Bahá’í World/Volume 14/Expansion and Consolidation of the Bahá’í Faith

From Bahaiworks

[Page 141]

IV

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION OF THE BAHA’I’ FAITH

INFORMATION STATISTICAL AND COMPARATIVE Riḍván 1968

THE following tabulation of the expansion of the Bahá’í world covers the entire five-year period beginning at Riḍván 1963 and, of course, includes the statistics for the first four years of the Nine Year Plan as published by the Universal House of J ustice in 1968, with the

exception of World Centre goals which are reported elsewhere in this volume.1 For ease of reference the material has been arranged in the same order as for the preceding section on the launching of the Nine Year Plan.

‘ See International Survey ofCurrent Bahá’íActiviIies, p. 81.

SUMMARY OF ACHIEVEMENTS (1963—1968)

1. The number of Mashriqu’l-Adhkárs has increased through the completion of: The first Bahá’í Temple in Europe (Frankfurt) The foundation of the first Bahá’í Temple in Latin America (Panama)

The number of future Temple sites has increased to 57 through the addition of :

6 in the African continent 2 in the Asian continent 3 in the European continent

2. The number of National Spiritual Assemblies has increased to 81 through the formation of :

10in the African continent

2 in the American continent 10 in the Asian continent

3 in Australasia

3.The number of incorporated National Spiritual Assemblies1 has increased to 57 through the addition of :

6 in the African continent

3 in the American continent

6 in the Asian continent

2 in the European continent

2 in Australasia Of the 81 existing National Spiritual Assemblies, 78 have acquired national Ḥaẓíratu’l-Quds, and 61 have secured national endowments.

’ See Directory Section, p. 560, for dates of incorporation.

4. The number of countries, significant territories and islands opened to the Faith has increased to 323 through the opening of :

6 in the African continent 31 in the American continent 4 in the Asian continent 14 in the European continent 5 in Australasia

5. The number of languages into which Bahá’í literature has been translated has increased to 417 through the addition of :

21 languages in the African continent 23 in the American continent 56 in the Asian continent 6 in the European continent 11 in Australasia

6. The number of tribes and minority groups represented in the Bahá’í Faith has increased to 1,179 through the enrollment of :

313 tribes in the African continent 82 in the Western hemisphere 205 in the Asian continent and Australasia

7. The number of Bahá’í Publishing Trusts has increased to 9 with the establishment of a Publishing Trust in Brussels, Belgium.

8. The number of Bahá’í schools and institutes has increased to 107 through the establishment of :

8 in the African continent 21 in the American continent 51 in the Asian continent

141

[Page 142]142

9. Bahá’í marriage certificates, recognized in 23 countries in 1963, are now recognized in 25 countries. Bahá’í Holy Days were recognized in 20 countries in 1963 and are now recognized in 23 countries.

10. The number of Local Spiritual Assemblies has increased to 6,840 through the establishment of:

964 in the African continent 441 in the American continent 1,850 in the Asian continent 9 in the European continent

THE Bahá’í WORLD

25 in Australasia

The number of incorporated Local Spiritual Assemblies has increased to 585.

11. The number of localities where Bahá’ís reside throughout the world has increased to 31,572 through the opening of :

3,583 in the African continent 3,165 in the American continent 13,089 in the Asian continent 389 in the European continent 275 in Australasia

COUNTRIES, SIGNIFICANT TERRITORIES AND ISLANDS OPENED TO THE Bahá’í FAITH 1844-1968


El 1. 1844—1853

15 2. 1853—1892

37 3. 1892—1921


262 4. 1921—1963



323 5. 1963—1968





1. Period of the Báb’s Ministry 2. Period of Bahá’u’lláh’s Ministry 3. Period of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s Ministry

4. Period from ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s Ascension, including the Ten Year World Spiritual Crusade

inaugurated by Shoghi Effendi 5. Period from Riḍván 1963 to Riḍván 1968

COUNTRIES, SIGNIFICANT TERRITORIES AND ISLANDS OPENED TO THE Bahá’í FAITH Riḍván 1968 1844—1853 (PERIOD OF THE BAB’S MINISTRY)

1. ‘Iráq 2. Persia

[Page 143]3. Adhirbáyján

4. Armenia

5. Burma

6. Egypt (U.A.R.) 7. Georgia

16. Australia 17. Austria 18. Brazil

19. Canada 20. China 21. England 22. France 23. Germany

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

1853—1892

143

(PERIOD OF Bahá’u’lláh’S MINISTRY)

8. 9. 10. 11. 12.

India Israel Lebanon Pékistzin Sudan

1892—1921

13. Syria 14. Turkey 15. Turkmenistan

(PERIOD OF ‘ABDU’L-BAHA’S MINISTRY)

24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31.

Hawaiian Is.

Hijéz

Hungary

Italy

J apan

J ordan Netherlands Republic of Ireland

1921—1963

32. Russian S.F.S.R.

33. Scotland

34. South Africa

35. Switzerland

36. Tunisia

37. United States of America

PERIOD FROM ‘ABDU’L—BAHA’S ASCENSION, INCLUDING THE TEN YEAR WORLD SPIRITUAL CRUSADE

38. Admiralty Is. 39. Afghénista’m 40. Ahsé

41. Alaska

42. Aleutian Is. 43. Algeria

44. American Samoa 45. Andaman Is. 46. Andorra

47. Angola

48. Anticosti I. 49. Argentina 50. Azores

51. Bahama Is. 52. Bahrayn I. 53. Balearic Is. 54. Balughistén 55. Baranof I. 56. Barbados

57. Belgium

58. Belize

59. Bermuda

60. Bhutan

61. Bismarck Archipelago 62. Bolivia

63. Botswana 64. Brunei

65. Bulgaria

INAUGURATED BY SHOGHI EFFENDI

66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. . Cuba 90. 91. 92. 93.

89

Burundi

Cambodia

Cameroon Republic Canary Is.

Cape Breton 1.

Cape Verde Is.

Caroline Is.

Central African Republic Ceylon

Chagos Archipelago Channel Is.

Chile

Chiloé I.

Cocos I.

Colombia

Comoro Is.

Congo Republic (Brazza.) Congo Republic (Kinshasa) Cook Is.

Corisco I.

Corsica

Costa Rica

Crete

Curacao Cyprus Czechoslovakia Dahomey

94. Denmark

95. Dominican Republic 96. Easter 1.

97. Ecuador

98. El Salvador

99. Eritrea

100. Ethiopia

101. Falkland Is.

102. Faroe Is.

103. Fernando Po. I. 104. Fiji

105. Finland

106. Franklin

107. French Guiana 108. French Somaliland 109. Galapagos I.

110. Gambia

1 1 1. Ghana

112. Gilbert and Ellice Is. 113. Grand Manan I. 114. Greece

1 15. Greenland

116. Grenada

1 17. Guatemala

1 18. Guinea

119. Gulf Is.

120. Guyana

121. Hadramaut

[Page 144]144

122. 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. 133. 134. 135. 136. 137. 138. 139. 140. 141. 142. 143. 144 145. 146. 147. 148. 149. 150. 151. 152. 153. 154. 155. 156. 157. 158. 159. 160. 161 162. 163. 164. 165. 166. 167. 168.

263. 264.

Hainan I. Haiti Honduras Hong Kong Iceland Indonesia Ivory Coast J amaica Kazakhstan Keewatin Kenya

Key West Kirghizia Kodiak 1. Korea Kuria Muria Is. Kuwait Labrador Laccadive Is. Laos Lesotho Liberia

. Libya

Liechtenstein Lofoten Is. Loyalty Is. Luxembourg Macao I. Mackenzie Madeira Mafia I. Magdalen I. Malagasy Republic Malawi Malaya Maldive I 3. Mali

Malta Manchuria

. Margarita I.

Mariana Is. Marquesas 15. Marshall Is. Martinique Mauritius Mentawei Is. Mexico

THE Bahá’í WORLD 169. Monaco

170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181

182. 183.

184

185. 186. 187. 188. 189.

190 191 192 193

. Morocco

. Mozambique

. Muscat and Oman . Nauru

. Nepal

. New Caledonia

. Newfoundland

. New Hebrides Is. . New Zealand

. Nicaragua

. Nicobar Is.

. Nigeria

North East New Guinea Northern Ireland . North Frisian Is. Norway

Orkney Is.

Outer Hebrides Panama

Papua

. Paraguay

. Pemba I.

. Peru

. Philippine Is.

194. Poland

195 196 197 198 199 200

201. 202. 203. 204. 205. 206. 207. 208. 209. 210. 211. 212. 213. 214.

215

. Portugal

. Portuguese Guinea

. Portuguese Timor

. Puerto Rico

. Qatar

. Queen Charlotte Is. Réunion I.

Rhodes

Rhodesia

Rio de Oro Robinson Crusoe Is. Rwanda

Sabah

Sarawak

St. Helena

St. Lucia

St. Pierre and Miquelon Is. San Marina

850 Tomé and Principe Is. Sardinia

. Saudi Arabia

1963—1968

216. 217. 218. 219. 220. 221 . 222. 223. 224. 225. 226. 227. 228. 229. 230. 231. 232. 233. 234. 235. 236. 237. 238.

239 240 241 242 243 244

245. 246. 247. 248. 249. 250. 251. 252. 253. 254. 255. 256. 257. 258. 259. 260. 261.

