(The Baha'i World 1944-1946)
A survey of Baha'i history ... To use the Search Feature on mobile devices: scroll down to the very bottom of the page, click on View Web Version. The search box will appear on the top right corner of the screen.
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March 29, 2016
Percentage of Continental Counsellors who are women – 1980-2010
The table above represents a historical overview of the
percentage of women serving as members of the Continental Boards of Counsellors
for the period from 26 November 1980—when the number of Boards was fixed at
five—until now [2010], including the most recent appointments that took effect
on 26 November 2010. Percentages have been calculated on the basis of the
appointments made at the beginning of each five-year term; mid-term appointments
have not been considered.
(Included with a letter dated 23 January 2013 written
on behalf of the Universal House of Justice)
March 26, 2016
1844: Bushihr, Persia - Wooden sailing vessels
An old-time wooden sailing vessel like this was used by the Báb to sail for Mecca in October of 1844. With Him were the Letter of the Living Quddus and an Ethiopian attendant with a large basket of sweet lemons to make up for the absence of fresh water. The voyage took about two months. They sailed 3,000 miles around Arabia to the Red Sea and to Jaddih, the port of Mecca.(source: 'Land of Resplendent Glory', by the International Baha'i Audio-Visual Centre, 1971)
March 24, 2016
March 21, 2016
March 20, 2016
Ílkhání Mosque in Shiraz, Persia
The The Ílkhání Mosque
in Shiraz, Persia where many of the Letters of the Living were housed during
their forty-day-long search for the Promised One. (‘Pilgrimage to the House of
the Báb’, 1977)
March 15, 2016
1957: First Conclave of the Hands of the Cause of God - recalled by John Robarts
March 10, 2016
First Baha’i Temple
The world's first Mashriqu'l-Adhkar was built in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, bordering northern Iran.
A women's meeting shows the interior design of the Ashgabat Temple. The women and girls would take turns reading or chanting prayers.
The front arch of the Ashgabat House of Worship
March 7, 2016
November 14, 2015: Battambang, Cambodia — first groundbreaking for a local Baha'i House of Worship
Some 200 community members attended an event marking the groundbreaking.
Community members participate in the groundbreaking at the spot marking the center of the central edifice.
People from surrounding neighborhoods make their way to the event commemorating the groundbreaking.
Members of the community work together to build a fence around the Temple land.
Some two hundred community members from the region of
Battambang in Cambodia gathered to celebrate the momentous occasion, beginning
with prayers at dawn. The event coincided with the commemoration of the Twin
Holy Birthdays—the Birth of the Bab and the Birth of Baha'u'llah.
Though yet unbuilt, the House of Worship is becoming part of
the fabric of community life, and developments related to its construction are
viewed as a collective endeavor, galvanizing the surrounding population. It is,
as described by the Universal House of Justice, connecting "two essential,
inseparable aspects of Baha'i life: worship and service".
The groundbreaking commemorated yesterday marks a
milestone—the first of its kind—among the seven locations announced by the
Universal House of Justice in 2012 to raise a Baha'i House of Worship in the
coming years.
(Baha’i World News Service)
March 3, 2016
1893 Chicago: World's Parliament of Religions - a letter describing Baha'u'llah and the Baha'i Faith was read
Chicago's World Columbian Exposition in 1893 celebrated the
400th anniversary of the discovery of the New World by Christopher Columbus.
The World's Parliament of Religions was one of many conferences planned to
coincide with the fair and was the world's first ecumenical meeting. It met for
17 days in the Hall of Columbus at the Art Institute of Chicago. Clergy from
many Christian denominations took part, as well as representatives of other
faiths, which included the following: Muslim, Hindus, Buddhists, Zoroastrians,
Confucians, and Jains… There was no member of the Baha'i Faith present. A
Christian missionary in Syria sent a letter describing Baha'u'llah and the
Baha'i Faith that was read at a conference session. The Parliament caused a
great interest in comparative religions amongst Chicagoans. When a Syrian
Baha'i named Ibrahim Kheiralla came to Chicago in 1894 hoping to make his
fortune, he initiated classes on spiritual healing, which included some Baha'i
prayers and principles. Students in those classes became the early Baha'is of
Chicago.
(‘Images of America – Baha’i Temple’, by Candace Moore Hill)