A wide variety of
approaches and activities are used by Baha’is to promote their
Cause (religion) and make it more acceptable to the general community
- including active involvement in, and initiation of, community programmes
on issues such as: peace, unity, the environment. The Baha’i Community
has a deliberate agenda of using education/educational
situations/educational programmes to promote their activities and their
faith (see books such as: Each One Teach One - A Call to the
Individual Believer [e.g. pp.10-11], Baha’i Education,
Education - A Baha’i Perspective, The Individual and Teaching -
Raising the Divine Call, Teaching the Baha’i Faith). The
Baha’is also have a deliberate policy of targeting prominent people,
including teachers and other educationalists - as well as indigenous
people (e.g. see chapters 5 & 6 Teaching the Baha’i Faith).
They often join with, or collaborate with, other groups when community
issues or concerns can be mutually raised or addressed. But Baha’is are
reminded of the real purpose of all such ventures: ‘In their
collaborations with such associations they would extend any moral and
material assistance they can afford, after having fulfilled their share of
support to those institutions that affect directly the interests of the
Cause. They should always bear in mind, however, the dominating purpose of
such a collaboration which is to secure in time the recognition by those
with whom they are associated of the paramount necessity and the true
significance of the Baha’i Revelation in this day’ (p.125-126
Baha’i Administration, see also pp. 348-369 [chapter 15] in the
3rd edition, 1996, Local Spiritual Assembly Handbook).
The ultimate goal and
hope for all Baha’is is the ushering in of a Golden Age
where the world will be unified under the Baha’i Faith and the
complete rule of its ultimate authoritative body, the Universal
House of Justice. This New World Order, which ALL Baha’is
are hoping and praying for, and working towards, ‘must in no wise be
regarded as purely democratic in character’ (The
Dispensation of Baha’u’llah p.61). This coming centralised,
autocratic and anti-democratic Baha’i World Government will enact
legislation in order to introduce and enforce the obligatory laws of
Baha’u’llah (which will include total submission to the ‘Will of
God’ - as interpreted by Baha’u’llah, the ‘Guardians’
who followed him, and the Universal House of justice; obligatory
daily prayers; keeping special Holy Days; fasting; and more).
(ibid. p.61-62) These Baha’i laws will be introduced world-wide by
‘a world executive, backed by an international Force.’ A
uniform and universal language, monetary system, literature, communication
system, religion, science, and more, will be introduced throughout the
world. It will be ‘a system in which Force is made the servant of
Justice’ - that is the justice of the Baha’i Universal House of
Justice! (e.g. see The World Order of Baha’u’llah
pp.201-205).
Local Baha’i
Assemblies will become the local representatives for the rule and
world government of the Universal House of Justice.
Baha’is pride themselves,
publicly, for their loving openness and acceptance of everyone, including
those of other religious faiths. In theory they can make it sound very
good, and very convincing. In reality, they are no different to many other
religious groups who are intolerant of those whose religious viewpoints
disagree with theirs, and especially of those who dare to leave the
Baha’i Faith.
The Baha’is
promote and practice ‘SHUNNING’ - as much as Jehovah’s Witnesses,
Exclusive Brethren, or similar groups.
The message is that
Baha’is are ‘to shun entirely all Covenant breakers as they are
afflicted with what we might try and define as a contagious spiritual
disease…most of them don’t want to repent’ (p.17, Directives
from the Guardian). Those who leave the Baha’i Faith and
are considered Covenant Breakers and regarded as a cancer to be cut
out of the body.
The much promoted
Baha’i concept of Unity is a ‘Unity amongst friends’
that includes ‘the absolute shunning of whomsoever we feel to be an
enemy of the Cause’ (our underlining - see p. 16,
Baha’i Administration).
