Bahá'í Faith: Difference between revisions

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== Governance ==
== Governance ==
The Baha'i religion lacks a professional clergy (though some of its leaders and functionaries receive salaries), and is governed by its "Administrative Order" (AO), a hierarchy of elected councils. These include  
The Baha'i religion lacks a professional clergy (though some of its leaders and staff receive salaries), and is governed by its "Administrative Order," a hierarchy of elected councils. These include  


:*Local Spiritual Assemblies (LSAs) — the most basic level of administration, associated with such localities as towns, cities, or counties. These consist of nine-member councils which are elected annually, from among all local believers. For this reason the community which it represents must be able to muster a quorum of at least nine adult believers.
:*Local Spiritual Assemblies (LSAs) — the most basic level of administration, associated with such localities as towns, cities, or counties. These consist of nine-member councils that are elected annually from among all local adult believers. In very large Baha'i communities the Universal House of Justice may approve an alternative election system whereby the adult Baha'is elect delegates, who elect the Assembly.


:*National Spiritual Assemblies (NSAs) — similarly-conceived nine-member councils, with national rather than local responsibilities. Like LSA's, NSA's are elected annually, but by delegates chosen by LSA's, rather than directly. NB: Some NSA's represent "nations" which are now defunct, such as [[Hawaii]].
:*National Spiritual Assemblies (NSAs) — similarly-conceived nine-member councils, with national rather than local responsibilities. NSA's are elected annually by delegates chosen by all the Baha'is resident in an electoral unit. The number of delegates is set by the Universal House of Justice; the NSA then divides its area of jurisdiction into electoral units, each with roughly the same number of adult Baha'is, the exception being large cities, which are kept as a single electoral unit that elects two or more delegates based on its Baha'i population. (It should be noted that the term "national" is used loosely in Baha'i parlance. All of South America originally elected a single "national" Spiritual Assembly, which was later subdivided into regional assemblies and finally one NSA for each country on the continent. It is common for islands, island groupings, and territories geographically detached from the main section of a nation to have their own "national" Spiritual Assemblies, Alaska, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and Sicily being examples.


:*Regional Baha'i Councils — exist in certain populous countries such as India, as an intermediate level in between the LSA's and NSA.
:*Regional Baha'i Councils — exist in certain populous countries such as India, as an intermediate level in between the LSA's and NSA. They are elected annually by all the members of local spiritual assemblies in their region.


:*The [[Universal House of Justice]] (UHJ) — a global body, the religion's highest authority. Its members are elected every five years, by an [[electoral college]] consisting of all the members of each NSA. In contrast to other Baha'i bodies, only men are eligible for election to the UHJ. Its "Seat" (headquarters) is located on [[Mount Carmel]], in a campus of [[neoclassical]] buildings and [[Persian garden]]s overlooking the city of [[Haifa, Israel]].
:*The [[Universal House of Justice]] (UHJ) — a global body, the religion's highest authority. Its members are elected every five years, by an [[electoral college]] consisting of all the members of the NSAs. In contrast to other Baha'i bodies, only men are eligible for election to the UHJ. Its "Seat" (headquarters) is located on [[Mount Carmel]], in a campus of [[neoclassical]] buildings and [[Persian garden]]s overlooking the city of [[Haifa, Israel]].


Baha'i elections take place through [[secret ballot]]. Elections are decided on the basis of [[plurality]]. In the event of a tie, preference is given to members of minority groups within that region. Individual Baha'is are urged to vote for whomever they feel would be best for the role. They may not engage in campaigning, or even announce their candidacy; nor may they discuss with others the question of for whom to vote.  
Baha'i elections take place through [[secret ballot]]. Elections are decided on the basis of [[plurality]]. In the event of a tie, preference is given to members of minority groups within that region. Individual Baha'is are urged to vote for whomever they feel would be best for the role. They may not engage in campaigning, or even announce their candidacy; nor may they discuss with others the question of for whom to vote.  

Revision as of 14:14, 29 August 2007

The Baha'i religion was founded during the 1860s by Baha'u'llah (1817-1892), an Iranian-born leader of Babi exiles in the Ottoman Empire. Baha'is (as its followers are called) recognize Bahá'u'lláh as the most recent in a series of divine "prophet-founders" which also includes Zarathustra, Krishna, Buddha, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, and the Bab. That is, just as Islam claims to supercede previous Abrahamic religions, so does the Bahá'í religion claim to supercede Islam (and Babism).

From its origins in the Persian and Ottoman Empires, the Bahá'í religion attracted a significant number of Western followers by World War I. During the 1960's it expanded into various Third World countries in South and Southeast Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, South America, and the Pacific. As a result it now enjoys a noteworthy geographic spread, with a membership drawn from hundreds of nations and ethnic groups.

Bahá'ís expect this process to continue into the indefinite future, until most of the world's people are Bahá'ís. Bahá'u'lláh's teachings, they believe, herald the gradual rise of a new global civilization characterized by world peace. "The earth is but one country," wrote Bahá'u'lláh (in the Lawh-i-Maqsud), "and mankind its citizens."

Nomenclature

The word "Bahá'í" (/baˈhaːʔiː/)comes from the Arabic word Bahá’ (بهاء), meaning "glory" or "splendor"--a term which forms part of Bahá'u'lláh's assumed title. Properly the term "Bahá'í" is either an adjective referring to the religion, or a noun for a follower of Bahá'u'lláh, but not a noun for the religion itself.

Members of the main body of Bahá'ís often refer to their religion as the "Bahá'í Faith," preferring "faith" to "religion," and treating it as part of the religion's name. Names like "Baha'ism," "Bahaism," "Behaism," etc. are sometimes encountered in older material, or in material by dissidents, but are avoided by mainstream Bahá'ís for complex historical reasons ("Babism," however, meets with less objection), "Bahá'í religion" is also a common usage.

Bahá'í institutions express a preference for the orthography "Bahá'í" (i.e. with diacritical marks),[1] using a particular transcription of the Arabic and Persian. The acute accents used here can also be written as horizontal lines (macrons) above the vowels. The "apostrophe" stands for a 'hamzih or glottal stop; otherwise English speakers might be tempted to pronounce ai as a diphthong.

Size

Attempts to estimate the Bahá'í population face problems common to many religions. Some of these are definitional; unlike most other religions, the religion's administration registers new members, but has no way to track people who do not officially resign their membership. In a few countries where the Bahá'í Faith is well known (such as Bolivia, where there is a popular Bahá'í radio station), the government census actually gives a membership number larger than the official Bahá'í statistic. Other problems are practical and arise from the sheer difficulty of estimating a minority population spread over numerous cultures and countries (including some where the religion is illegal). Recent estimates have ranged from a little more than a million,[2] to upwards of seven million.[3] The official Bahá'í number is five to six million.[4]

Observers often notice a discrepency between government and Bahá'í figures. As an illustration, official Bahá'í statistics claim the Bahá'í population of India to be 2.2 million],[5] whereas the 1991 Indian census recorded a mere 5,575 Bahá'ís living there.[6]

In answer to criticism that their religion is too small (in numbers) to deserve comparison with Christianity or Islam, Bahá'í literature notes that the World Christian Encyclopedia identifies theirs as the second-most widespread religion in the world (Christianity being number one and Islam, number three).[7] Because nine adult Bahá'ís will form a local "spiritual assembly" but nine adult Christians or Muslims will usually not establish a church or mosque, Bahá'ís are often more visible than their numbers would suggest.

