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REVIEW
“FIRESIDES”
by Catherine
Samimi Published by George Ronald, Available from the Bahá’í Publishing Trust,
price £6.95
“The
friends must realise their individual responsibility. Each must hold a Fireside
in his or her home, once in 19 days, where new people are invited, and where
some phase of the Faith is mentioned and discussed. If this is done with the
intent of showing Bahá’í hospitality and love, then there will be results”.
(Shoghi Effendi to an individual believer 6th March 1957, quoted in Lights of
Guidance).
We
have in our Faith a rich and growing treasury of literature, and
English-speakers are particularly blessed. Nonetheless there is one area that
remains relatively weak and this book is particularly welcome as it fills a gap
in this, the range of material dealing with practical detail and offering advice
and training. Not so much “Dear Friends, we must…”, more “This is how to…”
Firesides
is firmly based on the Writings and other guidance, which are shared with the
reader, but its main focus is on the practicalities. What is a fireside? What
form can and should it take? Above all, how does one actually go about
generating successful firesides?
The
author leaves one in no doubt that not only is a regular home-based fireside
the basic means whereby our Faith is spread, and that it is the duty of all Bahá’ís
and not just those regarded as “gifted teachers”, it is within the reach of
virtually all believers to hold these. The fireside meeting is the normal focus
of teaching activity, which is appropriate as the word “focus” is Latin for
hearth. Just as people naturally congregate around a roaring open fire, so will
they be attracted to its spiritual equivalent.
Christine
Samimi’s approach is grounded in the Writings but her book is based solidly on
experience, her own and others’. She explains what makes a successful fireside
and the variety of forms it can take. She shows how some activities we tend to
regard as firesides are nothing of the sort, although they may be useful in
other ways. She deals with scenarios that will
be familiar to most Bahá’ís, including the frequently-asked awkward
questions, and how one can approach them so as not to derail the teaching. And
she is especially good on inviting people to embrace the Cause.
I
can visualise (not least because I experienced it myself) many longstanding
Bahá’ís reading this book with a growing sense of familiarity: “Yes, been
there, done that! Oh dear, yes, done that too, perhaps that’s why it wasn’t
successful!” “Yes, we used to do that
in the past, when I was enthusiastic, well, I’m not too old or stale to go back
to it.”
Please
take note: Every single Bahá’í should
read this book
It
should be made clear that the book is not preachy, does not talk down to the
reader, and is readable, friendly, informative and stimulating. Let me
therefore close this review with a statement I have never before made in more
than fifteen years of writing book reviews: every single Bahá’í should read
this book. Indeed every Bahá’í should get his or her own copy so as to be able
to go back and read it again from time to time. If we learn from it and put it
into action there will be no stopping us or our teaching.