. |
Volume 11, Issue
1 / April-June 1999
Bahá'í Studies chair dedicated in Jerusalem
[Editor's Note: The following story is reprinted from the
Jerusalem Post,
one of Israel's largest English-language newspapers. The
dedication of a
Bahá'í Chair at one of Israel's top universities brings to
three the number
of Bahá'í academic chairs in the world. The other two are at
the University
of Maryland in the United States and the University of Indore in
India.]
JERUSALEM (June 7) - Prof. Moshe Sharon, the first incumbent of
the world's
first academic chair in Bahá'í studies [in Israel], said
yesterday that
the post was being set up at Hebrew University of Jerusalem with
the aim
of doing away with "tremendous ignorance" concerning Bahá'í.
The chair, funded by an anonymous donor, is to be dedicated today.
"People
think it is a Moslem sect. The truth is that it is a new world
religion,"
Sharon said.
He added that before he began his research in the field, the last
academic
work on Bahá'í had been done 80 years ago. It is a
fascinating faith, he
said, with great intellectual wealth. There are over 100,000
documents,
enough to provide work for researchers for a century, he added.
Noting that Bahá'í has spread rapidly throughout the world,
including Asia
and Africa, he described it as the perfect faith for the modern
person,
with its insistence upon complete equality between races and
between sexes.
The Bahá'í faith's origins were in Persia, where, in 1844, a
young man named
Ali Muhammad Shirazi, known as the Báb, began to attract
followers to a
new religious idea. He was deemed a heretic by the Moslem
religious authorities
and a rebellious leader by the Persian government, which executed
him in
1850.
Among the Báb's followers was Mirza Hussein Ali Nuri, later
called Bahá'u'lláh,
who in 1863 announced that he was the expected prophet whose
coming had
been foretold by the Bab. He developed the movement, which had
been persecuted
in Persia, and authored its holy writings. Bahá'u'lláh was
banished from
Persia and later from Iraq and other places, arriving in 1868 in
Acre as
a prisoner of the Ottoman government. He died and was buried there
in 1892.
Today the Bahá'í world center is in Haifa and the faith has
shrines in Haifa
and Acre. There are an estimated six million followers around the
world,
only a handful of them in Israel.
- By Haim Shapiro. Copyright 1999 The Jerusalem Post.
Reprinted by
permission.
"Reprinted from ONE COUNTRY, the newsletter of the Bahá'í
International Community."
© 1996 the Bahá'í International Community
ISSN 1018-9300
Original Story
|
. |