A FRAUDULENT TESTAMENT Part-5


Chapter 6.
 
VI. WHAT IS A BAHAI?
THE GOAL OF THE BAHAI RELIGION ACCORDING TO ABDUL BAHA AND ACCORDING TO SHOGHI EFFENDI


The best proof of the consequences of this goal is the fate of the
Bahai movement in the USSR.

 
In Esslemont's book Baha'u'llah and the New Era we find a chapter concerning this question. Abdul Baha answers it as follows:

"To be a Bahai simply means to love all the world; to love humanity and try to serve it; to work for universal peace and universal brotherhood." 132
In another part, Abdul Baha considers, "The man who lives the life according to the teachings of Baha'u'llah is already a Bahai. On the other hand, a man may call himself a Bahai for fifty years, and if he does not live the life he is not a Bahai". 133

In the same speech, Abdul Baha asserts, "A man may be a Bahai even if he has never heard the name of Baha'u'llah.
These statements would apply correspondingly to the followers of all other Manifestations of God. For Christian or Bahai, for Moslem or Buddhist, the word of Jesus, "Whoever will be my disciple must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me" is also valid.134

In the same measure that the Kingdom of God reigns in the hearts of individual men — be they Christian or Jew, Moslem, Bahai or believer in any other religion — in this same measure, too, the Kingdom of God grows up slowly on the earth. The seeking of religious truth leads us to the love of God, the dissolution of and separation from all egotistical wishes, to obedience to God's commandments, to service to our fellowman. A Bahai — like a Christian — teaches his fellow-man by being a living example, by courtesy and respect, by overlooking the faults of others, by humility, truthfulness, trustworthiness and self-knowledge. These ethical-religious values are handled by Baha'u'llah and Abdul Baha with the question about the essence of a Bahai.
What is a Bahai according to Shoghi Effendi? The alleged Guardian does not reach back to these eternal values which every manifestation of God proclaimed anew with different words, but bases his Idea on that which was indicated by the fictitious Will and Testament of Abdul Baha.

 1 "Loyal and steadfast adherence to every clause of Abdul Baha's sacred Will"; thus, of the alleged testament of Abdul Baha. Completing this:

2 "Unreserved acceptance of, and submission to whatsoever has been revealed by their (Bab, Baha'u'llah, Abdul Baha) pens"

3 "Close association with the spirit as well as the present-day Bahai administration . . ." '"

What is now the essential goal of the religion? We know this from the mouth of Jesus: love of God and love of man. The goal of a new religion, of a renewed outpouring of the divine spirit is then a deepening of the love of God and a heightening of the love of mankind, which has experienced in the last phase of the previous religious age a decline, a winter from which the religion is supposed to be led out now to a new spring. What does Shoghi say in his major work God Passes By about "the goal of the Bahai outpouring?" It is "the Administrative Order upon which the institutions of the future Bahai World Commonwealth must needs be ultimately erected..." 136
The fact that the graves of the founders of the Bahai belief lie at the foot of Mt. Carmel is not the reason that it has become the object of the devout reverence of its believers, but that here the "permanent world Administrative Center of the future Bahai Commonwealth . . ." will eventually be established." 137

It is a special characteristic of the Bahai Administration that it pushes the collective goals of the Bahai religion down to the political level. The assertions, meanwhile interlaced "on the nonpolitical character of the Faith" 138 or "a world religion ... nonpolitical 139 can only have the purpose of veiling this previously mentioned political goal and therefore they are not credible to the critical observer. That the penetration of our world with the Bahai ideals would also result in an improvement and enobling of political conditions cannot be doubted. Today we, too, speak of a Christian West without Jesus ever having indicated anything of the kind. Proceeding the concept ofthe"Christian West",however, has been the work of the Christian churches of different leanings and their individual members throughout the centuries. This work must also be performed now: it Is the presupposition for this eventual Bahai state in the same way as we live in the West in "Christian nations" today. This final result could not have been anticipated by the religion's founders at all.