262

Senegal Seychelles Shetland Is. Sicily

Sierra Leone Sikkim Singapore Society Is. Socotra I. Solomon Is. Somalia

South West Africa Southern Yemen Republic Spain

Spanish Guinea Spanish Sahara Spitzbergen Surinam Swaziland Sweden Tédglikistén Taiwan Tanzania

. Tasmania

. Thailand

. Tibet

. Togo

. Tonga Is.

. Trinidad & Tobago Trucial iheik_hs Tuamotu Archipelago Uganda Uruguay Uzbekistan Venezuela Vietnam

Virgin Is.

Wales

Western Samoa West Frisian Is. West Irian Yemen Yugoslavia Yukon

Zambia Zanzibar

. Zululand

(OPENED DURING THE PERIOD RIIQVAN 1963—RIQVAN 1968)

Aeolian Is. Ahvenanmaa

265. Alaska Peninsula 266. Antigua

267 268

. Aruba I. . Barbuda

[Page 145]269. Bonaire I.

270. Bornholm

271. Bozca Ada

272. Capri

273. Cayman Is. 274. Chad

275. Chiloé Archipelago 276. Cozumel I. 277. Cyclades Is. 278. Dominica

279. East Frisian Is. 280. Elba

281. Gabon

282. Gibraltar

283. Gotland

284. Grenadine Is. 285. Groote Eylandt 286. Guadeloupe 287. Ifni

288. Imroz I.

289. Ischia

290. Islas de la Bahia 291. Las Mujeres I. 292. Line Is.

293. Marie Galantc 294. Marmara

295. Mauritania

296. Melville Is.

297. Mocha

298. Montserrat

299. Niger

300. Niue I.

301. Nunivak I.

302. Phoenix Is.

303. Providencia I. 304. Pribilof Is.

305. Prince of Wales I. 306. Quintana Roo Territory

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 145

307. Rodrigues I. 308. Ryukyu Is.

309. Saba

310. St. Andrés I. 311. St. Eustatius 312. St. Kitts-Nevis 313. St. Lawrence I. 314. St. Martin

315. St. Vincent

316. Seri Reservation 317. Tierra del Fuego 318. Tokelau Is.

319. Turks and Caicos Is. 320. Inner Hebrides 321.1sle of Man

322. Isle of Wight 323. Upper Volta


Bahá’ís of Rangoon, Burma: May, 1966. Burma was opened to the Bahd’z' Faith during the period of Bahá’u’lláh’s ministry, 1853—1892.

[Page 146]i WORLD



Bahá’í pioneer Napoleon Bergamaschi, an Mr. NoelBIuett (right),pioneer to New Guinea, Alaskan Eskimo who, with his three children, with the first Bahá’í of the highlands area, Mr. opened St. Lawrence Island to the Faith on Wanume Hegite of Arufa village; 1967. March 22nd, I 966, filling one of the goals of the

Nine Year Plan.

'4‘?" 1 a

A Bahá’í study class led by Mrs. Margaret Bluett (centre), Arufa village, in the highlands of North East New Guinea.

[Page 147]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 147

STATISTICAL SUMMARY OF ACHIEVEMENTS (at Riḍván 1968)

GOALS OF THE NINE YEAR PLAN

The names in the wide column on the left are, first continents in capital letters, then the names in bold type of the National Spiritual Assemblies recognized at Riḍván 1968, followed by the territory comprising the homefront of those Assemblies.

The deeply indented listings represent the extra-territorial areas whose teaching goals are temporarily under the jurisdiction of the National Assembly listed above them; these territories are not included in the homefront—e.g., Spanish Guinea, et seq.

Bracketed territories represent possible groupings for future National Spiritual Assemblies.

The headings of columns numbered 1 to 7 show the goals which were set for accomplishment by the national community, e.g., incorporation, acquisition of a Temple site, etc., and the letters in the column indicate whether the goal had been won by Riḍván 1968.

The columns numbered 8 to 11 are as indicated in the headings.

GA—Nine Year Plan Goal Accomplished SA—Supplementary Accomplishment A—Accomplished before 1964






NATIONAL LOCAL l 2 3 ‘ 4 ‘ 5 6 7 8 9 10 l l - H a 3, §

1 N :5 E,

Q S '5 D A 22 N" =0 *2: g B 8 i E 2 3 .1: Q 2 ‘5 1. I 3. p, 8 '3 _ 5 § ‘3 2 i: E E; .2 ’4 a .5 Q’ <11 ~. 2 :- C3 ‘: F N '3 E 59: g ,~' 3:) § .2 .2 u, 5 .S '3 8 E; V x E E E t: u T Q a a k "‘ National Spiritual Assemblies g g i a '60 50 -E E (3 a :1. $3 (bold type) followed by territories 3 §- ‘5 ’§ 8 8 '5 E 8 g 53 8 5 under their jurisdiction .5 Q. Q L51 g Q E :3 .3 (3 {3 .5. {3‘ AFRICA I ! CAMEROON REPUBLIC ‘ ‘ '

Cameroon Republic GA ‘ GA 46 50 96 Spanish Guinea ! 1 5 6 Fernando Po Island 1' 1 1 Corisco Island I | Sic Tomé and Principe Is. ‘

INDIAN OCEAN ‘ ?

Mauritius GA GA 1 g 1962 81 4

Chagos Archipelago 3 L l 1

Rodrigues Island 1 1 l 1

Malagasy Republic ‘ ‘ 1 16 17

Seychel les 1 5 6 1 1

Comoro Islands J 2 2

{Réunion Island GA 5 2 4 6 KENYA § Kenya GA GA GA I GA A 506 1302 1808 1 NORTH AFRICA I {Algeria GA GA : 5 12 17 {Tunisia A A } 4 23 27













[Page 148]a

i WORLD

148 THE BAHA


Piaroa Indian Bahá’ís, Cafio Tawari village, T erritorio Amazonas, Venezuela, who accepted the Bahd’z' Faith in April, 1965 during the visit 0er. Amoz Gibson (second from right, front row). Contact with the Piaroa was first made in 1964.


Bahá’ís Of the Mambo tribe of Mindanao, a southern island of the Philippines, standing before the Bahd’z' Centre which they built. Teaching among the Mambo began in 1964.

[Page 149]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

149





NATIONAL LOCAL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 3’3 3 : s "‘ \a E N g E D ta 3 ?«3 :2 a E ma .g “k 55 x V: S o, g "g

. K ‘H t 3 E S, .2 ‘4 1E5 Q) ° ° N .5 x N 3: '3 V:

"g >1 g E: a z: E E $43 k 5 3:. 3.: \ Q U Q L N National Spiritual Assemblies 8. E 3 E '3; {7}, E: E E a :3. 3‘ S (bold type) followed by territories § E- 3 ~§ 8 8 ’s E 5 § 3 § :5 under their jurisdiction .5. in. Q Li Q Q E 5) .3 G [S .5 (2‘ NORTH EAST AFRICA Egypt (U.A.R.) A A 13 20 33 Libya A 1 2 3 {Sudan 4 12 16 1 Ethiopia GA GA 1 22 23 1 Eritrea 1 14 15 1 Somalia 1 7 8 Afar and Isa French Territory 1 1 NORTH WEST AFRICA Morocco GA GA GA 15 39 54 Mauritania 1 1 Rio de Oro 1 1 Spanish Sahara 1 1 Ifni 1 1 SOUTH CENTRAL AFRICA {Malawi 6 33 39 1 Rhodesia GA GA GA GA 12 34 46 1 Botswana 6 11 17 SOUTH AND WEST AFRICA South Africa A 41 74 115 South West Africa 1 4 5 Zululand 9 2 1 1 Angola 4 4 St. Helena 1 1 SWAZILAND, LESOTHO AND MOZAMBIQUE Swaziland 9 27 36 Mozambique 2 7 9 {Lesotho 28 28 TANZANIA Tanzania GA GA A GA 22 129 151 3 Mafia Island 1 1 Zanzibar 1 1 2 Pemba Island 1 1 2 UGANDA AND CENTRAL AFRICA {Uganda GA A A A 853 1865 2718 10 Burundi 102 53 155 Rwanda 1 1 {Congo Republic (Kinshasa) 5 881 886 Congo Republic (Brazzaville) 2 2 4 Gabon 3 3 Central African Republic 1 2 3 Chad 1 1
















[Page 150]150 THE Bahá’í WORLD




Amatu’l—Baha' Riihz'yyih K_hdnum (centre) visiting Guajiro Indian Bahá’ís at their Centre, Prieto, Venezuela; February, 1968.




Auxiliary Board member Hooper Dunbar (rear centre) with some Mataco Indian Bahá’ís and their friends, Embarcacio’n, Argentina. Enrolments among the Mataco first occurred in August, 1967.


.V A .4 wt.“ _ . r ..

Orpha Daugherty with first Bahá’ís of the Yao tribe, Laos; February, 1966.

Auxiliary Board member

[Page 151]EXPANSION

AND CONSOLIDATION

151


NATIONAL

t" O O 3, l"


National Spiritual Assemblies (bold type) followed by territories under their jurisdiction

Incorporation Haziram‘l- Quds

3 4 5 6

\I

Temple Site

Endowment

Recognition of Holy Days Recognition of

Marriage Certificate Summer/ Winter School

on

Local Spiritual Assemblies

Groups and Isolated Centres ‘0

_. O

T oral Localities

Incorporated Local

Spiritual Assemblies



WEST AFRICA

Sierra Leone Guinea

Gambia

Senegal Portuguese Guinea Cape Verde Islands

[Ivory Coast

{Liberia GA GA

Mali Upper Volta

WEST CENTRAL AFRICA {Nigeria Niger Dahomey Togo {Ghana

ZAMBIA Zambia TOTALS

AMERICA ALASKA

Alaska A A Aleutian Islands Baranof Island Kodiak Island Nunivak Island Pribilof Islands

Prince of Wales Island St. Lawrence Island Alaska Peninsula

ARGENTINA Argentina GA A

BELIZE Belize GA

BOLIVIA Bolivia A A

BRAZIL Brazil A A



O > C) > O > o... >|

GA GA

GA

GA

1..

