A World-embracing vision: Baha'is plan convention in Naples
Saturday, August 22, 1998
By EILEEN McCLELLAND, Daily News Staff
A barefoot Carrietta Kelly stands outside a home in Bonita Springs
welcoming visitors to a religious gathering.
Inside the foyer is a pile of shoes.
Baha'is are gathering to memorialize a member in Iran, recently executed
by the government.
Taking their shoes off isn't a Baha'i custom. The owners of the house,
Greg and Dr. Teresa Kelly, have white carpeting.
Carrietta Kelly, not related to her hosts, is public representative for
the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is in Collier County. She grew up in
Augusta, Ga., gradually becoming disturbed by pervasive racial
segregation, which wasn't addressed by local churches. The mother of a
friend introduced her to Baha'i, a world religion that stresses unity
and world peace. She was intrigued and became a lifelong adherent.
The group gathered recently both to plan an Oct. 4 convention and to
pray for Ruhollah Rowhani, 52, who was hanged July 21 in Iran, the
religion's birthplace. The regional convention will take place at the
Collier County campus of Edison Community College.
About 20 Baha'is from Lee and Collier counties gathered to remember
their persecuted Iranian brother in faith, children sitting cross-legged
on the floor and a baby chattering in the kitchen.
Carrietta Kelly's eyes, illuminated by the golden glow of a table lamp,
filled with tears as the prayer for Rowhani and his family ended. Teresa
Kelly sang a memorial song, accompanying herself on acoustic guitar.
Rowhani, charged with converting a Muslim to the Baha'i faith, was one
of 200 Baha'is executed since 1979. He was a medical supplies salesman
and the father of four. Some 300,000 Baha'is live in all regions of
Iran, making it the largest minority religion there. The Islamic
fundamentalist regime regards the religion as heresy and Baha'is have no
legal rights or even identity: They aren't issued birth certificates.
Marriages and divorces are not recognized.
Carrietta Kelly said the accusations against Rowhani were false. One of
the principles of the Baha'i faith is obedience to the civil law of the
land. "This is another case of strictly religious persecution," she
said.
But Bahai's have reason for celebration, too. They believe the "savior"
returned in the mid-19th century and that world peace and unity is
inevitable.
Baha'ullah (Arabic for the glory of God) was the prophet-founder of the
faith, carrying on the work of Mirza Ali Muhammed (1820-1850), who
called himself the Bab, meaning "The Gate." Baha'is regard Jesus and all
other messengers of world religions - including Moses, Krishna, Buddha
and Muhammad - as divine prophets of God. Their prophecies of return
have been fulfilled by Baha'ullah, who will unite the world in one
faith. The religion of the world is progressively revealed, they
believe. Another messenger will be along in the next 1,000 years.
Baha'is have no clergy. Local spiritual assemblies of nine adults each
"consult" on a regular basis on community issues. The whole community is
invited to meet every 19 days for "the feast," a feast of the spirit. In
Southwest Florida, Bahai's meet in members' homes.
STEPPING INTO THE LIGHT
Teresa Kelly, a pediatric radiologist, learned of the religion while
attending Harvard University. A California native of African-American
and Mexican heritage, she had been exposed to many religions and
cultures. She had been Episcopalian, her mother, Catholic, and her
father, Congregational.
"The United States suffers a great deal from disunity," Teresa said.
"It's a handicap for Americans. There are a lot of different things
people can be snobby about, but I know a lot of genuine people in the
Baha'i community. I feel a genuineness of spirit. It's like stepping out
of a sad, dysfunctional world into the light."
Teresa compares the growth rate of the relatively new religion to the
beginnings of Christianity.
"It's always hard for people to accept a new messenger," she said. "When
Christ came, only a handful recognized him at first. It's hard for
people to change. They are fearful of change. It will take years before
Baha'i is prevalent, but it is inevitable."
An estimated 133,700 Baha'is live in the United States, with only about
75 in Southwest Florida. Today the faith is represented in more than 340
countries and territories throughout the world, with the main strength
in Southwest Asia. Other centers are in Europe, Africa, North and South
America and Southeast Asia. The national Baha'i Office of Public
Information estimates its world membership at more than 5 million.
While Teresa Kelly learned about Baha'i at Harvard, her future husband,
Greg, discovered the faith at the University of Michigan at about the
same time - 1974. "We both came into the faith in the same way," he
said, "by studying the teachings."
Greg, who came from an Irish-Catholic family, questioned his beliefs and
the rituals they involved when he attended college. He undertook the
formal study of religion.
"I discovered the Baha'i faith and that was the one thing that stood
out. Nothing really excited me in this way."
"There was an instant compatibility," Greg said of his initial
encounters with Baha'i students and teachings. "It was very uplifting
when I discovered Baha'i teachings and Baha'is. It was almost instant
that I became a Baha'i, although I continued to study. It's a lifelong
thing, but you can learn enough quickly to know that you belong."
In 1989, Greg and Teresa met at the University of Michigan at a Baha'i
function, and were married a year and a half later. They are both
members of the Baha'i Spiritual Assembly of Lee County.
BORN TO BAHA'I
Mia Kelly, Teresa's daughter, is 20 and newly enrolled at Sweetbriar
College in Virginia. Because it's a small college, she's unlikely to
find an established Baha'i community.
"It's hard for people like me," Mia said. "I'll probably be the only
Baha'i. I'll need to teach people about Baha'i and that can be very
difficult to do."
But she said her fellow students already have expressed an interest in
her religion.
"Young people and people from my parents' generation are more willing to
be open-minded," she said. "I grew up with the Baha'i faith. I was just
so used to it. I'm just continuing to live a certain way of life which I
was very happy with."