Another often-encountered statement is that the Bahá'í religion is the fastest-growing world religion,[8] whose current obscurity is comparable to that of, say, second-century Christianity. The claim of course refers to percentile growth rather than the absolute number of new believers. Its veracity depends heavily on what the Bahá'í religion is compared to; denominations and small religions often find it easier to achieve rapid percentile growth than larger ones. Others note that the Bahá'í Faith, historically, grows in spurts, and and currently is growing very little or not at all (the high growth percentiles reflecting earlier rapid growth, spread out over a longer period of time).

Divisions

Bahá'ís view their sacred history in terms of "Covenants." A "Greater Covenant" encompasses previous dispensations and refers to the belief that each divine messenger promises a future divine teacher, a promise fulfilled by Bahá'u'lláh. A "Lesser Covenant" binds the major prophet and his followers. Examples of the latter would include Jesus's recognition of the primacy of Saint Peter and Muhammad's appointment of Ali as his successor, as per the Shi'a claim. In the Bahá'í case, Bahá'u'lláh wrote a document appointing his son, `Abdu'l-Bahá, as his successor; `Abdu'l-Bahá wrote a will appointing his grandson, Shoghi Effendi, as his successor; and Bahá'u'lláh, `Abdu'l-Bahá, and Shoghi Effendi all defined the future nature, functioning, and establishment of a worldwide elected governing body, the Universal House of Justice, in their writings.

Because of the clearly defined written instructions about leadership, efforts to split the Bahá'í religion have had limited success. Mainstream Baha'is note that none of the other Bahá'í divisions have attracted a significant following, and that many have disappeared. Of the several million Bahá'ís, all but a few hundred recognize the Universal House of Justice in Haifa, Israel (first elected 1963) as their religion's supreme body. Other splinter groups include:

  • The Free Baha'i Faith — based on the claims of Ruth White who, after the 1921 death of `Abdul-Baha, accused Shoghi Effendi of having forged a will naming himself as successor. Iranians familiar with `Abdu'l-Bahá's handwriting and style rejected her arguments, even those who had opposed `Abdu'l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi. White's claims were revived during the 1970s by Hermann Zimmer, who organized this group. Also known as the World Union of Universal Religion and Universal Peace.
  • The Orthodox Bahá'í Faith — accepts Charles Mason Remey as the Second Guardian (after Shoghi Effendi, their last point of commonality with the Baha'i mainstream), and Joel Marangella as the third.
  • Bahá'ís under the Provisions of the Covenant — established by Leland Jensen, one of the followers of Mason Remey, who believed that Pepe Remey, Mason Remey's adopted son, was the Third Guardian (even though Pepe Remey rejected the claim). Apart from issues of leadership, this group differs from the majority of Bahá'ís in many areas of belief, most notably in its focus on and interpretation of Christian prophecy.
  • The Reform Baha'i Faith — founded 2004 by Frederick Glaysher, who aspires to unite liberal, ex-, and "unenrolled" Baha'is under a common banner. Its activities are limited mainly to the internet.

For Bahá'ís, to accept Bahá'u'lláh while rejecting any of his clearly designated successors is "covenant breaking," one of the most grievous spiritual acts. The question of which claimant qualifies as the genuine successor is therefore a matter of profound spiritual importance. Members of different Bahá'í "denominations" are generally instructed not to associate with one another.

Some observers state they see the rise of Bahá'í fundamentalism in recent years.[9] Baha'i tradition incorporates classic liberal emphases (such as feminism and race unity) as well as conservative ones (such as submission to authority). Outsiders are somewhat more likely to encounter the former. Because of the lack of nominations and campaigning in Bahá'í elections (which will be discussed later) the Bahá'í community exhibits few internal divisions, including a conservative / liberal split, and it is official Bahá'í policy to discourage the labeling of members.

Sect or religion?

Bahá'ís consider theirs to be an "independent world religion" whose relationship to Islam is similar to that of Christianity to Judaism, or of Buddhism to Hinduism. That is to say, while Bahá'ís recognize Islam as their parent religion, and the source of their basic theology and practice, they categorically reject a Muslim identity for themselves. Much Bahá'í literature insists on the religion's equal status with "other" major world religions (size notwithstanding). Terms such as "sect" are rejected on theological grounds as they tend to reduce the Bahá'í religion to a subset of Islam.

This perspective became normative under the leadership of Shoghi Effendi after 1921. Previously, some Bahá'ís of Muslim background saw themselves as Muslims, albeit of a special sect; whereas some early Western converts assumed the Bahá'ís to be an ecumenical group open to members of any religion. While a Muslim court in Egypt recognized the Bahá'ís as an independent religion in the 1930s, most Islamic authorities see them as apostates, former Muslims, and therefore worthy of death.

Because of its acceptance of the divine origin of the major world religions, the Bahá'í religion is often assumed to be an example of syncretism. In addition to Shi'i Islam, whose influence on basic Bahá'í theology and praxis is extensive, some secondary elements resemble aspects of Christianity, Judaism, and Zoroastrianism. This is partly by virtue of the societies in which the Bahá'í religion has developed, and is partly due to the personal backgrounds of its early converts. Outsiders sometimes claim to detect influence from Theosophy or Marxism. By contrast, few influences from Hinduism or Buddhism can be identified other than the names of Krishna and Buddha--figures who are regarded as divine messengers. (That Buddhists would disagree with this formulation is attributed to the corruption of the teachings given by their founders.) Bahá'ís recognize that their religion has elements from the previous world's religions, but point out that the same can be said of Christianity (which derives its basic theology from Judaism and some of its practices from Greek religion and culture) or any other religion, which must arise in, and interact with, a specific religious and cultural milieu. Bahá'ís see their religion as based on a divine revelation and subsequent divine guidance, where innovation involves the divine acceptance or rejection of existing ideas and practices.

The Bahá'í religion is sometimes treated as a New Religious Movement (NRM) by those who accept 19th-century movements as "new." As such it would be grouped with Tenrikyo or Caodaism--and indeed, constitutes one of the largest and most established of such groups. No other NRM claiming to be an independent religion can boast such a widespread and diverse body of believers.

Ex-Bahá'ís sometimes accuse their former religion of qualifying as a cult in the pejorative sense. A comparison with Mormonism is particularly apt. Both groups are open about their beliefs, boast more than 150 years of tradition (though with major changes), and are now led by institutions rather than charismatic leaders. Like Catholicism and Mormonism, both have expelled some dissidents and liberal scholars, and taken various steps to maintain the authority of its leadership and the perceived integrity of its teachings.

Leadership

Bahá'is conceive of human history in terms of prophetic dispensations of hundreds to thousands of years. For example, the dispensation of Christ is held to have lasted from 4 B.C.E. to 622 C.E.; than of Muhammad from 622 to 1844. Humanity is now living in the "Bahá'í Era," the "millennium" of Bahá'u'lláh which is to last at least at least a thousand years (until at least 2853 C.E. and the appearance of the next Manifestation). Within this dispensation, Bahá'ís distinguish between a "Heroic Age" of the religion (1844-1921) characterized by the ministries of the Báb, Bahá'u'lláh and `Abdu'l-Bahá, and a "Formative Age" (starting in 1921) of institution-building. A "Golden Age" of world peace and unity is expected to arise in the distant future.