GA






A

N-bd— . 18 1775

N Luv)

u—nu: AHVD-d

36

    1. N

44

233 5143

22

.fl-h 43-‘0

77

moot 44

251 6918

N

28



12

12

173

17


D—‘HLIIi-to

28

57

1147

33


HMMHN

35

69

1320

50


10



M

[Page 152]152 THE Bahá’í WORLD



Members of the Bahá’ícommunity oquadeloupe, French West Indies, with their friends, 1968. Guadeloupe was opened to the Bahá’í Faith in 1965.



Bahá’í community of Nginamadolo, Swaziland, with visiting Bahá’ífriends; 1965.

[Page 153]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

153


National Spiritual Assemblies (bold type) followed by territories under their jurisdiction

NATIONAL

t" O O > 1"


Incorporation

Hazz’ratu’l- Quds

3

Temple Site

4

Endowment

5

Recognition of Holy Days

Marriage Certificate

Recognition of

\I

Summer/ Winler School

Local Spiritual Assemblies

Groups and Isolated Centres ‘0

._. O

T oral Localities

Incorporated Local Spiritual Assemblies



CANADA Canada Anticosti Island Cape Breton Island Franklin Grand Manan Island Gulf Islands Keewatin Labrador Mackenzie Magdalen Islands Newfoundland Queen Charlotte Islands Yukon St. Pierre and Miquelon Is.

{Iceland

CHILE Chile Chiloé Island Mocha Chiloé Archipelago Tierra del Fuego Easter Island Robinson Crusoe I sland

COLOMBIA Colombia St. Andrés Island Provedencia Island

COSTA RICA Costa Rica

CUBA Cuba

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Dominican Republic

ECUADOR Ecuador Galépagos Islands

EL SALVADOR El Salvador

GUATEMALA Guatemala

HAITI Haiti


>

GA

GA


>


3,


>


>

GA


>

GA

GA

l—SA



O\ \O

24

29

19


N O\ \O

r—g—N

H N HOOUNh'HMN

295

40

191

25

96

28


338

N Nh-‘N WHONNHNNNHHF-‘N

HH...

10

220

31

105

47


24



[Page 154]154 THE Bahá’í WORLD


The first legally recognized Bahá’í wedding in Europe took place on May 19th, 1966, in Finland

where marriages performed under the auspices of the Baha 1 community are legal.

A Bahd’z' wedding performed by the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Tainan, Taiwan; 1968.



A Bahá’í wedding party, Mogadiscio, Somalia; September, 1964.

[Page 155]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 155


NATIONAL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

l" O O > 1"


00 p—n O ‘H

National Spiritual Assemblies (bold type) followed by territories under their jurisdiction

Temple Site

Endowment Groups and Isolated Centres VJ

Incorporation Hazt'raru’I-Quds Recognition afHon Days Recognition of

Marriage Certificate Summer] Winter School Local Spiritual Assemblies T atal Localities Incorporated Local Spiritual Assemblies



HONDURAS Honduras Islas de la Bahia 1

>

>

> 11> T > U m ox \I i—Ié Ox

JAMAICA J amaica A A A 9 20 29 2 Cayman Islands 1 2 3

LEEWARD, WINDWARD AND VIRGIN ISLANDS Virgin Islands GA 3 Antigua Barbuda St. Kitts-Nevis 1 Dominica St. Vincent 1 Barbados Grenada 1 St. Lucia 1 Guadeloupe 1 Martinique Saba St. Eustatius St. Martin Montserrat Anguilla Ile de Saiutes Marie Galante Islands 1 1 St. Barthelemy Grenadines 1 1

HHHHHNw-hNHH-F~HH HHHHL—nmAuNNv—Mh—It—Im

MEXICO Mexico A A A 38 75 1 13 I Seri Reservation Cozumel Island 1 1 Las Mujeres Island Quintana Roo Territory 2

Wr—I LII

NICARAGUA Nicaragua A A A 12 26 38 1

PANAMA Panama A A A A A l—A 35 199 234 4

PARAGUAY Paraguay A A A A 3 22 25 1

PERU Peru A A A A 17 32 49 7
















[Page 156]156 THE Bahá’í WORLD


Bahá’í children’s class, Chacoma, Departa- Bahá’í children’s class, Baymis village, memo de LaPaz, Bolivia; 1968. Anatolia; 1965.


[Page 157]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

157


National Spiritual Assemblies (bold type) followed by territories under their jurisdiction

NATIONAL

l" O O 3, l"


Incorporation

Ḥaẓíratu’l- Quds

3

Temple Site

4

Endowment

5

Recognition of Holy Days

Marriage Certificate

Recognition of

\1

Summer/ Winter School

00

Local Spiritual Assemblies


Groups and Isolated Centres ‘0

.0

Total Localities

Incorporated Local Spiritual Assemblies


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA United States (Continental) Key West Puerto Rico Bermuda Bahama Islands Turks and Caicos Islands Falkland Islands Ukraine Kazakhstan

URUGUAY Uruguay

VENEZUELA Venezuela Margarita Island Aruba Island Bonaire Island Curacao {Trinidad & Tobago TOTALS

ASIA ARABIA Kuwait Sa‘fidi Arabia Ahsé Hijéz

BRUNEI Brunei

BURNIA Burma

CEYLON Ceylon Maldive Islands

EASTERN AND SOUTHERN ARABIA Bahrayn Island Qatar Trucial Sheikhs Southern Yemen Republic Yemen Hadhramaut Muscat and Oman Kuria Muria Islands Al-Masirah Socotra Island



GA

GA


GA

GA


GA


>

GA

GA

GA




431



3—A

375

32

l 1020

1713 10

4732

2088

H...N‘...

24

168

14 5752

141

240



23

28

53me

H...


12

40

135



20

63

163

H LHN WNUJUJ




' Stams.

[Page 158]158 THE Bahá’í WORLD



Youth project training session, Geyserville, California; June, 1965. The Hand of the Cause William Sears is seen standing, second row, sixth from the right.

[Page 159]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 159





NATIONAL LOCAL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 '53 rd '2 h “A 3 § 5; Q m Q g L) A ‘. v: 6; v3 ta

  • 3 u ()3 a m '3 .2

'4 m 2% a V E a a E

"E. “e “e 2 g E a g ‘4 m

9 9' w ‘. z: = 6 "N .5 N :2 ”g 2 a .L .1: s: .0 p k .2 '3 a ‘S V: E *5 to “g .s s a, r a u a k 3 National Spiritual Assemblies & 3 vi ‘: ‘33, § -§ E’ :3 a S. gas(bold type) followed by territories :5) E s ~§ 8 S '5 § 8 g S g E under their jurisdiction ,5 Q. Q L: Q g E (3 :1 {'5 [3 >5 '2‘ INDIA India A A A A 1543 10224 11767 37 Bhutan 3 3 Laccadive Islands 1 1 Nicobar Islands 1 1 Andaman Islands 3 11 14 {Nepal 42 42 INDONESIA Indonesia A A A 1 10 49 59 Mentawei Islands 32 32 Portuguese Timor West Irian Manchuria ‘IRAQ ‘Iráq A A A 6 10 16 Lebanon 2 2 4 Jordan 4 3 7 Syria 3 3 KOREA Korea GA GA GA GA 62 203 265 LAOS Laos 12 24 36 {Cambodia 1 1 MALAYSIA ~Malaya GA GA GA 97 171 268 12 Sarawak 27 122 149 1 Sabah 2 l 3 Singapore NORTH EAST ASIA Japan A A A 21 83 104 Hong Kong 2 2 4 Macao 1 1 Sakhalin Island Ryuku Islands 1 1 PAKISTAN Pékistén A A A A GA 20 44 64 12 Balt’uilistén 2 1 3 2 Tibet PERSIA 1Persia A A A SA Agurbayjén 1 1 Armenia 1 1 Georgia 1 1 Kirghizia 1 1 Tédghikistén 1 l Turkmenistan 1 1 Uzbekistan 1 1 Mongolia {Afganistén l 1


















