The American Bahá’í/Volume 11/Issue 7/Text
←Previous | The American Bahá’í July, 1980 |
Next→ |
Return to PDF view |
The text below this notice was generated by a computer, it still needs to be checked for errors and corrected. If you would like to help, view the original document by clicking the PDF scans along the right side of the page. Click the edit button at the top of this page (notepad and pencil icon) or press Alt+Shift+E to begin making changes. When you are done press "Save changes" at the bottom of the page. |
Of course. Here is the corrected text with a list of the spelling errors found and corrected.
- List of Spelling Errors Found in Original Text
- **Bah£'f** → **Bahá’í**
- **oply** → **only**
- **Il-linois** → **Illinois** (removed broken hyphen)
- **tor** → **for**
- **Bahci'is** → **Bahá’ís**
- **Ridvdn** → **Riḍván**
- **Bahi’f** → **Bahá’í**
- **Baha 7** → **Bahá’í**
- **BahS’f** → **Bahá’í**
National Assembly taps new Teaching Committee
The National Spiritual Assembly, expressing its “deep and sincere appreciation” for the heroic and sacrificial efforts of the National Teaching Committee in helping to win the goals of the Five Year Plan, decided at its May meeting to appoint a new five-member Teaching Committee to carry forward that momentum into the second phase of the Seven Year Plan.
Members of the new committee are J. Kenton Allen of Menlo Park, California; Dr. Wilma Brady of New York City; Juana Conrad of Glendale, California (the only holdover from the outgoing committee); Rose Lopez of Winnetka, Illinois; and Dr. Keyvan Nazerian of East Lansing, Michigan.
THE COMMITTEE was scheduled to hold its first meeting the weekend of June 13-14.
Mr. Allen, an assistant to Auxiliary Board member Margaret Gallagher, served for more than three years on the Bosch Bahá’í School Council.
The native Californian has pioneered with his wife, Mary, to the Seychelles Islands, Swaziland and South Africa.
Dr. Brady has served as the National Spiritual Assembly’s representative at the United Nations, and is presently chairman of the Spiritual Assembly of New York City.
Dr. Brady also served on the former Black Teaching Committee.
Mrs. Conrad, a member of the District Teaching Committee of Southern California No. 1 for the past two years, is a member of the Spiritual Assembly of Glendale.
She is deputy chief of the Los Angeles Municipal Court’s Traffic Division, and served for three years as superintendent
Please See TEACHING Page 21
Seals and Crofts, one of the most successful recording teams of the last decade, have left for pioneering posts in Costa Rica and Mexico, respectively.
Seals & Crofts leave U.S., pioneer to Latin America
Seals and Crofts, whose music has inspired and uplifted Bahá’ís and non-Bahá’ís alike in every corner of the world for more than a decade, have left the U.S. to pioneer to Central America.
Jim Seals and his family left their home in San Fernando, California, May 20 to take up residence in Santa Ana, Costa Rica.
Dash Crofts and his family moved from Northridge, California, in mid-June to their new home in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
IN A TELEPHONE interview from Costa Rica, Jim Seals said his decision to pioneer sprang in part from the impact of the Guardian’s statements about pioneering, coupled with a desire for a change of environment for writing.
“Every time I come to Mexico, or anywhere south of the border,” he said, “I’ve found I become more creative.”
Dash said his pioneering plans followed a search for a second home outside the U.S.
“Once we got to Cuernavaca,” he explained, “we realized we didn’t actually want a second home; we wanted to live there and become pioneers.”
Their millions of fans all over the world will be delighted to know that pioneering won’t end the musical activity of Seals and Crofts. Far from it.
Both emphasized that despite the move, Seals and Crofts remain very much a team.
“NOTHING HAS changed except our places of residence,” said Jim. “We realized that in the business we’re in, it really doesn’t matter where we live.”
“Jimmy prefers to be in Costa Rica while I want to live in Mexico,” added Dash. “That doesn’t have anything to do with our business relationship, or our personal friendship. Both remain very much intact.
“The only thing that is changing
Please See SEALS Page 23
What’s inside
A NEW children’s group, ’Youth for One World, is formed in Southern California. Page 6 THE BAHÁ’Í International Community hosts a luncheon on the dimensions of human development. Page 8
BERMUDA makes final preparations for the election of its first National Spiritual Assembly at Riḍván 1981. Page 11 GREEN LAKE, Wisconsin, plays host in September to its 21st annual Bahá’í Conference. Page 14 THE PUBLISHING Trust releases an unprecedented number of new materials for children. Page 16
Record $5 million budget goal is adopted for fiscal 1980-81
Last year the American Bahá’í community made an outstanding response to the appeal for funds for the Universal House of Justice. This demonstrated the potential of the believers to generate substantial sums of money for the Cause of God.
Filled with a spirit of confidence and optimism inspired by this example of selfless giving, the National Spiritual Assembly adopted a $5 million budget for fiscal 1980-81 at its May meeting.
OF THE TOTAL, the annual contributions goal will be $4.25 million ($224,000 per Bahá’í month—up $4,000 from last year’s monthly goal), while estates and other income will make up the balance.
As was the case last year, $1 million of this budget (20 per cent) is allocated for the Bahá’í International Fund. This collective contribution from the U.S. Bahá’í community is the top priority.
Successful completion of our own national plans, as outlined by the Universal House of Justice, will depend upon the degree to which the American Bahá’í community responds to the financial challenge of the new budget.
The National Spiritual Assembly has faith that the abundantly-evident deterioration of world conditions can only serve to strengthen the resolve of the friends to do whatever is necessary to meet the monetary needs of the Cause—the sole hope for mankind.
A front view of the architect’s drawing of the proposed new classroom building at the Louhelen Bahá’í School near Davison, Michigan Louhelen reconstruction plans have been approved by the National Spiritual Assembly.
Louhelen school plans okayed
The National Spiritual Assembly has approved plans presented by the National Education Committee and its Louhelen Project Committee for the reconstruction of the Louhelen Bahá’í School near Davison, Michigan.
At its May meeting, the National Assembly endorsed the architectural concept for the project and authorized the Office of the Treasurer to proceed with plans for raising the estimated $1.8 million needed to carry out the reconstruction program.
THE FORMER Louhelen (Davison) School, opened in 1931, was closed in 1974 for reasons of safety.
The Guardian’s comments about the importance of Louhelen can be found in no less than 50 of his letters.
For example, he wrote through his secretary on December 10, 1942: “Shoghi Effendi feels very strongly that Louhelen should, in every way, be safeguarded as a Bahá’í institution ...
Please See LOUHELEN Page 21
‘The real treasury of man is his knowledge.’—Baha’u'llah
July 1980
banal
American
National Assembly taps new Teaching Committee
The National Spiritual Assembly, expressing its “deep and sincere appreciation” for the heroic and sacrificial efforts of the National Teaching Committee in helping to win the goals of the Five Year Plan, decided at its May meeting to appoint a new five-member Teaching Committee to carry forward that momentum into the second phase of the Seven Year Plan.
Members of the new committee are J. Kenton Allen of Menlo Park, California; Dr. Wilma Brady of New York City; Juana Conrad of Glendale, California (the only holdover from the outgoing committee); Rose Lopez of Winnetka, II linois; and Dr. Keyvan Nazerian of East Lansing, Michigan.
THE COMMITTEE was scheduled to hold its first meeting the weekend of June 13-14.
Mr. Allen, an assistant to Auxiliary Board member Margaret Gallagher, served for more than three years on the Bosch Baha'i School Council.
The native Californian has pioneered with his wife, Mary, to the Seychelles Islands, Swaziland and South Africa.
Dr. Brady has served as the National Spiritual Assembly's representative at the United Nations, and is
presently chairman of the Spiritual Assembly of New York City.
Or. Brady also served on the former Black Teaching Committee.
Mrs. Conrad, a member of the District Teaching Committee of Southern California No. 1 for the past two years, is a member of the Spiritual Assembly of Glendale.
She is deputy chief of the Los Angeles Municipal Court’s Traffic Division, and served for three years as superinten Please See TEACHING Page 21
Seals and Crofts, one of the most successful recording teams of the last decade, have left for pioneering
posts in Costa Rica and Mexico, respectively.
Seals & Crofts leave U.S., pioneer to Latin America
Seals and Crofts, whose music has inspired and uplifted Baha'is and non-Baha’is alike in every corner of the world for more than a decade, have left the U.S. to pioneer to Central America.
Jim Seals and his family left their home in San Fernando, California, May 20 to take up residence in Santa Ana, Costa Rica.
Dash Crofts and his family moved from Northridge, California, in mid-June to their new home in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
IN A TELEPHONE interview from Costa Rica, Jim Seals said
What’s inside
ANEW children’s group, ‘Youth
for One World, is formed in Southern California. Page 6
THE BAHA'I International Community hosts a luncheon on the dimensions of human development. Page 8
BERMUDA makes final preparations for the election of its first National Spiritual Assembly at Ridvan 1981. Page 11
GREEN LAKE, Wisconsin, plays host in September to its 21st annual Baha'i Conference. Page 14
THE PUBLISHING Trust releases an unprecedented number of new materials for children. Page 16
his decision to pioneer sprang in part from the impact of the Guardian’s statements about pioneering, coupled with a desire for a change of environment for writing.
“Every time | come to Mexico, or anywhere south of the border,” he said, “I've found | become more creative.”
Dash said his pioneering plans followed a search for a second home outside the U.S.
“Once we got to, Cuernavaca,” he explained, “we realized we didn’t actually want a second home; we wanted to live there and become pioneers.”
Their millions of fans all over the world will be delighted to know that pioneering won't end the musical activity of Seals and Crofts. Far from it.
Both emphasized that despite the move, Seals and Crofts remain very much a team.
“NOTHING HAS changed except our places of residence,” said: Jim. “We realized that in the business we're in, it really doesn't matter where we live.”
“Jimmy prefers to be in Costa Rica while | want to live in Mexico,” added Dash. ‘That doesn’t have anything to do with our business relationship, or our personal friendship. Both remain very much intact.
“The only thing that is changing
Please See SEALS Page 23
Record $5 million budget goal is adopted for fiscal 1980-81 —
Last year the American Baha'i community made an outstanding response to the appeal for funds for the Universal House of Justice. This demonstrated the potential of the believers to generate substantial sums of money for the Cause of God.
Filled with a spirit of confidence and optimism inspired by this example of selfless giving, the National Spiritual Assembly adopted a $5 million budget for fiscal 1980-81 at its May meeting.
A front view of the architect's drawing of the proposed new classroom building at the Louhelen Baha'i
OF THE TOTAL, the annual con tributions goal will be $4.25 million ($224,000 per Baha'i month—up $4,000 from last year’s monthly goal), while estates and other income will make up the balance.
As was the case last year, $1 million of this budget (20 per cent) is allocated for the Baha’ International Fund. This collective contribution from the U.S. Baha'i community is the top priority.
Successful completion of our
School near Davison, Michigan Louhelen reconstruction plans have
own national plans, as outlined by the Universal House of Justice, will depend upon the degree to which the American Baha'i community responds to the financial challenge of the new budget.
The National Spiritual Assembly has faith that the abundantly-evident deterioration of world conditions can only serve to strengthen the resolve of the friends to do whatever is necessary to meet the monetary needs of the Cause—the sole hope for mankind.
been approved by the National
Spiritual Assembly.
Louhelen school plans okayed
The National Spiritual Assembly has approved plans presented by the National Education Committee and its Louhelen Project Committee for the reconstruction of the Louhelen Baha'i School near Davison, Michigan.
At its May meeting, the National Assembly endorsed the architectural concept for the project
and authorized the Office of the Treasurer to proceed with plans for raising the estimated $1.8 million needed to carry out the reconstruction program
THE FORMER Louhelen (Davison) School, opened in 1931, was Closed in 1974 for reasons of safety.
The Guardian's comments about the importance of Louhelen
can be found in no less than 50 of his letters.
For example, he wrote through his secretary on December 10, 1942: ““Shoghi Effendi feels very strongly that Louhelen should, in every way, be safeguarded as a Baha'i institution ..
Please See LOUHELEN Page 21
| |
VIEWPOINT
The American Baha'i
Editorial The bounty of being a believer
In the grind of everyday living we sometimes forget what a great bounty it is to be a Baha'i.
The extraordinary statements made by the Central Figures of our Faith about the significance of this Day and the blessings vouchsafed to those favored with the gift of faith fortify our souls and inspire us. Consider these words of ‘Abdu'l-Baha:
“HOW THANKFUL must we be for having been made in this Day the recipients of so overwhelming a favor! Would that we had ten thousand lives that we might lay them down in thanksgiving for so rare a privilege, so high an attainment, so priceless a bounty!”
“The mere contemplation of the Dispensation inaugurated by the Blessed Beauty would have sufficed to overwhelm the saints of bygone ages—saints who longed to partake for one moment of its great glory.”
“The holy ones of past ages and centuries have, each and all, yearned with tearful eyes to live, though for one moment, in the Day of God. Their longings unsatisfied, they repaired to the Great Beyond. How great, therefore, is the bounty of the Abha Beauty Who, notwithstanding our utter unworthiness, hath through His grace and mercy breathed into us in this divinely-illumined century the spirit of life, hath gathered us beneath the standard of the Beloved of the world, and chosen to confer upon us a bounty for which the mighty ones of bygone ages had craved in vain.”
“The souls of the well-favored among the concourse on high, the sacred dwellers of the most exalted Paradise, are in this day filled with burning desire to return unto this world, that they may render such service as lieth in their power to the threshold of the Abha Beauty.”
Baha’u'llah’s own reference to the station of the true believer boggles the mind and makes us wonder how great are the deeds expected of us:
“THE STATION which he who hath truly recognized this Revelation will attain is the same as the one ordained for such prophets of the house of Israel as are not regarded as Manifestations ‘endowed with constancy.’ ””
As we labor in a world beset with calamities and confusion, may we ever keep in mind assurances such as these.
However troubling and bizarre the misfortunes of a collapsing society may become, we know who we are and what God expects of us. What greater security could there be?
Sam Jackson, Sheri Dressler and Duane Dumbieton (left to right), Baha'is who work at Florida Junior College in Jacksonville, prepare to cut one of two cakes presented on
their behalf to the faculty and staff at FJC as a gift for Ayyam-i-Ha. It marked the third year in a row that the Baha'is at FJC have offered such a
gift during Intercalary Days. The cakes were made by an FJC student, Lee Gross, a Baha'i from another campus of the college.
Comment
Baha’i teachings require new standards of criticism
Standing of the subjects of their scholarship are worthy and high endeavors.”
The statement is especially relevant to literary criticism.
TRADITIONALLY, the role of
By ERIC COWAN “Scholarship,” the Universal House of Justice explains in its recent message to Baha'i scholars, “has a high station in the Baha’ teachings, and Baha'i scholars
have a great responsibility to a growing, divinely-guided society. “The ascertainment of truth and the acquisition of a fuller under(eS
The American Baha’ (USPS 042-430) Published monthly by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States, 536 Sheridan Road, Wilmette, IL 60091. Second class postage paid
at Wilmette, IL.
Editor: Jack Bowers Associate Editor: David E. Ogron
The American Baha'i welcomes news, letters and other items of interest from individuals and the various institutions of the Faith. Articles should be written in a clear and concise manner, black and white glossy photos should be included whenever possible. Please address all materials to The Editor, The American Baha'i, Wilmette, IL 60091.
Copyright © 1980 by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States. World rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.
‘such criticism has been to provide a scale on which the merits of a literary work can be weighed.
Observations and opinions, based on an individual's comprehension and evaluation of a particular work, form the basis of literary criticism.
In many cases, literary critiques have come to be regarded as legitimate standards marking the degree to which a work is “good” or “bad.”
Equally accepted is the concept that critics should have “free license” to employ whatever language they feel is necessary to express their admiration, or lack of it, regardless of the integrity of such language, literary or otherwise.
Indeed, since literary criticism is generally regarded as a form of writing in itself, it is not uncommon for criticism to become exaggerated simply because the writer desires to make a show of “muscle-flexing” his own literary style.
It is clear that in light of Baha'i teaching, there is a need to reexamine our attitudes toward this
This month's article, “Toward a Baha'i Standard of Literary Criticism,” was written by Eric Cowan of Harrisonburg, Virginia.
subject.
LITERARY CRITICISM, in its proper expression, is an art-form whose foundation is justice and fairness, and whose object should be to encourage the independent investigation of truth.
Indeed, the loftiest principles of the Faith must be aligned with our intellectual attitude toward so important a subject.
“Everything in creation,” the Universal House of Justice adds in its letter to scholars, “should be studied in the light of revelation as well as in that of purely rational investigation.”
The tools with which every author of literary criticism must work—the spiritual principles of justice and fairness—combined with a truly rational and unbiased attitude, will enable him to present his information in a spirit of objectivity, without making personal judgments, but rather providing observations and posing questions designed to encourage others in their pursuit of truth.
This is not to say that a critic cannot question or challenge the assertions, conclusions or literary expression of any work.
Criticism in light of the Baha'i
teachings need not be vague or mediocre for the sake of recognizing only the good qualities in something.
HOWEVER, the spirit in which these questions are raised, and especially the language employed, is supremely important.
Many critics delight in writing scathing reviews, or in exercising their particular style of witty criticism because it is the fashion.
It is especially important, with the emergence of a Baha'i standard of literary criticism, that these Standards be discarded. The Universal House of Justice writes:
“A scholar who is imbued with understanding of the broad teachings of the Faith will always remember that being a scholar does not exempt him from the primal duties and purposes’ for which all human beings are created.”
Baha'u'llah Himself has eloquently asserted: “Great care ‘should be exercised that whatever is written in these days doth not cause dissention, and invite the objection of the people.”
Again, He says: “Whatever is written should not transgress the bounds of tact and wisdom ... God grant that authors among the friends will write in such a way as. would be acceptable to fair minded souls, and not lead to cavilling by the people.”
FROM THESE statements it is clear that enlightened authors must cause the emergence of a new and productive form of literary commentary, and cast aside more traditional forms, so counter-productive in their essence and so non-aligned with basic spiritual concepts.
The benefits of the establishment of a more spiritual approach to literary commentary are significant and far-reaching.
The impression that such a mature and intelligent form of writing, based on the Teachings of Baha'u'llah, must. make on a watching world would certainly be another evidence of the creative power of a Faith that does not blindly adhere to outmoded customs, but rather creates new forms to suit its new and unique needs.
A Baha'i approach to literary criticism might well imbue writers with a heightened enthusiasm for their work, Knowing that their efforts would be treated fairly and objectively, instead of subjected to bias or personal opinions that can be so demoralizing.
Indeed, the Baha'i community cannot afford to suppress or squander its talent at a time when
rr Please See COMMENT Page 6
[Page 3]LETTERS
duly 1980
Faith can use well-trained legal minds
To the Editor:
| am a Baha'i attending law school. As previous articles in The American Baha'i have stated, there is a great need for Baha'i lawyers. This need will become even greater as the Faith grows.
Unfortunately, compared with other occupations, not many Baha'is are preparing for this field.
Most Baha'is | know are supportive of my becoming a lawyer. But | think the lack of Baha'i lawyers and law students is due in part to an attitude in the Baha'i community that being a lawyer does not quite measure up to Baha'i moral standards.
This attitude is the source of discourteous remarks made by some Baha'is to others in the field of law.
It is important to examine and to correct these attitudes, not only for the sake of unity, but also to encourage other Bahda‘is to become lawyers.
Some areas in which it appears to me that Baha'i lawyers are needed are in immigration law, to help the Persian friends; in copyright law, to protect Baha'i trademarks; in’ property law; in international law—as the Faith grows, the list grows longer. The fact is that Baha'is are needed in most areas of law, and the friends should realize that a Baha'i need not feel he could be compromised.
While law schools aren't known for being fun, being a Baha'i lawyer can be exciting, especially in direct service to the Faith. Women and members of racial minorities are especially needed in this field, and most law schools actively seek such individuals as students.
it may help to remind the friends that two members of our National Spiritual Assembly—James and Dorothy Nelson—are lawyers, as is one member of the Universal House of Justice, Hugh Chance.
A partial list of early Baha'is who were lawyers includes -the Hand of the Cause of God Louis G. Gregory, Charles loas, Arthur Dodge, Mountfort Mills, Charles Greenleaf, Tony Seto, Albert Hall, and Alfred Lunt. The Guardian showered his praises on them,
» often for their legal assistance to
the Cause. Brent Poirier Sacramento, California
To the Editor:
Ever find yourself saying “Why don't the’Baha’is do this or that,” whatever the case may be?
Upon taking a closer look and being honest with ourselves, we find that the “Baha’is" are you and me.
They are not out there, they are here, and this is it, you are it, we
YES! Please send me
Ship to:
Bahai Publishi ing Trust
Bahd‘u’llah and the New Era. A handsome, revised cloth edition of J. E. Esslemont's “authoritative and comprehensive introduction to Baha’i history and teachings.” Essential for your own library and excellent for gifts to public libraries. Catalog No. 7-31-04. Cloth $12.00 me eG NY A copies of Bahd’u'llah and the New Era at$12.00 each (postpaid). I enclose a check or money order for
$______ made payable to the Baha’ Publishing Trust.
My name is (please print)
‘Street, Rural Route, or P.O. Box Number
ci
ity State
Send order with payment to: Bahd’t Publishing Trust 415 Linden Avenue/Wilmette, IL 60091
(SSR a a GT ee ees oe) em
Zip
letters to the editor on any subject of general interest. Letters should be as brief. as possible, and are subject to editing for length and style. Please address letters to The Editor, The American Baha'i, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
are it.
If you want something to happen in your community, initiate it or get someone to help you in initiating it with the approval of your Assembly, or in consultation with the Group.
Once we all begin to shoulder the obvious responsibility for the success of the Cause, collectively, the strength and power of Baha'u'llah will bring us our hearts’ desire and create the world we ail long for and know will sooner or later be established.
The more responsible we choose to be, the sooner the goals will be achieved.
District Teaching Committee California Central No. 1
To the Editor:
Recently | had the bounty of seeing a personal teaching venture extend beyond my immediate efforts, and have been encouraged to share the account with you.
As a student at Western Washington University, | occasionally have the opportunity to discuss certain aspects of the Faith with some of my instructors.
It occurred to me that the instructor of one of my classes (a seminar in personality theory) might enjoy Daniel C. Jordan's article, “Becoming Your True Seif.” So! loaned him the issue of World Order magazine in which it appeared.
He was so impressed by the article that, to my surprise, he had copies made and distributed them to the class, asking everyone to write a brief comment.
Several students have since indicated to me that they enjoyed the articler and the ideas it expressed.
World Order includes many articles well-suited to a university audience; | recommend it as a medium for teaching on campus.
John Governdale Bellingham, Washington
To the Editor:
In the last two issues of The American Baha'i, a topic has been brought under discussion that has long lingered in the hearts and minds of nearly every Baha'i in this hemisphere.
Since many of us come from a Christian background, we are therefore faced with the challenge of educating the very “family” into which we were born in the fundamentals of Baha’u'llah’s Revelation.
WE FIND, however, an overwhelming number of Christian ideologies, each person at times having a unique approach to his belief in Jesus, the Christ.
Theodore Heizer (Comment, February 1980) has, | believe, ex pressed most aptly the fundamental point at issue, saying, “For American Baha'is, becoming wellversed in the Christian teachings is, | believe, not simply a good idea, it is an obligation.”
But one may reasonably ask: Which Christian teachings? From whose point of view?
We could spend a lifetime seeking the various Christian churches out, then another finding the myriad individuals who are “churches” unto themselves.
Perhaps we should study the Bible, not from the point of view of those who promote it, but from the standpoint of the Revelations of the Bab, Baha'u'llah, and Muhammad, even as Baha'u'llah has said:
“O leaders of religion! Weigh not the Book of God with such standards and sciences as are current amongst you, for the Book itself is the unerring balance established amongst men.” (Synopsis and Codification of the Kitab--Aqdas, p. 22, No. 14)
Shoghi Effendi also touched on this subject in The World Order of Baha'u'llah, p. 185:
“Such institutions as have strayed far from the spirit and teachings of Jesus Christ must of necessity, as the embryonic World Order of Baha'u'llah takes shape and unfolds, recede into the background, and make way for the progress of the divinely-ordained institutions that stand inextricably interwoven with His teachings.
“The indwelling Spirit of God which, in the Apostolic Age of the Church, animated its members, the pristine purity of its teachings, the primitive brilliance of its Light, will, no doubt, be reborn and revived as the inevitable consequence of this redefinition of its fundamental! verities, and the clarification of its original purpose.”
Among the more valuable source books on Apostolic Christianity I've found are The Heavens Are Cleft Asunder, by Hushmand Sabet; The Light Shineth in Darkness, by Udo Schaefer; and Recognitions and Homilies of Clement, published in the AntiNicene Fathers, Vol. Vil! (William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan, reprinted October 1978)
J.C. Miller Lincoln City, Oregon
To the Editor:
I'd like to comment on a letter to the editor by Susan V. Jones (May 1980) in which she questions the Guardian's statements about psychic phenomena, reasoning that since Baha'u'llah Himself placed no limitations on any area of learning and development, why should Shoghi Effendi then impose such restrictions?
First, it should be clear to every Baha'i who understands the Covenant that after Baha'u'llah, ‘Abdu'l-Baha had the last word, and after ‘Abdu'l-Baha, Shoghi Effendi was the final authority. Today, of course, the Universal House of Justice is empowered to
Settle any ambiguous matters that may arise.
IT IS TRUE that Baha'u'llah often praised and encouraged education, but “of those sciences which may profit the people of the earth, and not such sciences as begin in mere words, and end in mere words.” (Tablet of Tajalliyat)
To experience and foster our innate psychic powers for study in this world would not “profit” mankind, as ‘Abdu'l-Baha and Shoghi Effendi warned us; and besides, little has come to light about a scientific basis on which to justify the multitude of claims being propounded and believed in.
As of now, much of psychic investigation is “mere words.”
The independent investigation of truth is a principle that relates to one’s maturity and capacity.
Would the freedom to read a covenant-breaker’s books be a sign of open-mindedness for the Faith, or rather a dangerous test to the soul? Were we ready to discover and develop atomic power when we did?
Our Writings warned us long ago of the dangers of both of the above.
The question is: When may we utilize and express our psychic powers? The answer, from ‘Abdu'l-Baha, is: Not until the soul leaves the body.
And the appropriate response to the Guardian's statements is: Obedience!
