February 1998
Bahá'í Youth are Urged to Awaken from
Their Slumber
By Nasseem A. Rouhani
Greenbelt Interfaith News
The 14th Annual Washington, D.C. Thanksgiving Bahá'í
Youth Conference was held from November 27th through the 30th at the
Marriott Hotel in Falls Church, Virginia. A total of 650 participants
attended, mostly youth who had come from all over the nation.
On the first night of the conference, the participants commemorated
the Ascension of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, who was the son of the founder of
the Bahá'í Faith, Bahá'u'lláh. At midnight
the doors of the main hall were opened, and as participants entered,
they were greeted by individuals who welcomed them and helped them to
their seats. The hall which they entered was lighted only by the many
candles placed around the room, and participants could smell the sweet
fragrance of roses all around them and hear the soft sound of a piano
playing in the background.
When everyone was seated, the piano playing stopped, and the room was
quiet for a long time. Shortly afterwards, the silence was broken by the
reading and chanting of prayers. At exactly 2 a.m., the Tablet of
Visitation was read in both Arabic and English, which was followed by a
recording of the voice of 'Abdu'l-Bahá chanting a prayer.
When the participants had registered for the conference, they were
given little black buttons with a nine-pointed star on it - a nine-
pointed star being the symbol of the Bahá'í Faith - and
they were asked to wear these buttons at all times during the conference.
The youth of this conference were then told that these buttons symbolized
their involvement in the Bahá'í Faith and the important
role they must carry forth as members of the youth movement. They were
then asked to pass
these buttons along to their friends not present at the conference so as
to signify the increasing involvement of youth in the movement.
The conference was aimed to "Awaken the Youth from Their Slumber,
" and to recognize the importance of this youth movement. At the
start of the morning program on Saturday, a symbolic performance was given
of the "Rekindling of the Fire of the Youth Movement." Six youths
performed this symbolic event, divided between youth of the eighties and
youth of the nineties.
On the center of the stage, a table was filled with many candles that
had not been lighted. The first candle was lighted by a youth of the past
generation who shared with the participants her personal understanding
of the youth movement during her time and her part in it. She then said
that now was the time for this present generation to make a mark in the
history of the Bahá'í Faith. At that point, a youth of this
generation stepped forward, and with the same candle that was already lighted
by the older youth, he lighted his candle. He had accepted the torch of
the previous generation of youth and said that he hoped he and all the
other youth of his generation could arise to sacrifice some time in their
lives out of service to both the Bahá'í Faith and humanity.
Participants at the conference were told that many youth in the history
of the Bahá'í Faith have made great sacrifices for the faith.
Therefore a great part of the conference was dedicated to the remembrance
of the youth who have offered up their lives for the advancement of the
Bahá'í Faith. Amongst the youth honored was Tahirih, a strong
-willed woman who gave up her life at the age of 26 for her religion. The
conference participants learned that Tahirih was slowly strangled to death
because she proclaimed the emancipation of women by removing the veil from
her face.
Conference participants also learned about Badi, a 17-year-old boy,
and Ruhullah, who was only 12; both were both martyred because they were
Bahá'ís. Only twelve years ago, the youth were told,
seventeen-year-old
Mona was martyred because she was a Sunday school teacher and taught the
faith to young Bahá'í children.
These are just a few examples of the stories that were shared with the
participants at the conference, and the participants agreed as they left
the conference that these were the stories that had the greatest effect
on them.
Nasseem A. Rouhani is a senior at Eleanor Roosevelt High
School in Greenbelt, Maryland, and is a member of the Greenbelt
Bahá'í Community.
©Copyright 1998, Greenbelt Interfaith News
Original Story