1 Local Spiritual Assembly of Djakarta.

[Page 160]160 THE Bahá’í WORLD

NATIONAL HAZiRATU’L-QUDS


Saint Pierre, Réunion Island Seoul, Korea

[Page 161]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 161






NATIONAL LOCAL l 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 l 1 '2". h a 2 2 2 Q g E G A S ~= m ’3 g 3 8 i "3 2 3 ': ~33 m 5'5 a 3 S ., 3 E 2 = ‘s ‘2 t ‘2 s E: ~§ *‘ 2 .2 Q’ \a .. I: : CS "‘ .3 "G '-:: E a ‘3 ,~' 5:) § .2 .2 u E .S = a ‘s V k S B -‘~‘ ea \ '2 B o =~ N National Spiritual Assemblies g ‘5 $2 E '80 § -E E 2 a :1 ES (bold type) followed by territories g g. 5 2°: § 8 e E 8 g s g .5 under Iheirjurisdiction 5.. :2- fi ‘5 E Q E V3: :1 G 13 5 VQJ‘ PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Philippine Islands GA A GA 116 1595 1711 11 SIKKIM Sikkim GA 48 290 338 4 TAIWAN Taiwan GA 5 55 60 THAILAND Thailand A 32 74 106 TURKEY Turkey A A 13 27 40 Imroz Island 1 1 Bozca Ada 1 1 Marmara VIETNAIVI Vietnam GA GA GA GA A 176 544 720 125 UNALLOCATED TERRITORIES China Hainan Island North Vietnam TOTALS 2848 14814 17662 208 AUSTRALASIA AUSTRALIA 1Australia A A A SA 25 138 163 16 Tasmania 1 10 1 1 Groote Eylandt 2 2 Bathurst Island Melville Islands 1 1 Cocos Island Bismarck Archipelago GA GA 2 16 18 Admiralty Islands 1 1 2 North-East New Guinea 2 7 9 Papua 3 4 7 GILBERT AND ELLICE ISLANDS Gilbert and Ellice Islands GA GA HAWAIIAN ISLANDS Hawaiian Islands GA GA GA GA A 10 10 20 4 Marshall Islands 1 3 4 Caroline Islands 3 3 Mariana Islands 1 1 2 1 NEW ZEALAND New Zealand A A A A A A 5 40 45 5 Tokelau Islands 1 1 Nine Island 1 1 2

















[Page 162]3

162 THE BAHA i WORLD

NATIONAL HAZiRATU’L-QUDS


Nairobi, Kenya

[Page 163]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

163



















NATIONAL LOCAL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 l 1 E E» E i Q w 7% E 8 i5 ‘- “5 3 "=3 N '6‘; ,3 8 V: H S u L:m 2. 55 K V 5 a g a E x \ ~ 2 3 a ,w .4 E = Q Q n = ‘ 9) ~. w .9 0’ m s. a a (‘3 "‘ F- N N: E E g .~' g 5, .2 .2 m k .S "E 8 a V k 5 5 -‘::. -‘:: ho \ A =3 a x " National Spiritual Assemblies §- ‘5 g a E, E, ~§ E :1 a :1. §. § (bold type) followed by territories g S- E ~§ 8 8 ‘5 E 3 § 5’. § :5 under their jurisdiction .5 in. § L5 g Q E 53 31 {3 Q 5. r2‘ SOUTH PACIFIC OCEAN {Fiji GA A A A 3 11 14 fTonga Islands 8 26 34 5 [Cook Islands 4 4 Western Samoa GA GA 2 15 17 1 American Samoa GA 5 5 1 Nauru SOUTH WEST PACIFIC OCEAN {Solomon Islands GA 5 38 43 New Caledonia GA 1 I 2 New Hebrides Islands 2 9 11 Loyalty Islands 3 3 TOTALS 79 426 505 35 EUROPE AUSTRIA Austria A A 8 23 31 Czechoslovakia 2 2 Hungary 1 1 Yugoslavia l 1 BELGIUM Belgium A A A GA 6 21 27 2 BRITISH ISLES England A A A A A 46 237 283 17 Scotland 4 18 22 1 Wales 3 11 14 2 North Ireland 3 10 13 1 Shetland Islands 1 1 Orkney Islands 1 1 Outer Hebrides l 1 Inner Hebrides Isle of Man Isle of Wight 1 1 Channel Islands 2 2 Gibraltar 1 l {Eire GA GA 1 6 7 Line Islands Phoenix Islands 1 1 Cyprus 2 2 Malta 2 2 Faroe Islands 1 1 1Guyana GA GA 2 23 25 1 DENMARK Denmark A A A GA 3 17 20 1 Bomholm l l Greenland 3 3




1 To be part of the National Spiritual Assembly of Guyana. Surinam and French Guiana.

[Page 164]164 THE Bahá’í WORLD

LOCAL HAZiRATU’L—QUDS



v

Shiraoz', Hokkaido Island, Japan

M V w w l 5a. L w}


Lusaka, Zambia

[Page 165]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

165


National Spiritual Assemblies (bold type) followed by territories under their jurisdiction

NATIONAL

I" O O > r"


Incorporation

Hazfratu’I-Quds

3

Temple S ile

4

Endowment

5

Recognition of Holy Days

Marriage Certificate

Recognition of

\1

Summer/ Winter School

00

Local Spiritual Assemblies

Groups and Isolated Centres ‘0

p... 0

Total Localities

Incorporated Local

Spiritual Assemblies


FINLAND Finland Ahvenanmaa

Estonia

FRANCE

France

Corsica Monaco Marquesas Islands Society Islands Tuamotu Archipelago French Guiana

GERMANY Germany North Fn'sian Islands East Frisian Islands Cyclades Islands Latvia Lithuania Moldavia White Russia Russian S.F.S.R. Albania Bulgaria Poland Rumania Greece Crete

ITALY

Italy

Sicily

Sardinia

Elba

Ischia

Capri

Aeolian Islands San Marino Rhodes

LUXEMBOURG Luxembourg

NETHERLANDS Netherlands West Frisian Islands Surinam

NORWAY Norway Lofoten Islands

Spitzbergen



3 GA


I>


C) p


3>


>

11

SA

GA


3



29


HNh—IN u—nw

h—Ip—Ih—nl—I


U Hm

HNNQ

Hp...


4s

18



‘ Rhodes only.

[Page 166]166 THE Bahá’í WORLD

SITES OF FUTURE Bahá’í HOUSES OF WORSHIP

’ .5

\Muv r

m _sue mg

BAHN u w


Lusaka, Zambia

[Page 167]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

167



















NATIONAL LOCAL l 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 l 6 ~ = s "a 3 “g b 3‘. E i g '3 ~. 3’3

2 3 % <2 § 3::

g E “e “e? E E E .§ 3 E E 9' ~» ~ = = a § é :, s s a E “Z ‘51 E 1% :§ :3 .\ ”a E § E 5 National Spiritual Assemblies R E i’ § 50 5,: 'E E ‘2 3. :1 §§ (bold type) 1011:) Wed by territories § E. E‘ '§ 8 8 g E 8 § 55 g E under their jurisdiction .5 a. Q 1:] c: Q E :4: .3 G [3 5 pa). PORTUGAL Portugal A A 7 1 1 18 Azores 1 1 Madeira Islands 1 l SPAIN Spain GA A A A 12 22 34 Balearic Islands 1 1 Andorra 1 1 Canary Island 2 3 5 SWEDEN Sweden A A A A 4 29 33 I Gotland 2 2 SWITZERLAND Switzerland A A A A 31 8 67 75 8 Liechtenstein 1 1 TOTALS 180 866 1046 74 AFRICA 1775 5143 6918 28 AMERICA 1020 4732 5752 240 ASIA 2848 14814 17662 208 AUSTRALASIA 79 426 505 35 EUROPE 180 866 1046 74 GRAND TOTALS 5902 25981 31883 585




  • Localities

TRIBES AND PEOPLES REPRESENTED IN THE Bahá’í FAITH

1. Abakisa 2. Abakpa 3. Abalsoso 4. Abdah

5. Abgal

6. Abo

7. Acholi

8. Adangbo 9. Adansi

N

Riḍván 1968 (Listed by Continent) I. AFRICA 10. Adere 19. Ait Baha 11. Adja 20. Ait Boughman 12. Adouina 21. Ait Om El Bakht 13. Adouma 22. Ait Said 14. Afemai 23. Ait Sakhman 15. Agh’znai 24. Akan 16. Agona 25. Akim 17. Aguro 26. Akmas Sofla l8. Ait Ahid et Imlishel 27. Aku

[Page 168]THE Bahá’í WORLD

168

r

SITES OF FUTURE BAHA’I HOUSES OF WORSHIP



Willowa’ale, Ontario, Canada


[Page 169]28. Akuapim 29. Alipi

30. Alur

31. Amhara 32. Ana

33. Anang

34. Anda

35. Anecho 36. Angola 37. Angoni 38. Anola

39. Anona 40. Anooho 41. Antonasy 42. Anyang 43. Arab Sayess 44. Arochuku 45. Ashanti 46. Aushi

47. Awuna 48. Babua

49. Babuyu 50. Bafang 51. Bafaw

52. Bafia

53. Bafew

54. Bafum 55. Bafuti

56. Baganda 57. Bagindo 58. Bahatra 59. Bahatra-North 60. Bajuni 61. Bakalobolo 62. Bakgatla 63. Bakossi 64. Bakundu 65. Bakusu 66. Bakweri 67. Bali

68. Balong 69. Baluchi 70. Balundu 71. Baluya 72. Bambalang 73. Bamangwato 74. Bambara 75. Bambele 76. Bambote 77. Bamiliki 78. Bana

79. Banana 80. Bandi

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 169

81. Banen

82. Bangala

83. Bangante

84. Bangang (Banyangi) 85. Bangaro

86. Bangwa

87. Bareka

88. Barolong

89. Barombi

90. Basani

91. Bashalek

92. Bashi

93. Basosi

94. Basoughe 95. Bassa

96. Basundi

97. Basuto

98. Batanga

99. Batchimba 100. Batsua

101. Baya

102. Bayuni

103. Bechuana 104. Belle

105. Bemba

106. Bena

107. Benahmed 108. Benin

109. Ben Wazit

1 10. Berber

1 11. Bette

112. Bikele

113. Bilen

1 14. Bisa

115. B’ni Ansaf 1 16. B’ni Ansar 117. B’ni Arouss 118. B’ni Assour 1 19. B’ni Atir 120. B’ni Bene 121. B’ni Bou 122. B’ni Bou Yafer 123. B’ni Hassan 124. B’ni Malek 125. B’ni Matir 126. B’ni Ouakil 127. B’ni Oualid 128. B’ni Said 129. B’ni Samgham 130. B’ni Sedjel 131. B’ni Shigguer 132. B’ni Sidal 133. B’ni Touzin