Colorado Spring
Kentucky conference scheduled in August
Auxiliary Board member Sam McClellan will be among the speakers August 1-3 at the Kentucky Baha’ Institute on the campus of Moorehead State Universi ty.
The institute, sponsored by the District Teaching Committee of Kentucky, has as its theme “Love, Unity and Family Life as Confronted Every Day by Baha'is.” The agenda includes a workshop on dealing with life as a single Baha’.
Plans also include children’s activities and a nursery for preschoolers.
Housing is available at the university, and there is a campsite three mites away. Numerous recreational opportunities are available at the conference site, located in a national park.
Moorehead State University is in Moorehead, Kentucky, east of Lexington on Interstate 64.
For information and reservations, contact Geri Hasse, 371 Tiverton Way, Lexington, KY 40503, or phone 606-272-4793.
Coming! Paper edition of Memories of ‘Abdu'l-Baha.
[Page 4]TEACHING COMMITTEE
The American Baha'i
Simplest ideas sometimes best |=
in carrying out teaching work
Sometimes it's the simple 1aeas that work best in our teaching efforts.
Here is one such idea that may help many of us overcome one of our biggest problems in teaching—getting acquainted with new people with whom to share the Faith
THAT IDEA is to do many of the things we normally do, but in different places. For example, most of us shop for groceries. If we shopped at a different store than usual, perhaps one in a goal area, we might become acquainted with someone new
One believer who tries to mention the name of Baha'u'llah to someone every day often makes a
special trip to a grocery store with the idea in mind that he may be able to talk to someone about the Faith.
This method also can be used to reach various ethnic groups. By shopping in an area where minorities predominate, we can target our teaching to reach them. This can be an invaluable way to “intensify” teaching work among the minorities.
We could walk the dog in a different neighborhood, jog through a different park, fish in a different stream, ride a different bus to work—any of a number of things that represent normal activity, but are done with a special purpose in mind: spreading the glad tidings
of Baha'u'llah.
But to prove successful, these activities must be conducted regularly and with a long-term commitment. Without continuous visits we can't become familiar with the area or make friends with the people living there.
Perhaps the friends could set a goal for using this* method, say, between now and the anniversary of the Birth of Baha'u'llah. The results could then be published in The American Baha’
With this method, those who do not have a place to hold a fireside or are not comfortable with team teaching activities may find a way to help fulfill their heart's desire: to teach the Cause of Baha'u'llah.
The Spiritual Angeles, Washington, sponsored a free car wash as its Naw-Ruz gift to the city. About 75 cars were washed, and many new friends were made for
Assembly of Port
the Faith, The Port Angeles As
sembly reports that the event also
helped bring the Baha'is even closer
together, reaffirming the concept
that ‘God loves those who work in
groups,
Auxiliary Board member Hormoz Bastani (lett) of Houston, Texas, chats with Dr. Allan Ward of Little Rock, Arkansas, during a three-day
teaching and consolidation institute April 4-6 in Tyler, Texas. The two
were main speakers al the institute, sponsored by the Auxiliary Board, the District Teaching Committee of Texas Eastern District No. 1, and the National Treasurer's Represen tatives
Fund, teaching themes at Texas-Arkansas meet
Baha’is from 16 communities in Texas and Arkansas participated April 4.6 in a deepening and teaching institute in Tyler, Texas
The institute, sponsored by the Auxiliary Board, the District Teaching Committee of Texas Eastern District No. 1, and National Treasurer's Representatives, had as its theme “Living the Life Drop by Drop—the Fund and Teaching.”
Sixty-one adults, 14 youth and 11 children attended the three-day event.
SPEAKERS included Auxiliary Board member Hormoz Bastani of Houston, Texas, and Dr. Allan Ward of Little Rock, Arkansas, a National Treasurer's Representative.
The primary purpose of the gath according to Robert
Spann, secretary of the District Teaching Committee, was to draw the Baha'i institutions in the District together for consultation on teaching, expansion and consolidation.
Mr. Bastani spoke about the Covenant and its relationship to the Seven Year Plan and conducted a workshop on teaching using the “green book.”
Dr. Ward, speaking of the relationship between the Fund and teaching, emphasized universal participation as a measure of a community's energy and direction.
Activities during the institute included a teaching project in Tyler, consultation on the institute's theme, workshops, a children’s class, songs, and a deepening session.
Teaching Quiz
What are
Are you helping to win the goals of the initial two-year phase of the Seven Year Plan?
Do you know what those goals are? If not, take the National Teaching Committee Quiz and discover what's ahead for the American Baha'i community.
Learn what we've been called upon to accomplish by the Universal House of Justice: What the goals for teaching minorities are, what Baha'i youth have been urged to undertake, and how many Assemblies need to be raised. These are but a few of the many questions answered in this quiz.
To begin the quiz, read each question carefully, circle the best response, and compare your answers with the key at the end NOW, what can you do to WIN the goals of this first phase of the Plan?
NATIONAL TEACHING COMMITTEE QUIZ
NOTE: In each question, circle the letter of the answer you believe to, be the most correct.
1, The two-year phase of the Seven Year Plan in the U.S. calls for A. Increasing the number of Local Spiritual Assemblies to 1) 1400 2) 1550. 3) 1650 4) 2000 B. Increasing the number of localities where Baha'is reside to 1) 7000 2) 7200 3) 7500 4) 8000 C. At least 700 Local Spiritual Assemblies to 1) contribute to the Fund regularly 2) become incorporated 3) adopt extension teaching goals 4) meet more often
The states of Californi
7 Year Plan goals?
linois, New York and the District of Columbia to
1) use extreme caution in teaching non-Baha’is
2) be audacious and fearless in teaching the local authorities
3) aim at maintaining their present rate of growth
4) aim at doubling membership
5) pray for the teaching work in the rest of the country
E. Emphasizing the participa:
tion of Baha’i youth in
1) social and cultural activities of various organizations
2) teaching and consolidation activities
their
3) youth Local Spiritual Assemblies
4) college fraternities and sororities
F. The teaching work among the minorities to be
1) maintained
2) carefully reconsidered
3) intensified
4) temporarily abandoned
2. The teaching activity strongly advocated by the National Spiritual Assembly for the execution of the Plan is
a) “community firesides”
b) team teaching
¢) individual firesides
d) all ways of teaching
e) none of the above
3. The numbers 1, 5, 9, 15, 30
a) are the last seven digits of the National Teaching Committee office’s WATS telephone number
b) represent the systematic growth goals for any Baha'i community
¢) are the important years in
an individual's life requiring special deepening d) represent a code, the
meaning of which will become known at the end of the Seven Year Plan 4. “Phased and systematic’ characterize a) teaching campaigns that
consist only of firesides and public meetings
b) any teaching project or activity except those that include playing the guitar and clapping
) the teaching plan with phased goals, adequate preparation, any or all methods of teaching, universal participation, and consistent follow-up
) the type of plan that allows for adequate rest and preparation for winning the majority of the goals during the last four to six months of a Plan |
0'Q'P'€ ‘2 ‘be ‘2 ‘€ ‘suemsuy
Kokomo MDs given plaques
The Spiritual Assembly of Kokomo, Indiana, in an attempt to reach a certain segment of the city’s population, spent many months preparing a special gift for each physician in Kokomo.
The gift was an 8 x 10 inch framed plaque with the message to physicians by ‘Abdu'l-Baha from pages 150 and 151 of Selections From the Writings of ‘Abdu'l-Baha.
The plaque was printed in calligraphy, surrounded by pressed flowers, and covered with handmade parchment.
Seventy plaques were personally presented to local physicians during Ayyam-i-Ha. The Assembly has received numerous expressions of gratitude from physicians for the gift and the content of its message.
Unframed copies of the plaque are available to Baha'is for $2.50 postpaid from the Assembly secretary, Mildred Holmes, 1307 West Jefferson, Apt. 118-B, Kokomo, IN 46901.
Proceeds from the sales to Baha'is will be donated to the Baha'i Fund:
THE FUNDS
duly 1980
Spiritual progress, Faith’s growth require
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles prepared by the Office of the Treasurer on the basic principles of the Fund.)
The Spirit of Sacrifice ...
“Behold a candle how it gives its light. It weeps away its life drop by drop in order to give forth its flame of light.” (‘Abdu’l-Baha, quoted in May Maxwell, An Early Pilgrimage, p. 42)
Learning the mystery of sacrifice is a great challenge for every believer, for his spiritual progress, and the growth of the Faith itself, requires sacrifice.
Amelia Youssefi of Herndon. Virginia, says, ‘Happiness is giving to
The Baha'i Fund is an ever-present means by which we can iearn the joys of sacrifice.
Not every Baha'i can leave his home to go pioneering or afford to deputize another, but, according to the Universal House of Justice, “Contributing to the Fund is a service that every believer can render, be he poor or wealthy; for this is a spiritual responsibility in which the amount given is not important. It is the degree of the sacrifice of the giver, the love with which he makes his gift, and the unity of all the friends in this service which bring spiritual confirmations.” (Wellspring of Guidance, p. 19)
the Fund. Try it and see!” (Photo by
Sacrifice, therefore, cannot be discussed in terms of dollars and cents, but rather, in terms of the attitude or spirit with which the gift is given, and the willingness with which other desires are foregone in order to contribute to the Faith.
As the Guardian says, “The harder the sacrifice the more meritorious it will be ... in the sight of God.” (From a letter dated December 31, 1935, to an individual believer)
The Fruits of Sacrifice ...
It has been shown that the more one gives up for something, the
Ruthie Nylin)
more like that thing he becomes.
If acquiring material possessions is the most important thing in life to an individual, he will readily give up other pursuits in order to purchase more, gradually forgetting spiritual values and becoming consumed by materialism.
‘Abdu'l-Baha uses the following analogy to demonstrate that spiritual growth depends upon the sacrifices we make for the Cause:
“Man must become like unto the iron thrown within the furnace of fire. The qualities of iron, such as blackness, coldness and solidity, which belong to the earth,
sacrifice
disappear and vanish, while the characteristics of fire, such as redness, glowing and heat, which belong to the Kingdom, become apparent and visible. Therefore iron hath sacrificed its qualities and grades to the fire, acquiring the virtues of that element.” (Tablets of ‘Abdu’l-Baha, p. 355)
The more we give up for the Cause of God, the more like God we become. We learn severance, detachment, reliance on God, patience, and many other divine virtues.
Each act of sacrifice, then, results in something gained rather than something lost or given up.
Treasurer responds to questions from believers
Question: Why does the Office of the Treasurer often encourage believers to give to the National Fund individually? | thought that if | give to the local Fund this is sufficient, since the Assembly then makes a contribution to the National, Continental, and International Funds.
Answer: The principles that form the structure and guide the development of the Baha'i Funds were expressed by Shoghi Effendi as he outlined the growth of the Administrative Order. We refer to these principles when advising the friends about their relationShip to the Fund.
In a letter dated March 12, 1923, the Guardian outlined the importance of the Fund and its relationship to the Assembly:
“ait is of absolute necessity that mediately after the establishment of Local as well as National Spiritual Assemblies, a Baha'i Fund be established, to be placed under the exclusive control of the Spiritual Assembly ... The
members of the Spiritual
Assembly will at their own discretion expend it ... to extend in every
way possible their sphere of service.”
It is important to note Shoghi Effendi’s clarification that the Funds are under the control of the Assembly.
The Guardian, in a letter dated June 20, 1954, makes it clear that there is a distinction between money contributed by individuals and money contributed by Assemblies, using national contributions to the International Fund as an example:
“Any monies received as a contribution from the Baha’is for the International Centre should not be credited to this account which represents a national joint contribution, and has nothing to do with individual or local contributions forwarded to the World Centre in your care.”
Please See QUESTIONS Page 8
Amelia Collins: Shining example of love for Cause
One need not have superhuman powers to accomplish great things for the Cause of God.
Every believer has the capacity to become a hero or heroine of the Cause in these days when we are So few and so much work needs to be done. All that is required is that we become motivated by a degree of love for the Cause that consumes every distracting thought.
One of the most wonderful examples we have regarding the relationship of an individual to the Faith is the life story of the Hand of the Cause of God Amelia Collins.
Many believers are aware of the large sums of money that Mrs. Collins was able to contribute to various Baha'i projects, but what sets her apart is not the amount of these gifts, but the degree to which these donations were a reflection of her love for the Cause of God.
From the time Mrs. Collins became a Baha'i, her life was one of complete dedication. She was an active, world-wide teacher and ‘a member of the National Spiritual Assembly of the U.S. and Canada for 20 years, as well as an outstanding benefactress of the Faith.
Her contributions made possible the purchase of extensive land endowments in Israel, the publica: tion of books, the extension of the teaching work throughout the world, and the support of many pioneers.
As for her private needs, Mrs. Collins lived quite simply. Her only wish was to be of service to the Guardian.
The pure love she held for him was the most profound evidence of her faith. The Hand of the Cause A.Q. Faizi writes in his tribute to her, Milly, that Mrs. Collins said she knew very little about
the Writings.
“Out of the immense treasury of all the Writings,” she said, “I memorized one sentence and did my utmost to follow that one injunction.
“It served as a lamp of guidance, shedding light on the dark and obscure paths of my life.
“That phrase-is from the Will and Testament of the Master, where He says that the friends should make Shoghi Effendi hap Ye :
“Whatever step | took in my life, any vote cast in the Assemblies, any trip taken, even any thought, ! would first ask myself whether my vote, words, trip or thought would make him happy. When | was sure, then | would take action without fear.”
Once, when hurrying to a meeting of the National Spiritual Assembly, Mrs. Collins noted that a home across from the House of
Worship was for sale.
She instantly remembered a passing remark Shoghi Effendi made years before, encouraging the believers to purchase the homes around the Temple when they became available. Mrs. Collins immediately phoned the broker and purchased the house, unconcerned about the price.
After the death of the Guardian, Mrs. Collins continued her heroic efforts. She was the companion of Ruhiyyih Khanum in the Holy Land. She met with the other Hands of the Gause as they temporarily guided the course of the Faith.
During this time Mrs. Collins was very ill, but continued to serve. The last letter taken to her for her signature bears only the letters “Am”; her aching fingers could write no more. Within days her spirit took flight to the Abha Kingdom.
This was the example left to us by the Hand of the Gause of God Amelia Collins. Hers was a love so consuming and so pure that she lost her own identity and immersed herself in the Will of God.
AMELIA COLLINS
YOUTH NEWS
The American Baha’i
A new children’s group, “Youth for One World,” has been formed in two counties in Southern California.
At its initial meeting, held in February at Redlands, 45 children ages 5 through 15 were enrolled in Yow.
The children played together and got to know new friends from all over San Bernardino and Riverside counties.
MORE CHILDREN were enrolled in the group at meetings in March and April
First envisioned a year ago as a kind of Baha'i scouting organization, Youth for One World began with a suggestion to the Spiritual Assembly of Redlands
A committee was formed to come up with guidelines and plan an organization for Baha'i children.
YOW was developed as an areawide group for children ages 5 to 15, designed to provide them with a Baha'i social environment, promote a Baha'i identity, and help them develop virtues and a Baha'i point of view.
Spiritual Assemblies, Groups
Dr. Iraj Ayman, a Continental Counsellor for Western Asia, addresses a public meeting May 9 at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. The meeting, spon sored by the Baha'i Club at North
Dr. Iraj Ayman, a Continental Counsellor for Western Asia, was the guest speaker May 9 at a public meeting at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.
Dr. Ayman’s talk, sponsored by the Baha’ Club of Northwestern University, was entitled “A Pattern for Future Society.”
The public program was a follow-up to the presentation of books and pamphlets on the Faith to members of the university's faculty.
Thirty-two copies of the book Call to the Nations by Shoghi Effendi were presented to the presi
and isolated believers in a large
area around Redlands were asked
to participate in YOW by hosting
monthly meetings on a rotating
basis.
During the meetings, children are encouraged to complete activities listed in their YOW member manuals under nine areas, such as “Your Spirit” and “Your Baha'i Community.”
THEY REPORT their points to their local YOW coordinator at local meetings, and coordinators then send for the awards they earn with YOW points.
Awards are presented at the monthly meetings.
Children have been eagerly completing activities from the manuals, and making sure that they attend the monthly meetings.
In April, close to 50 YOW members and adults drove two hours or more for a meeting near Palm Springs, where they visited a botanical garden.
The children take an active role in consulting on YOW activities and proudly wear their uniform shirts to school and elsewhere.
Teaching opportunities have arisen because of the visibility of
lt
western, had as its theme.‘A Pattern for Future Society.’ It was preceded by the mailing of Baha’ literature to more than 100 faculty members and administrators at the university.
Counsellor Ayman guest at Northwestern meeting
various schools, and other faculty members, along with a cover letter from the Baha'i Club.
‘A week later, approximately 100 copies of the pamphlet, “A Pattern for Future Society,” were sent to other faculty members at Northwestern.
“It was the feeling of the Baha'i Club,” said club president Ken Bowers, “that the leaders of thought at the university should be introduced to and become familiar with the tenets of the Faith and the principles enunciated by Baha'u'llah for the foundation of a peaceful and pro
the children in a large group in
their brightly-colored YOW uniforms. The Spiritual Assembly of
Redlands has a starter kit for communities that would like to start
Forty-five youngsters from two coun ties in Southern California gathered
Comment Continued From Page 2
the skills of its writers need to be developed and nurtured for the expansion and protection of the Faith.
With a greater awareness of new standards of literary criticism, we shall increase both the professionalism and the integrity of Baha'i publications.
The Universal House of Justice concludes its letter to scholars with these words:
“The distinction desired by ‘Abdu'l-Baha for all Baha’is is certainly for attainment by Baha’i scholars, who by following the exhortations of Baha'u'llah to moderation, kindliness, tact and wisdom, may restore scholarship to that high station of dignity and admiration which it formerly held and which is confirmed by the utterances of Baha'u'llah.”
Caution is urged
The National Assembly wishes to advise the friends that they should exercise caution in entering into financial dealings with Robert Jeff Banks, formerly of Calabasas-Topanga, California.
NEW
Greeting Cards
Available! « For happy occasions = Get-well cards = Sympathy cards See details in Publishing Trust ad
“Youth for One World’ formed in Southern California
their own YOW group. It includes member manual, YOW coordinator_ manual, directions for starting a YOW group, and sample awards,
If your community would like a
in February at Redlands for the first meeting of a new Baha'i children’s
Andishe Samandari, a 13-year-old junior high school student in Col: orado Springs, Colorado, recently won first place in the Pike's Peak Regional Science Fair. Her entry, en: titled. ‘The Effect of Magnetism on the Growth of Crystals,’ was judged by U.S. Air Force officials as the most outstanding in the junior high school physical sciences division.
kit, please send $10 to cover the cost of materials and postage to YOW, P.O. Box 229, Redlands, CA 92373.
Inquiries can be directed to that address, or phone 714-793-7291.
group, ‘Youth for One World.’
was
Miss Samandari's project awarded third place in the Colorado
State Fair competition, and her school has given her a ‘most talented student’ prize and named her an exemplary student. Andishe was born in East Africa where her parents were Baha'i pioneers for 19 years.
Johns Hopkins Baha’is proclaim Faith
To prepare their intended audience for upcoming proclamation activities, members of the Baha'i Club at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland sent letters to faculty and students in March focusing on Baha'i guidelines for a world government.
The letters also provided information about symposia on “Prospects for World Peace” to be held April 13-16 at the University. The
ed to tie in with a statewide “Baha'i Festival” at that time.
The club received an immediate response from the Dean of Students at the John Hopkins Medical School, one of four administrators chosen to receive special commendation from the Baha'i Club.
The dean shared with club members his family’s treasured friendship with a Baha’ during
dent of the university, deans of its gressive society.” on page 27 proclamation efforts were design: their stay in Iran.
[Page 7]YOUTH NEWS
July 1980
Some of the friends at the Texas ‘Touchstone’ Youth Conference help
Beth Hufstickler of Castroville, Texas
World Citizen twin issue released, draws praise
The special double issue of World Citizen magazine, contain: ing the first authorized translation of the so-called “Fire Tablet,” has been printed and is drawing praise from all over the country.
‘As a result of the popularity of this impressive issue subscriptions have increased, and many people have inquired about buying single copies, which are sure to become collector's items.
The editors of World Citizen have announced prices for single issues of the magazine.
For subscribers, extra copies will be $2.50 an issue. For nonsubscribers, single issues may be purchased for $3.50 each. At this time, a one-year subscription to
the magazine (six issues) is $8.
World Citizen now has more than 400 subscribers, and the special double issue should increase that number substantially. In addition to the “Fire Tablet,” the March-June issue features 56 pages of articles, poems, photos, stories and puzzles.
The July-August issue will be mailed this summer, and the editors would like to encourage all youth to subscribe, to contribute articles, and to support the magazine.
Inquiries about World Citizen should be addressed to Shervin Hawley, 10110 Margate Drive,
Houston, TX 77099.
Pranslation of
F LUTIRAQ
(with guitar) in a sing-along,
61 youth attend Texas ‘Touchstone’
Sixty-one youth from Texas and surrounding areas attended the first Texas “Touchstone” Youth Conference March 14-16 sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of San Marcos, Texas.
Among those attending the conference was Auxiliary Board member Hormoz Bastani.
THE GATHERING, held at Camp. Huaco Springs on the Guadalupe River, included deepenings entitled “Onward Through the Fog,” “The Baha'i View of Human Sexuality,” and “The Covenant,” conducted by Stacy Dobbins of Fort Worth.
The youth spent one afternoon in groups creating and performing
their own skits. There was much laughter, lively discussion, deep reflection, and new-found talent. Much of the time was spent getting acquainted, playing volleyball, singing, dancing and sitting by a fire There was a Baha'i version of “Saturday Night Live” that ended in a sing-along.
Before the close of the conference, the District Teaching Committee helped establish local youth groups.
Everyone left with new friendships, a new resolve to work more closely together, and a promise from the Baha'is of San Marcos to host another conference next year.
Utah youth form committee.
Youth from all over the state of Utah attended a District Youth Conference last November 17-18 at which a District Youth Committee was formed.
Energetic and ready for action, the youth discussed and consulted on the three basic aspects of the conference; Baha'i youth and their social peer groups, fellowship among Baha'i youth, and teaching.
AUXILIARY BOARD member Ernest Bruss spoke to the youth about coping with a deteriorating society and the importance of avoiding political issues. As a result of the consultation, Blanding, Utah, became a primary goal area for the youth.
Over_the past four months, three extensive teaching trips have been undertaken by the youth in Utah
Blanding, in the southern area of the state and bordering the Southern Ute and Navajo Reservations, posed a rather difficult obstacle since most of the youth live in the northern or central parts of Utah. For many, the trip to Blanding took six to nine hours.
But despite these difficulties, the youth accomplished their goal.
The first trip, which took place last December 26-28, was in the form of a social gathering to “break the ice.” The other two trips were geared toward teaching.
A large dinner was held during the second trip, February 16-17, where the Iranian believers taught the others how to make fry bread. Later that evening, four seekers attended a public meeting.
AS A RESULT of the third trip, March 15-16, there was a declaration, bringing the number of Baha'is in Blanding to eight adults and a large number of children.
Friends traveled from Arizona and New Mexico to share their love and teaching efforts, and to support a 24-hour prayer watch.
Remaining strong and active,
the youth are continuing their teaching efforts and planning future events.
Cedar City, Utah, with one isolated believer, is among future teaching goals. During the
weekend of April 18, a musical proclamation was planned with a
fireside to follow.
These musical proclamations, featuring John Ford Coley, Leslie Bulkin, and Chip and Kelly Bruss, were continued in May and June, with a major proclamation held i Salt Lake City. .
, ~ Club of Sonoma County, California, held its first meeting May 10 and planned meetings for the first Sunday of each’ month thereafter. Club members are (seated left to right)
Bryan II (chairman), Heather Sullivan (treasurer), Kelley’ Bryan (corresponding secretary), Jeff Engwall (recording secretary).
Essay contest deadline extended
The National Youth Committee’s national essay contest deadline has been extended to September 1, 1980, to give all youth an opportunity to enter.
The essay topic is “Why Should | Be a Baha’i?” Ten winners will be
chosen, and winning entries printed in The American Baha'i.
Submit your essay (two pages double-spaced) to the National Youth Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
NTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
The American Baha'i
‘Right to Development’ lunch
The Bahd’i International Community hosted a successful luncheon program May 1 at the United Nations on the theme “The Right to Development: Exploring Its Human Dimensions.”
The meeting included two main speakers: Dr. Ervin Laszlo, a member of the UN Institute for Training and Research and the prestigious Club of Rome, and Dr. Jane Faily, a clinical psychologist specializing in group therapy who spent nearly a year in 1978-79 visiting Baha'i communities in West Africa as the Baha'i International Community's consultant in Africa for the International Year of the Child.
THE GATHERING was attended by representatives of government missions to the UN, members of the UN Secretariat, and represen: tatives of non-governmental organizations at the UN.
The purpose of the luncheon, according to Dr. Victor de Araujo, the Baha’i International Community's representative to the UN, was to focus attention on the interrelationship between human rights and social and economic development, and to try to demonstrate that the complex economic and social problems we face cannot
Mayor R.E. Hobbs (center) of Vic toria, Texas, receives a ‘Great Religions of the World’ art medal from Gilbert Rucker (right), chairman of the Spiritual Assembly of the
be resolved without new moral and spiritual standards built on a consciousness of the organic oneness of humanity.
The Baha'i International Community, he said, is aware of the importance of deliberations now under way at the UN to effect a new developmental strategy for the '80s and is continually alert to the possibility of making a contribution to these deliberations that will culminate in a special session of the UN General Assembly from August 25 to September 5 of this year.
In opening the meeting, Dr. de Araujo explained that the Baha'i International Community wished to explore the human dimensions of the right to development and investigate the kind of development we want for ourselves, our families and the world.
DR. LASZLO, speaking on the “Social Implications of the New International Development Strategy,” said he felt the Baha'i idea of the organic oneness of humanity is much-needed, and that the global negotiations now under way at the UN are an essential forerunner of an order for all humanity as well as part of the slow and difficult process that will
Baha'is of Victoria, and Gay Hill, secretary of the Assembly. The presentation was a part of the Victoria community's commemoration of World Religion Day in January.
lead to the emergence of the kind of world commonwealth envisaged in the Baha'i teachings.
He said that whereas the global development strategies of the 60s and '70s had primarily economic objectives, his studies indicate that the new strategy seems likely to place its greatest emphasis on social questions.