The Forerunner, the Báb

The first figure was Mírzá `Alí-Muhammad. Born on October 20, 1819, in Shiraz to a well-known merchant of the city, his father died soon after his birth and the boy was raised by his uncle Ḥájí Mírzá Siyyid `Alí, who was also a merchant.[10]

Upon reaching manhood, he joined his uncle in the family business, a trading house, and became a merchant. In 1842 he married Khadíjih-Bagum and they had one son, Aḥmad, who died in infancy.[11] A contemporary described Him as "very taciturn, and [he] would never utter a word unless it was absolutely necessary. He did not even answer our questions. He was constantly absorbed in his own thoughts, and was preoccupied with repetition of his prayers and verses. He was a handsome man with a thin beard, dressed in clean clothes, wearing a green shawl and a black turban."[12]

On the evening of May 23, 1844, when he was 24 years old, he invited a young religious seeker into his house and announced that he was the promised one of Shi'ite Islam. He took the title of "the Báb," meaning "the Gate," referring to the title of four successive spokesmen of the twelfth and last Imám of Shi'ite Islam. By taking such a title it sounded like he was claiming to be a spokesman or intermediary of the twelfth Imám, but in fact he gradually made it clear that in fact he was claiming to be the messianic return of that figure, whose advent was expected by some Muslims in that very year (which was the year 1260 in the Islamic calendar).

Gradually, the Báb attracted a group of followers. He also began to "reveal" texts, "reveal" referring to a process of rapid dictation--often as much as a hundred pages a day--which required a scribe to record. He sent followers out, armed with some of his texts, to preach his message throughout the Shi'ite communities of Iran and Iraq. Because his messianic claim contradicted the commonly held understanding that Muhammad was the seal of the prophets until the Judgment Day, the Báb's message was highly controversial. His followers were persecuted and sometimes killed and he was placed under house arrest, then exiled to government forts on the remote Turkish-Iranian border. But he was never denied writing materials and thus he continued to compose texts. Nearly two hundred are extant today, though some exist with various scribal variants. Among them are the Qayyumu'l-Asmá, a metaphorical commentary on the Qur'anic Surih of Joseph, and the Bayán or "Exposition," a book containing the laws and practices of the Báb's religion. A volume of extracts from his writings, Selections from the Writings of the Báb, was published in English in 1976.[13] Among his major teachings was the advent of another messianic figure, "He whom God would make manifest," described as an even greater divine messenger than himself. Various texts seemed to suggest the new figure would appear in nine or nineteen years, though other texts were interpreted to suggest the advent was hundreds of years in the future.

In July 1850, the Báb was condemned to death for blasphemy against Islam (his claim to be a successor to Muhammad being the main evidence) and was executed by a firing squad in the city of Tabriz, Iran. By then his movement embraced several tens of thousands of followers. It was particularly popular among young Shi'ite seminarians and clerics and the urban middle class, though it did attract rural villagers, a few tribesmen, and some Turkish-speaking Shi'ites. A large number of the Bábís had previously been members of the Shaykhis, a small Shi'ite sect that had expected the imminent return of the Twelfth Imam.

The Bábí community, which was under increased persecution, turned to other leaders: the nineteen "Letters of the Living" the Báb had appointed and a titular head of the community, a teenager named Mírzá Yahyá (1831-1912), who took on the title of Subh-i-Azal. Another figure of considerable informal importance was Mírzá Husayn-`Alí, titled Bahá'u'lláh (1817-92), son of a member of the Shah's court. Mírzá Yahyá was his younger half brother, lived in Bahá'u'lláh's house, and may have been appointed titular head of the community so that Bábís could consult Bahá'u'lláh without endangering him.

In 1852, two vengeful Bábís failed in an assassination attempt against Naserud-Din Shah, Iran's king. This led to a series of pogroms that produced the deaths of hundred of Bábís and drove the community to near extinction. Ultimately, somewhere between two and twenty thousand Bábís were killed for their beliefs, often via ingenious public tortures.

The Founder, Bahá'u'lláh

Bahá'u'lláh was one of those caught up in the general persecution of the Bábís following the attempted assasination of the Shah. He was arrested on suspicion of involvement in the plot, all his extensive properties were confiscated, and he was confined in a pestilential subterranean dungeon for four months. But while there he experienced a mystical encounter with the "Maid of Heaven," an event that symbolically marked the beginning of his ministry as a divine messenger.

Cleared of all wrongdoing, Bahá'u'lláh was released from prison in December 1852, but to punish him for his involvement in the Bábí Faith, he was ordered into exile. He chose to go to Iraq. He was accompanied by his family, including Mirzá Yahyá. After two years in Baghdad, Bahá'u'lláh retreated into the wilderness for several years, where he lived as a dervish. He returned to Baghdad and began to organize that city's Bábí community and reestablished correspondence with the remnants of the Bábí community in Iran. More and more Bábís performed Shi'ite pilgrimage to the shires of the Imams in southern Iraq, then came through Baghdad to meet Bahá'u'lláh and receive his advice and encouragement. He also began to reveal texts in the same manner as the Báb. When the Báb's uncle came through Baghdad in January, 1861, and asked Bahá'u'lláh a series of questions, Bahá'u'lláh responded by composing the Kitáb-i-Íqán or Book of Certitude--a 250-page book about Qur'anic and biblical prophecy, the relationship of the religions, and the spiritual development of the individual--in forty-eight hours. He also produced a short work of spiritual and ethical aphorisms, The Hidden Words. In response to questions posed by a Sufi master he composed The Seven Valleys, which talks about seven stages in the journey of the soul. The Four Valleys was a response to a different Sufi master and described the spiritual journeys of four different types of souls.

In 1863, the Iranian government petitioned the Turkish government to move Bahá'u'lláhh farther from the Iranian border in order to reduce his influence in Iran. In response, Bahá'u'lláh was ordered to Istanbul, the imperial capital. On the verge of his departure, Bahá'u'lláh announced his claim to be the promised one of the Báb, "He whom God would make Manifest," thereby making public the status as a divine messenger he had already been expressing in his written works. Bábís were invited to accept him as the divine successor of the Báb; over the next decade, the vast majority did so and became Bahá'ís. In Istanbul Bahá'u'lláh made contacts with many ambassidors, which enabled him to convey public letters to various European monarchs announcing his claim to be the Promised One.

After some months in the capital, the Ottoman government sent Bahá'u'lláh to further exile in Edirne, a small city in Turkey near the modern borders of Turkey, Bulgaria, and Greece. There, a rift opened between the supporters of Subh-i-Azal and Bahá'u'lláh. Subsequent strife led to the decision of the Ottoman government to exile Bahá'u'lláh and most of his followers to Acre (Akko in Hebrew, `Akka in Arabic), a small prison city in what is today northern Israel, and Subh-i-Azal and most of his followers to Famagusta, Cyprus.

Bahá'u'lláh spent the rest of his life in or near Acre. The first two years involved a severe imprisonment that resulted in the deaths of two of Bahá'u'lláh's followers and of his youngest son. Subsequently he was allowed to live in a condition of house arrest within the city walls, then in rented houses outside the walls. He devoted the remaining years of his life to meeting with Bahá'í pilgrims, who spent months making the difficult journey to Acre, and revealing more texts.

His literary corpus eventually came to include some 15,000 works, covering a wide range of genres, including poetry (of several different types), theological treatises, polemical and apologetical essays, prayers, philosophical texts, and letters. His works are in Arabic, Persian, and a scholarly combination of both. His most important work, the Kitáb-i-Aqdas or Most Holy Book (composed circa 1877), established the basic laws of personal conduct of his religion and many principles of social reform. Bahá'u'lláh’s other prominent works, in addition to the previously mentioned writings from the Baghdad period (the Kitáb-i-Íqán, Hidden Words, Seven Valleys, and Four Valleys), include a series of epistles to kings, rulers and the Pope; a series of treatises after the Kitáb-i-Aqdas that explained and amplified its provisions; several lengthy and beautiful mystical prayers; several works about the authority and station of his eldest son, `Abdu'l-Bahá, including a will and testament appointing him as Bahá'u'lláh’s successor; and Epistle to the Son of the Wolf, Bahá'u'lláh’s last important work, which summarized many of his major teachings and reprised many of his most important passages.

