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Bahá'u'lláh and the Fourth Estateby Roger Whitepublished in Bahá'í World, Vol. 18 (1979-1983), pages 975-979Haifa: Bahá’í World Centre, 1986 1. PDF of image scansDownload: white_bw18_bahaullah_press.pdf.
2. Proofread, formatted versionP975ROGER WHITE IT is little known in the West among students and adherents of the Bahá'í Faith that Bahá`u'lláh addressed Himself to the public press. It is necessary to set aside squeamishness to depict the circumstances which brought about His doing so. A spring day in Yazd, a Persian city dating from the fifth century, the seat of numerous mosques, an important centre for the production of silk carpets. It was the 19th of May, 1891. Exhilerated by the violence it had witnessed, the excited mob called for the shedding of more blood of the hated Bahá'ís. Only two victims remained, young brothers in their early twenties. Already the crowd had been treated to a thrilling spectacle. A young man of twenty-seven, `Alí-Asghar, had been strangled and his body dragged through the streets to the aqccompaniment of drums and trumpets. Then Mullá Mihdí, a man in his eighty-fifth year, had been beheaded and his corpse hauled in simlar manner to another quarter of the city where a considerable throng of onlookers, their frenzy mounting with the music, witnessed the decapitation of `Áqá `Alí, the youthful brother-in-law of the two young men who had thus far escaped harm. From there the people rushed to yet another sector of Yazd where they relished the sight of Mullá `Alíy-i-Sabzivári having his throat slashed. They then fell upon his body, hacking it to pieces with a spade while he was still alive, and pounded his skull to a pulp with stones. At the moment he was seized he had been addressing the tumultuous gathering, exhorting them to recognize the truth of the New Day, fully aware of his imminent martyrdom and glorying in it. Then, in yet another quarter, the townsfolk rejoiced in slaying Muhammad Báqir. It is reasonable to feel compassion for this rabble. Theirs was a profound and manipulable ignorance easily inflamed by fanatical rhetoric and capable, with encouragement from figures of authority, of finding expression in acts of depravity and barbarism. The calculating would be among them--those with vested interests, fearful of loss of power and office--and ruffians and idle thrill-seekers; but no doubt many of their number were utterly convinced that their actions were meritorious in the sight of God, would win the approval of His Prophet and priests, and secure their position in the all-important afterlife. And so their sincere devotion led them to psrticipate in these murders of supposed enemies of the established order. It is a classic example of what scholars of the phenomenon call `enantiodromea', the principle by which any extreme--even virtue--if pushed to the limit, grotesquely crosses over into its opposite. Five had died. But two young men remained and these were to receive the full force of the crowd's savage fury. The music grew wilder, drowning the shouts of the swirling mob which propelled the youths brutally to the public square, Maydán-i-Khán, where an especially theatrical fate, matched to the mood of the crowd, awaited them. The youths, sons of Áqá Husayn-i-Káshání, known as Baktáshí, were silk weavers. They had been raised by affectionate parents and had always lived close to the bosom of their family. Everything about them was conventional for that time and place save that they and their parents had embraced ther Faith of Bahá`u'lláh. It was this circumstance which brought them to that horrific scene on that spring day in Yazd. The young men, with the five other Bahá'ís whose deaths they had just witnessed, had gathered for a meeting when a surprise raid was conducted on the house and all were carried off. It is said that some ill-disposed neighbours had alerted the authorities. Good citizens, these, for the pogrom had been instigated by the mujtahid of the city, Shaykh Hasan-i-Sabzivárí, acting on instructions of the Governor, Jalálu'd-Dawlih, and the slaughter of the victims--sanctioned sport for the Muslim populace--could be averted only by their denial of faith. The seven were, in a caricature of trial, invited to renounce their religion. How can the true believer barter or dissemble? Having spurned the offer, all seven were condemned to death P976 and surrendered to the executioner and the mob who were eager to aid him in his grisly task. The elder brother, age twenty-three,bore the same name as his friend who had died earlier that day--`Alí-Asghar. He had recently married and was the father of an infant daughter. The younger, Muhammad Hasan, age twenty-one, has been described by those who knew him as a youth of extreme beauty, delicacy and masculine grace. The official executioner, Afrásíyáb, and the chief constable, Mubárak-Khán, had been urged by the Governor to spare Muhammad Hasan's life, if possible, by persuading the young man to recant. Were