An able diplomat and devoted adherent of his ancestral
religion, Mánikchí Sáhib was appointed, in 1854, as an emissary on behalf of
the Parsees of India to assist their coreligionists in Iran, who were suffering
under the repressive policies of the Qájár monarchs. Sometime after this he
attained the presence of Bahá’u’lláh in Baghdad. Although maintaining to the
end of his life allegiance to his Zoroastrian faith, he was attracted to the
teachings of the new religion and, moved by the sacrifice of its early martyrs,
became a lifelong admirer. Years after their meeting he posed a series of
questions to Bahá’u’lláh’s which led to the revelation of two Tablets of
far-reaching significance, the first of which was sent to him in 1878.
The first Tablet, known as the Lawh-i-Mánikchí Sáhib, is
celebrated for its striking and well-known passages epitomizing the
universality of Bahá’u’lláh’s prophetic claim. Revealed, at Mánikchí Sáhib’s
bold request, in pure Persian, the Tablet responds to the questions he had
raised and proclaims some of the central tenets of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh:
“Be anxiously concerned with the needs of the age ye live in, and centre your
deliberations on its exigencies and requirements.” “Turn your faces from the darkness
of estrangement to the effulgent light of the daystar of unity.” “Ye are the
fruits of one tree, and the leaves of one branch.” “[W]hatsoever leadeth to the
decline of ignorance and the increase of knowledge hath been, and will ever
remain, approved in the sight of the Lord of creation.”