NEWS BRIEFS
THE UNITED KINGDOM HOSTS MEETING OF THE 'IRFAN COLLOQUIUM
The 14th session of the 'Irfán Colloquium was held at the
Manchester Bahá'í Centre from 4 to 7 July. Its theme
was 'World Religions and the Bahá'í Faith', and among
the papers presented were 'African Traditional Religion: A
Bahá'í View', by Dr. Akwasi Osei, from Ghana; 'African
Religion and the Bahá'í Faith', by Enoch Tanyi, from
Cameroon; and 'Monotheistic Religion in Africa: The Example of the
Swazi People', by Margaret and Crispin Pemberton-Piggot. Thirty-five
people attended the gathering.
WILMETTE INSTITUTE'S SECOND RESIDENTIAL SESSION HELD IN THE U.S.A.
The second residential session of the Wilmette Institute's Spiritual
Foundations for a Global Civilization programme was held from 21 July
to 8 August. Fifteen faculty members provided an intensive series of
classes for 27 students who 'surpassed in maturity, seriousness, and
commitment the participants in the remarkable inaugural session in
1996', according to the report. In addition to attending classes, the
students did volunteer service at the Bahá'í National
Center, the House of Worship, the Bahá'í Home, and
Bahá'í Publications. They also went to see places visited
by `Abdu'l-Bahá during His visits to Chicago in 1912.
'GLOBAL GOVERNANCE' THEME OF AUSTRALIA'S NATIONAL BAHA'I
STUDIES CONFERENCE
'Global Governance: a Promise for Collective Security and Human
Prosperity' was the theme of the 16th annual Bahá'í
Studies Conference, held at the University of Western Australia in
Perth from 10 to 13 July. 'A spirit of openness and dialogue between
Bahá'í and non-Bahá'í participants'
reportedly characterized the gathering, which was opened by the deputy
vice-chancellor of the University before an audience of 350 people.
More than 35 papers, workshops and performances were presented.
ONE-WEEK YOUTH TEACHING PROJECT IN INDIA ENROLS 356 BELIEVERS
Twenty Bahá'í youth volunteered their services
for a teaching project organized in the Tihiruvannamalai district
and held from 7 to 13 July. The healing Message of
Bahá'u'lláh was presented to more than 1,000 people,
resulting in 356 enrolments and the opening of 28 new localities to
the Cause. People exposed to the Faith included the district collector,
the superintendent of police, district medical officers, school
headmasters, government officers, businessmen and others.
APPROXIMATELY 200 PEOPLE ATTEND PROCLAMATION EVENT IN
TOGO
Approximately 200 people attended a public meeting held in the goal
city of Bafilo on 10 August. The theme of the event was 'The Invisible
Hand of God', and Mr. Mohamadou Bakoye, a Bahá'í from
Burkina Faso, talked about progressive revelation and proclaimed
the coming of Bahá'u'lláh. There had been no
Bahá'ís in this city before this proclamation, but while
friends from Lomé put up posters announcing the event they met a
man whose heart was open and he accepted the Blessed Beauty. He helped
with other pre-conference publicity, including announcements made on
local radio, and he helped the short-term pioneers in the city to meet
with the steady stream of enquirers who are asking to learn more about
the Faith.
IN FRANCE, BAHA'IS PARTICIPATE IN SOCIETY FOR SOCIOLOGY OF
RELIGION CONFERENCE
About 450 academics from around the world participated in the 24th
International Conference of the Society for the Sociology of Religion,
held in July in Toulouse. Two full sessions were devoted to the study
of the Bahá'í community, while a third session included
a Bahá'í paper. The first session was devoted to the
Bahá'í community and globalism. The second session
launched the book The Origins of the Bahá'í Community
of Canada, by Dr. Will van den Hoonaard. The third session featured
a paper by Dr. van den Hoonaard entitled 'Religious Singleness and the
Spread of New Religious Movements: A Bahá'í Illustration'.
FAITH PROCLAIMED ON NATIONAL TELEVISION IN CHAD
The Bahá'í Faith was proclaimed on Chad Television
on 29 October. During a news broadcast, a reporter who had visited
the locality stated that 'in Mongo there are the Catholic, Protestant,
Muslim religions and the Bahá'í Faith, which are on good
terms with each other'. The National Spiritual Assembly commented that,
'This is a very important step in the recognition of the
Bahá'í Faith in that northern region....'
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