Statement of the Universal House of Justice for the opening of the
Terraces on Mount Carmel
HAIFA, Israel, 22 May 2001 (BWNS) -- Statement of the Universal House Justice
on the occasion of the official opening of the Terraces of the Shrine of the
Bab, 22 May 2001
As delivered by Dr. Albert Lincoln, Secretary General of the Baha'i
International Community:
With joyful and thankful hearts, we welcome all who have come from near
and far to join us on this auspicious occasion for the Baha'is of the
world. We acknowledge with deep appreciation the presence of so many
distinguished guests.
A century and a half have passed since that unspeakable tragedy in the
northwest of Persia when the Bab faced the volley fired at Him from the
rifles of 750 soldiers. The soldiers had followed the orders of the
highest authorities in the land. The Bab's mangled body was then thrown
on the side of a moat outside the city, abandoned to what His
cold-blooded persecutors thought would be a dishonourable fate. They
had hoped thus to put an end to the growing influence of His teachings
on masses of people throughout the country. These masses had accepted,
in the face of intense persecution, the Bab's claim to prophethood, and
their lives were being transformed spiritually and morally as He
prepared them for what He said was the dawn of a new age in which a
world civilization would be born and flourish. The expectations that
stirred countless hearts were heightened even more sublimely by the
Bab's announcement that One greater than He would soon arise, One who
would reveal the unparalleled character of the promised world
civilization that would signify the coming of age of the entire human
race.
We are met not to lament the tragedy of the Bab's martyrdom and the
persecutions that followed; rather have we come to celebrate the
culmination and acknowledge the meaning of an unprecedented project that
had its beginning over a century ago. It was then that Baha'u'llah,
Whom the Ottoman authorities had banished to Acre to serve out His days
in confinement, visited Mount Carmel and selected the spot where the
remains of His Herald would be interred. We humbly trust that the
wondrous result achieved by the completion of the nineteen terraced
gardens, at the heart of which rises the Shrine of the Bab, is a fitting
fulfilment of the vision initiated by Baha'u'llah.
The sufferings sustained by the Bab so as to arouse humanity to the
responsibilities of its coming age of maturity were themselves
indications of the intensity of the struggle necessary for the
world’s people to pass through the age of humanity’s collective
adolescence. Paradoxical as it may seem, this is a source of hope. The
turmoil and crises of our time underlie a momentous transition in human
affairs. Simultaneous processes of disintegration and integration have
clearly been accelerating throughout the planet since the Bab appeared
in Persia. That our Earth has contracted into a neighbourhood, no one
can seriously deny. The world is being made new. Death pangs are
yielding to birth pangs. The pain shall pass when members of the human
race act upon the common recognition of their essential oneness. There
is a light at the end of this tunnel of change beckoning humanity to the
goal destined for it according to the testimonies recorded in all the
Holy Books.
The Shrine of the Bab stands as a symbol of the efficacy of that age-old
promise, a sign of its urgency. It is, as well, a monument to the
triumph of love over hate. The gardens which surround that structure,
in their rich variety of colours and plants, are a reminder that the
human race can live harmoniously in all its diversity. The light that
shines from the central edifice is as a beacon of hope to the countless
multitudes who yearn for a life that satisfies the soul as well as the
body.
This inextinguishable hope stems from words such as these from the Pen
of Baha'u'llah: "This is the Day in which God's most excellent favours
have been poured out upon men, the Day in which His most mighty grace
has been infused into all created things." May all who strive, often
against great odds, to uphold principles of justice and concord be
encouraged by these assurances.
In reflecting on the years of effort invested in this daunting project,
we are moved to express to the people of Haifa the warmth of the feeling
in our hearts. Their city will for all time be extolled by the Baha'is
everywhere as the place in which the mortal remains of the youthful
Prophet-Herald of their Faith finally found refuge, and this after half
a century of having to be secretly moved for protection from one place
to another in His native land. The patience and cordiality shown
towards the Baha'is throughout the most difficult years of the
construction work exemplify the spirit of goodwill in which so much of
the world stands so greatly in need. Haifa is providentially situated
on Mount Carmel, with its immortal associations with saintly
visionaries, whose concern throughout the ages was largely focused on
the promise of peace. May Haifa achieve wide renown not just as a place
of natural beauty but more especially as the city of peace.
Let the word go forth, then, from this sacred spot, from this Mountain
of the Lord, that the unity and peace of the world are not only possible
but inevitable. Their time has come.
BWC-UHJ-010522-1-TERRACES-119-S
©Copyright 2001, Baha'i World News Service
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