Covenant Breakers are those who have been Baha’is but who
then dare to contradict or ‘attack’, especially publicly, any aspects of
the Baha’i Faith or any of its leaders, including the Universal
House of Justice. The message is currently reinforced with statements
such as: ‘Baha’is must shun Covenant-breakers entirely in order to
preserve the unity of the Faith.’ Such an attitude, behaviour and
action is regarded as ‘One of the greatest and most fundamental
principles of the Cause’ (see p.346 in the 3rd edition,
1996, Local Spiritual Assembly Handbook. See also
Directives from the Guardian, Will and Testament).
The reading of material
by Covenant Breakers (often referred to as Apostates in
other cultic groups) is discouraged with warnings such as: ‘The
friends are warned in the strongest terms against reading such literature
because Covenant-breaking is a Spiritual poison and the calumnities and
distortions of the truth which the Covenant-breakers give out are such
that they can undermine the faith of the believer and plant the seeds of
doubt unless he is fore-armed with an unshakeable belief in Baha’u’llah
and His Covenant and a knowledge of the true facts’ (p.347 in the
3rd edition, 1996, Local Spiritual Assembly Handbook).
Like most cultic groups
there are some true facts of which the Baha’i leaders would prefer the
followers NOT to have any knowledge or awareness. These include
some aspects of Baha’i history and the continuing disunity amongst the
Baha’is themselves.
Baha’u’llah (Mirza Husayn
Ali - who gave himself the title, ‘Baha’u’llah’ - ‘Splendour/Glory
of God’) was supposedly a close follower of the Bab (the
followers were known as the Babis), who later discovered that he
was the special manifestation of God referred to by the Bab as
‘He-Whom-God-Will-Manifest.’ What is rarely acknowledged is
that the Bab declared that he was a special
manifestation of God and that the next manifestation would not come before
1511 years, but not later than 2001 years, after the Bab, which
would disqualify Husayn Ali - Baha’u’llah!
Also omitted from
official Baha’i writings are references to the fact that the Bab
actually appointed Husayn Ali’s younger step-brother, Mirza Yahya
Subh-i-Azal, as his official successor. After some years Husayn Ali
rejected his younger step-brother’s authority and position, claimed a
greater one for himself, and gathered followers. Followers of Husayn Ali/Baha’u’llah
(Baha’is) killed many of the followers of the official successor to
the Bab, the step-brother, Subh-i-Azal (Azalis). And at
least one of the brothers tried to poison and kill the other. The Turkish
government separated the two warring factions in 1868, with Subh-i-Azal
and the Azalis being sent to Cyprus, and Husayn Ali/Baha’u’llah and the
Baha’is sent to Akka (Acre) in Turkish ruled Palestine. In Akka
Baha’u’llah and his followers did not use his full title, kept much of
their Baha’i activity secret and pretended to be Sunni Muslim. They were
so successful in this deception that, after their deaths, Sunni Muslim
clergy conducted the funerals of both Baha’u’llah and his son and
successor, Abbas Effendi.
The Baha’is under the
authority of the Universal House of Justice, and the general
public, are not informed of another schism that occurred after the
First Guardian of the Faith, Shoghi Effendi, died in 1957. For several
years affairs were led by a small group known as the Hands of the Cause,
and then in April 1963 the Universal House of Justice was
established. It has been claimed, by the mainstream Baha’i movement, that
there was no appointed successor to the First Guardian of the Faith.
However, this is disputed by a group of Baha’is lead by The Mother
Baha’i Council of the United States, in Roswell, New Mexico. This
group of Baha’is claims that Shoghi Effendi DID appoint a
successor, the president of the original Universal House of
Justice - which they say Shoghi Effendi proclaimed in embryonic form
in 1951. This president, Charles Mason Remey, proclaimed his
accession to the Guardianship in 1960. In 1961 he appointed Joel
Bray Marangella as his future successor, and in 1966 publicly handed
the authority of the Guardianship over to Joel Marangella.
