First National Spiritual Assembly of Kazakhstan 1994 |
The Baha'is of Central Asia obeyed the Soviet government's
subsequent ban on Baha'i institutions and religious practice and the National
Spiritual Assembly was itself dissolved in 1939, but Baha'is in the region
retained their faith as a matter of private belief and conscience. When the
policy of glasnost emerged in the 1980s, and then the Soviet Union dissolved in
1991, the surviving Baha'is began to share their Faith more openly with the
help of fellow Baha' is from other countries who were then allowed to travel to
the region. By April 1992, there were approximately 500 Baha' is and eight
Local Spiritual Assemblies in Central Asia, and the Regional Spiritual Assembly
of Central Asia, with its seat in Ashkhabad, had been re-formed.