he to do so, he would be welcomed at the residence of the Governor and showered with favours. `Alí-Asghar was dealt with first. Having swiftly affirmed his refusal to recant, he was beheaded. Then it was his younger brother's turn. The Governor's enticement was extended by the constable to the handsome young man from whom it drew an impatient reply: `Hurry up! My friends have all preceded me! Do what you are charged to do!' He was then decapitated. In a burst of showmanship--playing to the jeering crowd--the executioner slit open the boy's stomach, plucked out the heart, liver and intestines, and held them aloft. This exhibitionist gesture inspired the audience to commit further atrocities. The head of Muhammad Hasan was impaled on a spear and paraded through the city--again with the accompaniment of music--and suspended on a mulberry tree. The multitude stoned it so viciously that the skull was broken. His body was then cast before the door of his mother's house. Some women darted from the crowd, danced into the room where the mother sat, and mocked her. Pieces of the boy's flesh were carried away to be used as a medicament. Then the head of Muhammad Hasan was attached to the lower part of his body and borne with the remains of the other martyrs to the outskirts of the city where they were pelted with stones and finally thrown into a pit in the plain of Salsabíl. The elder brother, `Alí-Asghar, was not spared ignominy. In an especially cruel gesture the crowd carried his head to the home of his mother and cast it into the room where she sat with her son's young wife. The mother arose, bathed her son's head, and set it outside, admonishing her heering torturers not to attempt to return to her what she had given to God. The frenzy had at last reached its climax, and now a carnival atmosphere prevailed. The Governor declared a public holiday and by his order the shops were closed. When evening came the city was illuminated and the populace gave itserlf over to festivities. The name of the mother of the two young men has not come down to us; we know her only as Umm-i-Shahíd, the mother of the martyr, though she lost more than one member of her family that day. But the magnificance of her gesture will fire the imagination of generations to come. She lived on into the period of the ministry of `Abdu'l-Bahá and received from Him at least one Tablet extolling her courage and fortitude, and consoling her in her loss. The young widow of `Alí-Asghar, Sakínih Sultán, chose not to remarry, though she had offers and was urged to do so. Apprised of her plight, `Abdu'l-Bahá invited her and her infant daughter, Fátimih Ján, to come to the Holy Land where she had the bounty of serving in His household. Thus all seven lost their lives. It was not, alas, the only occasion upon which a septet of believers was slain in Yazd; similar episodes occurred in July 1955 and as recently as September 1980. There were also many isolated martyrdoms in that city over the years, and an especially devastating upheaval took place in 1903 when many Bahá'ís lost their lives in various ways, including stabbing and axeing, and one even being shot from a cannon by a direct order of Jalál'ud-Dawlih, the Governor. Bahá`u'lláh stigmatized this man--son of Zillu's-Sultán `The Infernal Tree', and grandson of Násiri'd-Dín Sháh-- as `The Tyrant of Yazd'. The deaths of the seven plunged Bahá`u'lláh, then living out the penultimate year of His life in the mansion of Bahjí, into profound grief. The late Hand of the Cause H. M. Balyuzí, in Bahá`u'lláh, the King of Glory, recounts: `When news of the death of the Seven Martyrs of Yazd reached them, it brought great sorrow to Bahá`u'lláh. Hájí Mírzá Habí-bu'lláh [a great-nephew of the wife of the P977 Báb] writes that for nine days all revelation ceased and no one was admitted into His presence, until on the ninth day they were all summoned. The deep sorrow that surrounded Him . . . was indescribable. He spoke extensively about the Qájárs and their deeds. Afterwards, He mentioned the events of Yazd; thus sternly did the Tongue of Grandeur speak of Jalál'ud-Dawlih and Zillu's-Sultán . . . Then He said: Do not be sad, do not be downcast, do not let your hearts bleed. The sacred tree of the Cause of God is watered by the blood of the martyrs. A tree, unless watered, does not grow and bear fruit . . .' Bahá`u'lláh also revealed a Tablet, as yet not fully translated into English, honouring the seven martyrs. Sometimes popularly referred to as the `Tablet to The Times' because of its reference to the most respected and influential newspaper of the day--The Times of London--it is a document of astonishing power. The tone is one of impassioned anguish, the `Tongue of Grandeur' giving divine expression to our human responses, reflecting even our indignation and bewilderment, our sense of outrage and inconsolableness. Specific reference is made to the two young brothers and an unusually full description is given of their torture and martyrdom. The Governor's offer