134. B’ni Wariaghel 135. B’ni Washik 136. B’ni Yattaft 137. B’ni Zeroual 138. B’ni Z’nassen 139. Bohora

140. Boki

141 . Bondei

142. Bore.

143. Borena

144. Boushafi‘ar 145. Bravanese 146. Bugu

147. Bukusu

148. Bulu

149. Buluch

150. Burungi

151 . Busaiya

152. Bushman 153. Busi

154. Bwali

155. Bwamba 156. Calabax'

157. Cameronian 158. Cerel

159. Chagga

160. Chewa

161. Chikunda 162. Chishinga 163. Chocho

164. Chonyi

165. Chopi

166. Comorian (Ngazija) 167. Congolese 168. Coto-Coli 169. Criole

170. Cylonies 171. Dagomba 172. Danda

173. Dande

174. Darud

175. Dekhessah 176. Delle

177. Digo

178. Dinka

179. Douala

1 80. Dukalak

181 . Duruma

1 82. Efik

183. Efo

184. Effot

185. Ekon

186. Ekwe (Ejagham)

[Page 170]

’ .. - A ,‘ ‘ w “$5,.

Bahá’í Summer School, Kobe, Japan ; August, 1966. The Hand of the Cause Tara’zu‘lláh Samandari is seen in the centre of the photograph holding the Greatest Name.

Bahá’í Winter School, Lahti, Finland;

January, 1967.


OM

0180/“ I‘IVHVEI 3H1.

[Page 171]187. E1Gharb(Gharbia) 188. Elgeyo 189. E11 Kindi 190. Elmina 191. Elung 192. Embu 193. Euboneka 194. Ewe

195. Ewondo 196. Fanti

197. Farkhanah 198. Fetwakah 199. Fingo 200. Fipa

201. Fon

202. Fulla

203. Fur

204. Ga

205. Gabonaise 206. Galla 207. Ganda 208. Gaunch 209. Gbandi 210. Ge

211. Ghafer 212. Ghana 213. Gharbiyah 214. Ghaznayah 215. Gh’mara 216. Giriama 217. Gisi

218. Gisu

219. Gogo 220. Gola

221. Gome 222. Gongo 223. Goni

224. Gowa 225. Grebo 226. Groble 227. Guan 228. Guluka 229. Gunya 230. Guragie 231. Guria 232. Guru 233. Gwere 234. Hamasien 235. Haouz 236. Hausa 237. Haya 238. Hebe 239. Henga

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 171

240. Heriga 241. Him

242. Hiyawo 243. Hlengwe 244. Hlubi

245. Holoholo 246. Ibekwe 247. Ibibio-Efik 248.1bo 249.1dakho 250. Ifakara. 251. Igbo

252. Ijaw

253. Ijebu

254. Ikpai 255.1121

256. Indonedian 257. Inhambane 258. Ismailia 259. Ito 260.1tsikiri 261. Jaikiwa 262. Jaluo

263. Jie

264. Jita

265. Joko

266. Jolla

267. Jonam 268. Juanyama 269. Kabras (Kabarasi) 270. Kaguru 271. Kakamega 272. Kakiva 273. Kakwa 274. Kalanga 275. Kamanga 276. Kamba 277. Kami

278. Kanbe 279. Karamojoing 280. Karanga 281. Kateli 282. Kauma 283. Kawango 284. Keaka 285. Kebdanah 286. Kenyi 287. Kerewe 288. Khaha 289. Khayo 290. Kiga

291. Kikuyu 292. Kilindi

293. Kimbu 294. Kiran 295. Kirari 296. Kisa 297. Kisii 298. Kitosh 299. Kombe 300. Konde 301. Kongo 302. Kono 303. Kony 304. Korekore 305. erlle 306. Kran 307. Km 308. Kuanyama 309. Kugu 310. Kukuwenga 31 1. Kuli 312. Kuman 313. Kunema 314. Kurya 315. Kusu 316. Kutu 317. Kwavi 318. Kwele 319. Kywuska 320. Laba 321. Labukok 322. Labwor 323. Lado 324. Lagoli 325. Lagu 326. Lala 327. Lali

328. Lambia 329. Lango 330. Laraich 331. Lazi 332. Lebae 333. Leka 334. Lendu 335. Lenge 336. Lenje 337. Lima 338. Ljaw 339. Logo 340. Lokele 341. Loma 342. Lomwe 343. Lozi 344. Luba 345. Lugbara

[Page 172]’ 9

172 THE BAHA

i WORLD



Bahá’í Summer School, Juneau, Alaska; June 1966. The Hand of the Cause William Sears is seen in the centre of the photograph holding the Greatest Name.

[Page 173]346. Luguru 347. Luhya

348. Lukju

349. Lunda

350. Lungu

351. Lusha

352. Lwo (Luo) 353. Ma

354. Madi

355. Maka.

356. Makuwa 357. Makunduchi 358. Malagasy 359. Malawi 360. Malinké (Mandingo) 361. Mambwe 362. Mamfe 363. Manda 364. Mandinka 365. Manganja 366. Mangurimi 367. Mano

368. Manyema 369. Manyika 370. Marachi 371. Maragoli 372. Marikwct 373. Masai

374. Matengo 375. Matumbi 376. Matambwe 377. Matende 378. Mauritanian 379. Mautitian 380. Mayumwago 381. Mayuma. 382. Mbalmayo 383. Mbo

384. M’bonge 385. Mbosi

386. Mborde 387. Mbunga 388. Mbungu 389. Mbwali 390. Mdau

391. Mdengereko 392. Mdengo 393. Mende 394. Menka 395. Meru

396. Meta

397. Mezzoujah 398. Mfiji

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

399. 400. 401 . 402. 403. 404. 405. 406. 407. 408. 409. 410 411. 412. 413. 414. 415. 416. 417. 418. 419. 420. 421. 422. 423. 424. 425. 426. 427. 428. 429. 430. 431. 432. 433. 434. 435. 436. 437. 438. 439. 440 441 . 442. 443. 444. 445. 446. 447. 448. 449. 450. 451 .

Mhela Mina Mjohoo Mkawere Mkindo Mkinga Mkuiga Mkwavi Mkwele Mlanaki Mludi

. Mnamjoma

Mndari Mndwere Mnfurimi Mngindo Mngupo-Salumi anela Mnyakipsa Mnyaswanda Mouko

Mrufiji

Mrundi Mshukwa Msimbwe Msungli-Nkambe Mtabioa Mtabwa M’talsa. Mtawara Mtumbatu Mtumbe Mtumbuka Mtusi Muchonyi Mudau Mugendo (Muganda) Muglinya Mugunya

Muha Muhangaza

. Muhugu

Muihva Mukangwa Mukauma Mukaza Mukelewa Mukigo Mukogoro Mukore Mulahya Mulundi Mumapwc

452. 453. 454. 455. 456. 457. 458. 459. 460. 461 .

462

463. 464. 465. 466. 467.

468

469. 470. 471 .

472

473.

474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504

173

Mumhonga Mumwera Munchi Mungishu Munha Munukutuba Munya Malanga Munyiramba Muzita Mwaehuen

. Mwala Mwalabu Mwamoriango Mwanda Rufigi Mwemka Mwera

. Mwikoma Mwyoho Myagatwe Myatula

. Mynatenga Mzinguma

. Namjoma

. Namulanga

. Nandi

. Ndali

. Ndebele

. Ndengeleko

. Ngala

. Nganda

. Ngindo

. Ngolle-Batanga (Ngolo) . Ngonde

. Ngoni

. Ngulu

. Ngunda

. Nguni

. Nguu

. Nhela

. Nhembane

. Nkambe

. Ntabwa

. Ntakwo

. Nthakwani

. Ntipachort

. Nubi

. Nuer

. Nung

. Nyagatwa

. Nyakyusa (Nyarusa) . Nyala

. Nyalwanda

. Nyambo

[Page 174]174 THE Bahá’í WORLD


, . ,. 1] LA; - 92134.3? ‘ . . _ k ‘ '5- :isng: Guajiro Indian Bahá’ís attending the first Teacher Training Institute held at Riohacha, Colombia; December, 1965.


First Bahá’í Summer School, Bomi Hills, Liberia, West Africa; March, 1967.