There is, he feels, a new recognition of development as “an integral process embodying both economic and social objectives.”
Or. Faily discussed the “Search for Common Values’ and the dichotomy that exists between what every enlightened person realizes—that we are one globe and one humanity—and the problems we face because of short term political antagonisms.
“We are speaking about the need for a new international order,” she said, “‘and we live in an age of terrific disorder.
“THE SOURCE of that disorder is the evolution of the planet. Institutions and ideologies we have inherited from history are not yet capable of implementing the fact of the oneness of this planet, and the disorder created by this inherited system is what brings us
Questions
Continued From Page 5
Whenever the Guardian called the attention of the believers to the needs of any of the Funds, or the establishment of a new Fund, he always called for support by believers as individuals and as communities. For example, in a letter dated July 29, 1935, he wrote:
"the institution of the National Fund should be increasingly supported by the entire body of the believers, both in their individual capacities, and through their collective efforts, whether ‘organized as Groups or as Local Assemblies (emphasis added).””
Such examples can be found ‘over and over again in the letters of Shoghi Effendi. When individuals and communities begin to understand and practice this divine, infallible guidance from the Guardian, our unified efforts will attract the blessings of Baha'u'llah.
Citing contributions to the Fund as one aspect of universal participation, the Universal House of Justice stated: “The participation of every believer is of the utmost importance, and is a source of power and vitality as yet unknown to us.” ‘Wellspring of Guidance, p. 38)
Question: How can an individual or Assembly send a contribution to the International Fund?
Answer: There are three ways in which contributions can be sent to the World Centre.
DR. ERVIN LASZLO ‘A New Development Strategy’
to living in days of crisis, even though, mentally, we Can see and understand the need for global consciousness.”
The most powerful and lifethreatening delusions, said Dr. Faily, are racism and nationalism. She then described some of their effects in our world today.
Unity, she said, is the essential ingredient required for the,wellbeing of mankind. Order depends upon trust, whose two components—justice and love—are
The first method is to make a check payable to the Baha’i International Fund and mail it directly to the Baha'i World Centre, P.O. Box 155, Haifa, Israel 31-000. Contributions made in this way are not tax-deductible.
A second possibility is to make a check payable to the National Baha'i Fund and to earmark all or part of the total amount which you wish sent to Haifa. The address for the National Fund is Office of the Treasurer, Baha'i National Center, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091. Contributions made in this way also are not taxdeductible.
The third method does provide individuals with a way to take advantage of a tax deduction. Simply make a check payable to the National Baha'i Fund and, in a note, express the “wish,” “hope” or “desire” that all or part of the total be sent to the Baha’i International Fund.
Question: Can the National Spiritual Assembly report on the progress of contributions from the American Baha'i community to the International Fund?
Answer: At present it is not possible to provide regular information on this subject since the National Spiritual Assembly has no way to monitor contributions sent directly to Haifa. We do know that about $2.5 million has already been contributed to the Baha’ International Fund through the National Fund. This is in addition to the $1 million budgeted for that purpose by the National Spiritual Assembly, and is 19 times greater than the amount contributed in this way last year.
In a letter dated December 3,
DR. JANE FAILY ‘A Search for Common Values’
necessary to the healthy growth of the human spirit.
Dr. Faily concluded: “ ...whatever our immediate perils, whatever calamities we will choose to experience in our pursuit of material security, the ultimate outcome must be in conformity with reality—the pragmatic reality that this world is one homeland, and the spiritual reality that mankind is one family.”
1979, the Universal House of Justice advised the National Assembly that information regarding contributions from. the American Baha'i community could be available by the summer of 1980. The National Spiritual Assembly would then consider the best means for reporting these figures to the friends.
In its letter, the Universal House of Justice asked the National Assembly to express to the American believers its “grateful appreciation for their immediate and generous support of the international work of the Cause.”
Question: Is there still time to contribute to the construction of the Seat of the Universal House of Justice?
Answer: As of April 1980, there has been no “cut-off date” announced for such contributions. At present, exterior construction of the building is complete, while work continues on the interior and on landscaping. There is still time to participate in funding construction of the Seat of the Universal House of Justice, an opportunity that will never occur again.
Plan a Deepening on the Seven Year Plan! For new booklet and cassettes see Publishing Trust ad on page 27.
PAGINA HISPANA
duly 1980
Editorial
A TODOS LOS HISPANO-HABLANTES DE LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS Allah'u'Abha!
Desde el pasado mes de diciembre, la Asamblea Nacional nombré un Comité Nacional de Ensefanza Hispana, para atender, promover tensificar la labor de promulgar, y consolidar las ensefianzas Bah: entre los mas de veinte millones de personas que hablan el bello idoma hispano, en este pais.
Este Comité esta integrado por: Dr. Antonio Cubero (Largo, Florida); Ms. Marilyn Sanchez (Phoenix, Arizona); Lionel Gonzalez (Bergenfield, New Jersey); Ms. Regina Anchondo (Balcones Heights, Texas); Mrs. Maud Grasselly (Zion, Illinois), and Ms. Angelica Arhontogiorgis (Los Angeles, California).
LAS REUNIONES de Comité se realizan periddicamente en los estados metas, tratando de realizar alguna labor de ensefanza. Nuestros planes son inmensos, pero practicamente inalcansables, sino recibimos la cooperacién de todos los Baha'is hispanos, Comités de Distritos y Asambleas Locales.
Sabemos que la comunidad hispanica sera una minoria muy infiuyente en las préximas décadas, por lo que tenemos el deber y la responsabilidad ineludible de ensefiaries, “EL ULTIMO REFUGIO DE UNA CIVILIZACION DECADENTE”: LA FE BAHA'I.
La Asamblea Nacional nos ha dado metas especificas desean que ingresen miles de hispanos a nuestras comunidades, que se profundicen los creyentes, que se consoliden las Asambleas, pero sobretodo que los hispanos nos integremos mas al trabajo de nuestras comunidades con todo el amor Baha'i, que este entendimiento y esperanza en Baha'u'llah, nos haga eliminar las diferencias idiomaticas y culturales y nos integremos como Baha'is, haciendo una realidad el principio de la unidad en la diversidad. Es nuestro deber pedir a las comunidades americanas, que en las fiestas de 19 dias, se lean selecciones en espafiol, que se traduzcan las cartas, que en Asambleas siempre haya quien traduzCa para aquellos que no hablan inglés. Tenemos muchos planes, pero exhortamos a todos, a contribuir mas al fondo Baha'i para poderlos llevar a una realidad. Ya esta listo, un plan para un curso de lecciones por Correspondencia que enviaremos a todas las comunidades hispanas en Estados Unidos.
HAY PLANES para nuevas traducciones de libros, aumentar la existencia de libros en espafiol en el Baha'i Trust; asi como peliculas, programas radiales y para televisién, laminas etc y traer de otros paises hispanos materiales que necesitamos para ensefiar y profundizar.
Tenemos un extenso plan de ensefianza entre los hispanos de la frontera, en New York, New Mexico, Florida pero necesitamos tu ayuda.
Deseamos urgente
Ores por nosotros y por todos los hispanos de Estados Unidos para que Ileguen a ellos la luz de la fe. Contribuye al fondo Baha'i no importa la cantidad. Tu centavo es muy importante si lo haces en forma regular y te unes a la contribucion universal.
Envianos los nombres, direcciones ye teléphonos de los Baha'is hispanos de tu comunidad. Nombres de prominentes lideres hispanos de tu communidad (abogados, médicos, profesores profesionales otros lideres etc), para que conozcan el mensaje Baha'i. Instituciones hisp4nicas, fiestas ferias etc, que celebren.
Nombres de periodicos, revistas, estaciones de radio y television hispanicas etc, de tu comunidad. Fotos y articulos de actividades Baha'i hispanicas.
HAY QUE PROCLAMAR a todos el mensaje de Baha'u'llah. Unete a nosotros y por favor, escribenos, danos tus sugerencias, ya que nuestro Comité sélo existe para el servicio de los hispanos en Estados Unidos.
Queremos compartir con todos ustedes la siguiente cita de Baha'u'llah.
“Bienaventurado y feliz es aquel que se levanta para promover los mejores intereses do los pueblos y razas de la tierra...No debe enaltecerse quien ama a su patria, sino quien ama al mundo entero. La Tierra es un solo paiis, y la humanidad, sus ciudadanos.””
“Todas las naciones y razas de la tierra seran reunidas bajo la sombra de este Estandarte Divino ... y llegaran a ser una sola nacion. El antagonismo religioso y sectario, la hostilidad de razas y pueblos, y las diferencias entre naciones seran eliminadas. Todos los hombres se aferraran a una religién, tendran una fe comun, seran aunadas en una raza y llegaran a ser un solo pueblo, Todos moraran en una patria comun, que es el planeta mismo.”
“Todo lo que esta latente en lo mas intimo de este ciclo sagrado graduaimente aparecera y se hard manifiesto, pues ahora solo es el comienzo de su crecimiento y la aurora de la revelacién de sus signos.”
Comite Nacional de Ensefianza Hispanica Regina Anchondo, secretary 4100 Parkdale, Apt. 3615
Ensenanzas Baha’is sobre la politica
En este mundo politicamente orientado, es necesario que los baha'is no cometan actos imprudentes e ignorantes. He aqui los principios que deben guiar nuestra relacién con las campaiias politicas:
1. El baha’i no puede ser miembro de ningun partido u organizacion politica que apoye a un partido politico, ni asociarse con ellos.
2. ES IMPROPIO que baha’i contribuya fondos o servicios aun partido o campafa politicas.
3. Sin embargo, el baha’i esta libre de ejercer su derecho como ciudadano de los Estados Unidos para votar por candidatos en las elecciones nacionales y locales como dicte su conciencia. Si quiere inscriberse como votante, debe clasificarse como independiente.
Es importante que entendamos las implicaciones del principio baha’i de Ia no interferencia en los asuntos politicos. En una carta a las Asambleas Espirituales Nacionales de Africa, con fecha 8 febrero de 1970, la Casa Universal de Justicia dijo:
“‘Abdu'l-Bahá y Shoghi Effendi nos han dado razones claras y convincentes del por qué debemos defender este principio. Estas razones se resumen a continuacién para el estudio y profundizacién de los amigos.
“Es nuestra esperanza que estas observaciones no solo ayuden a los amigos a seguir inteligente y radiantemente las sagradas ensefianzas. sobre el particular, sino que les ayude a explicar la actitud baha’i a los que duden de su sabiduria y utilidad.
“La Fe de Dios es la Unica fuente de salvacion para la humanidad hoy dia. La verdadera causa del malestar de la humanidad es su desunidad.
“POR MAS PERFECTA que sea la maquinaria ideada por los lideres de los hombres para la unidad politica del mundo, aun asi no producira el antidoto par el veneno que va debilitando el vigor de la sociedad actual. Estos males solamente pueden ser curados mediante la influencia de la Fe de Dios.
“La humanidad tiene muchos bienhechores quienes concentran Sus esfuerzos a la labor de socorfer y proveer caridad para el bienestar material del hombre, pero solamente los baha’is pueden hacer el trabajo que Dios quiere que mas se haga.
“Cuando nos dedicamos al trabajo de la Fe, estamos haciendo una obra que constituye lamas grande ayuda y Unico refugio aun mundo necesitado y dividido.
“La comunidad baha'i es una organizacion a nivel mundial que busca establecer la verdadera paz universal sobre la tierra. Si un baha'i trabajara por un partido politico para que venza a otro, esto seria una negacién del
“Por lo tanto, el ser miembro de cualquier partido politico implicaria el repudio de algunos o todos los principios de paz y unidad proclamados por Baha'u'llah. Tal como declara ‘Abdu'l-Baha, ‘Nuestro partido es el partido de Dios; no pertenecemos a ningun partido.”
“Si_un baha’i insistiera en su derecho de apoyar a cierto partido politico, no podria negar el mismo grado de libertad a otros creyentes.
“ESTO IMPLICARIA que dentro de las filas de la Fe, cuya misién promordial es la de unir a todos los hombres en una gran familia bajo Dios, habria bahd’is unos opuestos a otros. ~Donde, entonces, estaria el ejemplo de unidad y armonia que el mundo busca?
“Si las instituciones de la Fe (Dios to prohiba!), se metieran en la politica, los baha'is estarian causando antagonismos en vez de amor. Si tomaran cierta postura
en un pais, ello seguramente cambiaria la opinién de la gente en otro pais sobre los fines y propdsitos de la Fe.
“Si se metieran en las disputas politicas, los baha'is mismos, en vez de cambiar el mundo o de ayudarlo, se perderian y se destruirian, La situacién mundial es tan confusa, tan confundida, con sus facciones egoistas en pugna, que la mejor manera en que los baha’is pueden servir los mas altos intereses de su pais y a la causa de la verdadera salvacion del mundo, es sacrificar sus intereses y afiliaciones politicas y dar su pleno apoyo con todo coraz6n al sistema divino de Baha'u'llah,
La Fe no se opone a los verdaderos intereses de ninguna nacion; tampoco esta contra ningun partido o faccién.
“Se halla por encima de toda controversia y las trasciende, a la vez que recomienda a sus seguidores, lealtad al gobierno y un patriotismo sano.
EI ejercicio de la moderacion en la vestimenta es importante
El ejercicio de la moderacion en la vestimenta, en el lenguaje y en los entretenimeintos es importante.
“Una vida casta y santa ha de ser el principio controlador en el comportamiento y conducta de todo baha’i, tanto en sus relaciones sociales con los miembros de su propia comunidad como en su contacto con el mundo en general,” escribe Shoghi Effendi en El Advenimiento de la Justicia Divina. ,
El Guardian continda: “Tal vida casta y santa, con su implicacién de modestia, pureza, templanza, decencia y pensamiento limpio, involucra no menos que el ejercicio de la moderacién en todo lo que pertenezca a la vestimenta, al lenguaje, a los entretenimientos y a toda avocacién artistica y literaria.
“REQUIERE Ia vigilancia diaria en el control de los deseos carnales e inclinaciones corruptas. Requiere el] abandono de la conducta frivola con su apego excesivo a los placeres triviales y a menudo mal dirigidos. ““Requiere Ja abstinencia total de las drogas que forman habito.
“Condena la prostitucion del arte y de la literatura, la practica del nudismo y del concubinato.
“Cuando su vida esté orientada hacia el servicio a Baha'u'llah, y cuando cada accién consciente se haga dentro de este marco, no fallara en lograr el verdadero proPosito de su vida.
“Por lo tanto, cada creyente
Sagrados Escritos y las instrucciones del amado Guardian, esforzandose siempre por llegar a una comprensién renovada y mejor de su importancia para él y para la sociedad.
“Debe orar fervorosamente por la guia divina, por la sabiduria y la fuerza de hacer lo que complazca a Dios, y de servirlo en todo momento y al maximo de su capacidad.”
Profundizacion CUESTIONARIO NO. 2
1. gDespués de la muerte del Bab Quién fue el lider de la comunidad Babi?
2. eCual era el nombre de Baha'u'llah? cQue quiere decir su titulo?
3. eQuién era Baha'u'llah?
4. ~Ddénde y cémo recibid la llegada del Espiritu Santo para comenzar su misién?
5. zEn qué lugar vivid Baha'u'llah durante dos afios y por qué?
6. ~Cuando y dénde declard Baha'i su misién como el prometido de todas las épocas?
7. 2A qué lugares fue dester
rado Baha'u'llah y sus
seguidores? %
8. eCudles importantes cartas escribid Baha'u'llah en Adriandpolis?
9. 2A qué lugar infernal fue desterrado Baha'u'llah?
10. Este lugar esta profetizado en la Biblia. Recuerda Ud la cita.
San Antoni 78229 ! espiritu mismo de la Fe. debe estudiar continuamente los Busquela en Isaias
IGC: PIONEERING
The American Baha’i
Letters... from pioneers
Dear Friends:
Allah'u’Abha! answering my American Baha’i.
My mother is typing this letter on a stencil while | dictate it because | have received more than 40 letters so far and | am having difficulty answering each one separately.
I'd like to begin by telling you a little about myself. | am nine years old now. | came from Alameda, California, to pioneer in the Falkland Islands in April 1976 with my mother and father.
Thank you for letter
| HAVE BEEN HERE almost four years now. | don’t have any brothers or sisters. | like to play soccer. | am on a league team named Redskin Rovers: We play every two weeks or so, on weekends. The other teams are the Hotshots and Dynamo Devils.
| also like to go fishing. There is very good fishing in the Falklands. You can catch mullet or trout. The record trout caught is 20 pounds!
My mother’s name is Jeanne. My father’s name is Duffy. My mother is a secretary; she works for the Falkland Islands government. My father is an artist. He paints portraits and landscapes.
Iam in Class 5 in school. My teacher is Mr. Townsend. We just finished our summer vacation in February and started a new class. My favorite subject is reading, and then math.
i nave 18 people in my class, At playtime | like to play football, catch, last touch, pig-in-themiddle, and high jumps.
My best friend is Leonardo Blanco from Argentina. Leo and | fly kites, ride our bikes, play football, make boats and rafts, and houses, and generally have fun. Sometimes we talk in English and sometimes in Spanish—and sometimes in Spanglish!
| BELONG TO the Baha'i community of Stanley, which is the only town in the Falklands. It has the. only Local Spiritual Assembly.
The rest of the Falklands is made up of sheep farms called settlements, and anything outside of Stanley is referred to as “the camp.”
There are two Baha'i families living in the camp and one single Baha'i living on different farms now.
In town we have Baha'i children’s classes every week on Mondays. Classes have just begun again after the summer vacation. Last year we studied Japan, Spain, India and Africa.
We did two cooking projects—Rabanadas and Peanut Soup. We also did origami. We made birds with it, and balls from folded paper. We also do painting and coloring. First we have prayers and Hidden Words, which we are memorizing, and then we have eats and artwork.
Last year our Baha'i community sponsored an Art Contest for the International Year of the Child; 180 children entered the contest, including me.
in The.
| HELPED by going on the radio. because we don't have any television here in the Falklands. | was. ‘on the radio three times.
The winners got prizes including a beautiful certificate made by one of the Baha'is in the community and prizes ordered from UNICEF.
We had a display of the pictures at the Town Hall where the prizes were given by the Chief Secretary's wife. There were slide shows about UNICEF and IYC, and a Baha'i display. The winning pictures were sent to UNICEF for possible use in the 1981 UNICEF calendar.
Last year we had the first Baha'i summer school in the camp. It was held at Port Stephens. There were 17 Baha'is there, which is nearly all the Baha’is in the Falklands.
There were classes for the grown-ups and the children. We went on outings and rode horses. There were slide shows and parties in the evenings, and | gave a magic show with my magic kit. It was lots of fun.
This year the summer school is going to be at Port San Carlos in two weeks time, the weekend after Naw-Ruz. We're really looking forward to flying out there for it.
| SPENT TWO WEEKS of my summer holiday at Port San Carlos with the Baha'i family there. They came from North Dakota a year ago.
While | was there | got to ride horses, went fishing and caught nine mullet in one day. | got up at 6 in the morning and helped milk the cows. There are four rows with milking machines and eight get milked by machine, but one, which we named Black Beauty, gets milked by hand.
Black Beauty has a baby calf, which is a steer. We named him Peter Pan. We found some fossils behind one of the dog kennels. They were shell impressions in rock. They were in a gulley in the ground,
Guyana plans. summer coastal teaching trips
The National Spiritual Assembly of Guyana extends a warm welcome to Baha'is in different parts of the world to come and teach in a tropical country with a wonderful diversity of race, religion and culture.
Teaching trips are planned this summer in the coastal regions of Guyana as well as in the river and creek areas and the interior of the country.
The teaching project is scheduled to begin August 5 and continue through the month of August. The goal is to enroll at least 1,000 new believers by the end of 1980.
For further information, please contact the International Goals Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091, or phone 312-256-4400.
In early February my father had an exhibition of his paintings in Mar del Plata, Argentina. The whole family went for two weeks. We went to the beaches, and it was very hot. It was nice to visit another country and practice our Spanish!
We were invited to the home of a famous race car driver where we had an asado (Argentine barbecue) and spent the day swimming and playing football. (1 really love playing football. Our football is what Americans call soccer.)
We went to the park and rented a pedal car and a ferry boat. We went to a club to see antique cars, and they had a paddling poo! with a frog. We had a big asado there too.
WE MET WITH the chairman and secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly of Argentina and they came to my father’s exhibition. They really liked the paintings, especially the one of ‘Abdu’l-Baha that had next to it an explanation of who He was and what His Father's teachings are. We enjoyed the trip very much, and hope to be able to go again sometime.
In. many of the letters that | received, people asked about pioneering in the Falkland Islands. My mother suggests that if any of you really want information about pioneering here, it is best to write to the International Goals Committee in Wilmette, as they have lots of information they could send you.
If after that you still have special questions, you can write to our Assembly. Their address is: Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Stanley, P.O. Box 50, Stanley, Falkland Islands.
Well, | will close for now, and hope to hear from you again soon. Thank you for writing to me.
Your friend,
Eli Sheridan Stanley, Falkland Islands
ARGENTINA
South America
The Hand of the Cause of God John Robarts (front row in light jacket) and his wife, Audrey (to his right) are
Hand of Cause Robarts, wife encourage Bermuda
The Hand of the Cause of God John Robarts and his wife, Audrey, visited Bermuda April 3-9, encouraging the Baha'i community there to redouble its efforts to form at least seven Local Spiritual Assemblies prior to forming its National Spiritual Assembly at Ridvan 1981.
While in Bermuda Mr. and Mrs. Robarts met with the Bermuda Teaching Committee, hosted a public meeting, and were interviewed on radio and by
shown with members of the Bermuda Baha'i community during their visit to the island April 3-9.
newspapers.
Their visit helped infuse new life into the Bermudian Baha'i community as Mr. Robarts emphasized again and again that victories can be won if the friends place their trust in the power of prayer and Baha'u'llah.
In some parishes in Bermuda the prospect of re-forming or reelecting the Spiritual Assemblies this year seemed bleak. However, five of the six existing Assemblies were re-formed at Ridvan.
European Youth
A European Baha'i Youth Conference will be held September 6-10 at Fiesch, Switzerland.
The conference, sponsored by the Continental Board of Counsellors and organized by the National Spiritual Assembly of Switzerland, is for youth from 15
BRAZIL
Conference set
to 25/30 years of age.
The conference theme is “Turning to Baha'u'llah.” A Hand of the Cause of God and three Counsellors will be present.
Activities will include speeches, music, recreation, informal evenings and films.
Valid Baha'i credentials are obligatory. Close seekers (except those from the Middle East) will be accepted if they carry a letter of recommendation from a Baha't institution.
Registrations must be received by August 15. For information, contact the International Goals Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
Auction in Spokane
Between 40 and 45 people participated in an auction February 24 sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is -of Spokane County, Washington, Commissioner's District No. 2 that raised $739 for the International Baha'i Fund.
Items offered for sale ranged from paintings, out-of-print books. and Baha'i jewelry to handcrafted toys and stuffed animals, homemade jams and jellies, fresh
fruits, and dried flower arrangements.
[Page 11]IGC: PIONEERING
duly 1980
Beautiful Bermuda nears National Assembly status
By MORRIS TAYLOR JR.
Bermuda has been described as a beautiful gem, an_ inviting cluster of sparkling islands situated hundreds of miles from its closest neighbors.
Its landscape, with an abundance of soft pink beaches and semi-tropical verdure, is indeed lovely, and is exceeded only by the genuine warmth and kindliness of the Bermudians themselves.
A LITTLE MORE than two decades ago, the first Spiritual Assembly in Bermuda was formed.
Today, the lovely islands, whose population ‘s nearly 60,000 boast an active and dedicated Baha'i community that is destined to form a National Spiritual Assembly at the first National Convention of Bermuda on April 24-26, 1981.
There is much work to be done to prepare for that momentous occasion. Many of these tasks can be completed only with the help of pioneers and traveling teachers.
The Baha'i community of Bermuda is presently under the jurisdiction of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the U.S.
Eleven localities in Bermuda are open to the Faith, with five Spiritual Assemblies (seven are needed by Ridvan 1981).
There is a Bermuda Teaching Committee, appointed annually by the U.S. National Spiritual Assembly. Several members of the Bermudian Baha'i community have had the bounty of pilgrimage, pioneering or traveling teaching, and a group regularly attends the U.S. National Convention.
BERMUDA IS about 21 square miles in size—the most northerly group of coral islands in the world—and lies 700 miles southeast of New York City and about 900 miles east of the
Carolinas.
It is a British colony with a governor appointed by the Queen, and its own elected parliament.
While the British influence is pervasive, the Bermudian culture is a mixture of Caribbean, English and American influences.
Racially, the population is primarily black, white, or Portuguese, with a small number of Chinese and East Indians. Interracial marriages are not uncommon, and Bermudians are a handsome people who enjoy good health and have a keen sense of humor.
The level of literacy is high, and the people are generally welleducated and knowledgeable in current affairs.
Bermuda's main source of revenue is tourism. Large numbers of visitors, mostly American tourists, are attracted by the beautiful scenery and mild climate.
FOR THIS REASON, the large majority of jobs are in touristrelated fields.
The cost of living in Bermuda is high, while housing is scarce and therefore relatively expensive.
Most commercial products are imported, many from the U.S., and one can expect to pay a few dollars more for even everyday household goods. Grocery items are significantly higher than in the U.S.
While the cost of living is high, the standard of living is comparable. Bermudians are extremely industrious, many of them working at two or more jobs, and most are considered middie class economically
As for jobs themselves, Bermudian labor is always preferred, and unless one has an extremely desirable skill it is difficult to find employment.
Also, foreign employment is always subject to approval by the government. But despite these
More than 200 attend Texas ‘Pioneer Jubilee’ celebration
More than 200 Baha'is and some seekers attended a “Pioneer Jubilee” celebration May 3 that was planned and sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of Carrollton, Texas, as a farewell party for a group of believers who were planning to pioneer.
The guest speaker was Douglas Allen, a staff member in the International Goals Committee office at the Baha'i National Center.
MR. ALLEN, a former pioneer to Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) and Swaziland, described the steps necessary to prepare for pioneering and told something of the pioneering experience itself.
The program included the introduction of each member of a group of eight prospective pioneers to South Africa, Nigeria, Puerto Rico, Ecuador and Costa Rica. Slides of each of the countries were shown.
