual assemblies would serve as the delegates to elect the Universal
House of Justice, the supreme worldwide Baha'i governing body. Abdul-Baha's will asserted that while the
Guardian had the power to interpret authoritative Baha'i texts, the Universal House of Justice had the authority to
legislate on matters about which the texts were silent.

However, Shoghi Effendi's sudden deathówithout a willóin November 1957, plunged the Baha'i Faith into crisis,
because it deprived the community of its international leadership and raised the specter of schism. But Shoghi
Effendi had begun a 10-year plan for expansion of the Baha'i Faith in 1953 that provided the Baha'is with clear
goals until April 1963. He had also appointed a series of individuals as Hands of the Cause of Allah (a position
created by Baha'u'llah). In October 1957, he raised their total number to 27 and termed them "the Chief Stewards
of Baha'u'llah's embryonic World Commonwealth, who have been invested by the unerring Pen of the Center of
His Covenant with the dual function of guarding over the security, and of insuring the propagation, of His Father's
Faith."

Abdul-Baha's will had also given the Hands clear authority. Consequently, the Baha'is of the world turned to the
Hands, who coordinated the Baha'i Faith until the completion of Shoghi Effendi's 10-year teaching plan. One
effort by a Hand of the Cause, Charles Mason Remey, to claim leadership of the Baha'i community garnered
support from several hundred persons, but subsequently the Remeyite movement split into at least four factions.

In April 1963, the Hands oversaw the election of the Universal House of Justice (they voluntarily disqualified
themselves as members). Subsequently the Universal House of Justice has been elected every five years by the

2 of 4 02/11/11 12:36 PM
World Religions: Belief, Culture, and Controversy http://religion.abc-clio.com/Search/Display/1586898?sid=1586...

members of all the national spiritual assemblies, who either send their ballots by mail, or gather in Haifa, Israel, to
cast their ballots in person. The Universal House of Justice has overseen continued expansion of the Baha'i
community and coordinated translation of more Baha'i texts into English and other languages (including the Kitabi-Aqdas); it was also responsible for a great increase in the public visibility of the Baha'i Faith worldwide.

The global dissemination of the Baha'i Faith had begun in 1888, when two Lebanese Christians became Baha'is
in Egypt and in 1892 immigrated to the United States. One of them, Ibrahim George Kheiralla, was responsible
for converting the first Americans in 1894. Starting with a small group in Chicago, by 1900, the United States had
four Baha'i communities of 50 or more believers, plus scattered Baha'is in 23 states. By 1899, the Faith was also
introduced from Chicago to Ontario, Canada; Paris, France; and London, England. In turn, a European convert
took the Baha'i Faith to Hawaii in 1901, and two Hawaiian Baha'is took the religion to Japan in 1914. In 1910, a
pair of American Baha'is circled the globe westward, visiting major Baha'i communities in every country where the
religion could be found. By 1921, other American Baha'is had settled in Mexico, Brazil, Australia, New Zealand,
and Korea.

Abdul-Baha was so impressed by the American Baha'i community that he sent them a series of 14 tablets from
1914 to 1916 entitled The Tablets of the Divine Plan, in which he enjoined them to spread the Baha'i religion to
every nation and island on the globe. He enumerated hundreds of places where there should be Baha'i
communities, all of which subsequently became missionary goals. In the 1920s, Shoghi Effendi gave the
American Baha'is the chief responsibility for establishing Baha'i elected institutions, and he patterned such bodies
in Europe, Asia, and Australasia on the American model.

In 1937, the North American Baha'is having finally established firm local and national spiritual assemblies, Shoghi
Effendi gave them a Seven Year Plan (1937ñ1944) calling for them to establish at least one local spiritual
assembly in every state in the United States and one in every province of Canada, to establish the Baha'i Faith in
every country in Latin America, and to complete the exterior of the Baha'i House of Worship in Wilmette, Illinois.
In spite of World War II, enormous progress was made, and by 1944, many Latin American nations were home to
local spiritual assemblies as well as small groups of Baha'is.

In 1946, Shoghi Effendi launched a second Seven Year Plan (1946ñ1953) that called for creation of a separate
national spiritual assembly for Canada (the Canadian Baha'is having shared a national assembly with the United
States all that time), a single national spiritual assembly for all of South America, another for all of Central
America, and reestablishment of the Baha'i Faith in war-ravaged Western Europe.