With these big words of "Bahai world state" and of "Bahai Commonwealth", Shoghi sets himself not only above the word of Jesus — "Render unto Caesar..." — but also simultaneously about the word of Baha'u'llah — "And whatsoever hath proceeded out of His blameless, His truth speaking, trustworthy mouth can never be altered." 140

In the Letter to the Son of the Wolf, Baha'u'llah himself brings up these words of Jesus: "Yea, render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's and unto God the things that are God's." 141

Already in 1902 the first Bahai temple was erected in Ishkabad (Turkistan) not far from the Persian border, in the Bahai literature there are different indications that high Russian officials of the Czarist period: thus, in the lifetime of Abdul Baha, spoke out for the Bahai religion and even sided with them in case of emergency. Leo Tolstoy's words, "The teachings of the Babists, which proceeded from Mohammedanism and have been developed into the Bahai teachings (teachings of Baha'u'llah) represent one of the greatest teachings in religion", are well-known.Even a few years after Shoghi's accession to the Guardianship, everything went well; very well. The following excerpts prove this: " The government is very friendly towards the Bahai teachings because it broadcasts true knowledge and does not pursue politics. Among the 130 million inhabitants of Russia there exists only one religious periodical, and this is the Bahai newspaper "Khurshid Khavar"; In English, "The Sun of the East".142

Also In the following years we find a singular "high" in the Russian fair weather map:
"The news from Russia is very heartening; the friends In Moscow have obtained permission to publish the teachings freely, and every facility to enable them to propagate their cause has been accorded them. The friends work together with the Tolstoy group, which offers great interest In the movement In the near future they hope to be able to publish a newspaper in Russian, Persian and English." 143

The news became more and more optimistic. As it says, "The government has allowed the Bahais to use their own press for publication of their printed materials and newsletters."144

The last joyous messages about Russia can be read in the "Bahai Nachrichten" of August, 1927: "We hear from Moscow of the founding of a new Bahai society in Tiflis... We learn from Teheran that Baha'u'llah and the New Era by Dr. Esslemont, lquan and Wonderful Proofs by Abdul Fazl were translated into Russian and we are impatiently looking forward to publication in Moscow."
In a small special excerpt, "our brethren in Ishkabad" ask that printed materials be sent only in Esperanto because "no one in our city understands English." An address is then given for correspondence: Soviet der Bahaauoj, Post Office Box 9, Askabad-Poltorazk, Turkistan, USSR. 145

In the "Bahai News" of September, "1927, addresses of the National Spiritual Assemblies were given: among others, that of the Russian regions of the Caucasus and Turkistan. But it was an exile National Spiritual Assembly with the one and the same Persian living in London. Whether this Persian was simply appointed by the American National Spiritual Assembly, from which all the addresses come, is not known to us.

During the whole year of 1928, there is nothing to be read in the "Bahai News" about the Russian group. In Germany preparations were being made in this period for the separation of the Free Bahais from those of the administration. W. Herrigel was chosen as acting chairman of the National Spiritual Assembly at the Bahai congress in Stuttgart at Easter.146   However, he then had to withdraw, perhaps in connection with the publication of the Esslemont book around this time, because the name Herrigel is missing in the repeated information about the composition of the NSA of Germany in the "Bahai News" of June-July, 1972. The German Bahai Publishing Company went into the hands of the Bahai Bureau under Frau A. Schwarz on October 1, 1928. In 1929 in the SdW parts of Ruth White's book Abdul Baha and the Promised Age were published, the last time in October. When they found out in Stuttgart about this American's criticism of Shoghi's administration in her book The Bahai Religion ... she came into the Bahai Index.

On January 1, 1929, Shoghi had also written his letter with the news of the confiscation of the Bahai temple in Ishkabad. 147 The Russians had probably begun an investigative commission which had determined, with the help of the available literature, the new direction of the Bahai teachings; namely, to political Shoghism.