The prospective pioneers remained on stage to participate in “Pioneer Squares,” a questionand-answer session based on the format of a TV game show.
All former pioneers in the audience were presented with flowers by Howard and Joanne Menking who are Knights of Baha'u'llah to the Cape Verde Islands.
Thirty-eight members of 18 Spiritual Assemblies in the Dallas area attended a discussion the following day on how Assemblies can help prospective pioneers.
Mr. Allen participated in that discussion and also conducted a fireside organized by the Baha'i Club at Southern Methodist University.
Such activities as these at the local level, said Mr. Allen, can provide a powerful and effective tool for winning the goals of the Seven Year Plan.
obstacles, foreigners seem to be able to settle and find employment in the islands.
EXEMPT COMPANIES are always in need of accountants and those with good secretarial skills. There is a U.S. naval base that offers opportunities for employment, especially for skilled labor (mechanics, electricians, etc.) or for certified school teachers.
Autos, scarce in Bermuda as recently as a few decades ago, are common now; however, securing a car can be a costly undertaking for the foreigner unless he is working at a job that makes its use necessary.
Autos are not brought to the island by private owners, nor can they be rented. Mopeds and motor scooters are plentiful, both for rental and purchase, and are probably the most common means of transportation throughout Bermuda.
Non-Bermudian children can attend the naval base school or pay a tuition and attend one of the several fine elementary or second: ary schools.
The Bermuda College, similar in function to an American junior college, also is available.
‘A popular song written by a Bermudian is entitled: ‘Bermuda. Is Another World.”
On entering Bermuda, one is given a two- to three-week visitor's permit. Anyone who wishes to remain longer must apply to the Department of Immigration for an extension, which usually runs for six months and is not difficult to obtain.
To obtain permanent resident status, one must be retired and able to prove a yearly income of $50,000.
A group of Bermudian Baha'is with pioneers and traveling teachers is shown following the completion of an
Doug Allen (left), a member of the In ternational Goals Committee staff, chats with Dodie and Bobby
the
Freeman of “Pioneer Jubilee’ May 3 in Carrollton, Texas.
Dallas during
The physical beauty of this island paradise will undoubtedly be surpassed by an everlasting spiritual radiance as the Community of the Most Great Name in Bermuda continues to move forward, fulfilling its destined role as yet another firm pillar supporting the Supreme Institution of the Faith, the Universal House of Justice.
Assembly Development Program in September 1978
Radio training course slated in Puerto Rico
The National — Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Puerto Rico is sponsoring a four-week, 140-hour course August 4-29 designed to train a group of Bahalis in the fundamentals of radio broadcasting, programming, production, management and government licensing, along with a special emphasis on Baha'i radio.
The course will be taught by Dean K. Stephens, a certified senior broadcast engineer with more than 21 years of experience in radio broadcasting and engineering
Mr. Stephens is technical adviser to the Universal House of Justice Audio-Visual Department and the designer of Radio Baha'i facilities in Ecuador.
Graduates of the course will receive a certificate detailing all the various elements covered. In addition, U.S. citizens will be prim: ed to pass the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) operator's license examinations, which are given weekly in Puerto
Rico. ss
The cost of the course is $300, with a $50 deposit required by July 9.
For further information, please
write to the International Goals Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091, or phone 312-256-4400
[Page 12]HOUSE OF WORSHIP
The American Baha’i
‘Family of Man’ series explores
contemporary living problems
“Wait ‘Til Your Father Gets Home!" was the title of one of the workshops presented during a program entitled “The Mother,” one of four held in May and spon: sored by the Baha’i House of Worship Activities Committee as part of its service-oriented ‘Family of Man” series.
The other programs in the series were “The Father,” “The Child,” and-“The Community.”
THE “FAMILY of Man” series was designed to deal with issues facing modern families. It ad
- dressed difficult situations that
often confront the father, the mother, the child and the community, and explored ways of responding to these situations in light of Baha'i principles.
The situations addressed included balancing outside commitments with home responsibilities (“Is daddy gone again?"); the working mother (‘‘Super-mom"); sibling rivairy (“You always liked him better! and family recreation (‘There's
do around here"). invited as keynote
speakers included Jack Lee of
Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin (‘The
Father”), Dr. Ann Schoonmaker of
Eliot, Maine (“The Mother"), Dr.
Khalil A. Khavari of Bayside,
Wisconsin (The Child”) and Dr.
John Bustard of Urbana, Illinois
(“The Community”).
To publicize the programs, more than 600 letters were sent to local community organizations and prominent citizens, posters were
Farsi, Arabic programs
Toward the end of 1979 the Baha'i House of Worship Activities Committee established a special committee to develop and conduct devotional programs in the native languages of Baha'u'llah.
These programs are now being held at the House of Worship once every Baha'i month on the Sunday following the Nineteen Day Feast.
The programs, which run from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m., are presented in Farsi and Arabic. EES
Baha'i House of Worship Wilmette, Illinois
Summer Hours: May 15 to October 14 Auditorium 6:30 a.m. to 10 a.m. (Open for Worship) 10 am. to 10 p.m. (Open to Visitors) Visitors Center in Foundation Hall 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Book Shop 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sunday Activities Devotional Program—3 p.m. Public Meeting—3:45 p.m. Information on transportation, food and lodging is available from the Baha'i House of Worship Activities Office, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
put up in store windows, flyers were distributed to visitors at the House of Worship, and specially designed invitations were sent by Baha'is in the Chicago area to friends and acquaintances. Quarter-page ads appeared in many papers in the northern Chicago area.
IN RESPONSE to one of the letters, the village manager of Glencoe, Illinois, wrote to the House of Worship: “| want to commend you and the Baha'is for sponsoring these ‘family’ programs. | have circulated your letter and leaflet
among Village staff members in the hope that they may be able to attend one or more of these sessions.”
The Baha'i House of Worship Activities Committee would like to make sample “Family of Man” materials available to local Baha'i communities who have a desire to sponsor similar programs in their area.
For a packet of these materials, please write to “Family of Man Materials,” Baha'i House of Wor ship Activities Office, 112 Linden ©
Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
Or. Khalil Khavari (right of center, facing camera) leads a workshop on parent-child relationships held May 10 at the Baha'i House of Worship in Wilmette, Iilinois. The workshop was
part of a series of public programs entitled ‘The Family of Man’ that dealt with issues facing modern families. The sessions were held on four Saturday afternoons in May.
Panel debate probes alcohol use, abuse
Upward of 150 people, more than half of whom were not Baha’is, attended a panel discussion April 12 entitled “Would There Be Advantages to an Alcohol-Free Society?” at the Baha'i House of Worship in Wilmette, Illinois.
The discussion, sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of Wilmette, was moderated by Dr. Magdalene M. Carney, assistant
secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly.
THE PANEL consisted of three members of nearby Evanston Hospital's Alcoholism Intervention Service, who discussed the implications of alcohol abuse as seen from the medical, social and youth viewpoints, and Mrs. Amy Seidel Marks, a Baha'i from Wilmette, who spoke about
alcohol's effect on the human soul.
Mrs. Marks compared alcohol consumption to such barbaric Practices as human sacrifice, slavery, and the killing of female babies—all of which were socially acceptable at the time they were practiced. F
She quoted Dr. David Smith, an
expert on fetal alcoholism, who has said that if alcohol were introduced into society today, the Food and Drug Administration would ban it.
A brief question-and-answer session followed the formal discussion, during which suggestions were offered for helping someone who is an alcoholic.
He has no doubt of spiritual power emanating from the ‘silent teacher
To a man who has the auditorium at the Baha’i House of Worship in Wilmette, Illinois, all to himself for several hours each day, there is no doubt about the powerful spiritual influence exerted by the “silent teacher.” Friends and co-workers at the Baha'i National Center say that Ira Burgett brings so much love to
Jra Burgett, a man who loves his work, keeps the floors in the auditorium of the Baha'i House of
his work that the results of that love are readily apparent.
Mr. Burgett's janitorial responsibilities include the House of Worship’s auditorium as well as offices downstairs in Foundation Hall.
IN THE AUDITORIUM, he keeps the floors looking like glass and
Worship in Wilmette, Ilinois, spark ling like glass,
the brass railings shining brightly.
Mr. Burgett begins his working day in Foundation Hall after the House of Worship has been closed to the public.
Later, when he moves upstairs to the auditorium, he begins by offering prayers from a favorite chair near the rear of the large sanctuary.
“| don’t bother to turn the lights ‘on then,” he says. “I rather enjoy the atmosphere that is created in the darkened auditorium.”
Mr. Burgett, who became a Baha’i last year, began working at the National Center eight years ago. Before that, he spent 10 years working as a hospital orderly and 17 years mining coal in West Virginia.
It was Mr. Burgett’s son who suggested, in 1972, that he join him in Wilmette.
“EVERYBODY has his own thing to do,” says Mr. Burgett, “and | think I've found mine right here.
“There is a certain power to this place. So many prayers are offered here.
“If you're ever feeling low or depressed, you have only to sit down here for a few moments and say some prayers. Believe me, something will happen!”
As one who is alone in the House of Worship on a daily basis, Mr. Burgett has had a chance to become more aware than most other people of the building's extraordinary power and attraction.
House of Worship sees 41 couples united in marriage
Among the many activities held at the Baha’i House of Worship during the year are weddings.
In 1979 a total of 41 weddings took place, uniting 26 Baha'i and 15 non-Baha’i couples.
All those who are married at the House of Worship must have a Baha'i ceremony. Twenty Local Spiritual Assemblies officiated at these ceremonies.
Anyone who is interested in information on marriage at the House of Worship may write to Marriage Information, Baha'i House of Worship Activities Office, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
Senator, mom visit House of Worship
Where does a U.S. Senator take his mother on Mother's Day?
In the case of Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois, as well as many other residents of the northern Chicago suburbs, the answer is for a walk in the gardens at the Baha'i House of Worship in Wilmette.
Sen. Percy is a native of the northern Chicago area. His mother lives only three blocks from the House of Worship.
Coming! Paper edition of Memories of ‘Abdu'l-Baha.
[Page 13]FEATURES
duly 1980
If you've ever seen television reruns of the “Our Gang” comedies from the early 1920's, you'll probably remember a young black girl named Farina whose pigtails Stood straight up whenever she became frightened.
The director accomplished that bit of early movie magic by means of “invisible wires and pulleys, according to Mrs. Lucille Brown, a former child movie actress who played the part of Farina for about five years.
TODAY, MRS. BROWN is a Baha'i who lives in Houston, Texas. She embraced the Faith five years ago after readina Baha'i books and attending firesides in Buffalo, New York, where she served on the Local Spiritual
Assembly before moving to Texas. Before becoming a Baha'i she
Lucille Brown was about five years old when she began playing the part of Farina in the silent ‘Our Gang comedies of the early 1920s. This photo, one of only five that Mrs. Brown has of herself during her movie days, was taken by matrons at the California orphanage where she lived while pertorming as a child movie star
Galinkins profiled in magazine article
George and Carolyn Galinkin, Baha'is from Bozeman, Montana, are mentioned with several other couples in the April 22 issue of Family Circle magazine in an article entitled ‘‘Someone for Everyone,” about “families that open their hearts and their homes to children with special needs.”
The Galinkins, who have one daughter of their own, have adopted six children. Three are Mexican-American, one is a Native American, and another is of black and Mexican-American parentage.
Although the article does not mention the Faith, the writer speaks of the Galinkins’ belief that “their children are learning valuable lessons from being part of a large, diverse family.”
had been a member of several Protestant churches, and at one time had even studied to become a Roman Catholic.
“But there always seemed to be something missing,” Mrs. Brown says of her previous religious experiences.
“L can walk into a room where there is a group of people who are not Baha'is,” she says, “‘and they are pleasant, considerate and smiling.
“But when | leave that room and enter another where there are only Baha'is, it hits me at the door! That loving feeling; that's what I've found in the Baha’i Faith.”
The former child star recalls that there was an absence of racial prejudice among the children in the “Our Gang” cast.
“WE NEVER looked at each other's color,” she says. “We were just having a good time.”
Two incidents, she says, stand her memory of those early days.
Once, she recalls, she and the gang were let loose in a “haunted house” with sheets floating everywhere. She laughed and laughed on that set.
On another occasion, Producer Hal'Roach Sr. let the kids go wild in a department store while the cameras rolled. “Mr. Roach just paid for all the damage we did,” says Mrs. Brown
The producer had discovered young Lucille in a Marysville, California, orphanage. Her show business career had started shortly before that with her mother, a hula dancer who used the name “Princess Kalimah.”
Before she was six, Lucille and her mother were part of a carnival in which they both performed.
“She did her Hawaiian thing,” says Mrs. Brown, “while | did a buck 'n wing with a minstrel show. | nearly danced myself to death; wore out five pairs of shoes in on: ly a little time.”
LUCILLE WAS placed in the orphanage after her mother was involved in a serious accident and State officials could not find any of her relatives.
The youngster danced every night for the other children at the orphanage. It was during one of those performances that she was seen by the producer, Hal Roach.
“The next thing | knew,” she recalls, “a matron at the orphanage was driving me into Hollywood all the time, where I'd be turned loose with the other kids in the gang. We'd sort of do our own thing while someone was filming us. Then they'd cut and splice what we did until they had something they liked.”
It was in Hollywood that Lucille was nicknamed “Babe.” She was the second child to play Farina; the first had been a boy.
“They didn't get rid of the first Farina,” she says. “They just kind of worked me in. While we were both in the show, | was called “Baby Lucille.’ That's where | got the name ‘Babe.’ | just dropped
the ‘y’ as | grew up.” Babe was about 10 years old
when her mother and stepfather
claimed her from the orphanage.
THEY WENT ON the road together, playing tent shows, medicine shows and carnivals. Babe and her stepfather did the soft-shoe, the cakewalk and a waltz clog. Babe also learned to tap dance and sing.
When she later went to live with her grandmother in Des Moines, lowa, show business was not neglected. She began high school while also dancing and singing in shows around town.
After school, she joined a circus, learned how to ride elephants, and trained to become a trapeze artist. She also worked shows as a dancer, blues singer and contortionist.
Mrs. Brown appeared with singers such as B.B. King and Bobby Blue Bland. During World War II she performed at USO camps in the Pacific. At Guam and Bougainville, she had to parachute to her performances because her plane was under enemy fire
In more recent years Mrs. Brown has hosted radio shows in Memphis, Tennessee, and Buffalo, New York.
She has been a VISTA volunteer, has attended schools in Ghana and Nigeria, has worked in communications for a city redevelopment project, and has been a voting booth inspector.
FOUR YEARS AGO Mrs. Brown and her daughter, Gloria, were graduated together from Buffalo State College. Mrs. Brown then went on to earn a master’s degree in communications.
Her life has not been without ordeals. Neither she nor her mother received any of the money she earned as a child actress. All of it went to the orphanage, where Mrs. Brown remembers having to sleep in a room alone, away from the other children.
As a young performer doing one-nighters, she and other members of the troupe sometimes went onstage hungry because their manager had disappeared with the ticket money. Her first marriage, at age 15, ended unhappily
Mrs. Brown lost nearly all of her show business memorabilia in 1949 when she and other cast members of the New York-based “Sun Tan Revue” were involved in a bus accident.
The charter bus left a highway and plunged into a river in Mississippi. Mrs. Brown was pinned beneath a seat, but managed to free herself.
Another time, she was injured in a train wreck while on the road with a show.
RECENT YEARS have brought more health-related problems. She developed heart trouble, and was hospitalized at one time for diabetes.
Since becoming a Baha'i, says Mrs. Brown, a prayer book is her
constant companion. don't go anywhere without it,” she says.
Mrs. Brown says she prays on buses, in airplanes, in restaurants, and in busy downtown Houston. She credits the power of Baha'i prayers with keeping her from becoming a victim of her personal tests and trials.
“My religion,” she says, “has given me peace of mind.”
Her career as a child movie actress now has little meaning for this show business veteran.
“That's not the big thing in my life,” she says. “What is important to me is that | am a Baha'i and how | feel about the Baha’i Faith.”
Ex-child star finds Faith, peace of mind
MRS. LUCILLE BROWN
House of Worship facelift sees nine sides re-roofed
All of the Baha'i House of Worship's nine sides were recently reroofed under a continuing program of preventive building maintenance,
The job began with the roofing of one three-level section of the Temple. This was completed in the spring of 1979. Four additional sections were completed by a professional roofing firm in April of this year, in time for the Baha'i National Convention.
The remaining sections of roofing were completed by early June.
THE DECISION regarding which sections of the roof would be replaced first was based on the condition of each, according to Mark Eaton, assistant to the secretary for National Center services.
The re-roofing project, he explained, was completed in phases to keep within budgetary limits.
The widest roof area at the House of Worship is found on the lower, or gallery, level where the roofers were able to set up their heating kettle for the tar and for the temporary storage of roofing supplies.
Buckets of hot tar were hoisted ‘on ropes from the gallery level to roofers on the higher clerestory roof
At the clerestory level, some 109 feet above ground level, the view is magnificent but the roof is quite narrow, requiring the roofers to work in close quarters and with extra caution.
The highest roof sections are located just above the windows of the clerestory. They are narrow, metal-covered areas that must be re-soldered periodically.
THESE THREE roof levels are best seen in aerial photos of the House of Worship.
The roofing work has been scheduled at times other than during the warmer summer months to guard against accidental spills of hot tar on the cast-concrete ornamentation of the Temple, according to Mr. Eaton.
“Tar is more difficult to remove in hot weather,” he explains. “In colder weather it solidifies quickly and can be more easily removed in the event of an accident.”
CONFERENCES
The American Baha’i
New facilities, superb speakers key 21st Green Lake gathering
Nineteen years constitute a “vahid,” of “unity,” a time to begin anew.
So as the Green Lake Conference Planning Committee prepares for this 20th year, marking the 21st annual conference at the lovely American Baptist Assembly facility in Green Lake, Wisconsin, there'll be some changes made.
For one thing, the facilities themselves are being remodeled prior to the 1980 conference, scheduled for September 12-14.
ALREADY SET to appear at Green Lake are Continental Counsellor Angus Cowan; Glenford . Mitchell, secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly; Auxiliary Board member Stephen Birkland; and Stephen Jackson, assistant to the National Treasurer.
Other speakers also are expected to be on hand to address the central theme, “Our Brightest Visions ... Our Highest Hopes.”
In response to the call of the Seven Year Plan for the nurturing of a deeper understanding of Baha'i family life, the encouragement of Baha'i youth, and the education of Baha'i children, much of this year’s conference is being dedicated to the needs of the family.
A series of workshops and brainstorming sessions dealing with family finances, personal transformation, career planning, understanding what goes on at the Baha'i National Center, nurturing children, keeping marriages together, prayer and meditati and being a single adult Baha'i is planned for Saturday afternoon.
Any two of these workshops can be chosen, or time can.be spent relaxing, exploring the conference site, or visiting with friends.
A youth “coffee house” will be open during conference hours. There will be a minimum of structured programs and a maximum of
inging, instrumental “jam sesgetting acquainted, and exchanging ideas.
CHILDREN’S CLASS facilities are exceptional. Last year Judge Dorothy Nelson, treasurer of the National Assembly, praised them as “the finest children’s classes | have ever seen at any conference anywhere.”
If funds are available, a number of teachers from Baha'i schools will attend the 1980 conference to train for administering similar programs elsewhere.
There will be a complete cooperative nursery for children up to age 3. Last year there were 180 children from 3 to 11 years, which resulted in an overflow situation.
To avoid such difficulties and to guarantee each child a place in the program, it is now absolutely required that children in that age group be pre-registered with Bud
and Victoria Polk (as well as with the Green Lake ABA).
To pre-register children ages 3 to 11, simply fill out the form accompanying this article and return it by August 30 to the Polks.
Children who are not preregistered will not be eligible to attend classes. Each family will be responsible for a two-hour commitment to help in children’s classes or in the nursery.
ADDITIONAL classrooms and teachers will be included in this year’s program. People who have special skills are being recruited to help staff them.
If you are a teacher, aide, naturalist, outdoor educator, recreation leader, dancer, musician, puppeteer, clown, juggler, poet, artist, or if you do mime or have other talents you'd like to share with children, please write to the Polks, or phone them between 6 and 9 p.m. (CDT) at 312-733-0192.
Children must have name tags before entering classes or the nursery. Those with nursery-age children should also bring whatever is necessary to care for them: toys, bottles, diapers, blankets, or pillows. Be sure to label everything.
Write out any special instruc: tions concerning sensitivity to food, allergies, or medication. Bring porta-cribs if possible. For Parents with babes in arms, a room with piped-in audio will be located near the main conference room.
There are, of course, many other activities planned for the weekend, including an outstanding line-up of Baha'i musicians and entertainers.
The book store at Green Lake always features a farge selection of Baha'i literature and audiovisual materials including the newest releases.
AS IN PREVIOUS years, attendance at Green Lake is likely to approach the maximum number that can be accommodated, 1,400 to 1,500. Delay in registering could lead to disappointment.
Facilities fees are $3.50 for children (ages 3 to 11) and $6 for adults. Fees are not included in room rates. zi
Everyone coming on the grounds must register both with the Green Lake ABA and with Baha'i registration and pay the facilities fee, whether they pian to attend the sessions or not. (If you can't afford the facilities fee, please contact a member of the Green Lake Baha'i Conference Planning Committee.)
The conference site, in southcentral Wisconsin about three miles west of the city of Green Lake on state Highway 23, is a secluded facility of some 1,000 acres of rolling hills and woods, all accessible only through a private gate.
Campsites in the woods are available for $10 a site. Accommodation rates are separate from meal costs, and you may buy only those meais you wish. However, meal commitments must be made upon registration.
Room costs are $11 to $25 per person per night. There are other rooms, with private bath, for $9 (four per room) to $22 (single) per person per night.
Rooms with semi-private baths are $11 (three per room) to $22 (single) per person per night. Rooms with a central bath are $9 (four per room) to $18 (single) per person per night.
Master Charge and VisaBankAmericards are accepted for housing.
Those attending the conference will have access to the grounds, lake, golf course, tennis courts, marked nature trails, and hiking trails. There are bicycles for rent, and an indoor swimming pool.
Children enjoy singing during one of the sessions of a Spring Institute
held March 28-30 at Potosi, Missouri.
Hand of Cause Khadem charms Missouri friends
The Hand of the Cause of God Zikrullah Khadem delighted the more than 200 people who participated March 28-30 in a Baha'i weekend institute at Trout Lodge, a lovely conference facility near Potosi, Missouri, with charming stories of the beloved Guardian, Shoghi Effendi, and the precious hours spent with him in the Holy Land.
“Heralds of His Name” was the theme of the conference at which Auxiliary Board member Ronna Santoscoy spoke on “The Seven Year Plan—Unity, Radiance, Steadfastness and Good Reputation,” and then conducted a workshop in which these qualities were discussed in small groups.
“TEACHING—the Greatest Gift” was the subject of a presentation by Auxiliary Board member Darrell Borland.
Others on the program were Dr. Ebrahim Amanat who spoke on “Love,” and Douglas Ruhe who discussed ‘The Baha'i Family—ideal and Reality.”
The adult program was sup: plemented by an excellent
PRE-REGISTRATION FOR CHILDREN’S CLASSES
CHILD'S NAME AGE BIRTH DATE
PARENT'S NAME:
PARENT'S ADDRESS AT GREEN LAKE:
PLEASE LIST ANY SPECIAL NEEDS YOUR CHILD MAY HAVE (emotional-physical-learning disabilities)
CHILD WILL ATTEND __
__SAT. MORNING
_____SAT. AFTERNOON
DO NOT WRITE IN THIS SPACE
teacher
CHILD'S BAHA'I EXPERIENCES:
PLEASE LIST ANY SPECIAL MEDICAL OR DIET RESTRICTIONS:
____._SUN. MORNING
RETURN BY AUGUST 30 TO BUD AND VICTORIA POLK, 924 W. 19TH ST., CHICAGO, ILL., 60608
children’s program for about 50 children with classes and activities for five age groups.
A varied program for youth ages 15-18 included presentations by Mr. Khadem and the Auxiliary Board members.
Music and devotions featured songs by “The Sounds of Light” and “Daybreak,” musical groups from the St. Louis area, and Mrs. Beverly Ruhe of Evanston, Illinois.
The institute, sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of Rock Hill, Missouri, drew Baha'is and
seekers from 46 localities in five states.
Many of the participants expressed the hope that gatherings Such as this would become an annual event for Missouri and the
Mr. Khadem set as key speaker at Massanetta
The Hand of the Cause of God Zikrullah Khadem will be the featured speaker at the second Massanetta Springs Baha'i Conference, to be held over the Labor Day weekend, August 29-31, near Harrisonburg, Virginia, in the lovely Shenandoah Valley.
Other speakers at the conference, whose theme is “The Challenging Requirements of the Present Hour,” will include Auxiliary Board members Javidukht Khadem and Robert Harris and Dr. Wilma Brady, chairman of the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of New York City.
There will be special. sessions
for Persian believers and youth.
Nearly 700 Baha'is attended the first Massanetta Springs conference last year.
The facilities fee of $42 includes meals and housing. For more information, contact the Spiritual Assembly of Staunton, P.O. Box 421, Staunton, VA 2440
[Page 15]NATIONAL CENTER
July 1980
15
Community Administration serves Baha’i standards
Baha'is who work in the Secretariat, the executive offices of the National Spiritual Assembly, are in a good position to witness the growing maturity of the American Baha'i community.
From his vantage point in the Department of Community Administration, Dr. Geoffry Marks has seen “quite a bit of growth” in Assemblies during his three years at the National Center in Wilmette, Illinois.
“| THINK there has been a real maturation on the part of many Local Assemblies,” he says. “We have several hundred Assemblies ‘that | believe are quite mature and Strong. If the National Assembly were somehow unable to communicate with the community, about 500 or more Local Assemblies would simply keep on functioning as before.”
The Department of Community Administration is one of several departments in the Secretariat including Personnel, National Center Services, and Public Affairs.
The National Spiritual Assembly has defined two main areas of responsibility for the Office of Community Administration: (1) dealing with violations of Baha'i law and standards of con
DR. GEOFFRY W. MARKS
A staff meeting at the Department of
Community Administration helps set ing Baha'i laws and principles to November 197: Please See COMMUNITY Page 20
duct that are referred to the National Assembly—problems that impede the unity of the community—and (2) the education, guidance and strengthening of Local Spiritual Assemblies.