[Page 175]505. Nyamwenga 506. Nyamwezi 507. Nyangalio 508. Nyanja 509. Nyankole 510. Nyaruanda 511. Nyasa

512. Nyaturu

5 1 3. Nyembana 514. Nyembi 515. Nyiha

516. Nyika

517. Nyilamba 518. Nyole

519. Nyoni

520 Nyore

521. Nyoro

522. Nyumwago 523. Obang

524. Okebo

525. Omnal

526. Opopo

527. Ora

528. Oron

529. Oulad Arous 530. Oulad Elyan 531. Oulad Emran 532. Oulad Khallouf 533. Oulad Riab 534. Ovambo 535. Owerri 536. Pangwa 537. Pare

538. Pedi

539. Pilas

540. Pleebo

541. Pogoro 542. Pokomo 543. Pondo

544. Popoi

545. Rabai

546. R’hamna 547. Rangi

548. Rhode

549. Ronga

550. Ruguru 551. Saboot 552. Safya

553. Sagala

554. Sakwe

555. Sela

556. Sambaa 557. Samburu

558. Samia 559. Sandawe 560. Sanhaja 561. Sangu 562. Sapo 563. Sara.

564. Sebei 565. Senguju 566. Sekondi 567. Sena

568. Senga 569. Serrere 570. Seychelles 571. S’fafaa 572. Shangaan 573. Sharaghah 574. Sharardah 575. Shashe 576. Shemukoye 577. Shewa 578. Sherbro 579. Shikiri 580. Shírázi 581. Shona 582. Shoshi 583. Simbiti 584. Sissala 585. Sisya 586. Soga 587. Somali 588. Soni

589. Songe 590. Soude 591. Suba 592. Sugulu 593. Suk

594. Sukuma 595. Sukwa 596. Sumbwa 597. Sungwa 598. Susso 599. Swaka 600. Swazi 601. Tabwa 602. Tachoni 603. Taita 604. Takamanda 605. Tasama 606. Tehadian 607. Tembu 608. Temeneh 609. Tcnde 610. Teso

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

611 612

613. 614. 615. 616. 617. 618. 619. 620. 621 . 622. 623. 624. 625. 626. 627. 628. 629. 630. 631. 632. 633. 634. 635. 636. 637. 638. 639. 640. 641. 642. 643. 644. 645. 646. 647. 648. 649. 650. 651. 652. 653. 654. 655. 656. 657. 658. 659. 660. 661. 662.

175

. Tifnout

. Tigre Tikari Tilibunka Timini Tinepo Tiriki Tive Togolese Toko Tonareg Tonga Toro Tridis Tsevie Tsotso Tumbatu Tumbuka Tura Turu Turkana Tusi

Twi Ungwe Urhobo Uvambo Vai Wafulero WOIof (J olof ) Wanda Wanga Wangongo Wemba Wundi Xosa (Xhosa) Yabosi Yako Yambassa Yao (Ajaua) Yoruba Yumbu Zabi Zammour Zanaki Zanzibari Zaramo Zende (Mazinde) Zesuru Ziba Ziguwa Zinza Zulu

[Page 176]7

i WORLD

176 THE BAHA


J , vv A k, v . 1 \‘~ \m

Bahá’í Teaching Conference” Ekpene Téte, Eastern Nigeria; August, 1965.



[Page 177]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 177

1. Agariya (India)

2. Ahom (India)

. Ahumes (India)

. Ainu (Japan)

. Ambonese (Indonesia)

. Ami (Taiwan)

. Andh (India)

. Angami (India)

. Apayao (Philippine Is.) 10. Arakanese (Burma)

11. Ata (Philippine Is.)

12. Badaga (India)

13. Bagobo (Philippine Is.) 14. Bagris (India)

15. Baiga (India)

16. Bandjar (Indonesia)

17. Banjaras (India)

18. Baram (Borneo)

19. Batak (Indonesia)

20. Bharud (India)

21. Bhil (India)

22. Bhilalas (India)

23. Bhogta (India)

24. Bhumij (India)

25. Bhuta (Bhutan)

26. Bhutia (India, Sikkim) 27. Bikolano (Philippine Is.) 28. Bilaan (Philippine Is.) 29. Binjhwar (India)

30. Black Thai (Laos)

31. Bogis (Indonesia)

32. Bontoc (Philippine Is.) 33. Butonese (India)

34. Buhid (Philippine Is.) 35. Bukidnon (Philippine Is.) 36. Cagayan Aeta (Philippine Is.) 37. Cebuano (Philippine Is.) 38. Chabacano (Philippine Is.) 39. Chakma (India)

40. Cham (V ietnam)

41. Chin (Burma)

42. Chodhara (India)

43. Chutiya (India)

44. Dangi (India)

45. D’Babaon (Philippine Is.) 46. Devri (India)

47. Dhodia (India)

48. Dombo (India)

49. Donggala (Indonesia) 50. Dub1a(India)

51. Dusadh (India)

OOQQUI-hw

\0

II. ASIA

52. Dusun (Brunei)

53. Elianon (Philippine Is.) 54. Erka1a(India)

55. Gaddang (Philippine Is.) 56. Gaddi (India)

57. Garo (India)

58. Ghonda (India)

59. Gond (India)

60. Gorkha. (India)

61. Guiangan (Philippine Is.) 62. Gurang (India, Sikkim) 63. Ho (Laos)

64. Iban (Land Dayak——Borneo) 65. Iban (Sea Dayak—Borneo) 66. Ibang (Philippine Is.) 67. Ifugao (Philippine Is.) 68. Igorot (Philippine Is.) 69. Ilocano (Philippine Is.) 70. Ilongot (Philippine Is.) 71. Iranon (Philippine Is.) 72. Isinay (Philippine Is.) 73. Jain (India)

74. J ain-Kurbas (India)

75. Jango (Philippine Is.) 76. Jarrai(Ma1aya)

77. J atapu (India)

78. Javanese (Indonesia) 79. J uanga (India)

80. Kachari (India)

81. Kaili(Indonesia)

82. Kalbelia (India)

83. Kalinga (Philippine Is.) 84. Kangaloyan (India)

85. Karen (Burma)

86. Karimpalan (India)

87. Kayan (Borneo)

88. Kelalit (Sarawak)

89. Kenya (Sarawak)

90. Kha (Laos)

91. Khangar (India)

92. Khandhao (India)

93. Kharia (India)

94. Kharwar (India)

95. Khasi (India)

96. Khmer (Cambodia, Thailand) 97. Koho (V ietnam)

98. Konkna (India)

99. K01(India)

100. Koli (India)

101. Kolha. (India)

102. Kolpanika (India)

[Page 178]9

1’ WORLD

178 THE BAHA



»- M . . .H ‘ hm \ , <1 i \x , . \.

Members of the Teaching Committee of Tinto District, West Cameroon, with three members of the National Spiritual Assembly; October, 1965.

[Page 179]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 179

103. Kombi (India)

104. Kond (India)

105. Konda Dora (India)

106. Kon Muang (Thailand)

107. Konyak (India)

108. Korku (India)

109. Korwa (India)

110. Kokni (India)

1 11 . Kota (India)

1 12. Koya. (India)

113. Kubu (Sumatra)

114. Kuki (India)

115. Kuravan (India)

1 16. Kurbas (India)

1 17. Lambadi (India)

118. Lepcha (Sikkim)

119. Limboo (Sikkim)

120. Lodhi (India)

121. Lué (Laos)

122. Lushai (India)

123. Mahar (India)

124. Mahli (India)

125. Makassar (Indonesia)

126. Malpahraia (India)

127. Mamberi (Malaya)

128. Mangyan Beribi (Philippine Is.) 129. Mangyan Buhid (Philippine Is.) 130. Mangyan Hanunoo (Philippine Is.) 131. Mangyan Pula (Philippine Is.) 132. Mangyan Ratagnon (Philippine Is.) 133. Manipuri (India)

134. Manker (India)

135. Manobo (Philippine Is.) 136. Mansaka (Philippine Is.) 137. Maranao (Philippine Is.) 138. Maratha (India)

139. Marup (India)

140. Melanau(Ma1aya)

141. Mcntaweian (Mentawei) 142. M60 (India, Laos, Thailand) 143. Merat (India)

144. Mhar (India)

145. Mikir (India)

146. Minahasa (Indonesia)

147. Minangkabau (Indonesia) 148. Miri (India)

149. Moi (Vietnam)

150. Molog (Philippine Is.)

151 . Mondaya (Philippine Is.) 152. Munda (India)

153. Murut (Borneo, Brunei)

154. Nags. (India)

155. Nagesia (India)

156. 157. 158.

159

162

167

168

171

174

175

180

191

193

Nat (India) Nayak (India) Nhung (V ietnam)

. Neo-Malayan (Malaya) 160. 1 61 .

Orang (India) Oraon (India)

. Pai (Laos) 163. 164. 165. 166.

Paiwan (Taiwan) Palawanon (Philippine Is.) Pangasinan (Philippine Is.) Panika (India)

. Pano (India)

. Pardhan (India) 169. 170.

Pardhi (India) Parja (India)

. Penjabung (Borneo) 1 72. 173.

Pogot (Philippine Is.) Pompango (Philippine Is.)

. Punan (Malaya) . Puthai (Laos)

176. 177. 178. 179.

Rabha (India) Rawat (India) Rhada (V ietnam) Rodiyas (Ceylon)

. Saber Adivasi (India) 181. 182. 183. 184. 185. 186. 187. 188. 189. 190.

Sakai (Malaya) Sangirese (Indonesia) Sansi (India)

Sansia (India)

Santal (India)

Samal (Philippine Is.) Samar-Leyte (Philippine Is.) Saora (India)

Sauria Paharia (India) Sehria (India)

. Sema (India) 192.

Semlai (Malaya)

. Semang (Malaya) 194. 195. 196. 197. 198. 199. 200. 201. 202. 203. 204. 205. 206. 207. 208.