The Master, `Abdu'l-Bahá

Bahá'u'lláh’s eldest son, `Abbás, was born on May 23, 1844—the same day when the Báb declared his mission—and was raised in exile with his father. When Bahá'u'lláh passed away in 1892, he was 48 and had served as his father’s assistant, secretary, and representative for three decades. In that role he anonymously authored three works: A Traveler’s Narrative: Written to Illustrate the Episode of the Báb, a history of the Bábí and Bahá'í Faiths; The Secret of Divine Civilization, a work on the social and economic reform and development of Iran; and A Treatise on Politics, a work on government reorganization. Long addressed by Bahá'ís as “the Master” on Bahá'u'lláh’s command, he took the title of `Abdu'l-Bahá, “Servant of Bahá.” Bahá'u'lláh’s writings declared `Abbás the head of the Faith, exemplar of the Bahá'í life, and center of authority, which stirred jealousy and plotting on the part of his half brother, Muhammad-`Alí.

The Young Turk Revolution of 1908 freed Abdul-Baha from confinement in Acre. He was able to leave Ottoman territory for Europe and North America during the years 1911-1913. He spoke on the relationship between Bahá'í teachings and various liberal causes of the day (racial amity, women's suffrage, Esperanto) to universities audiences, peace societies, liberal Protestant and Reform Jewish congregations, theosophical lodges, Spiritualist churches, and women’s clubs. Kahlil Gibran drew his portrait and was very impressed by him. Tens of thousands of North Americans and Europeans heard of the Bahá'í Faith for the first time and the Bahá'í communities, first established on those continents in the early years of his ministry, were greatly strengthened. While in the United States he laid the cornerstone of the Bahá'í House of Worship in Wilmette, Illinois, outside Chicago. His talks were collected and published as The Promulgation of Universal Peace, Paris Talks, and `Abdu'l-Bahá in London, works that are of great interest in understanding Bahá'í teachings, but which nevertheless are not considered Bahá'í scripture because `Abdu'l-Bahá never reviewed the transcripts for accuracy. After he returned to Palestine, `Abdu'l-Bahá penned a series of epistles to the North American Bahá'ís titled Tablets of the Divine Plan, where he gave them the responsibility to take the Bahá'í Faith to every corner of the globe. He was a ceaseless correspondent, producing some 27,000 extant works, mostly letters to individuals and groups. Because Bahá'u'lláh stated that `Abdu'l-Bahá was authorized to interpret the Bahá'í teachings, all his writings are part of Bahá'í scripture.

After `Abdu'l-Bahá’s passing on November 28, 1921, his Will and Testament was made public. Composed in the first decade of the twentieth century, it explained how the Bahá'í world was to go about electing the Universal House of Justice, a supreme governing institution for the Faith established by Bahá'u'lláh. He also established the institution of the Guardianship, delineated the process whereby each Guardian would appoint his successor, and defined the complementary functions of the Guardianship and the Universal House of Justice respectively as interpretation of the Bahá'í texts and legislating on matters in which the texts were silent.

The Guardian, Shoghi Effendi Rabbani

Shoghi Effendi (1897-1957) was the eldest grandson of `Abdu'l-Bahá, through his eldest daughter, who was married to an Afnan (a member of the family of the Báb). He served as `Abdu'l-Bahá’s secretary; when `Abdu'l-Bahá died, he was studying at Oxford University in order to perfect his English so that he could serve as a translator. He was shocked, upon his return to Palestine, to discover he had been appointed the Guardian of the Bahá'í Faith. He took various major works by Bahá'u'lláh and `Abdu'l-Bahá—the Will and Testament of `Abdu'l-Bahá, The Tablets of the Divine Plan, and Bahá'u'lláh’s Tablet of Carmel—as the mandates for his thirty-six year ministry.

Because the first two focused on organization of the Faith and expansion of its membership, respectively, they complemented each other well. The membership of the American Bahá'í community had been flat at roughly 1,500 members for two decades. Within months of becoming Guardian, Shoghi Effendi wrote Bahá'í communities around the world and told them to elect nine-member local spiritual assemblies in order to organize activities. He asked Bahá'ís to establish National Spiritual Assemblies as well. Within a decade there were about 115 local spiritual assemblies outside Iran (statistics within the country were not yet available) and nine National Spiritual Assemblies.[14]

The establishment of organization was not without controversy. Ahmad Sohrab, a prominent Iranian Bahá'í living in the United States, clashed with Bahá'í institutions over the role of his personal organization, the New History Society, took it outside the Bahá'í community, and used it as a vehicle to oppose the Faith. Luminaries such as Albert Einstein and Helen Keller spoke at the society's meetings in New York City. The organization, however, barely survived his death. Efforts by Ruth White, a very individualistic American Bahá'í, to oppose Bahá'í organization by claiming `Abdu'l-Bahá’s Will and Testament was a forgery, produced a brief independent Bahá'í group in Germany that soon dwindled away.

With organization came defined community life, systematic deepening of new members, and coordination of efforts to teach the Faith locally, hence membership began to increase. Greater human resources made possible systematic campaigns to establish the Faith in new countries, which brought new National Spiritual Assemblies in existence; by 1963 there were 56 National Spiritual Assemblies and there was a thin scattering of Bahá'ís everywhere outside the Communist world.

Shoghi Effendi also took Bahá'u'lláh’s Tablet of Carmel as his inspiration to expand and beautify the Bahá'í World Center, with its holy places located in and near Acre and on Mount Carmel in nearby Haifa. Notable was the construction of the Shrine of the Báb on Mount Carmel (`Abdu'l-Bahá having earlier brought the Báb’s remains to Palestine from Iran). He continued the task of translating that he had taken on with `Abdu'l-Bahá’s encouragement, producing a series of new translations into English of most of Bahá'u'lláh’s major works. His translations became the standard for later translations into English and were used as the basis for translating Bahá'í scriptures into other languages outside the Islamic world, from Icelandic to Vietnamese. He also produced a constant flow of letters and essays answering the questions of individuals and interpreting the Bahá'í teachings; altogether, 25,000 letters have been collected. Some have been assembled into significant compilations, such as The World Order of Bahá'u'lláh; others were of sufficient length to be published as small books, such as The Advent of Divine Justice and The Promised Day is Come. Shoghi Effendi also wrote one book, God Passes By (1944), a history of the Bahá'í Faith’s first century, and he edited, abridged, and translated Nabil’s Narrative, also called The Dawnbreakers, a major memoir by a Bábí who became a close follower and companion of Bahá'u'lláh.

The Hands of the Cause

Shoghi Effendi died suddenly on November 4, 1957. He left no will (which is a duty for Bahá'ís if they have property and descendants, which he did not). Based on a series of letters Shoghi Effendi wrote to the Bahá'í world about the Hands of the Cause of God, a group of distinguished servant-leaders of the Faith that he had appointed (based on guidance from Bahá'u'lláh and `Abdu'l-Bahá), the Hands took temporary charge of the Bahá'í Faith until 1963, when the ten year expansion plan Shoghi Effendi had set in motion in 1953 would end. They began to prepare for the 1963 election of the Universal House of Justice, which had not yet been established. This decision greater disturbed one Hand, Charles Mason Remey (1874-1974), who gradually came to believe that Shoghi Effendi had named him the Second Guardian. When he announced his claim in 1960, he acquired a following of one or two hundred, but subsequently the Remeyites disagreed over various matters, including who should be the Third Guardian, and broke into several groups, two of which (the Orthodox Bahá'ís and the Bahá'ís Under the Provision of the Covenant) remain active today.