The department also oversees the coordination of arrangements for pilgrimages.
Everything carried out by the nine-member department is done on behalf of the National Spiritual Assembly and in accordance with its policies and guidelines.
“Over the years the National Assembly has developed a body of policy based on its experience in handling cases,” explains Dr. Marks, who heads the department.
“THESE GUIDELINES and
policies have been explained to the staff, and clear lines of responsibility have been given so that we know-exactly what our duties are and where our boundaries lie. Our work is carefully reviewed,” he adds. “We consult frequently with the secretary of the National Assembly and receive instructions from him or from the assistant secretary.”
One indication of the growing maturity of Local Assemblies in the U.S. is the fact that the National Assembly is becoming more a body of review and appeal, and less a body that takes action on local matters.
Says Dr. Marks: “Gone are the days when a Local Assembly would write to us and say, ‘We have a problem. Here are the facts. We refer this to you for handling.’ The National Assembly is no longer the Local Assembly for the entire U.S.”
Local Assemblies are now expected to deal directly with matters within their jurisdiction.
“If it's a local problem, the Assembly has to resolve it,” says Or. Marks. ‘“‘The National Assembly may give the Local Assembly advice and general guidelines, but the final responsibility rests with the Assembly.”
THE NATIONAL Assembly, he Says, relies on the Local Assembly for well-conceived recommendations in cases where the Local Assembly has done all it can, and action by the National Assembly,
the direction for the day's activities.
such as the imposition of sanctions, seems appropriate.
Questions, reports and problems arrive at the Department of Community Administration at a rate of 80 to 110 letters a week.
They cover a full range of human problems, and are reported by Local Assemblies, individuals, District Teaching Committees, other National Assemblies, and the Continental Board of Counsellors.
Another indicator of the maturity of Local Assemblies can be seen in the nature of most problems now referred to the National Center.
“We rarely receive questions on subjects that are dealt with in Guidelines for Local Spiritual Assemblies,” says Dr. Marks.
“Some questions are routine, and the responses are obvious. Most of them, however, are much more involved and require careful Study, consultation, and reference to the National Assembly or its officers.”
The objectives in dealing with problems in the Baha'i community, according to Dr. Marks, are two-fold.
THE FIRST, he says, is to provide the proper guidance based on Baha'i principles. The second is to educate the individual or Assembly in a spiritual as well as a practical way, ‘so that people's sights are uplifted, their vision is broadened, and they are better able to transcend the immediate problem in which they are involved.”
Mrs. Eleanore Conkling is responsible for keeping track of all correspondence assigned to the department by the National Spiritual Assembly. She acknowledges it, distributes it to the appropriate staff members, and makes a record of the outgoing correspondence.
Three other staff members are assigned to specific geographical areas. They are Miss Sandy Egerer, Mrs. Anna Lee Strasburg,
_ and Miss Janet Murphy.
Miss Ouida Coley does the typing for the office, which amounts to as many as 200 items a week.
“Every day we appreciate her speed and accuracy,” says Dr. Marks.
HOW DO MEMBERS of the department feel about their work in dealing each day with the probtems of Baha'is?
“One not only sees the improper things Baha'is may be doing,” says Mrs. Strasburg, “one also sees the results of mature Local Assemblies and of struggling Assemblies that are plugged into the spiritual Source.”
“It's especially rewarding,” adds Miss Egerer, “when you see someone who is really being helped.”
The Guardian, says Dr. Marks, wrote that the World Order of Baha'u'llah would develop in harmony with the application of Baha'i law.
“We are in the process of apply Staff members Anna Lee Strasburg (left) and Sandy Egerer put their
everyday problems,” he adds, “and this means we are directly involved in the spiritual development of the community.”
In responding to the need to strengthen Local Assemblies through education and guidance, the Department of Community Administration pays special attention to new Assemblies because of their eagerness to learn.
ONE STAFF member who works full-time on strengthening Assemblies is Mrs. Carol Allen, who describes her efforts as “preventive rather than remedial.”
Strengthening Assemblies, she says, is essentially a deepening process, and that means it involves teaching.
Mrs. Allen answers questions from Assemblies about the Seven Year Plan and travels to talk with them about their role in the Plan.
Help is also offered to Assemblies that are going through the incorporation process.
Another important function of the department is arranging for representatives of the National
Assembly to visit Local Assemblies for a variety of reasons.
It takes most of Mrs. Mary Kurrus’ time to read copies of Local Assembly minutes sent to the National Assembly.
MRS. KURRUS, herself the secretary of a Local Assembly, reads minutes from all Assemblies except those in Cook County, Illinois, and others that are read by members of the National Assembly or other members of the Department of Community Administration.
Mrs. Kurrus also sees that the National Assembly's guidelines concerning the formation and recognition of all Local Assemblies are carried out
She maintains records of Assembly formations, losses, and restorations.
The Department of Community Administration came into being following the stroke that disabled Miss Charlotte Linfoot, former assistant secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly, in
heads together to work on a community problem.
Carol Allen spends much of her time helping to strengthen Local Spiritual Assemblies.
“The loss of Miss Linfoot was a tremendous blow to the National Assembly and the Secretariat,” says Dr. Marks.
“Miss Linfoot did a phenomenal amount of work that no one has been able to equal. As a result of her absence, the volume of unanswered correspondence grew so much that by the summer of 1977, we had some 1,400 pieces. It was a nightmare for the National Assembly, our department, and the community as a whole.
“IT TOOK a long time to chip away at that backlog. Now, however, we are essentially caught up and can respond to about 75 per cent of the mail within three weeks.”
With regard to pilgrimage, the National Assembly is the liaison between the Universal House of Justice and American believers who plan to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land,
Mrs. Patricia Spittal is the staff member responsible for seeing that the guidelines established by
[Page 16]PUBLICATIONS
The American Baha’i 16
Children, youth well served by Trust’s spring harvest
“The largest number of new materials for children and youth ever\ introduced by the Baha'i Publishing Trust at one time” is how Or. Betty Fisher, general editor at the Publishing Trust, describes its recent spring releases.
The first of these, My Baby Book, makes a welcome gift for new parents and is an excellent means for reinforcing a young child's Baha'i identity.
My Baby Book, handsomely illustrated in rainbow watercolors and interspersed with quotations from the Baha'i Writings, includes pages for such traditional information as details of birth, family tree, first pictures, medical records, and advances in physical, social and mental development.
In addition, it provides a page for a Baha’ birth certificate, and places in which to record milestones in the child's spiritual education and growth, including first community, first Feast, first Holy Day observance, and first prayer memorized.
The text for My Baby Book is by Deborah Christensen, with illustrations by David Cunningham. It is available in an 8 1/2 x 11-inch cloth-bound format (Catalog No. 7-52-53, $14.50)
Mrs. Christensen also provided the text for the four new Sunflower Books for Young Children, designed especially to help young Baha'i children,
mee
Sartones took tr Young Cran
especially 3- to 7-year-olds, learn something about being a Baha'i in @ way Suitable for their age.
Book 1, My Baha'i Book, helps the child understand his place in the worldwide Baha'i community, beginning with himself and his family and moving outward to his local and international communities.
Color photos of Baha'is around the world can be cut out, matched to the proper pages, and glued in place. The child is invited to color or paint certain pages and to draw pictures on others.
The book also focuses on God, the Central Figures of the Faith, and their message of love and ui ty.
Book 2, My Favorite Prayers and Passages, provides space for lettering in prayers and passages from the Writings and the date on which each was memorized. The border around each prayer or passage may be colored.
Book 3, God and Me, emphasizes worship through deeds and divine attributes, the effects of which can be seen in the physical world.
Book 4, Our Baha’i Holy Places, introduces the child to Baha'i Holy Places and Houses of Worship around the world and involves him in such activities as coloring, as well as matching and pasting photos of these Shrines.
The book, like the others in this series (four more of which are to be released later this year), helps parents and others working with children to build a sense of Baha'i identity in the child.
A “message to parents” inserted in each book contains general comments on the purposes of the Sunflower Books and Suggestions about their use.
The books may be ordered separately ($2.75 each NET) or as a set for $10 (Catalog No. 7-53-05)
The Birth of the Baha’i Faith (Catalog No. 7-52-55, $1.25 NET), a 23-page illustrated history in magazine format written by Debbie D. Wittman, brings vividly to life the Heroic Age of the Faith, 1844-1921
The attractive line drawings, based on historic photographs,
Publishing Trust to host seminar on writing, drawing for children
The Baha'i Publishing Trust is planning to hold a seminar September 20-22 for writers and illustrators of children’s books and other materials.
Those interested in attending the program should submit by August 15 a brief statement of their background and why they would like to attend the seminar.
SAMPLES of work, if they are available, should accompany the application.
The seminar will deal with a variety of topics of interest to those who are preparing materials for children and youth: the Baha’i writings, educational theory, and their implications for Baha'i
materials; developmental stages of children and youth; writing for children and youth; dos and don'ts for authors; text and illustrations; writing without crosscultural bias; and National Education Committee and Publishing Trust priorities for materials for children and youth.
There will be ample opportunity for questions and interaction with speakers and other participants. A limited number of openings is available.
Write to Writers’ Seminar, clo Or. Betty J. Fisher, general editor, Baha'i Publishing Trust, 415 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
and the clear straightforward text combine to produce an excellent deepening and teaching tool for youth and new Baha'is.
Another new release, Clementine and the Cage, designed for children from 7 to 9 years of age, tells the story of a bird who goes beyond the squabbling and limited vision of other birds.
The book is priced at $7.95 (Catalog No. 7-52-74)
Two of ‘Abdu'l-Baha’s prayers for children, “O God, guide me” and “O God! Educate these children” are reproduced on a new, attractively illustrated Children’s Prayers Card. _
The card, measuring 3 3/4 x 57/8 inches, makes an excellent teaching aid or gift for children, friends or family. It sells for 15 cents NET, or 10 for $1.05 NET (Catalog No. 7-03-25)
Come and Sing, a new children’s record album for preschoolers and older, includes 15 prayers and poems set to music. They cover reverence, obedience,
courtesy, truthfulness, patience,
love, and the equality of mankind. The album provides yet another
way of introducing children to
Baha'i concepts and of reinforc ing a sense of Baha'i identity. Come and Sing is priced at
5:
Happy Ayyam-i-Ha!, honored with an Angel Award as the best religious children’s album of 1979, features the Hand of the Cause of God William Sears, playing the part of a loving “grandfather” surrounded by children who ask questions and sing songs for him during an Ayyam-i-Ha party.
The delightful children, the soul-stirring music, and the lovery arrangements can be enjoyed throughout the year by children and adults alike.
Happy Ayyam-i-Ha! (Catalog No. 6-35-19) is priced at $10.
The wealth of new materials being released by the Publishing Trust represents “a first step in systematically publishing materials for Baha'i children and
youth,” says Dr. Fisher.
To order any of these materials, see your Baha'i community librarian or order directly from the Baha'i Publishing Trust, 415 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091. Please include 75 cents to cover postage and handling on orders under $5.
Archives seeks Tablets
The Baha'i Faith has been blessed with possessing its Sacred Writings in their original form.
However, this did not happen by accident. It was the result of persistent efforts by archives committees and concerned Baha'is to ensure their preservation in a Baha’i archives.
‘As the Guardian wrote through his secretary in 1929:
“THE WORK of collecting and publishing the Tablets is one of the most important tasks that this generation has to undertake, for upon it depends our true understanding of the Cause and its prin. ciples ...
“Shoghi Effendi firmly believes that only Tablets with the Master's signature and in the original tongue should be recognized.
“Any translations or copies of them fail from having real authority. This shows the importance of collecting the original Tablets that bear the Master's signature.”
Because some Tablets from ‘Abdu'l-Baha and letters from Shoghi Effendi have been lost or destroyed, often because nonBaha'i relatives did not realize their value, many Baha'is over the years have given their Tablets to the National Baha'i Archives for their protection.
However, the National Baha'i Archives Committee is aware that a number of Tablets of “Abdu'l-Baha or letters from the Guardian are still in the hands of individuals, and therefore appeals for the original or a photocopy to be sent to the National Baha'i Archives.
The Archives Committee would also like to know if any of the friends are aware of the existence of Tablets in the hands of nonBaha'i descendants of early Baha’is.
The Archives Committee is
seeking in particular Tablets addressed to Lilliam James, Arthur
P. Dodge, Arthur Agnew, Percy
Woodcock or Mrs. A.M. Bryant.
Any Tablets or information about Tablets should be sent to the National Baha'i Archives, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
for students of the ori Translated by
YES! Please send me
Ship to:
Bahiti Publishing Trust ae
A Traveler's Narrative. ‘Abdu’l-Baha’s engrossing account of
the rise of the Babi and Baha’i Faiths—e:
ins and history of these faiths.
Catalog No. 7-06-27. Cloth $8.75
ee ea ee ed copies of A Traveler's Narrative at 1 $8.75 each (postpaid). I enclose a check or money order for $________ made payable to the Baha’i Publishing Trust.
My name is (please print)
ential reading
ward G. Browne.
‘Street, Rural Route, or P-O. Box Number
ee eee
Gity State ‘Send order with payment to: pen Publishing Trust iden Avenue/Wilmette, IL 60091 ee on a oe ene oom oo ll
Zip
[Page 17]PROCLAMATION
duly 1980
Chester Kahn (lett) and David Villasefior look on as Franklin Kahn
Maryland
Thousands of Maryland residents heard of the Faith during a week-long “Maryland Baha'i Festival” April 12-20.
The festival also served to strengthen inter-community Baha'i relationships and the bonds betwéen Baha'is and church groups that participated in the activities, according to Allison Vaccaro, secretary of the Spiritual Assembly of Baltimore.
THE WIDE-RANGING proclamation effort featured addresses, music and dance performances, proclamations by the governor of Maryland and the mayor of Baltimore, university campus activities, and the distribution of Baha'i literature.
Dr. Dwight W. Allen, a member of the National Spiritual Assembly, was the speaker April 13 at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
His address, “Education for World Consciousness,” was arranged by the university's Baha'i Club as part of a weekly program series sponsored by the chaplain’s office at the university.
About one-half of the audience of approximately 100 who heard Dr. Allen speak were non-Baha’is.
Thirty minutes of in-depth ques
nangs one ot his paintings in
preparation for a showing of their art
March 17-21 in Phoenix, Arizona.
Art show helps proclaim Faith in Phoenix, Arizona
A showing of works of art by Baha'is Chester and Franklin Kahn and David Villasefor held March 17-21 at Thompson's Art Gallery in Phoenix, Arizona, provided several unique oppor
tunities to proclaim the Faith through the media and local firesides.
In anticipation of the showing, Matt Walker, a Baha'i who pro: duces the TV program “Get It On,” took a crew to videotape Chester Kahn on the Navajo Reservation in Houck, Arizona, and Franklin Kahn at his store, the Turquoise Hogan, in Flagstaff
One exciting result of the trip was that the cameraman was so impressed by the Kahns’ explana Baha’is sponsor week-long fest
tioning followed his address. Afterward, representatives of eight Spiritual Assemblies and Baha’i Groups attended a reception for Dr. Allen.
“Women, Hard Work and Peace” was the topic of a symposium April 13 conducted by Dr.
Baha'i musicians Randy Armstrong (left) of Dover, New Hampshire, and Ken LaRoche of Peterborough, New Hampshire, who perform under the name ‘Do’a,’ appeared three times in Baltimore and once in Westminster, Maryland, during the Maryland Baha'i Festival April 12-20. The two musicians created the song ‘Flight’ that was used as the title song for a record album now available from the Baha'i Publishing Trust.
Wilma Brady, chairman of the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of New York City, and Patricia Barnes, a member of the National Organization for Women (NOW).
THE SYMPOSIUM was sponsored by the Johns Hopkins University Baha'i Club.
A number of Spiritual Assemblies in the Baltimore area sponsored proclamation efforts during the festival week. One such effort was the placement of specially designed bookmarks in Public libraries to announce the coming festival activities.
Baha'i entertainers performed at a luncheon April 12 sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of Westminster. The Spiritual Assembly of Howard County sponsored a dinner April 19.
Members of the Spiritual Assembly of Annapolis, the state capital, received a proclamation from Maryland Gov. Harry Hughes officially recognizing the festival.
Baha'i musicians Randy Armstrong of Dover, New Hampshire, and Ken LaRoche of Peterborough, New Hampsire, who perform under the name “Do’a,” made several appearances during the festival.
Following one of their performances, in Baltimore, a reception was held in the parish hall of the First Unitarian Church, the same hall in which ‘Abdu'l-Baha spoke on November 11, 1912.
“Do'a” also appeared in an open square in downtown Baltimore under a large banner announcing the Baha'i festival week. A_ dozen believers distributed flyers and literature to a crowd estimated at around 500.
TWO MEMBERS of the Maryland Ballet Company participated in festival activities, performing at a Methodist church and at a senior citizens center.
“Immortality and Life After Death” was the title of a talk given at the Baltimore Baha'i Center during festival week.
“As a community,” says Mrs. Vaccaro, “we learned a lot from planning and putting on a festival.”
The effort was a success, she adds, “even though we didn't have any immediate declarations.”
The cost of the festival for the Spiritual Assembly of Baltimore, she says, was $2,000. The Assembly already is planning another statewide Baha'i festival for 1981.
Members of the Teaching and Proc: lamation Committee that planned the week-long Maryland Baha'i Festival in April are (front row left to right) Ed:
ward Bartlett, Amy Shaw, Oletha DeVane, Brenda Rickell, DuBois Johnson, and (back row left to right) Eric Byrd, Allison Vaccaro.
Baltimore believers (left to right) Farid Khorsandian, Jeffrey Silver man and Clarence Thomas helped staff this Baha'i Club booth at Johns
Hopkins University’s annual Spring Fair during :the Maryland Baha'i Festival April 12-20.
tion of the Faith that he declared his belief in Baha'u'llah.
Portions of the film Sands of Time were shown on the TV pro: gram to illustrate Mr. Villasefor’s work with Indian sand painting and his explanation of how the unity of mankind is represented in the symbols of many Indian works of art.
On March 17, a local TV station filmed a 2 1/2-minute interview with Mr. Villasefor for its evening newscast.
Mr. Villasefior also was interviewed on three local radio stations (two in Spanish), and spoke at the MECHA (Movimiento Esudiantil Chicano Atzlan) club at Phoenix Community College and at several firesides.
Howard University Baha’is present book fair display
The Baha'i Club at Howard University in Washington, D.C., participated March 21 in the annual book fair for university faculty members.
The fair is designed to acquaint faculty members with publications that are available for possible use in the courses they teach.
Thirteen faculty members requested a total of 16 complimentary copies of Baha'i books displayed at the fair.
The Baha'i Club was assisted by the Spiritual Assembly of Washington, D.C., in underwriting the cost of the complimentary copies.
Another result of the effort was a request by the director of the university book store that a private showing of Baha'i books be prepared for consideration as a part of the stock on sale in the store this summer.
lowa TV station
covers election
Shortly before the Ridvan elections were to be held in Cedar Rapids, lowa, a local television/radio station, WMT, phoned to ask if they might film the Holy Day observance and election for the late evening news.
The station was advised that the election itself could not be shown, as it is a prayerful and meditative process, but that a simulated election could be filmed
In addition to depicting the election on the news, the station aired an interview with the chairman of the Spiritual Assembly of Cedar Rapids.
The unexpected request for news coverage is believed to be a result of continuing positive contact with the local news media.
As a result, many members of the Cedar Rapids committee have found increased opportunities for teaching the Faith in that city.
[Page 18]PERSIAN PAGE
The American Baha'i
18
Ca 5 gaene glee pts oe cel IE SB oye Sod HIG byl ay! Wise FE a Jas gb L os LS UI MSI SID, 25535,0 51a wha Sits elegy! rl yo “(anny aad fd lh Se Syl y WISI eee psa Sa Se pas JL anes oy WaT UST op pty pe pop GEM a pie N/a Gas hk Seal a paka cesta Lees SNS MASI ope Gs og, JUS aay Us I ee gi! Sys ple hel eb I. ek gt sole ep ogee SIN Ny ary yg eT Le Ge SL! sl, yp ples Stal ay ogy I Se Loerie 5! agin polb das pT BS JS 53) prety les eas (gS: S115 > ope So Ee yay ly rage ps eat ae Le phen pete g Te SES Jace aU pls YS ya Cot cml ened sac mad ood ey SENG pane Sy 50 De gel pbel gouty “abe 955 eee ad 9 oe ad ule gl re oye “tee byes UI! Box OSL y asker Iluyts » 3955 Fos gislggs gle the pol y Laeahlt pers. Vjeenb ls WS ap 05,5 poaaly Glick 5 ayls SLs! , leds pls, , asta pe AS35000 wiley ole gpl ligld aS 15S le SS Lhe pe Te eae SUS ses SSS eis, ee hat g Slog pth gees JLT tebe 5 IST wae geal sy pa a, oleae 6.
sj 5 psig erases 5 Us
Vaya yas abs y ara OR ieee ieee ees oe tol he Ja lot
A test cag yay Letaas Baten dT gece gio bel Gy latsaseS pA D gg hs,
Banks gady cell paal glist yy SEEDY AE, Guy yas. YES ss | ais Pa ES wily fa PO ot std, Fe ay
ope wale
e— Est Ge
SLL 5 ISL Sate sap 9 raed wee 5978 539 Wy 6 we Sele gle oSL5S Shas tye2 5 LLL jbo rr ot! Sle GET 3 L551 2 ba sates gle LLL jl ae oe esol ob Sig eb Ils y Goss pa eS sla gel yo Uy aadly cla youl alle Pen, ites SL SGsi tei Seb 5 bbslr slool Bin sla 5 Leg pee pu ly ls, HLT col, AST VOU Las "Spl" olay py Shales, p 183 UG I soap UaleagaT ae Shs UNIS I gis legates SEDER gy Ree aaah, Leal sy (Soden bape teas vat glass ey
Obs ic Seetitgaponey
pt ylpee pl sly l lek ,
3 ears ph Ls yas aS Ls teh by Sigel dl eae ple, 5 Gla Mle aed, a3 a Ly. Sy SG 99 ose oleran SLcel JUS GSayeT 5 UL 0399 Sap owl ys Geol ats) y cas GI! SaaS Nise) eed as Oy cae aang a) jae ben go we lenis las Ib gai Ge Sees CI ase J tat yo S| We Gila! yobbe! | ks yb ete py G Geb Ilona leet anges gleam cgaighy Use psig STs ee pee Sue Sk STS LS A eee Sos, Sle 93 Ua regS <p Seeks gS 9 Ge te we ply ws IL Dipis cians WylEs ipsana lie Ue 5) Caio ry Sh fe G Lita ath Ay phe SU ile ay as CS Ly Sheen se
Teagan peadan yaks
parse coking pSV cee Sls 9 US, bale PUR y aps ls LS jo eetgy ee inde s aa Ip aSe ly MLNS jas ahs pens
Ue Siceel gM cpape Gayest doear
Cecio gle ingens galls iboenia i gts dee y
32g |, Cia Ua alga oy ee fe) Lesics law cell pail Ss, apafepag Lj ae
SIL ya eg Sj ylS lel ps oe PSEC NY pep GLENS Oye wo bay thee et ale ely, Sime Vy sly larg Qily gaSietly oes Gh Lite Weml gale LS soi SLwbol 5 sans CNL Sle ES pkey! Ja glo vo gee sales abe lae LST yo tT prs
let sll yal js U sbi gly paths Joby Us
112 Linden Avenue wont Wilmette, IL 60091 (213). 256-4400 eal
wey le Je oe ty dT GL Tews 35 JS! See eas yg Egle Sey 5! SIs le Bret Glee Soy BLS 3S ele ye Shela oll ES clas & ee a el ee Iba be le el iN Se at ed Glo scot el U obs ob ah eS es us yates Ub IS Janet Herbst
P.O. Box 701 Ganado, AZ 86505
Neale yo Gay So eg, dame ey Sa Sys Gall p53 oe! SI pol glee eae oS) Sas ae eT (Sor ike eT ys leit oT yo liso Lb 5 55T ger sae yo pie lawl carla Sse cle y stim athe
(8A AI YN GAS
CRE. Wns oreeseee 2 Baring. hyo WAG I ardbod
Wii pa4y th Sy be lee ere abe Beg ts gen os ye ar eg ea sayas Sic Ds Meer yl Nyssa tao pte Lal Sly heb! gd bY eel poe & Stas GL ce! otanipedlassriGhismesc leg! aces gant Soe laeae Mls ghee a a bens SS Sess I eas Saeed Geant Unie geile a7 cas MAS Sohn) Ua Liay cus eal ga hey Ng tee ee gene then Sey ils aaaenty Coan tea seater at aay Ss GP BIL g ae ae bt ey, 2a mee AS Ny ght ior 9 sSaarera ol Sylhee G hepss So-rprinice i eaeli ies aay Geb! varele pige WSCoT aa Sa SVN Sito ye Gees Gar Sy Ie Pah de oe eee te cyte We ES GNEN Nyy) oe RS ggg eenget s D. 9, betes json Senay oe we Sel apg) acy tase
SDipeawee ably eiiiatetecoasty Ie pat heme a et Satya Mae gee rt eee Sle lands spel
S18 S55 GIL st Lee js stant
SE tS! obey oat Sal 53 Hey S ne Se CABS « 959984359 bd garcsye 9 alee 5 sped y Jpeg gals eles poe pa VEIL, Sel ele! GL aT yay peg te
gilalig lag Mon ,SamTii ss eel IS), gasp JN ey eet Ut es gb ns
Bo Se et 5 No cae at gt Vly pete 256 OIG! 4 olan th oas is Wat La jo ce OS jai ye pce ee wot der oe et Sx3ly pj lules = | hl 5 payee Geis LI ok,
FEE Sle ook jo Gop Saree ie Sil SL Remar eons Galas
SOU phos oS, ipa iar ea) Nay ates et oy pete yen ey”
Vy ar ba aa rcns hols
a ple oe aly by Te ls pat 059) tee or he
TT tp ape we ee ele BUS yew past yp jst sede tee yo el pee pelea
sre Ses pele cea slp 6 So oly wate gt ine
ees y coe dy
205 Sol shy Gly Ugias eos Nage SI yl; ales SL pt Less SL Soles stan nen Syn olcan ye pd oe! peg pe ey ae rs SL ee Ras plas LS jt Gea PUSS IC Bell os tll gel st SytS -syaT pals 1 oer! he? gt le Sas Js slael 51555, 0S el, LSE PU vast, (rs SL Se ps ls ts yy el ce pL oe jyhey ales jp Ime poets UY Jb as loa Ses gg! Waly be Gh oS Se Lo LSE 99 3h ple S59) SN 99 Sj yg lens Satoh Log SG a Ser ipa pateenne yg Sigal Oral ogy SNS Ib 4 Jb sale ghar ieteth ret lace aad Lol ete eer 5 tele ee! Sas AS ay ls 9am ee epee Wes caah GflSat pias! 51 et als SF, bd Ls by, LL TLS ig ad May aig Ly gash dS 5: GSBseee Sey IN ese Soy oer 5M ty pSiee Shy asta sya ty Wa) es G43! eo% acs 5 helt gags See ee Wp OL go lyre dlls 49 2S cent bay Siete Geb 5 lg some lets GaNieASOaily yh Gilet shies ti Hage pie eS eyes es: Sa Sas Ble sage pie lin Lit, a5 Gatanr| Jas” eyo des sis ys SLetasnys, Sialiay| Spans sas es agS Gyo 1, Sys STL ail Pome Uo cite yy crash 9) geil pail 95, 5ySe curl CIES Gabe GeNS Glassy goto!