By 1953, there were 12 national spiritual assemblies worldwide: one in Italy and Switzerland, one in Germany
and Austria, one in Egypt and Sudan, one in Australia and New Zealand, one in India and Burma, the four
aforementioned in the Americas, the United Kingdom, Iran, and Iraq. Shoghi Effendi gave plans to all 12 for the
period 1953ñ1963. Among the goals were to more than double the number of countries, islands, and significant
territories in which the Baha'i Faith was established and to raise the number of national spiritual assemblies to 57.
Except for a national spiritual assembly in one Islamic country, all the goals were achieved by 1963. The United
States achieved perhaps a third of the goals, while expanding the number of American Baha'is from 7,000 to
10,000.

The decade spanning 1963ñ1973 saw the fruits of the effort to spread the Baha'i Faith widely but very thinly
around the world. Latin American Baha'is settling in Bolivia reached out to the rural population, and tens of

3 of 4 02/11/11 12:36 PM
World Religions: Belief, Culture, and Controversy http://religion.abc-clio.com/Search/Display/1586898?sid=1586...

thousands became Baha'is; the Bolivian Baha'i community is still the largest in Latin America, with a university
and a radio station to serve its members and the citizenry. In the United States, door-to-door teaching brought
10,000 to 15,000 rural African Americans into the Baha'i Faith in South Carolina, North Carolina, and Georgia in
the years 1969ñ1972. At the same time, an unusual receptivity swept the college population, stimulated by
support for the civil rights movement and opposition to the Vietnam War. By 1974, the United States had 60,000
Baha'is. Subsequent conversion has been supplemented by immigration (some 12,000 Iranian Baha'is and
perhaps 10,000 Southeast Asian Baha'is have settled in the United States since 1975), with the result that in
2001, the United States had 142,000 Baha'is and nearly 1,200 local spiritual assemblies. Today, the National
Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States owns retreat and conference centers in five states;
publishes a children's magazine, a monthly newspaper, and a quarterly scholarly periodical; operates a radio
station in South Carolina; runs a senior citizens' home and two institutions for economic development and public
health; and employs some 200 staff members.

Expansion of the American Baha'i community in the last 25 years has also allowed resources to be channeled in
several new directions. The Baha'i community has been able to sustain much greater commitment to the abolition
of racism, the establishment of world peace, and the development of society. One result has been greater media
attention. The larger community also produced an expanded book market that stimulated writers and scholars, so
that Baha'i literature greatly expanded in scope and depth. Cultural expressions of the Baha'i Faith, such as
operas and "Baha'i gospel" music, have also developed, and have become much more sophisticated. Now more
than a century old, the American Baha'i community is an indigenous American religion, with fifth- and sixthgeneration members.

Robert Stockman

Further Reading

Badiee, Julie. An Earthly Paradise: Baha'i Houses of Worship around the World. Oxford: George Ronald, 1992;
Bahá'u'lláh. Selected Writings of Baha'u'llah. Wilmette, IL: Baha'i Publishing, 2005; Cedarquist, Druzelle. The
Story of Baha'u'llah, Promised One of All Religions. Wilmette, IL: Baha'i Publishing, 2005; Esslemont, J. E.
Baha'u'llah and the New Era. Wilmette, Illinois: Bahá'í Publishing Trust, 1980; Hatcher, William S., and J. Douglas
Martin. The Baha'i Faith: The Emerging Global Religion. San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1984; Smith, Peter.
The Babi and Baha'i Religions: From Messianic Shi'ism to a World Religion. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1987.

Select Citation Style: MLA

MLA
Stockman, Robert. "roots of the Baha'i Faith." World Religions: Belief, Culture, and Controversy. ABC-CLIO,
2011. Web. 2 Nov. 2011.

back to top Entry ID: 1586898 Server: WEB2 | Client IP: 50.101.52.243 | Session ID:
r4xsruunrbrl0za0uroucnpm | Token: 9DB63A75B772765CD9AAFC8DC4E65D15
Referer: http://religion.abc-clio.com/Search/Display/1586898

4 of 4 02/11/11 12:36 PM
Kies een tweede tekst om parallel te lezen — een vertaling, of een willekeurige andere tekst.