Temple symbolizes Baha'i Faith
Chicago Sun-Times.
July 27, 1997
BY TOM SHERIDAN, RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS REPORTER
Happy birthday to the Baha'i Temple. The North Shore landmark is 85 this
year.
Well, sort of.
The dedication stone of the magnificent house of worship was laid in
1912, but doors didn't open until 1953. The years between built more
than a structure; they built up the foundations of a faith.
Seen from Sheridan Road, the Wilmette architectural treasure also
announces the presence of the Baha'i religion, a worldwide faith with
more than 5 million members, 110,000 in the United States.
In Evanston, not far from the house of worship, is the Baha'i National
Center, the administrative center of the religion's U.S. contingent. The
center's Loralie McClure said there are about 1,800 Chicago area
Baha'is.
But it is the sparkling dome of the temple that is most familiar. The
glistening stone looks like marble but is actually quartz-embedded
concrete. It had to be repaired in 1990 when water and erosion dulled
its brilliance.
The dedication stone, part of the 1912 ground-breaking by Abdu'l-Baha,
son of Baha'u'llah, known as the prophet-founder of the Baha'i faith,
never was used in the actual construction. However, it is enshrined in
the temple.
The nine-sided, bell-shaped temple was designed by Louis Bourgeois.
Actual construction began in 1920 and continued off and on until
completion decades later. Today, the five-story dome, wrapped in ornate
swirls, covers an auditorium that can seat nearly 1,200. The
architecturally significant building is listed in the U.S. National
Registry of Historic Places.
The Baha'i faith, an independent religion formed in 1844 in Persia, is
diverse ethnically and racially. It teaches world peace and the
development of humanity's spiritual nature through a continuing process
of divine revelation. Despite such beliefs, however, Baha'is have faced
persecution. It was mainly evident in Muslim Iran where, as a minority
religion, Baha'is faced execution. Though the killings have slackened,
say Baha'i officials, antagonism continues.
Copyright ©1997, The Chicago Sun-Times
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