Sennoi (Malaya)

Shan (Burma)

Shetkai Varg (India) Shin (India)

Soligas (India)

Soligas Jain (India) Sundanese (Indonesia) Surgara (India) Syntheng (India) Tagalog (Philippine Is.) Tagbanua (Philippine Is.) Tamil (Malaya)

Tarnun (Vietnam) Tayal (Taiwan)

Temiar (Malaya)

[Page 180]THE Bahá’í WORLD


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[Page 181]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION

209. Temuan (Malaya)

210. Thai (Thailand)

21]. Thai Darn (Laos)

212. Thai Yai (Thailand) 213. Thakur (India)

214. Th6 (Vietnam)

215. Tinggian (Philippine Is.) 216. Tiruray (Philippine Is.) 217. Toda (India)

218. Torandja (Indonesia)

181

219. Toroko (Taiwan) 220. Turi (India)

221 . Turkimén (Persia) 222. Uddanung (Borneo) 223. Urarn (India)

224. Var1i(India)

225. Vetan (India)

226. Yashkum (India) 227. Yao (Laos)

228. Zambales Aeta (Philippine Is.)

III. AUSTRALASIA

1. Andilyaugwa (Groote Eylandt) 2. Arawe (Papua—New Guinea) 3. Baluan (Admiralty Is.) 4. Bauan (Papua—New Guinea) 5. Bellonese (Bellona I.) 6. Buka (Australia) 7. Bunanditj (Australia) 8. Chamorro (Mariana Is.) also “Guamanian” 9. Chimbu (New Guinea) 10. Efatean (New Hebrides) 11. Ellice Islanders (Ellice Is.) 12. Erramangan (New Hebrides) 13. Fijian (Fiji) 14. Gilbertese (Gilbert Is.) 15. Guadalcanalian (Solomon Is.) 16. Iai (Papua—New Guinea) 17. J irkia. Minning Aborigine (Australia) 18. Junjan (Australia) 19. Karu (Papua—New Guinea) 20. Kilenge (Papua—New Guinea) 21. Kombe (Papua-New Guinea) 22. Koriki (Papua—New Guinea) 23. Kowai (Papua-New Guinea) 24. Kusaien (Caroline Is.) 25. Langa Langa (Solomon Is.) 26. Loyalty Islanders (New Caledonia) 27. Malaitan (Solomon Is.) 28. Malekulan (New Hebrides) 29. Mangap (Papua—New Guinea) 30. Manus (Admiralty Is.) 31. Maori (Australia, New Zealand) 32. Mapus (Papua-New Guinea) 33. Marshallese (Marshall Is.)

34. Micronesian (Mariana, Marshall, Caroline Is.)

35. Minen Aborigine (Australia)

36. Mortlockese (Caroline Is.)

37. Menyama (Papua-New Guinea)

38. Morobe (Papua-New Guinea)

39. Nalik (Papua-New Guinea)

40. Narrogin Aboriginc (Australia)

41. Niuean (Nine 1.)

42. Notsi (Papua-New Guinea)

43. Ontong J avanese (Solomon Is.)

44. Palauan (Caroline Is.)

45. Papua (Papua-New Guinea)

46. Ponapean (Caroline Is.)

47. Poroi (Papua)

48. Rarotongan Maori (Cook Is.)

49. Reef Islander (Solomon Is.)

50. Rennellese (Solomon Is.)

51. Samoan (Samoan Is.)

52. Santa Isabellan (Solomon Is.)

53. Savoese (Solomon Is.)

54. Siassi (Papua-New Guinea)

55. Pawaia (Papua—New Guinea)

56. Siyani (Papua-New Guinea)

57. Sikaianan (Solomon Is.)

58. Taiuna (New Hebrides)

59. Tanna (New Hebrides)

60. Tigak (Papua—New Guinea)

61. Tokelauan (Tokelau Is.)

62. T ongan (Tonga)

63. Trukese (Caroline Is.)

64. Yungum (Papua-New Guinea)

IV. WESTERN HEMISPHERE

1. Agua Ca1iente(U.S.A.)

2. Aguaraunas (Peru)

3. Alabama—Coushatta (U.S.A.) 4. Aleut (Alaska)

5. Apurinan (Brazil)

6. Arapahoe (U.S.A.)

7. Arawak (Jamaica)

8. Assiniboine (Canada)

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[Page 183]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 183

9. Athabascan (Alaska) 10. Aymara (Bolivia) 1 1. Aztec (Mexico) 12. Bella Coola (Canada) 13. Blackfoot (Canada) 14. Boruca (Costa Rica) 15. Bribri (Costa Rica) 16. Cabecar (Costa Rica) 17. Cafiaris (Ecuador) 18. Caranquis (Ecuador) 19. Carib (Belize, Honduras, Nicaragua) 20. Carifias (Venezuela) 21. Carrier (Canada) 22. Catchique1(Guatemala) 23. Cayambe (Ecuador) 24. Cherokee (U.S.A.) 25. Chetco (U.S.A.) 26. Cheyenne (U.S.A.) 27. Chinook (U.S.A.) 28. Chippewa (U.S.A.) 29. Chiriguano (Bolivia) 30. Choco (Panama) also “Emberé” 31. Chocé (Colombia) also “Noanamé” 32. Choctaw (U.S.A.) 33. Chook Chansee (U.S.A.) 34. Chulpa (Bolivia) 35. Colville (U.S.A.) 36. Comanche (U.S.A.) 37. Cora. (Mexico) 38. Cowichan (Canada) 39. Cree (Canada) 40. Creek (U.S.A.) 41. Cuna (Panama) also “Kuna” 42. Curipaca (Venezuela) 43. Delaware (U.S.A.) 44. Diegueno (U.S.A.) 45. Dogrib (Canada) 46. Doukhobor (Canada) 47. Easter Islanders (Rapa Nui I.) 48. Ehattaset (U.S.A.) 49. Franklin Eskimo (Canada) 50. Gros Ventre (U.S.A) 51. Guajibo (Colombia) also “Guajiro” 52. Gualacatas (Ecuador) 53. Guarayos (Bolivia) 54. Guatuso (Costa Rica) 55. Guaymi (Panama) 56. Gurani (Paraguay) 57. Haida (Alaska) 58. Hopi (U.S.A.) 59. Huichol (Mexico) 60. Imantags (Ecuador) 61. Inupiaq Eskimo (Alaska)

0

62 63 64 65 66 67 68

69. 70. 71. 72.

73

74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84.

85

86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97.

98 99

. Isleta-Jemez (U.S.A.)

. Isleta-Picuri (U.S.A.)

. Itariri (Brazil)

. J icaque (Honduras)

. Jicarillo Apache (U.S.A.)

. Kechi (Guatemala)

. Keewatin Eskimo (Canada) Kiriri (Brazil)

Klamath (U.S.A.)

Koyukon (Alaska)

Kutchin (Canada)

. Lengua (Paraguay)

Lummi (U.S.A.)

Macé (Paraguay)

Makah (U.S.A.)

Mam (Guatemala)

Mapuche (Chile)

Maroon (Jamaica)

Mataco (Argentina)

Mayan (Belize, Guatemala, Mexico) Maya Quiché (Guatemala) Mennonite (Canada) Mescalero Apache (U.S.A.)

. Mission (U.S.A.)

Missisauga (Canada)

Mixteca (Mexico) also “Mixtic” Mohawk (Canada)

Mohican (Canada, U.S.A.) Mojandas (Ecuador) Morongo (U.S.A.)

Moskito (Honduras, Nicaragua) Motilénas-Yukpa (V enezuela) Moxos (Bolivia)

Nahuatl (Mexico)

Navajo (U.S.A.)

Nez Percé (U.S.A.)

. Nisqually (U.S.A.)

. Nootka. (Canada)

100. Ojibway (Canada)

10 10 10

1. Omaha (U.S.A.) 2. Oneida (Canada, U.S.A.) 3. Osage (U.S.A.)

104. Otavalos (Ecuador)

10 10 10 10 10

5. Otomi (Mexico)

6. Oyacachis (Ecuador) 7. Paiute (U.S.A.)

8. Papago (U.S.A.)

9. Pawnee (U.S.A.)

1 10. Paya (Honduras)

11

1. Peigan (Canada)

112. Piaroa (Venezuela) 113. Pit River (U.S.A.) 114. Pocomchi (Guatemala)

[Page 184]THE Bahá’í WORLD

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[Page 185]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 185

115. Porno (U.S.A.) 141. Toba (Argentina, Paraguay) 116. Pujilies (Ecuador) 142. Tocachis (Ecuador)

117. Puruaes (Ecuador) 143. Tocagones (Ecuador)

118. Quechua (Argentina, Bolivia, Peru) 144. Tsimshean (Alaska, Canada) 119. Rama (N icaragua) 145. Tulalip (U SA.)

120. Sac-Fox (U.S.A.) 146. Tupi-Guarani (Brazil)

121. Saraguros (Ecuador) 147. Tzelta1(Mexico)

122. Saulteaux (Canada) 148. Ungava Eskimo (Canada) 123. Sekani (Canada) 149. Uru (Bolivia)

124. Seneca (U.S.A.) 150. Ute (U.S.A.)

125. Seri (Mexico) 151. Wailake (U.S.A.)

126. Shoshone (U.S.A.) 152. Washoe (U.S.A.)

127. Shuswap (Canada) 153. Wichita (U.S.A.)

128. Siberian Eskimo (Alaska) 154. Winnebago (U.S.A.)

129. Sierra (U .S.A.) 155. Yakima (U.S.A.)

130. Sioux (U.S.A.) 156. Yanaigua (Paraguay)

131. Slave (Canada) 157. Yaqui (Mexico)

132. Squamish (Canada) 158. Yaruquies (Ecuador)

133. Stallo (U.S.A.) 159. Yaruro (V enezuela)

134. Stony (Canada) 160. Yuk Eskimo (Alaska) also “Yupik” 135. Sumo (Costa Rica, Honduras, Nicaragua) 161 . Yuki (U.S.A.)