WEN osacs LS
st ee Jab Sy ats ye ot pbc! Jato co Ly
at lee ipl Nowy 5 Gb 5 ane ssi'9 Ul Wake deol te ga9e tod 4p ee
plestge le 5 398 youl only lil es el” pales tee JL 08 oor ly oe pee tly vegies aan at ley SayS Sy
gy 9 Wa Sand pads LG ol yo foe Asap easly compan ly, aaceeSy te oly aay eae pod cate yo jy py ples ory Cee lee S Loans WS Sey jy clade sly -plaoy Ih poly 00S pals Uy leon aly rls 9 ter GEL oT Gynee Ib ey ow! pS gyal opt EL LoS Jo jo ot AL Uyed ye GUE Qa oy! py tyne! les ph oo gly og UE LE Los
sly & bye ay
"aaylage pyakd |) oye ULE
[Page 19]PERSIAN PAGE
July 1980
EST od paes eed py US pt stb ppp bese lb (Acera) Tighe pH eb oS oe lb aes
NAVA pte te Fle gz ba dame = 9 2S bs VS Babs plaiting y yt)” tap le phe aay eee yet ples tye aS phe hee GS abe loc el lb, lo SSE Pb dunn
"abe el
Pay ean Ere Perec el egCar a yy JAVA pus Lo To
CYL Kags elolons Ut pe! Gp le we bsobe oe nth Unb pak byte galSlad as Lees LI ss Epa, eG Less Lg Lge,
Graig ph INS Lae SS, Nee cosets pas 4s
eh Sle! pe pL gle gs ab yoy
iat cae ands GIy!
Vogeze 99 eo ley Gell] yey aul vay bs (r.Victor de Arajo) 321,72 j 555.5 ,s5s Mey tad g5 Cera obtener uae be ace Uns, JL ie yo pled Gh ype ane JL FS VSIA yp jt eS Says LL TS OBS spits 058 sk, To tee esa meg ma ts be pd jpeg aS apt be reli, ek » (Sir Peter Ramsbotham) Lab, Gy lae yy55 5 (Lady Ramsbotham ) hese mcd UNI Gee, eel dag SY ogy Ahaat rg pre gs le Lae 5! abe ke el Ny ag Gh uty ge LT > OS gs eS lh ew” ssl Slam bet pl Leen y capa! gles ater py apy elsags Pe So Ne py gees cl hla oe Nose & ae aT 83-0959 9 ew sas loe gains JLo! Gayl 5! BERENS 9555 pt Or eel 5 lr sols
oe ele at lage tle Gels aint oS LS wb WIL wt ol SCS SUL os Let 51g Le Uae clyye hler Sy jlyaayes Nesp rat Megs a5 ye WS shee 00595 Gr! ONS) ote dee gel oS areola . ou S sO og BH ys Slt stele 1) Love That Child
abn apes 985) gStdS) 5 cs ale as ae lel 82 9 dee obthe shoe waye,S Ds es JL AUST Gyo ye wile ple wl Ieee el le OL SbpS pga 15 G3 ceeeye aries | I Sr ee SG Ob op esi Spees Ud gs peste sIGaL,s SS Cs ysre stseT Otel wBpsebS yy lee gy 5a ele Lbs.
eyo Ls cb es Leyes
Nas Lay
Vas 2
a NSae ly Gane
demtiaae ply der geet JUS L
OG tle el 14 ante yo 6S el soley gyle laa! sey ecbs TRhsl yee DN OMe ee yt 825 et ebergiyey, Sect
pSiae Tygelyyt Glnl yg) abo S555) ogee Camas ts loge SEB Ne LISS USI FOAL, pou ke 56
SP cel way BIL GIS yt aay 515°
Stet pd erent soe liken), pipe oy Uh
peg ySb7as Ua Las os Lens”
po Na key a naay ISS S50 Gb. La Pad aa ty ya lb piney s ay gte Ld Lae! wt nye Spee IGN gpl» ree
Jie esis y
Seely
peas Te ep ot le ole Gly — LL yaya
ee oll helt Gy to les” SNES Gleecee G Ba Ls Gs see LIS eee ygae plas! ails S 5 ILE Gb el ee a le leg, Sim 5 ory GMs deadig Cudisiys eaabeg kbps Shey) ed olngrQebs prclogees Spas SLi as Soe leads ee ghee pate yoy wJaaes y JL Ga! 5St ye
VAYa pe bop) = es ee bh ple eee gee HUGO” ee Sly ye od Gh to
GUST SIG U, WS de aes polyp bole ppt GIS pee 98g AS tls Elyas hy GLI ae StL pe Wp yey tea ce eS ogo epee Jie Ig Qa Spe ear S55) LUIS. ga Kade les
i yo hale
eat
WV mee phn es pS = Sy gan 1S yt VAVA pte Loe
B10 Sreboys les Maha lan, she” a Sle ple alee pe Lie 1p eatin Ste tks 5 le gt US te pb te sae jee py yy Lee pga Oo be ey Le ate ge go CL by, Sees Led Tau. Glass ly. Ste, be pgs Lon ma te gag pty Letina alin Bee 9098 play ileal) eye ey ple so tat i ees, dims ey ge! s wolel phe clings Gar Soy: 6, aw 65S N93 Boles ylaesZSIS Ist | Ka tigen lh! ar Fle By ane CEL 55 pl SNe retVos Lanes aS Jue 5s ley alas coms Sap y Was oso et
Pa Ua Ly USS hy ky ap ye Geet pel op Le tS UI ee
Type ey Ate Vy labs Glan!
VAVS pe ee FEE eye Wh! eb SaS eS pope se! soles”
Lee LILI 3 See CLL wags BUN ise «yp Seasbee 51 yo eye oo te bee 41259 (John Robarts ) ,by, eo pm ob yee bl. i Mele 2 Les gilegy y LE pT oy tee cote ete lye as Sol le Bpa pli fy Us VSI SIS, Uses Jesse pe wb blo je Sec Se
Tye een OEE ee
VAVA peels fo Moke wey — gL jae pes GUN lan Yee le @aneron Highland jus Sols tour
Pore yScipeme GOL! ype Satie (Chinniah) Lise x(¥an Kee) GS GL yy le Conidae, aj Ny lade GAS eS 2. SL Ay neice po bes sate Lake Nyhyay Last Peas: ye bes ee,
TAA pee ly & ple obey, Jims LLS
Je eS ti Ghee dt
ale Ws LQ meh Aips aalivenn| We oh
vi), Eee, fa it es
Gk BA EO
Lo MOF 2D
Litshn An (ip te 4s
Ei) ee i) ee i
Ayeyporoe
Shir
ie ge hj i fy Liss
Hecthy wishicg
nt) Carey,
er oF jigs? g pte iy iy < ZL wre whe were. Dim
i lip Mes
Cots d) mat) ssp oP Ley Ket Mit
GIs 1 spingh hatlaZi LY ED Medd
YRS,
Wa rings fan wpe! WV ome Cs MIT wv
oe aaa) arches pee) ee
1, MeO vfely- 7 in =~
Pa
- Paw,
cl
Lp y whet goin
As Si As) Aye) mepripteiontpee
wiles PI GIjbl 5! oS pols
oad 6 be wadl os! ay
ett one
olin ele bas im = oe 7 VAVA owe GO TY
pote plas FAM Noihe elas layne ls peimegg Leng pe bee pS2 UI toys Gol! co dee pe! (Athos Costas)» L-S¥-457 a SOU! spon sab theres 9 ler Le Lad are Shams panty Gee S50 Sla—aliale! ~L— (Rosario) 22 'i2 bth eh Tea Nee peas pe GG Le
pay Se ak st
MyAesl a SE Gy, let — Hd! Ubi hl Glin Ba yancms rel med poy k, TN Peg eee Oe eg ee eb! gt Spr le i aes, o Lass 7 ease + Sr (Annelies Bopp ) abel! Le Ll pba bee 5)
bee abSlel eS
TAA gee bo Fm ole gobegy dine Ie 22 S391 gps sy be ge GLa pope L" pa ee 5 Nps Langs jyte ly preibowi dy! ate beg, Sine Lae gene te Seep pci op te Ol vleses sass S er ble y rvlo bl
oy tans pel nae gal BSS 9, Ssh Gilyo Ne eld heey Ley gre em!
- PaysT Gol 5 y- Ulpl ae ys Lb
VAYA pee eo vo ales eae LILY!
SUSU 5 Pade Kear VAVA pe bo T) — dor 65
el TAY ee be tale obey dime o En gam
DESI 32 oly ee! stare be” I 8 pat gent EE 9 So oleae Geb pol) gk! alee l,! wo bby ek Rt pte tlhe tS od tee Oe Hy Shae GLT LG 5 Blade algo 139 5! i apes IS, gto tas iL ayoise as eel pane 9 SeiSal glasaSaste » yLSY ols DN OME gee ype et ele pe oly BS eres 9 re LEU 5! pane StS ple ee ery el gee Let I SI LS gles ya pal gel ae SyJpe) Ags ance SLL GL) Wig Is tus pe COATT) Me pee ge ree err I arse g Ny pe bo dp nate g pele tLe epee
ce b
tt or er Gb ek role Tee te lenge CUI
ey a) ae ne VAY pee Go 1H
es Ley eyed G Gags GS ancien” (Boman) = ot! ry ee gp S55 (Dipchand Khianara) 'y ——— L—S y lew wpe SU Las bens i gegts cue Ly pe a phe Jae Peak lanl SoS y yb yes Tease
syleby
nn SSS SETS ESS SSS SESE ESS SSE ET
[Page 20]AUXILIARY BOARDS
The American Baha'i 2 0
Grace Bates, a member of the
Spiritual Assembly of Arlington, Massachusetts, is shown with an Ayyami-Ha display at Shady Hill Schoo! in Cambridge, where she works as a receptionist and where her son is a student.
D.C. witnesses Hayden tribute
More than 75 Baha'is and guests were present April 22 at Howard University in Washington, D.C., for a memorial service honoring poet Robert E. Hayden who died February 22 in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
The entire program was recorded by the Voice of America for broadcast overseas.
Counsellor Sarah M. Pereira, a professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of the District of Columbia and close friend of the Hayden family, recalled Mr. Hayden's life and the Source of his inspiration, the Baha'i Faith.
“BOB HAYDEN was one of the thinking men of our age,” said Dr. Pereira, “who searched for a reasonable explanation for the moral sickness of this century.”
William Meredith, consultan’ poetry at the Library of Congress, a post Mr. Hayden held in 1975-76, devoted his presentation to the reading of Mr. Hayden's poetry.
Dr. Stephen Henderson, director of the Howard University Institute of Arts and Humanities, recalled with deep personal and professional regard the work of Mr. Hayden.
The documentation section of the Institute of Arts and Humanities video-taped the program. The tapes will be placed in the Afro-American Research Center at the university's Founders Library.
The English department, where Mr. Hayden held the position of “graduate writer-in-residence,”’ was represented by faculty and students.
Four students from Mr. Hayden’s advanced Contemporary Poetry class eulogized him in poetry and prose.
Or. Leon Jones, professor in the Department of Education and faculty adviser of the Howard Baha'i Club, chaired the program.
There were musical selections by Evander Gilmer, and a closing prayer by Mrs. Zylpha MappRobinson, a pioneer to Uganda for nine years who is now a member of the Baha'i Club at Howard Universit:
Auxiliary Boards defend, spread Cause
On June 21, 1968, the Universal House of Justice announced to the Baha'i world the establishment of the institution of the Continental Boards of Counsellors, an institution that would ensure the extension into the future of the functions of protection and propagation vested in the Hands of the Cause of God.
At that same time the Auxiliary Boards, which had been in existence since 1954 functioning under the direction of the Hands of the Cause, were placed under the direction of the Continental Boards of Counsellors.
THUS, THE Auxiliary Boards, one for the protection and one for the propagation of the Faith, are an auxiliary institution of the Continental Boards of Counsellors whose functions are to protect and propagate the Cause of God.
Members of the Auxiliary Boards are appointed by and serve under the direction of the
Continental Boards of Counsellors, and act as their deputies, assistants, and advisers.
The tasks of helping to watch over the security of the Cause, protecting it from its enemies, internal and external, and ensuring the constant propagation of the Faith of Baha'u'llah cover, in general, the functions of the Auxiliary Board members—functions they share with Local and National Spiritual Assemblies.
Their duties include furthering the interests of and assisting in the execution of the Plans set in motion by the Universal House of Justice, lending impetus to and strengthening the teaching work, the preservation and consolidation of victories won, and the development of the distinctive character of Baha'i life.
The Auxiliary Board members are called upon to work directly with individual believers, Groups, and Local Assemblies, encouraging, advising and stimulating them in the work of the Cause; assisting them in their development and growth; helping them to deepen in their understanding of the Teachings of Baha'u'llah and to act in accordance with His laws and principles; encouraging them to contribute freely to the various Funds of the Faith; urging their full support and devoted participa: tion in plans adopted by the National Spiritual Assembly; and impressing upon them the need to be unified under all circumstances.
THE UNIVERSAL House of Justice announced in its message of October 7, 1973, to the Baha'is of the world that it had taken two decisions designed to reinforce and extend the services of the Auxiliary Boards to meet the growing needs of an ever-expanding Baha'i world commr=-.ity.
The first raised the number of Auxiliary Board members throughout the world to 270, of whom 81 would serve in the Western Hemisphere.
Second, the Universal House of Justice decided to give to each
Continental Board of Counsellors the discretion to authorize individual Au: ry Board members to appoint assistants to help them in the discharge of their duties.
Believers who are appointed as assistants to the Auxiliary Board can serve at the same time on administrative institutions, and are appointed for a limited period, with the possibility of reappointment.
One of the main duties of the Auxiliary Boards and their assistants is to help bring into being and consolidate Local Spiritual Assemblies.
Individual believers and Local Assemblies: are encouraged to contact the members of the Auxiliary Boards for assistance in the expansion and consolidation work, and for advice and help in matters concerning the protection of the Faith.
“IT IS AT this local level of Baha'i community life,” the Universal House of Justice commented in a message of November 17, 1971, to the Continental Boards of Counsellors,
“the very foundation of the administrative structure of the Faith, that we so often find lack of adequate strength and efficiency.
“It is at this same level that our beloved Guardian urged Auxiliary Board members to establish contact with Local Spiritual Assemblies, groups, isolated centres and the individual believers, and through periodic and systematic visits to localities as well as by correspondence help in promoting the interests of the Plan, asssist in the efficient and prompt execution of the goals, watch over the security of the Faith, stimulate and strengthen the teaching and pioneer work, impress upon the friends the importance of individual effort, initiative and sacrifice, and encourage them to participate in Baha'i activities and be unified under all circumstances.”
In a message to the Baha'is of the world dated October 7, 1973, the Universal House of Justice added: “The aims of the Auxiliary Board members and their
assistants, stated previously in relation to the services of the assistants, ‘should be to activate and encourage Local Spiritual Assemblies, to call the attention of Local Spiritual Assembly members to the importance of holding regular meetings, to encourage local communities to meet for the Nineteen Day Feasts and Holy Days, to help deepen their fellow believers’ understanding of the Teachings...’
Finally, in a message of May 25, 1975, to all National Spiritual Assemblies, the Supreme Body said this:
“We are confident that the institution of the Boards of Counsellors will lend its vital support and, through the Counsellors’ own contacts with the friends, through their Auxiliary Boards and their assistants, will nourish the roots of each local community, enrich and cultivate the soil of knowledge of the teachings and irrigate it with the living waters of love for Baha'u'llah. Thus will the saplings grow into mighty trees, and the trees bear their golden fruit.”
Community Continued From Page 15
the Universal House of Justice concerning the scheduling of pilgrimages are carried out.
She also advises those who are traveling to areas of the world where the Faith is restricted.
The Universal House of Justice, she explains, grants permission for about 400 Baha'is to make a pilgrimage each year between the last week in October and the end of July.
The waiting time between one’s application for pilgrimage and the time he actually departs averages around three years. The 50 per ‘cent cancellation rate reduces the waiting period to eight to 10 months for those who are able to go on short notice.
IN EXPLAINING the high cancellation rate of those who apply for pilgrimage, Mrs. Spittal observes that the friends often overlook practical considerations.
“Plans must be practical,” she Says, “and money for the must be saved on a regular basis.”
With the permission of the Universal House of Justice, Mrs. Spittal also helps Baha'is who wish to travel to Israel for other purposes. Baha'is may visit the World Centre for up to three days while not on pilgrimage. However, any Baha'i going to Israel for any purpose must first receive permission from the Universal House of Justice.
Baha'is who plan to work or travel in the Middle East, eastern Europe, Greece, and certain areas of the Far East are referred to special instructions from the House of Justice.
“ “Specific guidelines vary from country to country and week to week,” says Mrs. Spittal, “depending on the present world situation.
It is imperative that Baha'is going to those countries know how to conduct themselves.”
THE UNIVERSAL House of Justice does not encourage believers who wish to live in the Middle East because Baha'is there are not allowed to teach the Faith or have any sort of community life.
There is no one type of work in the non-Baha'i world that would prepare one for a position in the Department of Community Administration, says Dr. Marks.
In addition to such qualities as a well-trained mind, the ability to write, knowledge of the spiritual and administrative principles of the Faith, and the ability to apply them to specific questions, says Dr. Marks, there is another impor tant ingredient.
“One must also be compassionate and understanding,” he says, “because the Baha’i view of justice is a new concept. Compassion, mercy and education are as much a part of it as the imposition of sanctions.”
Dr. Marks believes that the Iranian crisis has had a sobering effect on the U.S. Baha'i community and has aided its development.
“The crisis has served to center everyone's attention on the essentials of Baha'i belief and helped us eliminate many of the extraneous concerns that deflect us from our central purpose,” he says.
“There is more unity in the Baha'i community today. The spirit has improved and the level of energy is up. It is very encouraging!””
The three-member Baha'i Group of Fauquier County, Virginia, par ticipated in Warrenton’s annual Spring Festival on May 17 with this booth from which visitors were provided with free ice water, Band-Aids
and 600 ‘Love That Child’ balloons. The booth was borrowed from the Baha'is of Winchester and Frederick County who had used it the previous week at Winchester's annual Apple Blossom Festival.
[Page 21]The American Baha'i
duly 1980
Louhelen perceived as Baha’i ‘prototype’
Continued From Page 1
“It has grown to be one of the most important and one of the most valuable centers of Baha'i learning, and should be maintained at all cost.”
David Smith, secretary of the National Education Committee, Says the reconstructed schoo! will be “a prototype” of Baha'i education. ~
“We realize we have a long way to go toward realizing the Baha'i education of the future,” he says, “but the Louhelen project marks the beginning of fulfilling the dreams and hopes of believers over the past 50 years.”
The progress of the project to date has resulted largely from the volunteer efforts of Baha'i professionals working behind the scenes, says Stephen Jackson, assistant to the National Treasurer. p
“MORE HELP is needed now,” he says, “when things are really going forward.
“The strength of this project, like any other ip the Faith, lies in the participation of the friends from every economic level,!"
Paramount to its success, he adds, are contributions from the believers. The ambitious target date for completion of construction work at Louhelen is August 1981.
“If the needed funds are received by this fall,"" says Mr. Jackson, “construction can get under way and can be completed by the following August as planned.”
The National Spiritual Assembly has approved the sale of promissory notes to Baha'is to expedite raising the funds needed to support the project.
The Office of the Treasurer is in the process of selecting individuals to act as its agents in the approximately 26 states in which the sale of promissory notes will be registered in compliance with state law.
INDIVIDUAL believers in those states will be able to purchase promissory notes from the National Spiritual Assembly in denominations of $500 or more.
Maturities of 10, 15 or 20 years will be offered, according to Mr.
Jackson.
“The plan,” he says, “is to have the notes registered and the special Treasurer's represen: tatives ready to begin their work by mid-September.” That would leave about a year in which to sell the notes.
Baha’is in those states where purchase of promissory notes from the National Assembly won't be possible are free to contribute to the Louhelen project, and are encouraged to do so.
The Treasurer's Office will be making a concurrent effort to consult with individual Baha'is who may be able to contribute to the Louhelen project in a major way, he adds.
Reconstruction at Louhelen will include the preservation of some existing buildings on the property as well as construction of new buildings.
THE PRESENT library will be preserved for use as an archives facility for the school; the former auditorium will become a storage building.
The Louhelen building and Eggleston home also will be preserved and restored to their original appearance. The Pullman dorm: itory building and four cottages will be demolished.
Among the new buildings plan: ned is a lodge center that will contain a cafeteria, kitchen, auditorium, registration area, lounge, administrative offices, bookstore and library.
A new classroom building will feature an arts and crafts room, five classrooms, and a nursery with a sunken play area. Each classroom will have its own screened outdoor patio.
Housing will be provided for through construction of 24 suites to be built in two connected lodging clusters. The two-story structures will provide housing for up to 130 people.
The National Spiritual Assembly will be ready to sign construction contracts as soon as $1 million in contributions and/or promissory notes is secured.
This procedure, says Mr. Jackson, will safeguard the financial aspects of the Louhelen project and guarantee a healthy start.
The outgoing National Teaching Committee was com
Montevallo dentist
gets Alabama award
The Spiritual Assembly of Homewood, Alabama (a suburb of Birmingham) recently presented a “Baha'i Humanitarian Award” to Dr. Samuel Mahan, a non-Baha’i dentist from Montevallo, Alabama.
Dr. Mahan had made two trips to southeastern’ Mexico to”offer the indigenous people there;free dental care. The inhabitants of that area of jungle and mountains are descendants of the Mayan Indians.
THE SPIRITUAL Assembly of Homewood, after reading newspaper accounts of Dr Mahan's trips, decided that his work offered a striking example of work in the spirit of service and the attainment of a worldembracing vision.
To properly recognize that service, the Assembly presented Dr. Mahan with a plaque that included a brief quotation from the Writings and a nine-pointed star.
“It took several months to obtain the plaque,” said Dr. Curtis Russell, chairman of the Homewood Assembly, “because of difficulty in finding an engraver who could make a nine-pointed star.”
The presentation to Or. Mahan was reported in two newspapers in Shelby County, Alabama, one of
which carried a photo on its front page.
Dr. Mahan, who recalled having fed the House of Worship in Wilmette as a teen-ager in the early 1950s, expressed his gratitude for the award and invited the Baha’is to a future gathering at which he Gould show slides of his trips to Mexico and get to know the believers better.
Or. Samuel Mahan (center) of Montevallo, Alabama, receives a ‘Baha'i Humanitarian Award’ on behalf of the Spiritual Assembly of Homewood, Alabama, from Dr. Gur tis Russell, chairman of the Assembly, and Mrs. Corinne Inglis,
- Stimulate and coordinate the acti
Tennessee sets 4-day conference for Labor Day
The Tennessee Baha'i Institute Committee is sponsoring a fourday Labor Day weekend conference August 29-September 1 at the Dubose Conference Center in Monteagle, Tennessee.
The conference theme is “What Lies Ahead at This Crucial Hour?”
Speakers will include Counsellor traj Ayman from Western Asia, and Glenford Mitchell, secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly.
Activities will include a public
meeting, talent show, films, entertainment, children’s classes with a ‘field trip, workshops, games, and a special meeting for Persian believers. A nursery will also be provided. You can participate in this historic conference for as little as $35 (which includes meals and room).
Accommodations range from semi-private “motel style” rooms to dormitories and cabins.
The Dubose Conference Center is conveniently located atop a mountain between Nashville and Chattanooga.
For more information, please contact the committee at Route 1 Sussex Drive, Box 835, Morristown, TN 37814 (615-586-9247)
vice-chairman of the Assembly. Dr
Mahan, who is not a Baha'i, was
recognized for his service to the
Mayan Indians of southeastern Mex.
ico. He made two trips to that area to
offer free dental care to the people
there.
ities of the Baha'i
Teaching
Continued From Page 1
dent of the Inter-Community Baha'i School (now the William Sears School) in Pasadena, California.
MRS. LOPEZ, has served at the Baha'i National Center in Wilmette for the last six years as assistant to the secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly.
She was elected secretary of the Persian Affairs Committee upon its formation last October, and also is secretary of the Spiritual Assembly of Winnetka.
Mrs. Lopez, a former Californian, served on two District Teaching Committees in that state.
Dr. Nazerian, who came to the U.S. from Iran in 1959, has served on a District Teaching Committee and on the Louhelen Baha'i Schoo! Council.
Prior to coming to this country, Dr. Nazerian, a veterinarian, had pioneered to Italy and Sweden.
posed of John W. Conkling of Evanston, Illinois, secretary; Dr. Robert Henderson of Roswell, Georgia, chairman; Mrs. Conrad; Mrs. Jolie Haug of Fort’ Collins, Colorado; Dr. Fereydoun Jalali of Fort Valley, Georgia; Dr. Geoffry W. Marks of Wilmette, Illinois; Larry Miller of Roswell, Georgia; and Wayne Steffes of Fontana, California.
THE NATIONAL Spiritual Assembly's mandate to the new Teaching Committee emphasizes several specific functions: incourage and assist the development of Local itual Assemblies in such a way that the Committee's work will embrace and accommodate the services rendered to these Assemblies by the Auxiliary Board members and their assistants.
