Bahá’í World/Volume 2/Bahá’í Calendar and Festivals

From Bahaiworks

[Page 109]

BAHÁ’Í CALENDAR AND FESTIVALS
BY
DR. J. E. ESSLEMONT

(From Bahá’u’lláh and the New Era)


AMONG different peoples and at different times many different methods have been adopted for the measurement of time and fixing of dates, and several different calendars are still in daily use, e. g., the Gregorian in Western Europe, the Julian in many countries of Eastern Europe, the Hebrew among the Jews, and the Muhammadan in Muslim countries.

The Báb signalized the importance of the dispensation which He came to herald, by inaugurating a new calendar. In this, as in the Gregorian Calendar, the lunar month is abandoned and the solar year is adopted.

The Bahá’í year consists of 19 months of 19 days each (i. e., 361 days), with the addition of certain “Intercalary Days” (four in ordinary and five in leap years) between the eighteenth and nineteenth months in order to adjust the calendar to the solar year. The Báb named the months after the attributes of God. The Bahá’í New Year, like the ancient Persian New Year, is astronomically fixed, commencing at the March equinox (March 21st), and the Bahá’í era commences with the year of the Báb’s declaration (i. e., 1844 A. D., 1260 A. H.)

In the not far distant future it will be necessary that all peoples in the world agree on a common calendar.

It seems, therefore, fitting that the new age of unity should have a new calendar free from the objections and associations which make each of the[Page 57] older calendars unacceptable to large sections of the world’s population, and it is difficult to see how any other arrangement could exceed in simplicity and convenience that proposed by the Báb.

The months in the Báb’s Calendar are as follows:

Month Arabic Name Translation First Days
1st Bahá Splendor March 21st
2nd Jalál Glory April 9th
3rd Jamál Beauty April 28th
4th ‘Azamat Grandeur May 17th
5th Núr Light June 5th
6th Rahmat Mercy June 24
7th Kalimát Words July 13th
8th Asmá’ Names August 1st
9th Kamál Perfection August 20th
10th ‘Izzat Might September 8th
11th Mashíyyat Will September 27th
12th ‘Ilm Knowledge October 16th
13th Qudrat Power November 4th
14th Qawl Speech November 23rd
15th Masá’il Questions December 12th
16th Sharaf Honor December 31st
17th Sultán Sovereignty January 19th
18th Mulk Dominion February 7th
19th ‘Ulá Loftiness March 2nd
Intercalary Days—February 26th to March 1st inclusive—four in ordinary and five in leap years.


[Page 110]

BAHÁ’Í FEASTS, ANNIVERSARIES AND DAYS OF FASTING

Feast of Riḍván (Declaration of Bahá’u’lláh), April 21-May 2, 1863.

Feast of Nawrúz (New Year), March 21.

Declaration of the Báb, May 23, 1844.

Fête Day of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, November 26.

Birth of Bahá’u’lláh, November 12, 1817.

Birth of the Báb, October 20, 1819.

Birth of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, May 23, 1844.

Ascension of Bahá’u’lláh, May 28, 1892.

Martyrdom of the Bab, July 9, 1850.

Ascension of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, November 28, 1921.

Fasting season lasts 19 days beginning with the first day of the month of ‘Ulá, March 2— the feast of Nawrúz follows immediately after.


[Page 111]

View of the riverside of the Garden of Riḍván, Baghdád, ‘Iráq, as seen from the right bank of the Tigris.


View of the Garden of Riḍván as seen from the left bank of the river.


[Page 112]

The Mashriqu’l-Adhkár—the first Bahá’í House of Worship in America—when completed. Its foundation is already laid at Wilmette, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. Mr. Louis Bourgeois, Architect.