# Thelma Perks

*Exported from [Holy-Writings.com](https://www.holy-writings.com/) on 2026-06-21 — 1 clipping.*

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> Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Graham Hassall, Thelma Perks, Haifa: Bahá’í World Centre, 1998, bahai-library.com.
> ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
> 
> Thelma Perks
> 
> Graham Hassall
> published in Bahá'í WorldVol. 20 (1986-1992), pp. 903-907
> 
> Haifa: Bahá’í World Centre, 1998
> 
> With the passing of Miss
> Thelma Perks on Saturday 21 May 1988 the Australian Bahá'í
> community lost one of its remaining links to the first pioneers
> to this vast continent, Clara and Hyde Dunn. Thelma was born on
> 21 July 1901. Her well-to-do background allowed her to travel
> extensively in Europe and North America as a young women, just as
> it later enabled her to devote all her time and energy to the
> propagation and administration of the Bahá'í Faith throughout the
> Australasian region.
> 
> As a young woman Thelma
> had come upon the Bahá'í Faith while on a ship sailing from
> Southhampton to London. She had seen a photo of Abdu'l-Bahá in a
> friend's cabin and remarked "That's an interesting
> face!". The boat was about to cross the Atlantic, and her
> friend, who said she would tell Thelma about Bahá'í when they
> arrived in New York, took her to visit the Kinneys at their home
> on Riverside Drive. This notable Bahá'í couple lent Thelma their
> copy of the Dawnbreakers, which she read in the early hours of
> each morning after returning from one or other New York night
> club. On one occasion tears streamed spontaneously down her face,
> making her realise the truth of the Faith.1
> 
> While in America Thelma
> met Sylivia Matheson and May Maxwell (who took her to a
> nighclub), as well as many other Bahá'ís, whom she promised that
> she would visit Clara and Hyde Dunn when she returned to Sydney.
> The Dunns, who had brought the Bahá'í teachings to Australia in
> 1920, were then living in Randwick. They later moved to
> Kirribilli on the north side of the harbour, close to Thelma's
> residence in Mosman. Thelma thought them such wonderful people
> she happily became Clara Dunn's driver and helped the Dunns in
> whatever way she could, but it was not until early 1947 that she
> became a Bahá'í.
> 
> Between 1947 and 1953 the
> Australian Bahá'ís pursued a six-year teaching plan in which
> Thelma's support for Clara Dunn, and companionship with her
> during innumerable teaching trips was invaluable. Together they
> visited Bahá'í communties in such far-flung places as Wollongong,
> Adelaide and Brisbane. At Ridvan 1948 they flew, together with
> Mariette Bolton, to participate in the formation of Woodville
> Local Assembly in Adelaide, South Australia. At this time Thelma
> served on the library committee of the National Assembly, on the
> Regional Teaching Committee for New South Wales and on the Sydney
> Assembly. She helped organise National Conventions at the
> Hazirat'l-Quds at 2 Lang Rd, and participated in summer and
> winter schools at the Yerrinbool Bahá'í School. Meetings were
> conducted at "Bidura", Thelma's residence at Bowral
> close to the Yerrinbool School, and at her home in Mosman. In
> 1950 she donated several acres of land to the Yerrinbool Bahá'í
> School on the condition that the fact not be publicised and that
> the land not be named after her.
> 
> Great efforts were being
> made at this time to establish Bahá'í communities in the larger
> country towns, away from the big city centres were large
> communities already existed. Thus, in January 1952 Thelma was in
> Ballarat for World Religion Day and in March she and Dulcie Dive
> visited Wollongong and secured the Miners' Hall for that
> community's holding of feasts and special anniversaries for the
> remainder of the year. In 1953, at the close of Australia's six
> year plan, Thelma moved temporarily to Grafton in northern New
> South Wales, to fulfil her commitment to establishing a locality
> there.