- Direct the activities of the District Teaching Committees whose main functions are to open new localities to the
Faith and develop Groups to Assembly status.
youth through the instrumentality of a National Youth Committee, which will be appointed by the National Spiritual Assembly as an auxiliary of the National Teaching Committee.
Conceive, promote and encourage proclamation activities. z
- Establish and maintain a system of traveling teachers
who will function in accordance with the guidelines given by the Universal House of Justice.
- Assist the National Spiritual Assembly to maintain effective collaboration in the field between the teaching
agencies under (the Committee's) aegis and the Auxiliary Boards.
- Appoint and direct the work of such auxiliary agencies
as are needed by the Committee and approved by the National Spiritual Assembly.
- Organize and maintain an office for the proper execution of the Committee's business.
1 SS SR SSSR EY ERE
[Page 22]
CLASSIFIEDS ~
The American Baha’i
CLASSIFIED notices in The American Baha'i are printed free of charge as a service to the Baha'i community. Notices are limited to items relating to the Faith; no commercial or personal messages can be accepted for
publication. .
THE SPIRITUAL Assembly of San Francisco needs a confidential secretary at its Baha'i Center. Qualifications include office management skills and the ability to operate duplicating equipment, answer telephones and greet the public. The applicant should be a Baha'i with some administrative experience; the ability to speak Chinese, Persian or Spanish is desirable. Those who are interested should phone Kathleen Swanegan at 415-333-2157, or write clo the Baha'i Center, 170 Valencia St., San Francisco, CA 94103.
THE TENNESSEE Baha'i Institute Committee is sponsoring a Labor Day weekend conference August 29-September 1 at the Dubose Conference Center in Monteagle, Tennessee. Among the participants will be Or. Iraj Ayman, a Counsellor for Western Asia, and Glenford €. Mitchell, secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly. Housing costs range from $45 (single) for a Holiday Innstyle room for three nights to as low as $15 for a cabin or $9 for sleeping bag accommodations. Meals (8) are $20 (adults), $10 (ages 7-12), or free (under age 7). For more information, please contact the committee at Route 1, Sussex Drive, Box 835, Morristown, TN 37814, or phone 615-586-9247.
WANT TO LEAVE the city and lead a simpler existence? We need you on the Lower Brule Indian Reservation in central South Dakota, where two pioneers must leave to return to school. We have a lovely community with an Assembly of nine Native Americans who will continue to need administrative guidance. Needed is a strong Baha'i individual or couple. Jobs available include first grade teacher, fourth grade teacher, seventh grade reading and English teacher, high school social sciences and science teachers, several special education teachers, and a physician's assistant at a local clinic. Applications for teaching positions are needed immediately. Housing is available at a reasonable cost ($170/month plus $100/month or less for utilities) in this community on the beautiful Missouri River. Interested? Write to Barbara Rudolph, Lower Brule, SD 57548, or phone 605-473-5450.
BI-LINGUAL elementary school teaching jobs available immediately in Douglas, Arizona. Also, master’s degree social worker or counselor's position open with County Juvenile Court Center. For latter position, send resumés to Joan Lozier, P.O. Box 641, Douglas, AZ 85607. Deepened Baha'is are needed for consolidation and expansion in Douglas
and the surrounding area in- (singers, dancers, instrumen- terested, please contact the Int 415 Linden Avenue/Wilmette, IL 60091 4
cluding the Mexican border town of Agua Prieta, Sonorra, Mexico. This is homefront pioneering; our Group is dropping to two. Phone 602-364-8207.
TEACHING POSITIONS in Alaska: The North Slope Borough school district is accepting applications for teaching/administrative positions for the 1980-81 school year. Especially sought are couples who are teachers to work above the Arctic Circle. Most of the schools are small, and staff members must be generalists rather than specialists, and com: mitted to the philosophy of individualized instruction. The annual salary range is from $21,000 to $42,000, plus liberal benefits. If you meet the above qualifications, please contact the International Goals Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
MOVE TO SPRING HOPE, North Carolina, home of the National Pumpkin Festival, and help us establish a Group of five by the anniversary of the Birth of the Bab, October 20, 1980. This is a predominantly agricultural area within an hour's drive of RaleighDurham-Chapel Hill, home of numerous research facilities, three major universities, medical centers, and tobacco processing plants. Employment in that area is plentiful; housing and cost of living in Spring Hope are relatively low. The Baha'is of Spring Hope will provide rent-free living quarters for two weeks to any Baha'i moving to the area. If you are interested in pioneering to this lovely, quiet southern town, please write to the Baha'i Group of Spring Hope, Box 297, Spring Hope, NC 27882, or phone Jim or Kate Wilkinson (evenings) at 919-478-5030.
GLORY, a Baha'i youth deepening magazine published bi monthly in India, invites articles, poetry and photos from the friends everywhere. Your contribu‘tions will have to be honorary; you will be sharing your journalistic or artistic talents with Baha'is in all countries, as Glory has a worldwide circulation. Among themes for future issues are “Transformation of the Word of God,” “Priorities,” “Sacrifice,” and “Consultation.” Contributions ‘should be sent as soon as possible to the editor, Glory magazine, P.O. Box 19, Panchgani 412805, Maharashtra, India.
THE GREATER Las Vegas Baha'i Media Committee would like to thank the friends for the scores of billboards they have ordered to help spread the Message of Baha'u'llah. As a special favor, the committee requests that future orders be accompanied by an address other than a post office box number so that materials can be forwarded to it in case of a problem in mailing them to the post office box. Thank you. The committee's address is P.O. Box 4937, Las Vegas, NV 89106.
HELP WANTED: Musicians
talists, groups or individuals) to perform benefit concerts and entertain during direct and indirect teaching efforts in and around the Southern Ute Indian Reservation in Colorado. Traveling teachers and/or homefront pioneers with knowledge and experience in arts and crafts, community services, gardening, drug or alcoholism counseling, children’s activities, personal growth, etc., needed. For more information, please write to the Baha'is of the Southern Ute Reservation,’ Box 267, Ignacio, CO 81137, or phone 303-563-4274,
CALLING ALL ARTISTS! A giant Art Festival traveling to teach the Faith starts in Sacramento, Ci nia, on March 21, 1981. Fine arts; crafts, painting, sculpture, performing arts to be included. For information and entry blanks, please write to the Spiritual Assembly of Sacramento, Box No. 161252, Sacramento, CA 95816.
WE WELCOME to the Wenatchee Valley Persian Baha'is who may wish to pioneer to the beautiful state of Washington. We have several small Groups but no. Assemblies. For information, write to Mr. or Mrs. Steve Brown, Star Route Box 2-M, Leavenworth, WA 98826, or phone 509-548-7863.
HELP WANTED. The District Teaching Committee of Central North Carolina needs willing and enthusiastic traveling teachers for various summer teaching projects. Those who have their own transportation and can spend two. weeks or more in North Carolina may participate in teaching: consolidation work in several areas. The District Teaching Committee will help by providing room and board and some gas expenses. For a summer you'll always remember, please contact the District Teaching Committee of Central North Carolina, 5811 Newhall Road, Durham, NC 27713 (Attention: Melissa Tansik, secretary), or phone 919-544-3895.
COME TO GALLUP, New Mexico, and help sustain a newlyformed Assembly. Five to seven members of the Assembly must move from the Gallup area during the summer. Gallup is on the border of the Navajo-Hopi Indian Reservation and near the soon-tobe-built Southwest Baha'i Institute. Available posi clude teaching (all areas). For information, please contact the Gallup-McKinley County School District, Gallup, NM 87301, or James Stone, vice-chairman, Spiritual Assembly of Gallup, 627 N. Sth St., Gallup, NM 87301, or phone 505-863-6701.
THE BAHA’l community of Honolulu, Hawaii, is greatly in need of someone to teach English to the many Laotian believers who have recently arrived in that area. There are about 25 families with a total of more than 65 members, many of whom are having trouble finding and holding jobs owing to the language barrier. It is hoped that the bounty of residing in the “paradise of the Pacific” would be sufficient reimbursement. If
national Goals Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091, or phone 312-256-4400.
WANTED: English- and Spanish-speaking Baha'is for “Project Olinga,” a teaching campaign in and around Joliet, Illinois, now in progress (July 6-August 31). ited hospitality is available on a first-come, firstserved basis. Special briefing and training for teachers arriving in August. Youth are encouraged to ask their Assemblies about subsidizing their participation. “Project Olinga” is sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of Joliet. For details, phone project coordinators Donna Kime Barbre, 815-723-8488, of Ann Arp, 815-744-6950.
| WOULD LIKE to contact fellow Baha'is who want to complete their collections of Baha'i publications (Baha’i News, The American Baha'i, etc.) and are 1g to
trade or barter for needed issues. | am searching for issues of Baha'i er School will be held August 38
News in the 1920's and 1930's. My at the Frontenac Methodist Camp i in Frontenac, Minnesota, on the
duplicates include Bi News, jos s U.S. Supplement, Baha’i National beautiful Mississippi River away from big-city noise and conges Review and The American Baha'i. |" . Contact Christopher Polzer, 6657 tion. This is the first Minnesota school to have two sessions;
Bi , Ludi , Mi 49431, ee wera Cucina therefore, those who were turned
or phone 616-843-3732. away in the past will be able to atTHE UNIVERSITY of the West _ tend. Activities will include swimIndies in Kingston, Jamaica, is in ming, volleyball, bonfires, etc., dire need of lecturers for various plus a well-balanced, familydepartments, especially those oriented schedule of classes with who are qualified in computer a new, more flexible curriculum. sciences. Those who are For more information, please conemployed from abroad are exempted from taxes for two
Bahai Publishing Trust
years, after which they must pay a tax. That is why many of those who have completed a two-year stay are leaving. This is a great opportunity for those who have the necessary qualifications to pioneer to Jamaica. For more information, please contact the International Goals Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091, or phone 312-256-4400.
THE INTERNATIONAL City Managers’ Association is assisting the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior, in developing a cadre of tribal managers. Selections will be made from individuals in a wide range of occupational specialties to work with tribal governments on Indian Reservations throughout the U.S. for periods ranging from six to 24 months. Salary range: $25,000-$40,000 a year. Contact Don Burot at ICMA, 202-828-3609.
THE MINNESOTA Baha'i Sum
Please See CLASSIFIEDS Page 24
panaoenl
The Promised Day Is Come. Shoghi Effendi’s authoritative perspective on current world events This revised edition of the Guardian’s 1941 letter to Western Baha’is is indispensable—an eloquent and forceful analysis of the main trends of the last hundred years. Catalog No. 7-08-17. Cloth $9.75 (eS DOSY GSE NSE ET FO ERED ES] OE EES OL om AT AS HD YES! Please send me ____ copies of The Promised Day Is Come H ats9.75 each (postpaid). I enclose a check or money order for $—______ made payable to the Baha'i Publishing Trust. f
Ship to:
My name is print
Rural Route, or P.O. Box Number
Zip
Gy State Send order with payment to: Baha'i Publishing Trust
The American Baha'i
July 1980
Seals & Crofts leave for pioneer posts
Continued From Page 1
in our business relationship is that we'll be commuting when we work together, and we obviously won't be touring as much as we have in the past.”
Jim estimates that the team will make about six trips to the U.S. each year.
Seals and Crofts’ latest album, “The Longest Road,” was completed shortly before they left the U.S. for their pioneering posts.
The Way Home is the working title of a book they are writing about their search for the Faith and their lives as believers while in the public eye.
The two multi-talented and highly successful musicians, who first teamed up while still in junior high school in Texas, have four million-selling albums t credit: “Summer Breeze, mond Girl,” “Unborn Child, “Seals and Crofts’ Greatest Hits.”
IN ADDITION, their recordings
f “Summer Breeze,” “Diamond Girl” and “Hymmingbird” were among the top selling singles of the last decade.
When he was five years old, Jim Seals already was playing a Sears catalog violin and learning to play his father’s guitar.
Four years later he won the Texas state championship fiddle contest, then turned his attention to the saxophone, which became his principal instrument until the formation years later of the team of Seals and Crofts.
Dash, meanwhile, studied classical piano as a child, at the urging of.his mother, but found the drums more exciting.
When Dash was seven his parents finally gave in and bought him his first set of drums.
After high school, Jim and Dash found their way to Los Angeles where they played with various bands and composed songs for Brenda Lee, Rick Nelson and other performers.
THEY TOURED the world for seven years with “The Champs,” an.early rock group whose big hit recording of “Tequila” sold six million copies.
Their next venture was a group called ‘“‘The Dawnbreakers,” which featured Dash on drums, Jim on rhythm guitar and saxophone, Louie Shelton on guitar and Joey Bogan on bass.
That group also included three female singers, one of whom
Business group formed
To reach a greater crosssection of society in their community, the Baha'is of Rolling Meadows, Illinois, have formed the Rolling Meadows Baha’i Association of Business and Industry.
Among its plans are a series of dinners with guest speakers, and tours of area businesses and
plants. ion. by Mayor Angelo Martinelli of — Yonkers. of the Child.
became Dash’s wife.
It was during this time that Jim and Dash were studying the Faith with Marcia Day, who was to become their manager. Later, after “The Dawnbreakers” had decided to go their separate ways and Dash had taken up the mandolin, Seals and Crofts was formed.
“We had found the Truth,” said Dash, “and our vehicle for expressing it was our music.”
Much of their music has been inspired by the Writings of the Faith, including such memorable songs as “Year of Sundays,” “East of Ginger Trees” and “Hummingbird.”
Dash, elaborating on his deci: sion to pioneer, said, “A person's priorities can become a little con: fused, like mine did.
“| WAS BEGINNING to think that my situation here (in California) somehow carried a greater priority than pioneering, but it didn't.
“One's priority should always be the Cause of God, especially in this day. These opportunities we have now will never come again.”
Dash admitted to having some anxieties between the time he made the decision to go to Mexico and the move itself.
His fears were calmed, he said, by “A Call to Pioneering,” the cassette tape featuring the Hand of the Cause of God William Sears that is available from the Baha'i Publishing Trust.
“I would encourage other Baha'is who have the desire to go pioneering but think they are bogged down with problems,” said Dash, “to re-examine those problems to see whether they are real or exist only in their imagination.”
Jim Seals had been in his new home in Costa Rica for two weeks when he was asked about his feelings toward his pioneering post
“love it!” he said, his voice filled with emotion. “It is really beautiful!”
Auction raises
$245 for Fund
The mood of the social portion of the Feast of Jalal in Greenfield, Massachusetts, went from pleas ant to thrilling as homemade items and cherished personal possessions were auctioned to raise money for the National Baha'i Fund
The 25 adults and six children from five communities in the Northern Pioneer Valley and the Berkshire Mountains of western Massachusetts were thrilled when the host Greenfield Group announced the final tally of $245.33.
Especially inspiring was the spontaneous offer for auction of a sterling silver ring with a lapis stone of considerable weight and beauty. It provided the auction with its single largest contribu
Dash Crofts (center), Jim Seals, their
wives and family members gathered
in May for a farewell party hosted by
Yonkers, New York, Baha’i named ‘Goodwill Ambassador’ by mayor
Solomon Hilton, a member of the Spiritual Assembly of Yonkers, New York, has been chosen by the city’s mayor as its “Goodwill Ambassador” to the village of Falaba, Sierra Leone.
Arrangements are being made for Mr. Hilton, who was born in Falaba, to deliver a 100-year-old bell to the village school there as a gift from the South Yonkers Youth Council
THE DELIVERY of this “Bell of Friendship" will mark the initia ition of an ongoing relationship
with the African village. The trip will have special significance for Mr. Hilton because he and his family were in. strumental in bringing the Falaba
in checkered coat), a member of the Spiritual Assembly of Yonkers, New York, has been named ‘Goodwill Ambassador to his native village in Sierra Leone
Solomon Hilton (left,
the Baha'is of Culver City, California Their manager, Marcia Day, is at the left. Dash’s wife, Billie Lee, has an
school into existence in the mid-1950s.
As a youngster in Falaba, Mr. Hilton had to attend school in a neighboring village, as there was No school in his own village at that time.
“When | saw the bell in a thrift shop owned by the South Yonkers Youth Council,” says Mr. Hilton, “my first reaction was to make arrangements to buy it for the school in Falaba.””
Village schools in the hinterlands of most African countries, he explains, use clanging devices such as railroad irons to remind students of the time.
Falaba, he says, is a relatively small farming village of under 300 residents. The village school has
Yonkers (right). Funds are being rais: ed to enable Mr. Hilton to deliver a 100-year-old ‘Bell of Friendship’ to the village school in Falaba, Sierra Leone, on behalf of the people of
arm around a niece. Ihe other three children are those of Jim and his wite, Ruby Jean
This is the bell to be taken, to Sierra
‘Goodwill Ambassador New
Leone by Solomon Hilton of Yonkers, York.
about 80 to 90 students, many of whom live in nearby villages.
FALABA IS governed by a leader of the Mende tribe who happens also to be Mr. Hilton's cousin.
Mr. Hilton and his family came to the U.S. in 1964. His children, Solomon and Sombo, had attended the village school in Falaba, and more recently were graduated from a high school in Yonkers.
Mr. Hilton, an assistant resource consultant for the New York City Department of Social Services, is a member of the South Yonkers Youth Council's Falaba Project Committee, begun last fall as a means of supporting the United Nations International Year
[Page 24]The American Bahai
Classifieds
Continued From Page 22
tact the registrar, Ms. Barbara
_ Loeding, 1688 Arona St., Apt. 2, Falcon Heights, MN 55113, or phone 612-647-1014.
THE MERIDIAN Towns Michigan, Baha'i community fieeds one adult Baha'i to re-form, its Spiritual Assembly. A profes: sional person willing to settle there and give stability to the community is preferred. Meridian Township, which has eight adult Baha’is, is in the Lansing area and offers cultural activities as well as an affluent business community. For more information, please write to Martha Cavanagh, 4396 Okemos Road, E212, Okemos, MI 48864, or phone 517-349-3925.
WANTED: Letters from all our friends who have attended the New Era High School in India. We would like to Know about you and keep track of where you are so that, hopefully, we will meet each other again someday. Please write to Shohreh Kermani and Fariba Moghaddam, 8 Dewey Avenue, Westfield, MA 01085, or phone 413-562-0189.
JOB OPPORTUNITIES in Finland. As the Scandinavian countries gradually close their doors to foreigners, there remain at least two ways for Baha'i pioneers to get into Finland. Jobs are available as night school English teachers or as_kindergarten teachers at Englishspeaking schools. Anyone who has a college degree or teacher's certificate may qualify for these jobs. Many openings are available for September 1980. For further information, contact the International Goals Committee, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091, or phone 312-256-4400.
AM PREPARING a workshop for a National Early Childhood Education Conference and need material for children ages 3-9 on the Hindu, Muslim and Buddhist faiths: finger plays, songs, stories. Any original finger plays, etc., for the Baha'i Faith also are welcome. Please send to Jacqueline Osborne, 1808 Maple Avenue, Florence, AL 35630.
BAHA'l COUPLE desires to homefront pioneer anywhere for ‘one year before going to graduate school in public health in 1981. Would like to gain practical work experience in the health field in a rural community or on an Indian Reservation if possible. Please contact Diana Royal, 8 Countryside Road, Fairport, NY 14450, or phone 716-381-4089.
A TWO-BEDROOM concrete home on a fenced 1/3-acre lot is available near Belize City, in Belize, Central America. The home has two baths, many tropical fruit and flowering trees; it also has running water and electricity, not available in most homes in that area. It is in Burrell Boom village, about 18 miles from Belize City, a good location to get to roads to the west and south, and to the north toward Mexico. If interested, please contact W. Ford Young, Real Estate Ltd., 160 N. Front St.,
Box 354, Belize City, Belize, Central America.
SEVERAL TEACHING and administrative positions are available for the 1980-81 school year in Browning, Montana, on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation. Needed are a superintendent of schools, junior high school prin: cipal and vice-principal, 7th and 8th grade English teachers, psychologist, hearing and speech personnel for grades K-12, 7th grade math teacher, reading specialist for grades 7-9, shop teacher (grades 7-12), and junior high schoo! counselor. For more information, please write to the Browning Public Schools, Brown: ing, MT 59417.
WEST TEXAS wants you! Move to Abilene, where you'll find good employment opportunities, congenial weather, and a challenging community in which to teach the Faith. We'll help you relocate. Write to Candice Bowers,
secretary, 3157 South 19th, Abilene, TX 79605, or phone 915-698-7237.
GLORY, an international Baha'i deepening magazine published bimonthly by the National Youth Committee of the Baha'is of India, invites your subscription, Glory regularly presents a diverse range of materials from articles by Baha'i scholars and stories of martyrs and heroes of the Faith to biographies, book news and reviews, compilations from the Writings, poems, skits, puzzles, quizzes and ideas for individual and community improvement Subscription rates: Air mail to the U.S., $7.50; surface mail to the .S., $4 for one or two years. To subscribe, write to Glory clo Lucky, Main Road, Panchgani 412805, Maharashtra, India.
BAHA'I FILMS for sale. Four films covering the visit of the Hand of the Cause A.Q. Faizi to San Francisco in July 1973. The films are “Prayers and Medita ” “Answered Questions,” “Baha'i Education of Children,” and “Stories and Excerpts.” The cost is $350 each, or $1,200 for the set of four. A limited number is available from the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of San Francisco, 170 Valencia St., San Francisco, CA 94103.
SOUTH CAROLINA needs volunteers to help with consolidation work in the vicinity of the Louis G. Gregory Baha'i Institute near Hemingway. The need is great for deepened, dedicated, self-supporting Baha'is of all ages. Please apply to the Louis Gregory Baha'i Institute, Route 2, Box 71, Hemingway, SC 29554, or Phone 803-558-5093.
HOMEFRONT PIONEERS are needed to help a Baha'i Group of four in Calvert County, Maryland, achieve Assembly status. Calvert County is 30 miles from Washington, 0.C., 50 miles from Baltimore, and 27 miles from An: napolis, thé capital of Maryland. There are beautiful beaches and waterfront homes in this fastgrowing county. For more information, please — phone 301-535-2072 after 5 p.m. (EDT). We will help in any way we can.
G. Acre hosts ‘Spanish weekend’
The Green Acre Baha'i School in Eliot, Maine, held its first teaching and deepening weekend for Spanish-speaking believers and their non-Bahai friends March 29-30.
Auxiliary Board member Jorge Nossa of Mexico, who is a Colombian Indian, conducted a workshop entitled “Teaching Spanish-Speaking Seekers.”
Susan Nossa, an assistant to the Auxiliary Board from Mexico, and Cherie Martinez, a Baha'i representative to the United Nations from Mexico, also participated in the Spanish-language sessions. Z
“The Love of God” was the topic discussed at a Sunday session by Zohreh Granfar, who served for many years as a pioneer to Spain.
A Spanish-style luncheon was served to conclude the first “Spanish weekend” at Green Acre, but many of the participants lingered into the afternoon, reluctant to part.
The school hopes to host many such programs in the future as part of an effort by New England believers to reach their Spanishspeaking neighbors.
Baha’i World reprinted
The Department of Publishing at the Baha'i World Centre has announced that Volume XIII of The Baha'i World, which covers the years 1954 to 1963 and has been out of print for some time, is being reprinted.
It will be exactly the same as the original volume, except that the two maps that were inserted in pockets on the inside of the front and back covers will not be included.
The price for the new printing is $25 NET (Catalog No. 7-33-13).
Please send orders to the Baha'i Publishing Trust, 415 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
Children enjoyed one another's com: pany and games provided for them during the: first Spanish-language
teaching and deepening weekend March 29:30 at the Green Acre Baha'i Schoo! in Eliot, Maine.
Center employee wins art award
William Dennisuk, a mail services staff member at the Baha'i National Center, has won a $2,500 grant from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago where he recently earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in painting.
Mr. Dennisuk's works were judged as being among the seven best gallery exhibits of those displayed by the 225 graduating students at the Art Institute.
The four judges—an art critic, painter, filmmaker and photographer—were selected from various parts of the country.
Mr. Dennisuk, a native of Detroit, Michigan, uses various materials such as wood, canvas, slate and metals in his approach to contemporary art, which he says is influenced by the Faith.
“| take materials that are not traditionally used together and try to make them work together,” says Mr. Dennisuk. “A basic premise of my work is that there is an underlying, fundamental unity to all things.
Or. Alice Loomis, age 100, holds one
month-old Nathaniel Armstrong.
Both are members of the Lincoln,
Nebraska, Baha'i community. Or.
Loomis, a Baha'i since her early 80s,
was an innovator in educational
human relations and sociology who
is presently researching the causes
of senility. ‘The most important thing
in life,” she says, ‘is to be useful to
human needs.”
The Baha'i children’s chorus, “The Children of Baha," appeared May 4 on the KNBC-TV (Los Angeles) program, ‘Odyssey.’ The Baha'i chorus ‘shared the program with United Na tions representative Robert Muller
that he believes will pull the world through its present period of crisis and confrontation. ‘The Children of Baha’ are shown here with their
director, Mrs. Mary Zemke (standing left of center), and Warren Olney, host of Odyssey. The program is
seen by an estimated
100,000 viewers each week. ‘
The American Baha’i
July 1980
29
Te
sais Mente
The Hand of the Cause of God William Sears and Mrs. Sears at the dedication February 10 of the William Sears Baha'i School in Pasadena, California
Pasadena school named for Mr. Sears
In January, the Pasadena (California) Intercommunity Baha'i Schoo! renamed its facility the William Sears Baha'i School.
The dedication was held February 10 with the Hand of the Cause of God William Sears and his wife, Marguerite, present More than 200 Baha'is came to share in the celebration.
Mr. Sears told stories about other Baha'i schools around the world and showed his slides of Mt Carmel and the Holy Land, while Mrs. Sears showed the children how to cut ‘a nine-pointed star from a folded piece of newspaper.
There were flowers, music, and a cake decorated with the school’s name. Steve Pennington, a Baha'i from San Gabriel, made a lovely wood-carved sign for the school, and presented Mr. Sears with a sign for his residence
As a token of his appreciation, Mr. Sears gave everyone present a gift of the record, “The Queen of Carmel.”
The Sears School Baha'i_ communities: South Pasadena, La Crescenta, Canada-Flintridge, Altadena, Sierra Madre, Alhambra, San Marino, Burbank, Glendale, Temple City, Arcadia, Rosemead, San Gabriel, El Monte, and Monrovia.
serves 16 Pasadena,
Service for the Blind
AVAILABLE NOW:
In Braille or on tape—
- Tablets of Baha'u'llah
- The Priceless Pear!