The Universal House of Justice

Baha'u'llah's writings refer often to the House of Justice of nine male members, to be established in every city and worldwide. `Abdu'l-Bahá stated that temporarily, local Houses of Justice should be called local spiritual assemblies so that no one would confuse them with a court or political body. His Will and Testament stated that all the members of the nine-member National Spiritual Assemblies (which are national Houses of Justice) would elect the Universal House of Justice. The first election occurred in April, 1963, and subsequently the Universal House of Justice drafted its own constitution, which specifies that elections occur every five years. The April 2008 election will be the tenth election of the body.

The Universal House of Justice has continued the priorities set by Shoghi Effendi. They define the main goals of multi-year "plans” and deliver progress reports in the form of annual Ridvan messages. They issue statements about various teachings of the Bahá'í Faith and coordinate the answering of thousands of letters written by Bahá'ís to them every year. They have continued the development of Bahá'í institutions by inaugurating new institutions and have continued development of the Bahá'í world center in northern Israel. The latter has included restoration and beautification of holy places and construction of a series of monumental structures to house the international administration.

Governance

The Baha'i religion lacks a professional clergy (though some of its leaders and staff receive salaries), and is governed by its "Administrative Order," a hierarchy of elected councils. These include

  • Local Spiritual Assemblies (LSAs) — the most basic level of administration, associated with such localities as towns, cities, or counties. These consist of nine-member councils that are elected annually from among all local adult believers. In very large Baha'i communities the Universal House of Justice may approve an alternative election system whereby the adult Baha'is elect delegates, who elect the Assembly.
  • National Spiritual Assemblies (NSAs) — similarly-conceived nine-member councils, with national rather than local responsibilities. NSA's are elected annually by delegates chosen by all the Baha'is resident in an electoral unit. The number of delegates is set by the Universal House of Justice; the NSA then divides its area of jurisdiction into electoral units, each with roughly the same number of adult Baha'is, the exception being large cities, which are kept as a single electoral unit that elects two or more delegates based on its Baha'i population. (It should be noted that the term "national" is used loosely in Baha'i parlance. All of South America originally elected a single "national" Spiritual Assembly, which was later subdivided into regional assemblies and finally one NSA for each country on the continent. It is common for islands, island groupings, and territories geographically detached from the main section of a nation to have their own "national" Spiritual Assemblies, Alaska, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and Sicily being examples.
  • Regional Baha'i Councils — exist in certain populous countries such as India, as an intermediate level in between the LSA's and NSA. They are elected annually by all the members of local spiritual assemblies in their region.

Baha'i elections take place through secret ballot. Elections are decided on the basis of plurality. In the event of a tie, preference is given to members of minority groups within that region. Individual Baha'is are urged to vote for whomever they feel would be best for the role. They may not engage in campaigning, or even announce their candidacy; nor may they discuss with others the question of for whom to vote.

Once elected, the deliberations of Baha'i bodies are also kept secret. Baha'i tradition places great emphasis on consensus--not in the Quaker sense of waiting for agreement, but in the sense that dissenters are encouraged to respect the will of the majority. After a decision is made, all assembly members must support it for the sake of unity, regardless of what their earlier position may have been.

Critics charge that the system is deeply flawed and fundamentally unfair,[15] notwithstanding its portrayal in Baha'i literature as an improvement over secular democratic models, and allege the following:

  • The process favors incumbents in that, in the absence of a system of nominations and campaigning, dissatisfied voters will tend to scatter their votes. This is especially visible at the national and international levels, where voters cannot be familiar with many of the potential candidates. (Indeed, since the founding of the UHJ none of its members have ever failed to be re-elected, except through announced retirement.)
  • Since the deliberations of such councils are secret – the bodies issue joint statements, never revealing such things as minutes or voting records – voters have little basis on which to evaluate individual leaders.
  • The Baha'i leadership has been able to circumvent the ban on nominating candidates by promoting those whom it favors in Baha'i publications. Conversely, Baha'is not so favored by the administration, who nevertheless gain sufficient prominence to be elected on their own, may be arbitrarily eliminated--either by being stripped of their administrative rights (on the pretext they they are "gathering a following", for example), or by expulsion from the faith.

In addition to this hierarchy of councils, there exists a "staff" function--a bureaucracy--which advises the elected bodies. The UHJ appoints nine International Counselors, who direct Continental Counselors, who in turn appoint Auxilliary Boards (for the local and regional level), which appoint Assistants. Critics portray the appointed wing as a mechanism of control, analogous to the Catholic Inquisition.[16]

Any Baha'i assembly has the right to expel individual Baha'is, or strip them of their "administrative rights" (such as the right to vote, or be elected). Outright expulsion is rare and typically involves challenges to the authority of Baha'i institutions. Removal of adminisrative rights is a more common community response to public violations of Baha'i law, such as a couple living together outside of marriage. Only the UHJ may declare Baha'i to be a "covenant breaker", which requires shunning.

Higher-level assemblies additionally have the right to suspend the operations of lower-level ones within their jurisdiction. During the 1980s, the NSA of the United States suspended] the LSA of Los Angeles, citing multiple reasons.[17]

Beliefs

Baha'i literature often cites lists of core principles formulated by Abdul-Baha during his tour of Europe and America. The first three of this list are commonly referred to as the "three onenesses".

The oneness of God

The Baha'i religion is monotheistic. God's essence is said to be unfathomable. Revelation takes place only by means of his prophets, who have both human and divine aspects. This resembles Shi'i ghulat theories of the imams, as well as the Christian conception of the two natures of Christ. Many Muslims would reject the claim of such teachings to be monotheistic, since they appear to "associate companions" with God.

While God's essence may not be known, his attributes (or "names") may be known. These are likened to gems and include such divine qualities as compassion or wisdom, which human beings are urged to cultivate in their spiritual lives. Baha'is believe that our spiritual development in the physical world becomes a basis for judgment and advancement in the spiritual world, conceived as an endless expanse of ever-higher realms through which a soul may advance. "Heaven" and "hell" respectively refer to nearness or distance from God.

In an early writing, the "Tablet of All Food" (Lawh-i-Kullu't-Ta'am), Baha'u'llah adopts a Sufi-derived schema similar to that of Ibn al-'Arabi, to describe five levels between God and the physical world:

  • Hahut — "He-ness", i.e. God in his unapproachable essence
  • Lahut — roughly, "Divinity", the root being the same as the word for God (al-Lah Allah)
  • Jabarut — the world of "Spirits" (ruh), or archetypes
  • Malakut — "the Kingdom", the heaven of the angels
  • Nasut — the human, mortal world.

The oneness of religion

Baha'is recognize a succession of prophets or "Manifestations" (mazhar). Besides the familiar prophets of the Bible and Islamic tradition – from Adam to Muhammad – Baha'is additionally recognize the divinity of Zarathustra, Krishna, Buddha, the Bab, and Baha'u'llah. The names of many prophets from the distant past are said to be unknown; others are to arrive in the far future, after at least 1000 years have passed from the time of Baha'u'llah. The Baha'i doctrine of progressive revelation holds that each successive prophet reveals a gradually more advanced teaching suitable for his times, thereby guiding human social and spiritual evolution.