Mia officially joined the religion when she was 13, while attending a
Baha'i camp. "I probably wouldn't have done it if my parents had been
there," she said. "Kids don't like to be pushed by their parents to do
anything."
Mia was especially pleased that in the Baha'i faith, God is considered
neither male or female. "That was something that was very important to
me," she said.
The Kellys had encouraged her to study all religions before making a
decision.
"I was very proud of her," Teresa said.
The religion forbids the consumption of alcohol and premarital sex and
emphasizes the sacred state of marriage.
'A LOT OF PEOPLE ARE GOOD'
Gloria Dutton of Cape Coral has been a Baha'i for just two years.
"I've always been a Baha'i in my heart," she said. "My youngest sister
has been a member and I always thought, 'well, it's a cult.' "
Raised a Catholic, she converted to Methodism, which sufficed for a
while. Still, she inferred that fellow churchgoers believed only
Christians could do good or were inherently good. This disturbed her.
"I have a sister who's Jewish and another sister who's a Baha'i. A lot
of people are good."
The Christians she knew didn't seem to acknowledge this, she said.
"But you meet a Baha'i and you feel like you've known them all your
life. I just fell in love with it. I never felt so at peace."
Equality of races, religious backgrounds and the sexes appealed greatly
to Dutton. "Who ever heard of equality between men and women? Not in my
household."
Eugene Purnell, an African American from Memphis, found the religion in
1975.
"I felt a spiritual awakening in Christianity but I wasn't satisfied by
the divisions between black and white. The Bible doesn't profess any
division. I saw an ad in the paper for Baha'i and it said all are
welcome. I met people of all races and they all had this world-embracing
vision. After a couple of weeks I joined."
FAITH IN ACTION
Richard Donovan is chairman of the (now inactive) Collier County
Institute for Racial Healing. He and his wife, Teresa, have a 1-year-old
daughter, Sierra, whom they plan to raise in the faith.
Sierra plays with pots and pans and Tupperware as her parents discuss
their life-changing decisions.
Teresa Donovan learned about the religion while she worked as a nanny
for a Baha'i family in San Francisco.
"I had investigated a lot of different ways of getting in touch with my
spirituality," she said.
"Growing up with the idea that Jesus was the messenger, it was hard to
believe the idea that Jesus had returned (in the person of Baha'ullah),"
she said.
Still, the attraction of racial and sexual equality and the
concentration on world peace overcame any doubts.
"The fellowship was really sincere," she said. "You were treated like
you were a family. I had thought that I don't need any laws, that I did
pretty well on my own, but then I realized I didn't want to be out there
on my own."
While some are more outspoken, Teresa Donovan tends to be low-key about
her faith.
"All Baha'is are different," she said. "I find that especially at work,
when I'm developing relationships with people, I'm very hesitant to talk
about my faith because I don't want to have that relationship dissolved.
On the other hand, it is important that people hear about Baha'ullah."
Teresa and Richard Donovan met at a Baha'i gathering for world peace.
Richard, a self-described former devout Catholic, said Baha'is have
focused on spreading the word in Immokalee because the city has no
Baha'i community.
"We do this not to proselytize the religion, but because now is the time
for the world to come together," he said. "Technology has reached the
point where we have the tools to eliminate poverty, to have wonderful
schools, transportation, to have good health care. One of the primary
messages is the unity of mankind, teaching the individual that it's time
to get on with it. We believe the savior has come."
Teresa Kelly agreed that Baha'is aren't pushy about the religion.
"I don't think Baha'is feel any urgency other than to assist others,"
she said. "Some religious groups want to push their beliefs on others
for reasons that aren't clear to me."
But Baha'is make every effort to share the religion with people who
express an interest. "For Baha'is not to talk about it would be like
having antibiotics and not sharing it," she said.
The application of the faith through daily living and work is important
to Baha'is.
Teresa Kelly said she'd always been in touch with her spiritual side,
which helps her in her pediatric work to calm children. "As a doctor, if
you have a kid who is upset and screaming, just by being kind and loving
and calm, they'll calm right down."
The key to the Baha'i approach to any kind of work is the service it
provides to others. "Whether you're a thoracic surgeon or you're washing
floors," she said, "you have to ask yourself whether you're doing it for
the glorification of self or in service to others, and we respect all
people regardless of their occupation."
AWAITING WORLD UNITY
Baha'ullah has promised that the kingdom of God on earth is at hand,
Richard Donovan explained. War and disunity will disappear. World
governments will be under God's law.
But this dramatic change won't involve any obvious intervention from
God, he said.
According to "Eerdmans' Handbook to The World's Religions," (Lion
Publishing, 1994) the changes Baha'is speak of will not be abrupt.
Instead, according to Baha'i teaching, there will be an inner change in
people and in society, ultimately bringing the world from the brink of
ruin to harmony.
"I believe what Baha'ullah told us, that we will not achieve peace until
we understand that there is one God, one race, one world," Teresa
Donovan said. "It's important to me that Sierra be raised in the Baha'i
faith, to achieve that end."
Meanwhile, Baha'is are prohibited from holding public office or taking
part in bipartisan politics, beyond the level of voting, which they are
required to do. They also favor the establishment of a universal
auxiliary language and have been involved in the United Nations since
its inception. Carrietta Kelly attended the World's Women Conference in
China and serves on the Board of the United Nations Association for Lee
and Collier counties.
Aside from religious beliefs, Teresa Donovan said Baha'is share a
positive attitude.
"I went to dinner with three other Baha'i women and I knew that whatever
we talked about it would be uplifting, that there wouldn't be anything
negative going on," she said. "It's so easy to get bogged down by what's
happening on this plane. I feel so revived when I can be in that kind of
setting and know that one day this is what the world will be like."
©Copyright 1998, Naples Daily News
Original Story
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