> 
> Throughout the decade of
> the World Crusade (1953-63) Thelma served simultaneoulsy on the
> National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Australia and New
> Zealand, and as an Auxiliary Board Member to Hand of the Cause
> Clara Dunn. She was first elected to the National Assembly in
> January 1954 when a by-election was held to replace five members
> who had chosen to pioneer in the Pacific; and was appointed an
> Auxilary Board Member several months later. At this time the
> relationship between elected and appointed institutions was still
> evolving, and Clara Dunn appointed Thelma Perks and Collis
> Featherstone as her Auxilary Board Members during National
> Convention in 1954. After explaining to the assembled delegates
> and observers that the Guardian wished her to appoint two
> assistants, then placed her hand on the shoulder of Collis
> Featherstone who was sitting beside her as chairman and said
> "I appoint Collis, and Thelma Perks, standing up the back of
> the room!"
> 
> From that time forward
> Thelma travelled constantly both in Australia and in the Pacific,
> visiting Bahá'í communities to encourage them in their work. In
> 1954 she accompanied Clara in visiting Bahá'í communities in
> Queensland, Victoria, South Australia, and Tasmania; and the
> following year the two re-visited Victoria and Queensland. In
> 1955 Thelma visited New Zealand, and late in 1956 she made her
> first visits to Noumea, Vila, Papeete, Apia and Suva, before
> returning to Sydney via Auckland. No-one was more capable of
> raising the spirits of the isolated pioneers, of cheering their
> hearts, and comforting them in the midst of their physical
> hardships and deprivation. And yet no more incongruous scene can
> be imagined than this woman, regal in appearance, gracious in
> manner and elegant under all conditions, travelling and living in
> circumstances of extreme discomfort and improvisation. No-one
> enjoyed this paradox more than Thelma herself.
> 
> She later recalled her
> first visit to Knight of Bahá'u'lláh Bertha Dobbins who had
> settled in Vila in the New Hebrides (now known as Vanuatu). For
> ten days in 1956 she sleept on three boxes in a spider and
> cockroach infested room beneath swarming mosquitoes, in a
> mosquito net full of holes. "Once I got into that bed",
> she recalled, "I just lay still. I wouldn't stick my big toe
> out for anything!...because the rats were mighty things. Bertha
> had slung a wire across the room with a bit of a curtain and the
> rats used to walk up and down that wire while you were just
> sitting there". Such situations were encountered in many
> locations across the next two decades.
> 
> In 1957 Thelma attended
> the first New Zealand National Convention before moving on to
> Fiji, Samoa, the Cook Islands and Tahiti. While in Fiji visiting
> Irene Williams and the Fijian Bahá'ís she stayed overnight in a
> traditional village, bathing in a running stream and living on
> fish, dalo and rourou - green leaves cooked in coconut milk. In
> the evening she joined in traditional dancing and singing until
> midnight. She regarded the landscape of Papeete, where Edith
> Danielson and Dulcie Dive had settled in Tahiti, as the most
> glorious of any natural settings she ever experienced.
> 
> It was in 1957 also that
> Thelma first visited Alvin and Gertrude Blum in the Solomon
> Islands, and Vi Hoehnke and Rodney Hancock in Papua New Guinea. A
> trip organised by Rodney Hancock to take Thelma to meet the
> Bahá'ís on New Ireland provided yet another tale which she later
> enjoyed retelling. In order to make the trip down New Ireland's
> only and remote road, Rodney hired a utility on which Thelma rode
> in comfort seated on a lounge chair placed on the back. When a
> jeep appeared travelling in the other direction and the two
> vehicles had to slow to pass each other on the single track, an
> Australian man observed Thelma with her white raincoat, red
> umbrella, all dressed up for any type of weather, and called out
> "My God, what are you doing here?", to which Thelma
> replied "Well, I'm staying with friends of mine". He
> said his wife was up ahead and that she was welcome to stay with
> them, or call on them if she needed help, to which she replied
> that she was with her Bahá'í friends and that they were all
> brothers and sisters. Many such tales did Thelma have for the
> telling.