Baha'i tradition distinguishes between the spiritual teachings of these prophets, which is said to be identical; and the social and legal provisions, which vary according to time (though apparently not geography). If religions appear to disagree with respect to metaphysics (e.g., Baha'is reject the theory of reincarnation), this is attributed to the corruption of the pristine, "original" teachings of their founders. (Like Islam, the Baha'i religion assumes religions to require founders.) Only the Qur'an, and the Babi and Baha'i scriptures are considered textually reliable records of the prophets.

Religions whose divinity is not officially recognized include Sikhism and Taoism. Confucianism is regarded as a secular philosophy, tribal religions are assumed to contain truth, but few specifics are given. Following Islamic tradition, the Baha'i religion accepts Sabeanism as a God-given religion, but is unsure of what to identify as Sabeanism.

According to Baha'i theology, Baha'u'llah represents the fulfillment of the millennarian expectations of various other religions. For example he is the Second Coming of Christ, the Mahdi and Qa'im of Islamic eschatology, the future Buddha Maitreya, and Shah Bahram, as well as "He Whom God Shall Manifest" from Babism. In that spirit Baha'is note that 1844 was the year of the "Great Disappointment" from Adventism, as well as marking the thousandth year after the occultation of the Hidden Imam.

Baha'u'llah urged his follows to "consort with the followers of all religions in a spirit of friendliness and fellowship" (Tarazat, second Taraz); and Baha'is have done so actively, taking part in numerous ecumenical gatherings. Belonging to more than one religion is, however, forbidden.

The oneness of humanity

Baha'i teaching emphasizes that humans are biologically one race, with racial differences seen as ephemeral or superficial. A common Baha'i expression is that of "unity in diversity", like a garden consisting of numerous species of flowers.

We are also said to be spiritually one, though as yet this often goes unrecognized. In the future the unity of humanity is to have a political dimension as well, with the rise of a world government. This development has been willed by God, and will certainly come about, thanks to the (often unseen) spiritual influences of Baha'u'llah and the Baha'i religion.

An interesting question is the extent to which Baha'i views on the unity of humanity subject to revision by science. For example, supposing that science one day embraces the sociobiological view that race differences are not superficial, or the perspective of game theory that our division into quarrelsome identity groups is inherent part of human nature, would Baha'is accept these conclusions?

The equality of men and women

The Baha'i religion explicitly champions the equality of men and women, making this one of its major principles. While its major figures and recognized prophets have been exclusively male, Baha'i history celebrates a number of prominent women including Tahirih (a Babi heroine, not actually a Baha'i), Navváb (one of Baha'u'llah's wives), Queen Marie of Romania, Bahíyyih Khánum (one of Baha'u'llah's daughters), Martha Root (a prominent Baha'i missionary), and Lidia Zamenhof (daughter of the Esperanto founder).

A number of provisions of the Baha'i religion discriminate on the basis of gender. Women may not serve on the Universal House of Justice, its highest body, and receive less compensation than men in the Baha'i intestate will (an inequality inherited from Muslim family law). On the other hand, in the event that Baha'i parents find themselves unable to afford to educate both sons and daughters, they are instructed to give priority to girls.

The elimination of all forms of prejudice

This provision is closely related to the Baha'i teachings on the unity of humanity, and the equality of men and women. Critics point to other "forms of prejudice" which the Baha'i religion has not sought to eliminate. Shoghi Effendi specified that the Baha'i religion is opposed to homosexuality,[18] though Baha'is add that gays and lesbians ought to be treated with politeness and goodwill. Additionally, Baha'i antipathy towards Bayanis (remnant Babis) and the so-called "covenant breaker" groups may qualify as forms of religious prejudice.

World peace, under a world government

Baha'is expect the immanent arrival of "the Lesser Peace", in which world leaders shall (in the words of 'Abdul-Baha) "...establish a board of international arbitration; that from all nations and governments of the world there should be delegates selected for a congress of nations which should constitute a universal abitral court of justice to settle international disputes".[19] Some older Baha'i literature suggests that the advent of the Lesser Peace would occur prior to the year 2000.

This is to be followed by "the Most Great Peace", a more distant time when "Warfare and strife will be uprooted, disagreement and dissension pass away and universal peace unite the nations and peoples of the world. All mankind will dwell together as one family, blend as the waves of one sea, shine as stars of one firmament, and appear as fruits of the same tree."[20]

In 1993 the UHJ endorsed the U.S.-led alliance during the Gulf War, on the grounds that as a United Nations-approved military action designed to reverse Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, Operation Desert Storm fit the conditions specified by Baha'u'llah in the Lawh-i-Maqsud: "Should any king take arms against another, all should unitedly arise and prevent him."[21]

A point which is debated within Baha'i circles, is that of whether Baha'i institutions such as the UHJ will constitute the future world government (at a time when most of the world's people have converted); or whether these will retain a purely spiritual function, serving parallel to secular institutions like the United Nations.

Since world unity is the primary theme of Baha'u'llah's dispensation, some Baha'is speculate that the mission of the next prophet may involve interplanetary unity.

Harmony between religion and science

Baha'is view conflict between science and religion as misguided, since "truth is one", and each discipline is reliable within its own sphere of authority. In Paris Talks Abdul-Baha says: "Should a man try to fly with the wing of religion alone he would quickly fall into the quagmire of superstition, whilst on the other hand, with the wing of science alone he would also make no progress, but fall into the despairing slough of materialism."

A certain tension can be observed between this sentiment, and the Baha'i attribution of varying degrees of infallibility to its major figures, whose writings occasionally touch on scientific subjects. Baha'u'llah, for example, stated that "every planet [has] its own creatures," a generalization which at this writing appears to be scientifically false. Abdul-Baha apparently denied that human beings evolved from animals. Shoghi Effendi viewed homosexuality as a curable disease, a position now generally rejected by psychiatry. Baha'is have reacted by reinterpreting the writings in ways which are more congenial with modern science; insisting that current science is wrong; or reconsidering the question of infallibility.

Does the Baha'i endorsement of "science" extend to secular scholarship in general, for example in the field of religious history? While a number of conflicts in this area have occurred – for example, over the number of Babi deaths in Iran (scholar Denis MacEoin suggests a figure ten times smaller than Abdul-Baha's "20,000"[22]) – the Baha'i presumption seems to be that conducted properly, scholarship can only bolster Baha'i theology. In a 1998 position paper,[23] the Universal House of Justice laments the domination of secular approaches to "researching, understanding, and writing about historical events, and the elements of these methods which the House of Justice regards as being influenced by materialism."

Independent investigation of truth

The point of this teaching is that spiritual seekers ought not to be satisfied with the religion of their ancestors or upbringing, but should investigate various religions for themselves, ideally becoming convinced of the claims of the Baha'i religion. It is also related to the principle of harmony between science and religion, since a religious teaching contradicted by science is held to be irrational, and therefore unworthy of belief.

Critics point to various Baha'i policies which they say are inconsistent with this principle--among them the warnings against reading "covenant breaker" material, or the requirement to submit writings on the Baha'i religion for pre-publication censorship ("Baha'i review"). The response is that the "independent investigation of truth" applies to those who have not yet become Baha'is. Once one accepts the stations of Baha'u'llah and his successors, however, the Baha'i acquires a new obligation, namely to accept whatever these have revealed or commanded.

Universal compulsory education

Baha'i theology conceives of human spiritual evolution in terms of "education", with the prophets as teachers. Conversely, education is conceived in spiritual terms. Baha'u'llah wrote: "Regard man as a mine rich in gems of inestimable value. Education can, alone, cause it to reveal its treasures, and enable mankind to benefit therefrom."

