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ARTICLE
What
difference do we make?
How busy, happy and engaged
are we, in a wide range of activities serving the community around us and
re-shaping its community life?
At the beginning of the Four
Year Plan, my old community held regular exhibitions in the centre of our town.
One time an unhappy-looking young couple walked in and looked around. The young
woman asked a few questions did we have a church, where did we meet, what sort
of meetings and activities did we have, and so on. I gave her a leaflet, told her about the spread of the Faith and
how it fulfilled other religions ....
She asked me, "What difference will it make?" Meaning what difference would being a Bahá'í
mean to her and her partner.
I have been puzzling ever
since how best I should have answered her.
We Bahá'ís have become
experts at giving talks to each other
When I mentioned this to a
friend whose opinion I respect, she said that often for new Bahá'ís coming into
the Faith, it is like stepping into air - there is so little for them to do, no
activities to join in, to contribute and feel part of the community. I don't
know if this is true everywhere, but it did make me think: if you join a
church, you have services every Sunday (at least), and there will be meetings
every day of the week in the church hall for one group activity or
another. If you become a Bahá'í: there
will be a Feast every nineteen days, a Holy Day celebration every now and
again, you might even have to serve on the Assembly if it was below numbers ...
and what else? I have a sinking feeling
there can be a bit of a vacuum. And if
there are other activities, they may well be by Bahá'ís for Bahá'ís - someone
once said to me that we Bahá'ís have become experts at just giving talks to
each other ...
Another Bahá'í whom I
respect immensely, discussing this question of community life, said what we had
yet to get to grips with was the House's call for social and economic
development. The Universal House of Justice has been writing to the Bahá'ís of
the world about this for many years, but we haven't really come to terms with
it in this country - or have we? We are very good, and please don't let us
stop, at supporting schools and projects in far away countries, but where are
our home based projects? Is our British
society so good it doesn't need us?
The reason I raise these
questions is because they may be a key to our relative lack of success in
enroling new believers. I've been a Bahá'í for more than forty years. I have seen goodness knows how many teaching
campaigns (and served on some of the committees which organised them), and if
they had all achieved their goals, the Bahá'í Faith would probably be our state
religion by now.
Do we expect our campaigns to fail?
I've seen campaigns calling
for, "each one, teach one", and "everyone to say 500 Remover of
Difficulties each day (or week)"; for us to "mention the Faith to
someone new each day"; for "everyone to hold a fireside every
nineteen days", goals set for so many new believers by such and such a
date, special campaign prayers ... the list goes on. I know no effort for the Faith is wasted, but I do wonder how
effective some of these campaigns have been. And because they have not all been
totally successful, whether we now expect to fail, or at least not to care very
much if we do or not.
Which brings me to social
and economic development and our community life. Over 25 years ago, the Universal House of Justice told the
Bahá'ís of the world that it was, "a firmly founded, busy and happy
community life" which would provide the friends with "courage and
strength and loving support" for their teaching work. (1) The Promise of
World Peace (1985) described the Bahá'í community as, "engaged in a wide
range of activities serving the spiritual, social and economic needs of the
peoples of many lands" (2).
The 26 November 1999 message
from the Universal House of Justice speaks of, "projects of social and
economic development, which seek the spiritual and material upliftment of
entire communities" carried out by the Bahá'ís, and "penetrating
society at the grassroots."
Looking back, I am staggered at how many times this theme has been
repeated over the years. In 1994, the
House of Justice wrote to an Assembly that, "a distinguishing
characteristic of Bahá'í life (is) the spirit of servitude to God, expressed in
service to the Cause, to the friends and to humanity as a whole". (3)
So how busy and happy and
engaged are we in a wide range of activities serving the wider community around
us, re-shaping its community life?
The Guardian wrote about
this as long ago as 1941: "This Cause is a Cause which God has revealed to
humanity as a whole. It is designed to
benefit the entire human race, and the only way it can do this is to re-form
the community life of mankind, as well as seeking to regenerate the
individual." (4)
Sixteen years ago, the
Universal House of Justice told the Bahá'ís of the world (Ridván 141): "An
upsurge of zeal throughout the Bahá'í world for exploration of the new
dimension of social and economic development is both heartwarming and uplifting
to all our hopes. This energy within the community, carefully and wisely
directed, will undoubtedly bring about a new era of consolidation and
expansion, which in turn will attract further widespread attention, so that
both aspects of change in the Bahá'í world community will be interactive and
mutually propelling." May not this have something to do with
"promoting entry by troops"?
When Shoghi Effendi said the
most effective method of teaching was the fireside, he said it was because,
"new people .... can feel there the true Bahá'í spirit - and it is the
spirit that quickeneth." (5)
What is this true Bahá'í spirit?
So what is this true Bahá'í
spirit and how should our community life reflect it if not by being busy and
happily involved in the community? The
House of Justice told us: "... people will never embrace it (the Faith)
until they see in its community life mirrored what is so conspicuously lacking
in the world ..." (6)
So I ask myself, what was it
that the young couple who came into our exhibition so conspicuously lacked? Did
they need to be told about the Faith's global vision, or were they, like so
many others, concerned more about personal problems - like where do we sleep
tonight; family breakdown, or how to bring up our children to be courteous and
respectful, and to avoid drugs and under-age sex? - there isn't room for a full list is there ....? What were their problems they wanted answers
to? After all, while the Faith isn't a
counselling service, the Guardian did say the Bahá'í Faith, "is not a mere
philosophical or social doctrine". (7)
Surely it was something
which we Bahá'ís should be able to deliver - a busy and active community life
in which new believers could readily participate: engaged with the wider
community around us, promoting a happy and fulfilling social life, and looking
for ways in which we can stimulate and serve the economic well-being of our
community?
Just how are we, as a
community, working together to improve our economic circumstances (we might
even solve the chronic shortfall in the National Fund)?
We need to remember the
example of 'Abdu'l-Bahá - after all, what was it He did that gained Him a
knighthood - if not a social and economic project? The House of Justice described
His example as: "a dynamic that permeates the activities of the Faith ....
(and which) acquires collective, transformative force in the normal functioning
of a community." (8)
"Dynamic",
"collective" and "transformative" are words that appeal to me
.... how about you?
Andrew Gash
References:
1. From a letter dated Naw
Rúz 1974 to the Bahá'ís of the World
2. Peace Message, para 56
3. Letter from the Universal
House of Justice to the NSA of USA, May 19, 1994
4. From a letter dated 14
October 1941 written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi to two believers, Lights of
Guidance, #1405
5. From a letter dated 20
October 1956 written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi to an individual believer,
Lights of Guidance, #2000
6. From a letter written on
behalf of the Universal House of Justice to the NSA of Bolivia, August 19, 1985
7. From a letter written on
behalf of Shoghi Effendi to an individual believer, August 13, 1936, Lights of
Guidance, #1570
8. Letter from the Universal
House of Justice to the NSA of USA, May 19, 1994
Bahá'í exhibition at Green Fayre in Kingston, 29th May. Dianne Mahboubi and a visitor to the stall, with other
helpers.
Prince Charles visited Brent Inter Faith Centre, 10th May. He is
photographed here, receiving a posy of flowers from Yasmin Afnan from the local
Bahá'í community.