of protection for the younger man is mentioned and even the sector of the square where the youths died is named. Such atrocities, Bahá`u'lláh exclaims, have not been witnessed in the past nor will again be seen in future. He describes the mutilating of the bodies, alludes to the reward given to the executioner, the taunting and reviling of the families of the victims, the parading of the head on spear-point through the streets to celebratorial musical accompaniment, the lighting of the city by night, the fesatival air which prevailed. God knows, He laments, what the oppressed innocents suffered. Then He calls upon the public press of the world--newspapers, in the Bahá'í Revelation are exhorted by Bahá`u'lláh to mirror truth, and all those responsible to for their production `to be sanctified from malice, passion and prejudice, to be just and fair-minded, to be painstaking in their inquiries, and ascertain all the facts in every situation'--to take note of these happenings, to launch an enquiry, to faithfully record these facts and, in effect, to aid in awakening human consciousness to these sacrifices. The Tablet was not delivered to The Times (nor perhaps was intended to be), but in the following excerpt that newspaper is singled out, it would seem, as representative of the rational spirit of enquiry, of all that is true, praiseworthy and humane in Western thought: O `Times', O thou endowed with the power of utterance! O dawning place of news! Spend an hour with the oppressed of Írán, and witness how the exemplars of justice and equity are srely tried beneath the sword of tyrants. Infants have been deprived of milk, and women and children have fallen captive to the lawless. The blood of God's lovers have dyed the earth red, and the sighs of His near ones have set the universe ablaze. P978 In His Tarázát Bahá`u'lláh, Who had, on more than one occasion, been personally slandered and maligned in the press, and His Cause misrepresented in stories fabricated by His avowed enemies, recorded His awareness of inaccurate, perhaps even irresponsible, reporting: Concerning this Wronged One, most of the things reported in the newspapers are devoid of truth. Fair speech and truthfulness, by reason of their lofty rank and position, are regarded as a sun shining above the horizon of knowledge. The waves rising from this Ocean are apparent before the eyes of the peoples of the world and the effusions of the Pen of wisdom and utterance are manifest everywhere.In the same Tablet He extols knowledge and describes the integrity and regard for truth which should govern those who write for newspapers: Knowledge is one of the wondrous gifts of God. It is incumbent upon everyone to acquire it. Such arts and material means as are now manifest have been achieved by virtue of His knowledge and wisdom which have been revealed in Epistles and Tablets through His Most Exalted Pen--a Pen out of whose treasury pearls of wisdom and utterance and the arts and crafts of the world are brought to light.Among the indicators that `appear as the outstanding characteristics of a decadent society', corruption of the press is cited by Shoghi Effendi, together with `the degeneracy of art and music' and the `infection of literature', in his masterful and succinct analysis in `The Unfoldment of World Civilization'. In that same essay, in sketching the broad outlines of the World Order of Bahá`u'lláh, whose goal is the unification of the planet, he does not fail to mention the lofty and constructive role to be played by a truly free press. `The press will, under such a system,' he writes, `while giving full scope to the expression of the diversified views and convictions of mankind, cease to be mischievously manipulated by vested interests, whether private or public, and will be liberated from the influence of contending governments and peoples.' No `mirror of the world' more dramatically reflects the emergence of the Bahá'í Faith from obscurity than the press. With the renewed persecution of the Bahá'ís in the land where the Faith was born--persecution which, despite its instigators' seeming sole concession to enlightenment in the adoption of polite refinements such as closeted firing squads, private hangings and diabolical, exquisitely designed secret tortures, has the same demonic force and malicious purpose as earlier episodes--the media, and particularly the press of the world, on an unprecedented scale, locally, nationally and internationally, has sympathetically, emphatically, eloquently, insistently and for the most part accurately P979 reported the situation, expressed shock and dismay editorially, striven to alert readers to the gravity of the oppression, condemned its barbarity and demanded its cessation. Among them, it is noted with gratification, is The Times. [Picture in the Center of the Page with the Caption: The Times of London, 30 August 1980, reported the seizure of the members of the National Spiritual Assembly of Írán.]
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