Memorials of the Faithful
Hájí Aqáy-i-Tabrízí
Early in his youth this spiritual
man, who came from
Tabríz, had sensed the mystic knowledge and drunk the
heady wine of God, and he remained staunch as ever in
the Faith during his years of helpless age.
He lived for a time in Ádhirbayján, enamored of the
Lord. When he became widely known thereabouts as one
bearing the name of God, the people ruined his life. His
relatives and friends turned against him, finding a new
excuse to hound him with every passing day. Finally he
broke up his home, took his family and fled to Adrianople.
He reached there during the close of the Adrianople period
and was taken prisoner by the oppressors.
Along with us homeless wanderers, and under the protection
of the Ancient Beauty, he came to the Most Great
Prison and was a confidant and companion, sharing with
us the calamities and tribulations, humble and long-enduring. Afterward, when the restrictions were somewhat relaxed, he engaged in trade, and through the bounty of
Bahá'u'lláh was comfortable and at peace. But his body had
become enfeebled from the earlier hardships, and all the
suffering, and his faculties had deteriorated; so that ultimately
he fell ill, beyond hope of a remedy; and not far
from Bahá'u'lláh, and shadowed by His protection, he
hastened away from this least of worlds to the high Heavens,
from this dark place to the land of lights. May God
immerse him in the waters of forgiveness; may He bring
him into the gardens of Paradise, and there keep him safe
forevermore. His pure dust rests in Akká.
Memorials of the Faithful
pages 142-143
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