136. Tanaina (Alaska) 162. Yurok (U.S.A.)

137. Taos Pueblo (U.S.A.) 163. Zapotec (Mexico)

138. Tejas (U.S.A.) 164. Ziz Pueblo (U.S.A.)

139. Tewa (U.S.A.) 165. Zuni (U.S.A.)

140. T1ingit(Alaska, Canada)

MAJOR ETHNIC AND LANGUAGE GROUPS REPRESENTED IN THE Bahá’í WORLD COMMUNITY

1. Afghén 21. Chinese 42. Hawaiian 2. Afrikaans 22. Creole 43. Hungarian 3. Ainu 23. Czech 44. Icelandic 4. American Aborigine (Red 24. Danish 45. Inca Indian) 25. Dravidian 46. Indo-Aryan 5. Annamese 26. Dutch 47. Irish 6. Arab 27. English 48. Italian 7. Armenian 28. Eskimo 49. J apanese 8. Australian Aborigine 29. Estonian 50. Javanese 9. Aztec 30. Ethiopian 51. Khmer 10. Balinese 31. Faroese 52. Korean 11. Bantu 32. Filipino 53. Kurdish 12. Basque 33. Finish 54. Laotian 13. Berber 34. Flemish 55. Lapp 14. Bhutan 35. French 56. Luxembourgeois 15. Bolivian Aborigine 36. Gaelic 57. Malagasy 16. Burmese 37. German 58. Malay—Polynesian 17. Bushman 38. Greek 59. Maude l8. Byelorussian 39. Greenlandic 60. Maori l9. Celebese 40. Gypsy 61. Mayan

20. Cham 41. Hamitic 62. Melanesian

[Page 186]186 THE Bahá’í WORLD



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Bahd’z' Summer School, Tihra'n, ira’n, 1966. The Hand of the Cause ‘AIi—Akbar Furu’tan is seen seated in the centre.


Bahá’í Winter School, Panchgani, India; December, 1963.

[Page 187]63. Mentaweian 64. Micronesian 65. Mongolian 66. Negrito

67. Nilotic

68. Norwegian 69. Papuan

70. Persian

71. Polish

72. Polynesian 73. Portuguese

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 187

74. Pygmy

75. Russian

76. Scandinavian

77. Scottish

78. Semang (Malayan Aborigine)

79. Semitic

80. Slavic

81. Spanish

82. Sumatran

83. Sundanese

84. Swedish

85. Thai

86. Tibetan

87. Turkish

88. Ukrainian 89. Voltaic

90. Welsh

91. Yugoslavian 92. Zulu

LANGUAGES INTO WHICH Bahá’í LITERATURE HAS BEEN TRANSLATED

Accra (Ga) Acholi Adanwe Adja Afrikaans Alur Amharic (Abyssinian) Ana

Ateso Bemba Bravanese Bungom Chagga Cicewa Citumbuka Dagbane Dinka (J ieng) Douala Efik

Embu

Ewe

Fon Giriama Grebo Guan Hausa Henga Igbo

Ijebu

J olof Kabras Kabwa Kabyle Kamba Karamojoing

(Listed by Continent)

I. AFRICA: 115

Kibembe Kikuyu Kimbundu Kisii Kongo erlle Kuanvama Kuman Lari Laounde Leb Muno Lendu Lingala Liumbi Lozi Luba—Kasai Luba-Katanga Lubukusu Luganda Lugbara Lugwere Lukonjo Lumasaba Lunda. Lungereza Lunyolo Lusamia Lwo (Luo) Madi Malagasy Marachi Maragoli Masai Mbundu Mende

Meru

Moro

Nandi

Ndebele

Nubian

Nyanja

Pedi

Pongwe Puyia—hu

Ronga Runyankole-Rukiga Runyanarwanda Runyoro-Rutoro Sango

Sebei

Shangaan

Shilha

Shilluk Shironga

Shluh

Shona

Somali Sudanese Sukumba

Susu

Sutho

Swahili

Swazi

Taita

Tchadian Arabic Teso

Tigre

Tigriga

Tiriki

Tonga

[Page 188].4 I m U! > n: >p—Z 2 O W l" U

Third National C onvention Of the Bahá’í’s Of the Hawaiian Islands; April, 1966. The Hand of the C ause _D_hikru’llah flddem is seen seated in the centre of the photograph. Auxiliary Board member Marc Towers is holding the Greatest Name.


[Page 189]EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 189

Tswana Tumbuka Twi Urhobo

Abor Miri Aeta Agusanon Aklan Amanus Antiqueno Arabic Armenian Assamese Assyrian Atjeh

Badjao Baghelikhandi Balinese Balochi

Balti

Batak

Bengali Benguet Bhojpuri Bikolano Black Thai Bontoc Brahui

Bugis Bukidnon Burmese

Buru

Cagayan Aeta Cebuano Cham (Chambiali) Chin1L

Chinese (Old) Chinese (Modem Standard) Cuyunin Dusun

Fangir

Gamili Garhwali Georgian Gujarati Gurmukhi Hebrew Hiligaynon Hindi

Ibaloy (Igorot) ‘ Published in two dialects.

Uvambo Xosa (Xhosa) Yao

Yoruba

II. ASIA: 140

Iban (Land Dayak) Iban (Sea Dayak) Ibanag

Ilokano

Ilongo

Indonesian

J apanese

Javanese

Kachin

Kaili

Kalinga

Kannada (Kanarese) Kankanai

Karen

Kashmiri

Kcnyah

Khmer (Cambodian) Konkani

Korean

Kumayoni Kurdish

Ladakhi

Laos Thaidam Laotian

Lepcha

Madurese

Malay

Malayalam

Malwi

Manchu (Manchurian) Mangyan Hanunuo Mangyan Pula Manipuri (Meithi) Marathi

Marwari

Malanau

Meo (India)

Meo (Vietnam) Meo (Laos) Mentawei Merandanis Mongolian Mordoff

Mundari (Munda) Murut

Nepali

Zande Zulu

Newari

Nhung

Nias

Nicobarese

Oriya

Ossete

Pahari

Pali

Pampango Pangasinan

Perm (Ziryen) Persian

Prasad Punjabi(Urd1i script) Punjabi (Persian script) Pushtu

Rajasthani

Samal Samax-Leyte (Waray) Santhali

Semai (Senoi) Shans

Sindhi

Sinhalese

Sunda (Sundanese) Tagalog

Tamil

Tapanuly

Tartar

Tausog

Telugu

Temiar

Thai (Siamese) Thai Dam

Th6

Tibetan

Tiruray

Tolaud

Toradja.

Turkish Turkoman

Urdfi

Vietnam Banar Vietnam Rhade Vietnamese (Annamese) Zambal-Bolanon

[Page 190]190 THE Bahá’í WORLD

... . , «a 1. ”mm”:


National Convention of the Bahá’ís of the Dominican Republic; 1967.

[Page 191]Aneityum Areare Bambatana Binandere Bugotu Chamorro Ellice Erakor Fataleka Fijian Ghari Gilbertese Houailou Kusaien Kwara’ae (Mwala‘) Lifou Makura

Albanian Basque Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Dutch Frisian English Erse Esperanto Estonian Faroese Finnish Flemish French

Aguacateca Aimara (Aymaré) Aleut

Arhuaco Athabascan Blackfoot Cakchiquel Carib (Moreno) Carifia Castellano Cebu Chauanco

III. AUSTRALASIAZ 49

Manus

Maori (New Zealand)

Maori (Rarotongan)

Maranao

Maré

Marquesas

Marshallese

Motu

Nalik

Niuean

Palauan

Petats

Pidgin (Papua-New GuineaBismarck Arch.)

Pidgin (Solomon Is.)

Ponapean

Ponérihouen

IV. EUROPE: 48

Gaelic

German

Greek

Hungarian

Icelandic

Interlingua

Italian

Lapp

Latvian

Lithuanian Luxembourgish Maltese

Mordva

Norwegian (Landsmél) Norwegian (Riksmél) Piedmontese

V. WESTERN HEMISPHERE: 60

Cherokee

Choco

Chorti

Cree

Creole

Cuna (Kuna)

Eskimo (Eastern Arctic) Eskimo (Keewatin) Eskimo (Kobuk) Eskimo (Kotzebu) Eskimo (Kuskokwim) Guajibo

EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION 19]

Reef Island Rennellese Rotuman Roviana Samoan Tahitian Tasiboko (Lengo) Tetum Tikopian Timorese Tokelauan Tongan Tongoan To’obaita Torau Trukese

Polish Portuguese Romani Romansch Rumanian Russian Serbian Serbo—Croat Slovak Slovene Spanish Swedish Syrjfiini Ukrainian Welsh Yiddish

Guajiro Guarani Guaymi Iroquois Kanjobel Kekchi (Ketché) Lowland Maya Mém

Mapuche Masawas—Sumo Mataco

Maui

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Maya Ojibway Saulteaux Maya-Quiché Oneida Sepultec Moskito Pascuense Sumo Mohawk Pia Poco Tlingit Motilén-Yukpa Papyarnento Tupi-Xavante Nahuatl Pocomchi Twakha-Sumo Navajo Quechua Uspanteca Negre Rama Yukpa


A view of the dormitory wing, New Era High School, Panchgani, India.

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