> 
> In 1957 the Auxiliary
> Board was expanded. Collis Featherstone was appointed a Hand of
> the Cause by Shoghi Effendi, and the two Hands in Australia,
> Collis Featherstone and Clara Dunn, appointed as Auxilary Board
> members for protection Hugh Blundell in Auckland and Margaret
> Rowling in Suva; and as Auxiliary Board members for propagation
> Eric Bowes in Adelaide, and Thelma Perks in Sydney. Thus, while
> still a member of the Australian National Assembly, Thelma was
> occupied throughout Asia and the Pacific as deputy for two Hands
> of the Cause. In September 1958 she represented the Auxiliary
> Board Members in Australia at the 5th Intercontental Conference
> in Singapore.
> 
> Within Australia Thelma
> continued to travel to various states explaining the plans of the
> National Assembly. During 1959-60 she visited more than twenty
> Bahá'í communities incities and towns in Western Australia, South
> Australia, Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland and the
> Australian Capital Territory. In 1961 she visited the Northern
> Territory. South Australia, Tasmania, and Victoria. While in New
> Zealand with Nell McMiles in 1962 Thelma visited nearly all
> Bahá'í communities in the country. For many years during the
> 1950s and 60s she continued to share responsibility for the
> National Teaching Committee, the National Reference Library, the
> National Haziratu'l-Quds, and for care of Clara Dunn. She shared
> responsibility for the events related to the opening of the House
> of Worship in Sydney in September 1961.
> 
> It was in 1961 that Thelma
> first visited Haifa. Clara Dunn had often asked when she was
> planning to go, and when she learnt that the Universal House of
> Justice was to be elected in 1963, she thought that she should go
> before then. She turned to Greta Lake during a National Assembly
> meeting and asked "How about going to Haifa?" to which
> Greta replied "Alright". Thus Greta and Aub Lake went
> on pilgrimage with Thelma in April 1961. When both women were
> once again elected to the National Assembly in 1962, Greta turned
> to Thelma and said "We'll be going to Haifa for the
> International Convention. On route, Thelma visited Vietnam, rode
> elephants in Cambodia, and cruised through Greece. In Haifa she
> enojyed sharing a room with Bahia Ford, from South Africa.
> 
> By the close of the Ten
> Year plan Bahá'í communities had been established in many Pacific
> Islands, and in many additional centres across Australia and New
> Zealand, and the task of establishing and consolidating local and
> national assemblies was added to that of expanding the number of
> individual believers. During the Nine Year Plan Thelma continued
> to serve as an Auxiliary Board Member. In 1964 she attended the
> establishment of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Southwest
> Pacific in Honiara, Solomon Islands, and visited while on the
> same trip the Bahá'ís in Port Moresby, Lae, Madang, Manus and
> Rabaul. She continued to travel within Australia, although in
> 1965 she resigned as chairman of the Temple Services Committee
> when the Universal House of Justice decided that Auxiliary Board
> Members could no longer also be members of such committees.
> 
> In 1968 Thelma was
> appointed to the Continental Board of Counsellors for
> Australasia, together with Howard Harwood and Suhayl Ala'i. The
> Australasian region included Australia and New Zealand plus all
> islands in the Indian and Pacific Ocenas lying south of the
> equator and betwen longitudes of 80 degrees east and 120 degrees
> west including Portuguese Timor and the Gilbert and Ellice
> Islands but not including Indonesia. Thelma was trustee of the
> Continental Fund.
> 
> When addressing Bahá'í
> gatherings, Thelma reminded the friends of the responsibilities
> and the devoted work of the Hand of the Cause in Australia,
> Collis Featherstone. She was able to remind the friends of their
> high calling, and enthuse them in the tasks at hand. The words
> with which she closed the Australian community's National
> Convention in 1970 convey something of the uplifing effect she
> had on the community. She commenced by reminding her listeners
> that the Dunns were the 'spiritual conquerors of a Continent' and
> that Shoghi Effendi had given nobody else this station, and went
> on to say "The Guardian used to praise the Australian
> Bahá'ís - we must justify his faith and confidence in us ...If
> we do not arise to serve, Abdu'l-Bahá says we fall to the rear
> in the Army of Life - perhaps go out of the Faith ...There are
> many Bahá'ís moving about, footloose and irresponsible. We must
> be disciplined people. How are we going to bring in the World
> Order of Bahá'u'lláh if the Bahá'í Fiath comes last in our
> lives?...Let us have more enthusiasm! We must draw upon each
> other. When we think each day of our bounties, it gives us new
> life. This Cause can renew every atom of the body...Call on us
> (the Counsellors) to help you to serve."