- Selections From the Writings
of the Bab
- The Revelation of Baha’u'llah
(Vols. 1 and 2)
plus more than 80 other titles
For a printed catalog write: Baha'i Service for the Blind 3110 East Lester St. Tucson, AZ 85716
R
On April 11, the Office of the Secretary at the Baha'i National Genter sent the following letter to all Local Spiritual Assemblies in the U.S. on behalf of the National Spiritual Assembly:
“The situation which has arisen as a result of the difficulties between Iran and the United States makes it unwise for Persian believers to congregate in large gatherings at present.
"You are perhaps aware that the recent Persian conference in Los Angeles was foreshortened by a bomb threat. Quite apart from the obvious delicateness of the situation, the potential dangers hanging over the Iranians in the United States, we feel that enough regional conferences have been held for the Persian Baha’is for the time being.
“WHILE WE encourage local initiative in assisting the Persian believers to become fully in: tegrated into the American Baha'i community, we do not wish Local Assemblies to sponsor regional conferences for Persians.
“Certaim segments of the American public and the media have long thought that the Baha'i community in the United States is simply a collection of Iranian transplants. We have been combatting this misconception ever since the crisis began more than a year ago.
“Therefore, it does us no good
id
Zikrullah Knadem (center was an honored guest speaker at the
The Hand of the Cause of God smiling)
whatever, on the one hand, to endeavor to impress upon the public the broad-based American membership of the Baha'i community in the United States and, on the other, to hold so many Persian events as to lend credence to the misconception.
“We need to be careful about the number, extent and nature of the events we hold for the benefit
50 attend Plattsburgh, N.Y., deepening
A group of 50 believers trom New York state, Vermont and Canada, along with several nonBaha'is, attended a deepening institute April 20-21 near Plattsburgh, New York.
Speakers included Auxiliary Board members Javidukht Khadem of Skokie, Illinois, and
Nathan Rutstein of Amherst, Massachusetts. Assistants to the Auxiliary
Board Shannon Javid and Ronald Tomanio presented workshops, as did two members of the District Teaching Committee of Western
Got your road map through 1986? See new materials on Seven Year Plan. Publishing Trust ad
on page 27.
at MacMurray College in Jackson
ville, Illinois.
130 believers hear Mr. Khadem at Illinois ‘Baha’i Life’ gathering
The Hand of the Cause of God Zikrullah Khadem and Auxiliary Board member Stephen Ader were the guest speakers April 12-13 ata “Baha'i Life Conference” at MacMurray College in Jacksonville, Illinois.
The conference, the first in a series of three gatherings designed to help improve the spiritual, intellectual and community life of believers in Southern Illinois, was attended by some 130 of the friends.
The meeting was sponsored by the District Teaching Committee of Southern Illinois. It featured talks by the guest speakers, as well as seminars on marriage and family life, community life, the
Musical entertainment was provided by the “Sounds of Light” from St. Louis, anc by singer Donna Kime Barbre.of Joliet, Illinois.
The Hand of the Cause Mr. Khadem told his audience that every atom, every created thing, and every event promotes the Message of God, either by bringing attention to the Faith or by demonstrating the critical need for it.
The new World Order, he said, has so upset the world’s equilibrium that one is safe only when he is firm in the Covenant.
A second conference was scheduled June 7-8 in Bloomington, Illinois, with the dates and location of the third to be deter
egional Persian conferences restricted
of the Persian believers in our midst ...
“The complexity of dealing with the heavy influx of Persian believers in the wake of the current crisis prompted the National Assembly to appoint a Persian Affairs Committee to assist these friends and to advise Local Assemblies having a number of Persian believers in their com New York, which sponsored this first such conference in New York's “north country.”
The Auxiliary Board members spoke about our responsibilities as Baha’is, the need to set prior Ss and put the. Administrative Order in perspective, as well as about our role in the Seven Year Plan.
Other discussions were held on. the relationship between Baha'i children and adults, peer problems facing younger Baha'is, and the answers to the world’s present crises.
The conference, which included classes for children, ended with a picnic lunch at a nearby state park.
Top medical society taps Baha’i
Dr. Manucher Javid, a Baha'i from Madison, Wisconsin, who is chairman of the division of neurosurgery at the University of Wisconsin Medical School, is one of 10 neurosurgeons in the world to be named a charter member of the Xeiron Society, an organization aimed at promoting original work by neurosurgeons.
Dr. Javid was cited for introducing the use of urea to reduce high intracranial pressure in brain surgery.
munities.
“The National Assembly exercises close supervision over the work of the Committee to ensure proper handling of the tasks assigned to it.
“We would be grateful indeed if Local Assemblies would turn to this Committee for advice ... and heed its decisions and recom: mendations.”
David Nawi of Flushing, New York,’ age 2 1/2, tries his hand at the maracas during a children's class at the first deepening conterence in New York state's ‘north country April 20-21
Such pressure can lead to brain damage and death, Dr. Javid's discovery has saved countless lives, according to experts in the field of neurosurgery
The Xeiron Society is named for Aesculapius, the god of healing in Greek mythology.
Five of the other charter members of the society are from the U'S., two are from Canada, one is from the Netherlands, and ‘one is from the Soviet Union.
‘Deee-licious!’ was a comment heard frequently during a potluck picnic held in Chandler, Arizona, to celebrate the last day of Ayyam-i-Ha, and the reaction of young Casey Langness was no exception. Break.
to the gaiety of the occasion, and the recent influx of Persian believers in the area added an international flavor to the event. In the spirit of hospitality, several Baha'is took plates of food to the friends in the
Fund, and homefront pioneering. _mined later. ing a pifata and singing songs added area who weren't able to attend.
The American Baha’i
26
Alla Dakserhof dead at age 82
Alla Dakserhof of Bellevue, Washington, a Baha'i for 30 years who was widely known in the Northwest for her valiant and steadfast promotion of the Faith, died April 17 at the age of 82.
Mrs. Dakserhof, born September 16, 1897, in Petrograd (now Leningrad), Russia, studied music at the Conservatory there before leaving Russia with her husband in May 1918.
AFTER SPENDING 12 years in Canada, she and her family came to the U.S. in 1930. Mrs. Dakserhof became a Baha'i in 1950. Her husband, George, who died in 1967, embraced the Faith in 1955.
Mrs. Dakserhof, a piano teacher by profession and an indefatigable Baha'i teacher as well, conducted numerous firesides, discussion groups and public meetings, teaching every age group.
For 17 years she was in charge of the library at the Geyserville Baha'i Schoo! in California. She served on national, regional and local committees, and was many times a delegate to the National Baha'i Convention.
Mrs. Dakserhof was a student of comparative religions, and presented courses on that subject at the University of California, the
Jack F. Parr,
Colorado
homefront pioneer, dead
Jack F. Parr, the first homefront pioneer to Loveland, Colorado, died July 11, 1979.
Mr. Parr, who was born December 23, 1912, in Butte, Montana, spent most of his adult life in public relations.
He was known as “Hobo Jack,” a nickname given to him during his travels with carnival troupes throughout the U.S.
DURING THE 1930s Mr. Parr went to Hollywood where he formed friendships with many of the early stars of stage and screen, some of whom came to Loveland to visit him as recently as last year and entertained residents at the retirement village where he lived.
Active in marathon walking and marathon dancing, two of the crazes of the period, Mr. Parr won an 87-day walkathon at Hollywood's Polar Ice Rink in 1934.
He was shown in newsreels and in a photo shaking hands with Frankie Darro, a move star of the "30s who had bet $1000 that Mr. Pare would win the contest.
For 46 years Mr. Parr was a private contractor in custodial services, and for 14 years before his
7
Jack F. Parr, who was the first Baha’ hometront pioneer to Loveland, Cotorado, and was a member of its first Spiritual Assembly in 1973. Mr. Parr died in July 1979 at the age of 66.
death operated a promotional advertising business.
Mr. Parr embraced the Faith in Butte in 1965. Shortly afterward, he moved to Loveland and was a member of its first Spiritual Assembly, formed in 1973. He served for two years as treasurer of the Assembly.
Or. Isaac Asimov (fourth from felt) was among the speakers March 29 al a symposium on ‘Science and the Future of Mankind’ sponsored by the Spiritual Assembly of New York City in cooperation with the National Spiritual Assembly's office at the
United Nations. Among the friends with Dr. Asimov is Dr. Hussein Ahdieh (second from right), chairman of the Spiritual Assembly of New York City. An article about the sym: posium appeared in the May issue of The American Baha’
University of Washington, and Highline Community College.
In June 1978, her name was entered in the records of the Hall of Fame of the Piano Guild of the U.S. for her achievements in music teaching.
William V.Ackerman Loveland, Colorado October 25, 1979
Mrs. Geneva S. Alvarez New York, N.Y. April 6, 1980
Rimi
Goldtooth Begay Holbrook, Arizona Date Unknown
Mrs. Gypsy G. Gonzalez Washington, D.C. January 1980
Miss Lueinda Greene i, S. Carolina January 1979
Mrs. Olive H. Hackney Cleveland, Ohio February 25, 1980
Mrs. Irene Reynol
Massachusetts believer, dies
Mrs. Irene B. Reynolds of Beverly, Massachusetts, a devoted Baha'i for 30 years, died March 6.
Mrs. Reynolds, whose Baha'i teachers included Harlan Ober and Dr. Elizabeth Kidder, was a dedicated teacher who served for
In memoriam
David McNeil Darlington, S.C. Date Unknown
Morris Middlebrook: Senoia, Georgia Date Unknown
Chuck Montoya Dulce, New Mexico Summer 1979
Mack Bennett Mrs. Serrita C. Herbert — Mrs. Clara Morris. Elgin, South Carolina Los Angeles, California Albany, Oregon April 16, 1980 _ March 6, 1980 May 30, 1979
Raymond Betts East Berne, New York November 19, 1979
Charlie C. Brown Ideal, Georgia Fall 1979
Parish Cabbagestalk Hartsville, S.C. November 7, 1979
Mrs, Cloteal Casselberry Wichita Falls, Texas October 1979
Mrs. Sophie Chief Fort Thompson, S. Dakota
April 25, 1980 Date Unknown March 1, 1980 April 12, 1980
Freddie Chisholm Jimmy Jorney Mrs. Reva Robinson Mrs. Margaret Von Seeth Dale, South Carolina Marshallville, Georgia Naples, Florida . Long Beach, Washington March 31, 1980 Date Unknown March 1980 Date Unknown
George Cole John Joseph George Ross Rudolph White
Vashon, Washington Vienna, Georgia Griffin, Georgia Bronx, New York
April 3, 1980 Date Unknown March 1980 March 1980
Mrs. Helen Conley Nuroliah Khamsi Hugh Rouse Mrs. Roberta Whitehurst Mound City, lilinois Houston, Texas Poway, California Roper, North Carolina Date Unknown April 15, 1980 April 2, 1980 Date Unknown
Mrs. Alla Dakserhof AC. Little Miss Vicenta Salenas Dr. Lawrence E. Wilkins
Bellevue, Washington April 17, 1980
James Dawson Vienna, Georgia Date Unknown
Charles W. Ellison Westminster, Maryland April 4, 1980
Mrs. Minnie England Locust Grove, Okla. May 6, 1980
Mrs. Annie M. Evans Vienna, Georgia Date Unknown 1978 Herbert W. Forman Jr. Rochester, New York Date Unknown
Mrs. Mayme Glass Athambra, California April 23, 1980
James L. Higdon Rochester, New York April 5, 1980
Mrs. Rosa Holt Vienna, Georgia October 10, 1978
Gerald M. Horne Oceanside, California March 17, 1980
Ernest Jackson Waynesboro, Georgia Summer 1979
dames Henry Johnson Newport, Oregon
Marshaliville, Georgia Date Unknown
Miss Hazel M. Little Tucson, Arizona April 3, 1980
James P. McClellan Sierra Vista, Arizona March 24, 1980
George McCray Homestead, Florida Date Unknown
Julius J. McCray Pineville, S.C.
Mrs. Lillian McLeod Bassfield, Mississippi February 8, 1980
Edward Paddy Fort Hall, Idaho April 13, 1980
Earl Patterson New York, N.Y. April 24, 1980
Gustav P. Piff Puyallup, Washingt March 22, 1980
Livingston, Texas July 1, 1978
Fred Randolph
Buckeye, Arizona Date Unknown
Hawaiian Sales Buena Vista, Georg’ 1979
Edmond Scott Union Springs, Ala. March 1980
San Diego, Californ Date Unknown
Mrs. Willie Mae Smi Gifford, Florida Date Unknown
Sherman Solomon Union Springs, Ala. Date Unknown
Lang A. Prescott Sr.
Bridgeport, Connecticut
Mrs. Militza Shevtzoff
ds, long-time
several years in the bookstore at Green Acre Baha'i Schoo! in Eliot, Maine.
She was a member of the Spiritual Assembly of Beverly until the time of her passing.
Mrs. Carrie Stevenson Winnsboro, S. Carolina November 28, 1979
‘S Mrs. Grace Stewart Westborough, Mass. April 14, 1980
William Swift Union Springs, Ala. January 1980
Mrs. lone Tatelski San Diego, California April 4, 1980
George C. Thoma: Pomona, California March 1980,
James Thompson Deming, New Mexico February 1980
Phillip Thurmond Bandon, Oregon January 1980
jon
Mrs. Hasbahe B. Tsosie Chinle, Arizona April 1980
Mrs, Homayoun Vafadari Escondido, California
Los Angeles, California February 24, 1980
Hoskie Wilson ia ~—- Houck, Arizona Date Unknown
Henry Worthington Greenville, N. Carolina Date Unknown
Zabihollah Zabibi-Moghadam ia Louisville, Kentucky
Date Unknown ith Dariush Zarehzadeh New York, N.Y. Date Unknown
Mrs. Alice Zemke San Diego, California Date Unknown
[Page 27]PUBLISHING TRUST
July 1980
Bahai Publishing Trust
Consultation: A Compilation: NEW Booklet Designed to help groups, Local Spiritual Assemblies, and committees develop skills of consultation. Contains many previously untranslated passages from the Baha'i writings that shed light on a subject of vital concern to all. Compiled by the Research Department of The Universal House of Justice. 23 pp.
Paper 7-15-64
$1.50
Children’s Prayers Card: NEW Card
Excellent teaching aid and gift for children, friends, and family. Attractively illustrated card featuring two of ‘Abdu’l-Baha’s prayers for children: “O God, guide me” and “O God! Educate these children” (Baha'i Prayers, Nos. 5, 8). A useful item for Universal Children’s Day. Easy
7-03-25
$.15 NET 10/$1.05 NET
The Seven Year Plan: NEW Booklet
Your road map through 1986! Contains messages from The Universal House of Justice to the Baha’is of the World and of the United States, Naw-Ruz 1979, announcing the objectives of the fourth global teaching campaign. Also includes guidelines adopted by the National Spiritual Assembly outlining objectives for the execution of the first phase of the Seven Year Plan. Individuals, teachers, consolidation workers, and members of the various institutions of the Faith will want to have copies of these documents on hand at all times for reference and inspiration.
Paper 7-15-65
$1.50
Seven Year Plan Update—Ridvan 1980: NEW
Cassette Listen to the plans for the progress of the Faith in the United States. Hear the stirring words of Counselor Edna True, Judge Dorothy Nelson, Mr. Glenford E. Mitchell, and members of the National Spiritual Assembly praising the Baha'i community for its efforts and urging the Baha’is on'to greater love, unity, and victories in the teaching work and the consolidation of Baha’i community life. Recorded at the 1980 National Convention. 90 minutes.
A Mysterious Power in This Cause/fran: Crisis and Challenge: NEW Cassette
Two inspiring talks on one tape for a very special personal, family, or community deepening. On one side of the cassette the Hand of the Cause of God Dhikr’ullah Khadem, drawing on quotations from the Writings and stories of early Baha’is, speaks on the significance of Ridvan and the latent power available to the Baha’i community. On the other side Counselor Dr. Iraj Ayman gives a moving account of the transformation of the believers in the Cradle of the Faith brought about by tests and difficulties during a year of crisis. 90 minutes.
Bahd’u’llah: The King of Glory: NEW Book H. M, Balyuzi’s monumental biography of Baha‘u'lláh. Much of the story is taken from unpublished memoirs of Baha’u'llah’s companions, who themselves observed the events they describe. Includes details of Baha’u'llah’s ancestry and family that were hitherto generally unavailable. Profusely illustrated with more than 100 photographs. 544 pp., index, maps.
Cloth
7-32-47 —=
$22.50 NET
One World, One People: NEW Pamphlet For UN and Human Rights Day proclamations.
7-40-99
10/$1.60 25/$3.20 100/$11.50
Stories from the Delight of Hearts: The Memoirs of Haji Mirza Haydar-’Ali: NEW Book Learn about the fascinating life story of one who braved the persecutions of family, friends, and fellow-countrymen to embrace the Babi Faith. Haji Mirz4 Haydar-‘Ali’s commitment to the new religion finally took him to the Holy Land, where he attained the presence of Baha’u'llah. Translated and abridged by the Hand of the Cause of God A. Q. Faizi. 163 pp., notes.
Clementine and the Cage: NEW Children’s Book For 7-9 year olds. A fable of a bird who goes beyond the squabbling and limited vision of other birds. Text by Wendy Heller. Illustrations by Rex J. Irvine. Published by Kalimat Press. 11 x 842 inches. 32 pp.
Cloth
Cloth
7-31-98
7-52-74
$8.95 NET
$7.95 NET
The Story As Told: Revised Edition
Jalil Mahmoudi’s poetic presentation of the concept of progressive revelation including quotations from many of the world’s scriptures. Attractively illustrated by Russell Roberts. Published by Kalimat Press. 64 pp.
Paper 7-32-24
$8.95 NET
ag: — Wildflower Card with envelope: NEW Card 6-48-80 $4.50 Full-color photograph, gold stamped with “Thy name is my healing, O my God.” The prayer of Bahd‘ullah concludes inside the card. Pack of ten. Waterfall Card with envelope: NEW Card 6-48-81 $4.50
Full-color reproduction of a waterfall in a forest setting, gold stamped with “O God, refresh and gladden my spirit.” The prayer of ‘Abdu’lBaha is concluded inside the card. Pack of ten.
Celebration Card with envelope: NEW Card Bright watercolor depicting children of different races and cultures preparing for a party with the message, “The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens.’ A special message for you on this happy occasion.” Pack of ten.
6-48-82
$4.50
es a a es oes ee ee (Clip and mail today) om oe a a A A SS
rT NYP Sh ares pencirue alliyour new misserialsl Hncloeiddammy check oral
money order for $. made payable to the Baha'i Publishing Trust. § Cat.No. Quantity Price. © Amount Cat. No, Quantity Price. = Amount ff 7-15-64 1.50 7-52-74 7.95 NET 7-03-25 -15 NET 7-32-24 8.95 NET 10/1.05 NET 7-40-99 1011.60 7-15-65 1.50 2513.20 691-65 Ee ogg, 100/11.50 6-31-66 6.50 6-48-80 4.50 7-32-47 22.50 NET 6-48-81 4.50 7-31-98 8.95 NET 6-48-82 4.50
Ordered by: (please print)
My name is
Send coupon with payment to: Baha’t Publishing Trust 415 Linden Avenue/Wilmette, IL 60091 lr ney ey em SS SES NN oR NT SRE SO OE
[Page 28]The American Baha'i
28
Green Acre School sets
busy summer
A full schedule of summer events is scheduled at the Green Acre Baha'i School in Eliot, Maine, culminating August 30-September 1 in the Green Acre “Unity in Diversity” Festival.
The complete schedule:
July 12-13: Marian Lippitt, “Worlds of God.”
July 14-18: Auxiliary Board member Sam McClellan; Janice Talamantes, “Children and Youth in the Baha'i Community"; Virginia Schwacker,. “The Universal House of Justice.”
July 19-20: Randy and Melinda Armstrong, Roy and Anna Nash, “The Spiritually Grounded Family.”
July 21-25: Auxiliary Board member Katherine McLaughlin; Aaron and Barbara Fowlkes, “World Citizenship"; Bob and Mary Hatcher, “The meaning of Deepening.”
July 26-27: Jsing the Media to Proclaim the Faith.
July 28-August 1: Dr. AM. Ghadirian, “Tests and Difficulties”; Kurt Hein, “The Mystery of Sacrifice’; Jane
Grover, ‘From Gnats to Eagles.’
August 2-3: Behzad Zandieh, “Keys to Teaching: the Power of the Covenant and the Spirit of the
| : ; Bc | 8 8 | f | \s | f | Por aay lk ' lg |e | | 3 etek g se | | z 28 i; BR be eshte | 18 Bea, lob ee Ee Pees 2 3 ree bt PR 8 F Poppe se ie I | \z io | fe | \$ Ja | 3 hog Rule Fs i | fe 8 v4 eo PetteoR ole ck Poa ce eae A, ORE é | ba | ©2eesesae 1 eraaeeeee I go iseee?s I neegepeee | » 233222232 I eo 8° Sseeeu® Bo $55828 585 1 ~ SoG §2es08285 Boe | 8858528 t £56 gesesaes z= a oss | Sse 22s I ece Sos
schedule
Faith.
August 4-8: June Remignanti, “God and His Manifestations’; Juana Conrad, “The Greatest Holy Leaf”; Dr. Ann Schoonmaker, “The Loving Community.”
August 9-10: Ann Carpenter, “The Pupil of the Eye.”
August 11-15: Dr. iam Hatcher, “The Science of Religion”; Bill and Zarrin-Taj Foster, “The Dispensation of Baha'u'llah” George and Nina Karamallis, “Life and Works of the Guardian.”
August 16-1 Dr. Hossein Danesh, “Baha'i Marriage.”
August 18-22: Dr. Susan Theroux, “Moral and Spiritual Growth”; Bruce Whitmore, “The Dawning Place’; Jose Cortez, “The Baha'i Community.”
August 23-24: Auxiliary Board member Javidukht Khadem.
August 25-29: Auxiliary Board member Robert Harris; Mildred Mottahedeh, “The New Race of Men"; Ramin Khadem, “The New World Order.”
August 30-September 1: Green Acre Unity in Diversity Festival; presentations by the International
Goais Committee, Spanish Teaching Committee, Asian Teaching Committee. | | | a2 I | on | oe | | 22 | hl ee | | [lag 1 PT | S js 8 Fs g s | 2 2 | is | 2 I 2 | \s 2 ! s |e Lol eg | ee 2. if z |e | S % 3 © 3 Soe a | 2 |3 zt 8 3 2 | oie acl Peale ae 3 |8 3 | s |2 | a = s Ba feel 3 é| 8 = os i
‘Work weekend’ cleans Bosch
Approximately 35.people from communities within a 100-mile radius of the Bosch Baha'i School in Santa Cruz, California, participated in a “work weekend” at the school April 12-13.
Repairing, painting, landscaping, building and cleaning assignments are undertaken by volunteers who participate’ in these work weekends, held about six times each year.
Each volunteer worker puts in 10 to 15 hours during the weekend, according to school administrator James Kelly.
Each weekend of volunteer work there represents a savings to the National Fund of about $1,000 to $1,200, he says, basing his calculation on a pay rate of $5 an hour for 25 volunteers each working for 12 hours.
The savings calculation includes deductions for the cost of the volunteers’ food and housing.
Work weekend participants are
11 seekers attend Morgantown meet
Eleven seekers joined 11 Baha'is and one Baha'i child March 22 at Morgantown, West Virginia's first public meeting of the New Year.
Theespeaker was Dr. Rodney L. Beicher, a Baha'i who is an orthopedic surgeon from Washington, D.C. Dr. Belcher presented slides of his pioneering trip to Tanzania and spoke of his years as a surgeon.
Several students from Tanzania were among those attending the meeting. Afterward, they said they were most happy to see such fine photos of their homeland.
One woman, who had not heard of the Faith until 30 minutes before the meeting, became quite interested, and indicated she would like to attend firesides to hear more.
chosen from interest cards they
have filled out on previous vi
to the Bosch school. They are invited to participate in a work
weekend when their help is needed.
Several people volunteered considerable time last year, says Mr.
Cracks in the pool deck at the Bosch Baha'i School are repaired by volunteer workers (lett to right) Ken Allen of Menlo Park, California; John
Phil Park of Campbell, California, washes windows in the lodge during
Kelly, to help remodel a 500-square-foot building into an office.
The cost of the project, he says, was between $30 and $45 less per square foot than it would have been had the job been given to a commerciat contractor.
Williams, of. Aptos, California; and James Matthews of Manteca, California, during Bosch’s ‘work weekend" Aprit 12:13.
the Bosch Baha
School's. ‘work weekend’ April 12-13.
Race Unity Committee structures plans designed to address ‘challenging issue’
In appointing a new Race Unity Committee for the U.S., the National Spiritual Assembly instructed the committee to “identify the trends in race relations, within and without the Baha'i community, and to recommend ...the actions to be taken and programs to be adopted by the Baha'i community to meet the insistent challenge of racial prejudice.”
The Race Unity Committee has responded to that mandate with a six-year program designed to address the issues raised by the National Assembly.
THE FIRST YEAR of the program has been designated the “Year of Awareness.”
One of the components in that first year is a series of individual and community deepening programs that is now being prepared.
The Race Unity Committee
hopes that these progfams will serve to raise the general level of awareness of these vital issues, and is asking the U.S. Baha'i community for its help and cooperation with the project.
Another important part of the program is a page devoted to racial unity in each issue of The American Baha'i, beginning in ‘August 1980.
The Race Unity page will include several regular features, Such as:
sinteract, a forum for ideas to promote racial unity, interesting case studies on that theme, inspirational real life stories, ideas for community activities, accounts of the bounties of community diversity, etc.
- Your Turn, a forum for contributions from readers on subjects relating to the ‘most
challenging issue" of race unity,
and for comments on items printed each month on this page.
- From the Writings, quotations
of an inspirational nature on race unity.
- Other features such as book
reviews, resource lists for materials relating to the theme of racial unity, contests, photos, etc.
The committee asks for your help in making this an effective page through your contributions to it.
Individuals and communities are invited to contribute to the page now. Send contributions to the Race Unity Committee, c/o Ernest Lopez, secretary, 112 Linden Avenue, Wilmette, IL 60091.
Children and youth are especially welcome to contribute. Be sure to include your name and address (and your age, if you are a child),