One can interpret the motivations of the Russians from Shoghi's writing without difficulty when he says, "... due to circumstances wholly beyond their control ... our Bahai brethren ... have had to endure the rigid application of the principles already enunciated by the state authorities and universally enforced with regard to all other religious communities under their sway." The veil that now obscures the vision of the Russian rulers will be lifted and Shoghi hopes that God "will in time ... reveal the nobility of aim, the innocence of purpose, the rectitude of conduct and the humanitarian ideals" of the Bahai communities in every land. Moreover, the Guardian will "specially request them (the Bahais of the world) to proclaim in their written representation to the authorities concerned their absolute repudiation of whatever... political design may be imputed to them by their malignant adversaries." 148

We have already pointed out the goal and purpose of the Bahai outpouring in Shoghi's verdict and proved the dishonesty of its leadership in the different indications of the testament falsification. These proofs were possible for us, however, only on the basis of later publications.
The complete prohibition of the Bahai religion in Russia followed then in 1938 when the temple in Ishkabad was expropriated and transformed into an art gallery. Simultaneously, the "imprisonment of over 500 believers — many of whom died . . . confiscation of their property . . . exile of several prominent members of these communities to Siberia . . . the polar forests and other places in the vicinity of the Arctic Ocean.. ." 149

What were the reasons? Was it Shoghi's work World Order of Baha'u'llah published in the same year (1938} in New York, in the foreword of which H. Holley, the often mentioned secretary of the NSA of Bahais of the USA and Canada, had written of the "unique realization of the ultimate aim and purpose of Baha'u'llah's Revelation" by Shoghi Effendi that shows "the very essence of world statesmanship" 150 of the Guardian and that "the command (of Jesus) 'Render unto Caesar...' has been annulled ... by Baha'ullah"? 151

We can only surmise that these words, which are rejected by every normal believer in the religion of Baha'u'llah and Abdul Baha, supplied an excellent reason for the Soviet authorities to completely prohibit the Bahai religion which was still unbelievably favored in 1926 and 1927 as we have cited. This relationship between the prohibition of the Bahai religion in the USSR in 1938 and the publication of Shoghi Effendi, World Order of Baha'u'llah (New York, 1938), with these comments of the American secretary Holley about Shoghi's "world statesmanship" and the annulling of Jesus' commandment "Render unto Caesar..." is only an assumption because an inquiry at the Russian embassy in Rolandseck in 1967 has remained unanswered until today and closer details can hardly be found without a knowledge of the Russian language.

PART SIX


132.  loc cit.,  1970, p. 71
133. Abdul Baha in London, Chicago, 1921, p. 109, cit. by Esslemond Ioc. cit., p. 71 f.
134. Matthew 16 : 24
135. Shoghi Effendi In Article II, By-Laws of the National Spiritual Assembly, cit. White, loc. cit., p. 59 and  Bahai Administration, 1968, p 90
136. GPB, p. 325
137. GPB, p. 348
138. GPB, p. 342
139. GPB. p. 354
140. BWF, p. 60
141.  Quoted by Shoghi Promised Day, p. 73
142.  Article "Visit from South Russia" by A. Sch., SdW, 1925, p. 73
143. Bahai-Nachrichten August 1926, p. 22  in "Sonne der Wahrheit", 1926 after p. 96 '" 144.
        Bahai-Nachrichten", January, 1927, p. 42 in SdW, 1926 after p. 176
145. "Bahai -Nachrichten". p. 22, "Sonne Her Wahrheit" 1927, after p. 96
146. Bahai-Nachrichten", May, 1927, p. 12
147. SdW 1929, p. 19 ff.
148. Bahai Administration. p. 160 ff.
149. GPB. p. 361
150'  loc. cit., p. VI
151. loc. cit., p. VII

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