> 
> Thelma was loved and
> respected by the Australian Bahá'í community because she led by
> example. Although now weighed heavily with responsibilities as
> Counsellor, Thelma continued to travel throughout Australia and
> the Pacific. In 1971 she was accompanied by Nell McMiles to the
> Oceanic Conference in Sapporo, Japan. Soon after their
> appointment, the Counsellors arranged in conjunction with the
> National Assembly a conference in Melbourne to mark the 150th
> anniversary of birth of Bab. It was Thelma's privilege to
> introduce to the conference Hands of the Cause Mr Faizi and Mr
> Collis Featherstone.
> 
> The Counsellors organised
> other major conferences, including one immediately following
> annual convention in Melbourne in 1974 to mark the commencement
> of the Five Year Plan, attended by Hand of the Cause Dr Muhajir,
> and some 500 participants. In October 1974 the counsellors
> organised a conference in Sydney to coincide with the 155th
> anniversary of the Birth of the Bab, which was attended by 200
> Bahá'ís. Thelma closed the conference by saying:
> 
> the five year plan
> has something personal about it - it touches our hearts.
> Self-sacrifice is at the core of everything - sacrifice
> of our time, energy and resources. This is the challenge
> of each one of us. We have the inspiration of the
> pioneers that have gone out. Each one can do something,
> according to our capacity.
> 
> Early in 1974 the
> Counsellors met in Noumea, then visited the New Hebrides, then
> Thelma and Vi also visited the Solomons. About 60 islanders
> became Bahá'ís during a week-end conference held there. They
> then moved on to Papua New Guinea. In July 1975 Thelma and Howard
> Harwood consulted with the National Assembly on such issues as
> international teaching projects, Overseas and homefront
> pioneering and travel teaching, community deepening, conferences
> and other major events in the national plans.
> 
> The Counsellors convened a
> conference in Melbourne with the theme "Our spiritual
> strength in a declining world", which was attended by 278
> Bahá'ís. There were addresses by Hand of the Cause Collis
> Featherstone, and Counsellors Ala'i and Hoehnke among others, and
> Thelma closed the conference with the announcement of the
> appointment of several assistants to the Auxiliary Board. In
> January 1977 all the Counsellors of the Australasian Board
> attended the Sixth International Teaching Conference, held in
> Auckland New Zealand.
> 
> Thelma's retirement from
> the Continental Board of Counsellors was announced in the
> Universal House of Justice's letter of 3 November 1980. Vi
> Hoehnke and Howard Harwood were retired at the same time. Thelma
> spent her years of retirement in her Mosman home, and continued
> to visit the House of Worship and participate in Bahá'í
> activities in the Sydney area. She was thrilled in her later
> years by the declaration of her niece, Annette Sherringham.
> Thelma retained her dignified bearing and cheerful nature in her
> final years, even though hampered in her movements and activities
> by a paralysing stroke. She will be remembered as a pure soul,
> and a gracious lady. She set a high standard for the learned in
> Abha. Following her passing, the Universal House of Justice
> cabled:
> 
> WE ARE DEEPLY
> GRIEVED TO LEARN OF THE PASSING OF DEAR THELMA PERKS
> WHOSE OUTSTANDING SERVICES FOR THE PROMOTION OF THE FAITH
> IN AUSTRALASIA WILL LONG BE REMEMBERED HER LOVING CARE OF
> HAND OF THE CAUSE CLARA DUNN HER DISTINGUISHED WORK AS A
> MEMBER OF THE FIRST CONTINGENT OF AUXILIARY BOARD MEMBERS
> FOLLOWED LATER BY HER APPOINTMENT AS A MEMBER OF THE
> FIRST BOARD OF COUNSELLORS IN AUSTRALASIA TOGETHER WITH
> HER MANY YEARS OF SERVICE AS A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL
> SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLY OF AUSTRALIA STAND AS SOME OF THE
> HIGHLIGHTS OF HER DEVOTED LABORS PRAYERS ARE BEING
> OFFERED IN THE HOLY SHRINES FOR THE PROGRESS OF HER SOUL
> IN THE ABHA KINGDOM ADVISE HOLD A BEFITTING MEMORIAL
> SERVICE IN HER HONOUR IN THE MASHRIQULADHKAR A SIMILAR
> SERVICE IS BEING REQUESTED IN SAMOA
> 
> ENDNOTES
> 
> Note: Footnote numbers have been lost in this online version.