Baha'i parents have a duty to educate their children (if they are able), a duty which is shared by Baha'i assemblies. Said education must at least include moral and spiritual instruction; reading and writing; training in a useful trade or profession; and in the universal auxilliary language, as soon as one is chosen. Baha'i writings also mention foreign languages, mathematics, science, technology, commerce, industry, the liberal arts, and religion as subjects suitable for study.

A universal auxilliary language

Baha'u'llah urged that the nations of the world, through representatives, agree on "one universal language and one common script". Baha'is believe that such a council will one day be held (though as a practical matter, interest in it seems to have waned somewhat).

While the choice of language is reserved to this committee, many early Baha'is including 'Abdul Baha favored Esperanto (or a reformed version of it). Baha'u'llah spoke highly of the Arabic language, without recommending it directly; while today English is also frequently mentioned as a candidate. For purposes of international communication, the religion's working languages are English and Persian.

Obedience to government, non-involvement in politics

Baha'is have an obligation to obey the government of the country in which they live, in all things except the renunciation of their faith (should this be commanded). They are forbidden to participate in partisan politics, on the grounds that partisan behavior contradicts the Baha'i emphasis on human unity. They may however accept appointment to nonpolitical positions such as judges, and are encouraged to vote in elections.

Faced with military conscription, Baha'is are instructed to request alternative service consistent with the principle of pacifism. Should this be denied, the principle of obedience to government then applies, and the Baha'i must accept military service.

Some dispute has occurred concerning the range of activities which qualify as partisan or political. For example, the UHJ has clarified that Baha'is may not take part in activities sponsored by Amnesty International or the World Council of Churches.

Elimination of extremes of wealth and poverty

In contrast with some varieties of Communism, Baha'is accept the necessity of private property, and inequality of wealth, urging only the establishment of progressive taxation and a social safety net. Though the details of these must await the emergence of future Baha'i governments, Baha'i literature rues the prevalence of a "materialism" which blinds societies to spiritual truths, such as the necessity of helping the poor.

Practices

As their main scripture--comparable to the Bible for Christians or the Qur'an for Muslims--Baha'is recognize a book known as the Kitab-i-Aqdas, Bahá'u'lláh's book of laws. The Aqdas represents a revision of Babi law, which in turn revises Islamic law (fiqh). In it, Baha'is are commanded to

  • Recite an obligatory prayer each day. There are three such prayers, among which one may be chosen.
  • Read from / meditate upon Baha'i scripture each day.
  • Avoid backbiting and gossip.
  • Engage in useful work. (This would include unpaid labor such as parenting.)
  • Observe a nineteen-day sunrise-to-sunset fast each year from March 2 through March 20. (For adult Baha'is in good health)
  • Abstain from alcohol and drugs, unless prescribed by doctors.
  • Abstain from all sexual relationships outside of marriage. Marriages must be heterosexual and monogamous.
  • Receive the permission of their parents (if living) in order to marry.
  • Observe a "year of patience" prior to divorce.
  • Abstain from gambling.
  • Pay a religious tax of huququ'llah (the "Right of God", analogous to the Islamic zakat) consisting of 19% of their surplus net-worth (i.e. those things that they do not need to live comfortably) at least once in their lifetime, after the discharge of all debts.
  • Make a pilgrimage (technically a "visitation") to Haifa and Acre at least once in their lives, if they are able.

While some of the laws from the Kitáb-i-Aqdas are applicable at the present time, others have yet to come into effect.

The observance of personal laws such as prayer or fasting, while a universal obligation, is the sole responsibility of the individual. Other laws may be enforced to a degree by the administrative order (such as laws on sexuality), while still others are dependent upon the existence of a predominantly Bahá'í society, which is expected gradually to come into being. For example, the Aqdas specifies that arsonists are to be punished by being burned themselves.

Socially, Baha'is are urged to meet for "feasts" every nineteen days, plus Baha'i holidays (when they are to avoid working if possible). These "feasts" consist of a spiritual portion (scripture reading), business portion (this may include fund-raising, or elections), and social portion. Outsiders are barred from the business portion, but may be permitted to attend the other portions.

Participation in various committees is considered an important aspect of Baha'i spirituality, since their work is seen as a precursor to a future world government. Another important Baha'i emphasis is fund-raising. (Contributions are accepted only from Baha'is, who are frequently reminded of this duty.)

"Deepening" consists of the devotional study of Baha'i writings (typically, compilations of extracts) by groups of Baha'is. In recent years, Baha'is have been encouraged to form and participate in Baha'i study circles such as the Ruhi Institute classes. These feature a series of thematic textbooks.

Places of worship

Most Baha'i meetings occur in individuals' homes, local Baha'i centers, or rented facilities.

Baha'i writings refer to an institution called a Mashriqu'l-Adhkár (Dawning-place of the Mention of God), which is to form the center of a complex of institutions including a hospital, university, and so on. Only the first ever Mashriqu'l-Adhkár in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, was built to such a degree, but was seized during the 1917 Russian Revolution and later destroyed by earthquake.

Worldwide, there are currently seven Bahá'í Houses of Worship, basically one per continent, with an eighth under construction in Chile.[24] These are nine-sided, domed structures which in several cases are noteworthy for their architecture.

Symbols

The official symbol of the Bahá'í Faith is the five-pointed star, but a nine-pointed star is more frequently used.[25] The ringstone symbol and calligraphy of the Greatest Name are also often encountered. The former consists of two stars interspersed with a stylized Bahá’ (Template:ArB "splendor" or "glory") whose shape is meant to recall the three onenesses.[26] The Greatest Name is Yá Bahá'u'l-'Abhá (Template:ArB "O Glory of the Most Glorious!")

Calendar and Holy Days

The Baha'i calendar is based upon the Badi ("Unique" or "Peerless") calendar established by the Báb. The year consists of nineteen months of nineteen days, with four or five intercalary days, to make a full solar year. Each of the nineteen months is given a name which is an attribute of God; some examples include Bahá’ (Splendour), ‘Ilm (Knowledge), and Jamál (Beauty). Bahá'í communities gather each month, usually on the first day, at a meeting called a Nineteen Day Feast for worship, consultation, and socializing. The calendar begins with Bahá'í New Year, which corresponds to the traditional Persian New Year, called Naw Ruz. It occurs on the vernal equinox March 21, at the end of the month of fasting.

In addition, Bahá'ís observe nine Holy Days throughout the year on which work is suspended. They commemorate important anniversaries in Bahá'í history: three connected with the Báb (his birth, the declaration of his mission, and his martyrdom), five connected with Bahá'u'lláh (his birth, passing, and the first, ninth, and twelfth days of Ridván, the twelve-day festival commemorating the public declaration of his mission), and Naw-Ruz. The passing of `Abdu'l-Bahá is commemorated as a holy day, but Bahá'ís are not required to suspend work on that day. The Day of the Covenant is the final Bahá'í holy day and commemorates Bahá'u'lláh's appointment of `Abdu'l-Bahá as the head of his covenant. It is also a holy day on which the suspension of work is not required. `Abdu'l-Bahá established the Day of the Covenant because Bahá'ís wanted to celebrate his birthday, which falls on the Holy Day of the Declaration of the Báb.

Persecution

Baha'is claim to be persecuted in various Muslim countries, especially Iran, whose government argues that they are a revolutionary, criminal, and heretical group with ties to Israel and other enemy nations. The United Nations and various human rights groups regularly condemn Iran's treatment of its unrecognized Baha'i minority.

