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ARTICLE
The Bahá’í Faith and Planet Welfare!
I
was asked to submit an article for the annual journal of the National
Association of Field Study Officers. This is the article I wrote which was
printed in its entirety. It appeared in the 2000 edition of the NAFSO Journal.
The article was referred to prominently in the editorial in which the editor
wrote, “The Bahá’í Faith very much centres on the care and concern for the
world that we have been given in trust, and Kevin Beint explains why they place
so much emphasis - as we all should -
on our stewardship.”
In
1997 the editor of Dayspring, the United Kingdom Bahá’í children’s journal
published a special bumper edition called Planet 2000 Action Pack. As the name
suggests, as well as stories, games, puzzles and articles it had suggestions
for actions children could take to contribute to the well-being of the planet
on which they lived. So why are Bahá’ís so anxious to educate their children to
care for the planet and all its creatures, including their fellow man?
The
Bahá’í Faith started in the early nineteenth century when a Persian nobleman,
Bahá’u’lláh, claimed a revelation from God. He said that God’s message for this
age was that all the great religions of the past were from the same source and
that the people of the earth should come to realise that they are one diverse
family of man sharing one planet and one destiny and should learn to live in
peace and harmony with each other and with the ecology of the planet. “The
earth is one country,” Bahá’u’lláh has said, “and mankind its citizens.” In
order to help create a peaceful, harmonious and spiritual world Bahá’u’lláh
wrote copiously over a forty year period, a time spent mostly as a prisoner and
an exile. Today around six million Bahá’ís world wide are striving to put
Bahá’u’lláh’s principles into action and the bumper edition of Dayspring was
one small practical example.
The
Planet 2000 special edition of Dayspring presents a microcosm of the major
concerns of Bahá’ís who have a holistic approach to the solving of the world’s
social, economic and natural
challenges. It covers the subjects of
justice, prejudice and intolerance, ecology and participation. It was no
coincidence that Bahá’ís, as a Non-governmental organisation of the United
Nations, were heavily involved in the planning and running of the Earth Summit
in Rio in 1992 and now ardently support Agenda 21.
Why,
then, has Bahá’u’lláh placed so much emphasis in His writings on the
preservation of the planet as a spiritual duty of believers in God? There are
several reasons. Bahá’u’lláh has explained that the development of human kind
mirrors the development of an individual. Mankind in its evolution has passed
through the stages of infancy and childhood and for some time experienced the
turbulent period of adolescence and is
now on the threshold of maturity. During the early stages of development
mankind had been relatively unable to affect the natural life of the planet.
However, in the period of turbulent adolescence the outpouring of energy and creativity has enabled man,
through the development of technology, to begin to upset the delicate balances
of nature. It is as if, in this period, God has handed responsibility for
maintaining the equilibrium of the planet to man. However, in this process He
has not abandoned man to his own devices. He has left an instruction manual in
the shape of the Bahá’í writings. The Bahá’í
Faith offers spiritual and practical guidance on how to run the planet
now that we are in charge.
First
and foremost in the process of managing the planet is the establishment of
justice. “The best beloved of all things in My sight”, Bahá’u’lláh has said,
“is justice.” The equilibrium of the
planet cannot be maintained without justice. If any peoples or sections of
society continue to be exploited, if the earth’s natural resources are without
a plan of management for sustainable use and equitable distribution then
injustice will continue to perpetuate suffering and hardship and encourage
conflict.
The
Bahá’í writings try to raise our level of understanding of our relationship
with the planet on which we live. The earth, with all its glorious diversity is
our gift from God. Bahá’u’lláh has said,
“Every man of discernment, when walking upon the earth, feeleth indeed
abashed, inasmuch as he is fully aware that the thing which is the source of
his prosperity, his wealth, his might, his exaltation, his advancement and
power, is the very earth which is trodden beneath the feet of all men.” Bahá’ís
believe it is a deeply spiritual act to want to preserve the planet for future
generations. Nature, Baha’u’llah asserts, not only sustains us and makes human
life possible, it also provides us with, were we willing to meditate on it,
powerful metaphors for spiritual understanding. “Nature,” Bahá’u’lláh says, “is
the embodiment of My name.”
Thus,
Bahá’ís believe that they are responsible to educate their children and any one
else willing to listen about the need to cherish and care for the planet on
which we live because that understanding is an essential part of everyone’s
spiritual development. One such Bahá’í was Richard St. Barbe Baker, who founded
“The Men of the Trees” over sixty years
ago. He tirelessly campaigned to have millions of trees planted in North Africa
to halt the spread of the desert and worked to educate people that trees were
the lungs of the earth. Today Bahá’ís have reconvened the World Forestry
Charter Gathering and are part of the Network on Conservation and Religion
begun by the World Wide Fund for Nature.
For
a copy of the Planet 2000 Action Pack contact Maggie Manvell, 25 Lower Breakish,
Isle of Skye, IV42 8QA. Tel/fax: 01471 822317
Kevin
Beint
All
children in Bahá’í families are entitled to receive a copy of Dayspring
magazine. Are yours getting theirs? If not, contact the Editor: Maggie Manvell,
e-mail: mailto:Maggie@baha.demon.co.uk