> 
> 1. Interview, 1982.
> 
> 2. Interview 1 August 1981.
> Thelma's membership card was forwarded to the NSA 21 January
> 1947. 0268/0070.
> 
> 3. (Annual Report of the
> National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Australia and New
> Zealand Bahá'í Year 108, 11.)
> 
> 4. Thelma made two
> teaching trips to the South Island of New Zealand in 1959.
> "The visit of Miss Thelma Perks during February and March
> was much appreciated. In her quiet way of visiting interested
> non-Bahá'ís and obtaining good press publicity for the Faith
> and its objectives, Miss Perks' visit was of inestimable value.
> She contacted the press in Christchurch, Oamaru, Dunedin,
> Wellington, New Plymouth, Hamilton and Auckland. Annual Reports
> Bahá'í Year 113 (1956-1957), 4.
> 
> 5. Interview, 7 August
> 1981. In 1955 Thelma tried to contact an Aneityum Islander who
> was studying at a Presbyterian Theological College in Sydney to
> do translation into Aneityum (Annual Reports - 112 (1955-1956),
> 9.
> 
> 6. "Thelma joined in
> very spiritedly with the simple village dances and really seemed
> to be enjoying herself." Irene Jackson to Asian Teaching
> Committee 30 June 1957. 0133/0036.
> 
> 7. In 1958 Thelma visited
> throughout NSW & QLD
> 
> 8. In 1960 year she
> visited Queensland. (Annual Report Bahá'í Year 117 [1960-61],
> 10.
> 
> 9. In 1959-61 Thelma was
> on the National Teaching Committee. In 1948,51,52, 53, 1959
> Thelma was on Reference Library Committee; 1948,1951,52,1953 on
> National House Committee. 1960 Thelma was appointed with Greta
> Lake to look after Clara Dunn and her flat at Lang Road. Annual
> Report Bahá'í Year 117 (1960-61), 2.
> 
> 10. Bahá'í Bulletin
> 121, September 1964, 7.
> 
> 11. Bahá'í Bulletin
> 133, September 1965, 11. In 1965 the National Teaching Committee
> placed on record its thanks for the work Thelma achieved in her
> capacity as Auxiliary Board Member: Bahá'í Bulletin 129,
> May 1965, 13. During 1965 Thelma visited Cowra, Parkes, Grenfell
> in September; Tasmania in November; and Melbourne and Ballarat in
> December. In February 1966 she visited Lismore, Tamworth and
> Newcastle: Bahá'í Bulletin 135, November 1965, 3. In
> January 1965 Thelma attended summer school and gave firesides at
> the Temple. In April she visited Warringah for the feast of Jalal
> and "gave an inspiring talk on the Nine year Plan, and the
> privileges given to Bahá'ís to help in the fulfillment of this
> mighty task": Bahá'í Bulletin 130, June 1965, 13.
> In 1966 Thelma visited PNG: Bahá'í Bulletin 148,
> December 1966, 10. November 1967 Thelma spoke at State public
> meeting in Sydney.
> 
> 12. Bahá'í Bulletin
> 171, November 68, 6.
> 
> 13. Eg, Bahá'í Bulletin
> 167 July 68, 14: Thelma read cable from HCF at convention, and
> "reminded the friends of the responsibilities and devoted
> work of the Hand of the Cause for Australasia and of the loving
> esteem in which he was held. On the aspect of teaching she
> accented the task of gaining another 30 LSAs in 60 months, an
> average of one LSA every two months. She felt that a greater
> sense of unity was required in our community. She also dwelt on
> the responsibility of the delegates present and hoped that
> everyone would be enthused to great heights of endeavour during
> the subsequent days of consultation."