Baha'i sources say that Iran has executed some 200 Baha'is. Most of these deaths occurred in the wake of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.The most recent execution was of Ruhollah Rohani (for proselytism) in 1998. Another Baha'i, Zabihullah Mahrami, died in 2005 while serving a prison term (for espionage on behalf of Israel). The Iranian government claims that family members, acting on orders from the Baha'i leadership, refused the offer of an autopsy, which would reveal the cause of death to have been a heart attack rather than abuse in prison.

Several holy places relating to Babism or the Baha'i religion have been destroyed. In 1993, a Baha'i cemetery in Tehran was bulldozed in order to build a municipal centre. In April 2004, Iranian authorities demolished the shrine and gravesite of Muhammad-Ali Barfurushi (Quddus), a Babi leader. The following June, the Tehran house of Bahá'u'lláh's father was destroyed.

Baha'is claim to have been barred from higher education in Iran. Prospective students must take an examination in religion, choosing from among four recognized religions. Baha'is complain that choosing the examination in Islam might be interpreted by Iranian courts as evidence of Islamic identity. In response, the Baha'i community of Iran organized an underground university, the Bahá'í Institute of Higher Education. It operated from 1987 until a government crackdown in 1998.

Baha'is complain of being subject to arbitrary arrest and detention. For example, 54 youth were arrested for proselytism in May 2006 in the context of a teaching activity (possibly religious in nature). All were released by the following month.

A 2005 letter from an Iranian military official refers to instructions by Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to the effect that Baha'is should be monitored, with a view to suppressing their rights.[24]

Outside of Iran, the situation of Baha'is in Egypt received press attention in 2006.[25] There, the country's supreme court ruled that Baha'is do not have the right to identity cards bearing the name of their religion. (On Qur'anic grounds, only the three major Abrahamic faiths are recognized.) Whereas previously Egyptian Baha'is had been allowed to write in the name of their religion, or leave the line blank, the new system now compels them to either accept another designation, or forego identity documents. The Baha'i religion received recognition from the Egyptian government in 1925, but this was withdrawn by Nasser in 1960.

Internal controversies

In 1980 British academic Denis MacEoin quit the religion, complaining of a lack of freedom of speech and publication. At issue were his outspoken views (reflected in his dissertation on Babism, as well as numerous academic publications) to the effect that "received" Baha'i historical understandings are in error on many points.

In 1987, an unofficial Baha'i magazine called Dialogue (published by liberal Baha'is in California) submitted for "Baha'i review" (i.e. pre-publication censorship, required of Baha'is intending to write on their religion) an editorial by David Langness called "A Modest Proposal".[27] The editorial urged various reforms, including the abolution of censorship as well as term limits for Baha'i leaders. The U.S. NSA reacted harshly, leading to the (voluntary) closure of the magazine.

With the advent of the internet during the late 1980s and early 1990s, several disputes arose] between Baha'is posting online, and Baha'i administrative institutions.[28] One issue was that of whether material posted on the internet qualified as a "publication" requiring "review". Another was that of whether Baha'is could be punished, or even expelled, for their personal views. The UHJ later complained of a "campaign of internal opposition to its teachings [...] currently being carried on through the use of the Internet" by "persons technically trained in Middle East studies."[29]

In 1996, the UHJ investigated six Baha'i participants on the internet mailing list Talisman, including Juan Cole, and John and Linda Walbridge (all academics with specialties in Islam). In the course of the invesigation, the six were threatened with disenrollment as covenant-breakers. [30] Four of them including Cole, Langness, and the Walbridges, resigned their membership in the Baha'i religion. Others, notably children's author Michael McKenny, were expelled from the religion as a result of such conflicts.[31] Some of these have retained a Baha'i identity as "unenrolled Baha'is." A prominent example is New Zealand poet Alison Marshall, expelled in 2000.[32]

In 2005 Sen McGlinn was expelled from the faith, ostensibly for introducing himself as a "Baha'i theologian" in his book Church and State: A Postmodern Political Theology. The book's criticism of the Baha'i leadership may also have been a factor in his disenrollment.

In 2006 the U.S. NSA declared] a boycott of Kalimat Press, a Baha'i-oriented academic publisher run by Anthony Lee.[33] Its objection was that Kalimat had published certain books (all of which, ironically, had passed Baha'i censorship) inimicable to the faith--including the aforementioned Church and State. The boycott quickly spread to other countries as well.The circulation of a petition protesting the decision led discussions of whether Baha'is are allowed to petition their institutions.[34]

Notes

  1. [1]
  2. Juan Cole suggest 1.5 to 2 million in paragraph eight of http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jrcole/bahai/2001/khancole.htm ; the 1998 edition of the Academic American Encyclopedia gives two million.
  3. The Encyclopedia Britannica and adherents.com both use figures from the World Christian Encyclopedia, which estimates a Bahá'í population in excess of seven million. This number is probably too high.
  4. [2]
  5. [3]
  6. [4], but it should be pointed out that in most villages, households are not surveyed; rather, religions are ascertained based on the names the families use. There are no distinctive Bahá'í names, so many Indian Bahá'ís will be identified as Hindu or Muslim.
  7. [5]
  8. [6]
  9. [7]
  10. Balyuzi, H.M. (1973). The Báb: The Herald of the Day of Days. Oxford, UK: George Ronald, pp. 30-41. ISBN 0853980489.
  11. MacEoin, Dennis (1989). "Bāb, Sayyed `Ali Mohammad Sirazi". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  12. Hajji Muhammad Husayn, quoted in Abbas Amanat, Resurrection and Renewal: The making of the Babi Movement in Iran, 1844-1850 (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1989), 132-33.
  13. Selections from the Writings of the Bab
  14. The Bahá'í World: A Biennial International Record, vol. IV, 1930-1932 (New York City: Bahá'í Publishing Committee, 1933), 269-80.
  15. [8]
  16. [9]
  17. [10]
  18. [11]
  19. Promulgation of Universal Peace. p. 203
  20. ibid., p. 145
  21. [12]
  22. [13]
  23. [14]
  24. adherents.com (2001-05). Baha'i Houses of Worship. adherents.com. Retrieved on 2006-06-14.
  25. Effendi, Shoghi; The Universal House of Justice (1983). Hornby, Helen (Ed.): Lights of Guidance: A Bahá'í Reference File. Bahá'í Publishing Trust, New Delhi, India. ISBN 8185091463. 
  26. Faizi, Abu'l-Qasim (1968). Explanation of the Symbol of the Greatest Name. Bahá'í Publishing Trust, PO Box No 19, New Delhi, India. 
  27. [15], [16]
  28. [17]
  29. [18]
  30. From a letter by Counselor Stephen Birkland, maintained online by Juan Cole [19]
  31. [20]
  32. [21]
  33. [22]
  34. [23]

External links

Selected bibliography

  • Amanat, Abbas. Resurrection and Renewal: The Making of the Babi Movement in Iran, 1844-1850. Cornell UP, 1989.
  • Cole, Juan. Modernity and the Millennium: The Genesis of the Baha'i Faith in the Nineteenth-Century Middle East. Columbia UP, 1998.
  • Garlington, William. The Baha'i Faith in America. Praeger Publisher, 2005.
  • MacEoin, Denis. Rituals in Babism and Baha'ism. London: British Academic Press, 1994.
  • McGlinn, Sen. Church and State: A Postmodern Political Theology, Book One. Self-published, 2005.
  • McMullin, Michael. The Baha'i: The Religious Construction of a Global Identity. Rutgers UP, 2000.
  • Smith, Peter. The Babi and Baha'i Religions: From Messianic Shi'ism to a World Religion. Cambridge UP, 1987.
The Cole and Garlington volumes form part of the "Studies in the Babi and Baha'i Religions" series from Kalimat (general editor, Anthony Lee), currently 21 volumes.