> 
> 14. Bahá'í Bulletin
> 189, May 1970, 12.
> 
> 15. 176 April 69, 9 Thelma
> visited Canberra. Bahá'í Bulletin 192 August 1970. Thelma and
> Howard Harwood spent the weekend of 1-2 August with 13 Bahá'ís
> of Southeast Queensland to discuss future goals and plans.
> 
> Consulted with NSA at
> December 1970 meeting. At 1971 convention she read greetings from
> Hand of the Cause Collis Featherstone and spoke on the
> Continental fund. 1971 commenced a series of deepenings in her
> home on Saturday afternoons: Australian Bahá'í Bulletin
> 202, June 1971, 8. November 1971 Thelma was in Hobart, Tasmania,
> where she celebrated the Day of the Covenant, and spoke on
> several other occasions of Clara Dunn's meeting with
> Abdu'l-Bahá, and told of the life of Abdu'l-Bahá: Australian
> Bahá'í Bulletin 209, January 1972, 14.
> 
> .. Bahá'í Bulletin, 179
> July 69, 2
> 
> .. Bahá'í Bulletin, 184
> Dec 69, 4 Thelma told the friends how fortunate they were to be
> living in the time of the Hands of the Cause. Future generations
> will only be able to read about them.
> 
> .. Australian Bahá'í
> Bulletin 235, October 1974, 8. In January 1972 Thelma spoke
> at Summer School on the Institution of the Continental Board of
> Counsellors: Australian Bahá'í Bulletin 209, January
> 1972, 8-9; and attended the Canberra Youth Conference, which was
> attended by Hands of the Cause John Robarts and Collis
> Featherstone. In 1973 she opened a Bahá'í information centre in
> Newcastle, and received radio, press and television coverage, two
> weeks before participating in consultations in Haifa at the time
> of the third election of the Universal House of Justice, then
> visited Europe: Australian Bahá'í Bulletin 222 April
> 1973, 8; 223, May 1973, 4, 8.
> 
> .. Australian Bahá'í
> Bulletin 231, April 1974, 3.
> 
> .. Australian Bahá'í
> Bulletin 242, August 1975, 7. In 1974 Thelma read Hand of the
> Cause Collis Featherstone's message to the opening of the new
> Haziratu'l-Quds in the Temple grounds, Sydney. In February 1976
> Thelma attended a NSW conference with 120 adults attending. In
> October Thelma attended a seminar on "Teaching the
> Aborigines" in Perth: Australian Bahá'í Bulletin
> 257, December 1976, 11. In November Thelma attended an Auxiliary
> Board Member's conference at the University of NSW on the theme
> "Gift of God" and gave an inspiring talk on the heroic
> figures of the Faith: Australian Bahá'í Bulletin 259,
> February 1977, 13.
> 
> .. Australian Bahá'í
> Bulletin 246, December/January 1976, 2.
> 
> .. Late in 1977 Thelma
> present at an RGC Meeting for Sydney, hunter and Manning: Australian
> Bahá'í Bulletin 266, September 1977, 15. In August and
> September 1977 the Counsellors hosted "Covenant
> Institutes" in each state.
> 
> .. Australian Bahá'í
> Bulletin 300, December 1980, 3.
> 
> .. In February 1978 spoke
> at Persian Conference in Sydney: Australian Bahá'í Bulletin
> 273, April/May 1978, 12. Spoke at National Teaching Conference
> September in Lane Cove National Park: Australian Bahá'í
> Bulletin 277, September 1978, 2. In September 1981 Thelma
> joined Merle and Jim Heggie, and Jeff Rodwell, in speaking of the
> early years of the Australian Bahá'í community at celebrations
> commemorating the 20th anniversary of the dedication of the House
> of Worship: Australian Bahá'í Bulletin 308, November
> 1981, 3.
> 
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> — *Thelma Perks (Used by permission of the curator)*