The Third Guardian, Joel Bray Marangella, has been living in
Western Australia and first notified the Australian public about the
existence of the (‘True’) Orthodox Baha’i Faith in AN
OPEN LETTER TO THE HETERODOX BAHA’IS published in the West
Australian newspaper in April 1982. Members of the ‘Orthodox’
Baha’i Faith seem fearfully reluctant to confirm the current (December
1996) whereabouts of the Third Guardian of the Faith, Joel Bray
Marangella. Many of the mainstream (‘Heterodox’) Baha’is
seemingly have either not heard of the Third Guardian, or don’t
want to hear of him.
So much for all the talk
of peace and unity.
The more one examines
Baha’i primary sources, and other historical information, the more
disturbing the picture becomes. Exaggerated stories of mass persecutions
are used to emotionally cloud issues (we acknowledge that there have
been persecutions of Baha’is - which are wrong and unacceptable - but
evidence also suggests that some claims have been exaggerated).
Documentary evidence shows that the image of peace loving, open and
tolerant people, firmly united throughout the past as well as in the
present, is a false image. The Baha’is were described, not many decades
ago, as a ‘small obscure Islamic sect’ - they have worked
hard to change their image and to become acceptable in a naïve and
ill-informed Western Society. They have misused the Bible and distorted
both theology and history to conceal their true nature and promote an
image of being a respectable major world religion with a message of love,
peace and unity. Be aware of the Baha’is - their true cultic nature and
ultimate agenda.
******************
See also CCG Ministries TACL article on "The Virtues Project".
References/Sources:
Conversations with an
‘Orthodox’ Baha’i member on 2-12-96
Promotional pamphlets,
brochures, and personal letters.
Baha’i International
Community Office of Public Information (nd) Education - A Baha’i
Perspective Leicestershire:Baha’i Publishing Trust.
Baha’i Publications
Australia (1995) Teaching the Baha’i Faith Mona Vale:Baha’i
Publications Australia.
Baha’i Publishing Trust
(1992) Becoming a Baha’i - An
Introduction to the Baha’i Faith and its Teachings London:Baha’i
Publishing Trust.
Baha’i Publishing Trust (nd)
Directives from the Guardian New Delhi:Baha’i Publishing
Trust.
Shoghi Effendi (1974)
Baha’i Administration (rev. ed.) Illinois:Baha’i Publishing
Trust.
__________ (1977)
The Dispensation of Baha’u’llah New Delhi:Baha’i Publishing Trust.
Esslemont, J.E. (1970)
Baha’u’llah and the New Era - An Introduction to the Baha’i Faith
(3rd rev. ed.) Illinois:Baha’i Publishing Trust.
Marangella, Joel Bray
(Third Baha’i Guardian) (1986) An Appeal to the Heterodox Baha’is
advertisement in
The Weekend Australian Sydney, April 26, 1986.
__________ (1986)
personal letter to W.A. van Leen dated December 9, 1986.
Miller, William McElvee
(1974) The Baha’i Faith: Its History and Teachings
California:William
Carey Library - see also
his (1977) What is the Baha’i Faith? - an abridgement of
Miller’s 1974 text by William N. Wysham, published by William B. Eerdmans
in Michigan.
Momen, Wendi (general
edit.) (1989) A Basic Baha’i Dictionary Oxford:George
Ronald.
Mother Baha’i Council of
the United States (1981) The Orthodox Baha’i Faith - An Introduction
New Mexico:Mother Baha’i Council of the United States of America.
National Spiritual
Assembly of the Baha’is of Australia (1989) The Covenant
Mona Vale:Baha’i Publications Australia.
__________ (1984)
Now You’re a Baha’i (rev. ed.) Mona Vale:Baha’i Publications
Australia.
National Spiritual
Assembly of the Baha’is of the United States (1969) The Advent of
Divine Justice (4th ed.) Illinois:Baha’i Publishing
Trust.
__________ (1956)
Baha’i World Faith (2nd ed.) Illinois:Baha’i Publishing
Trust.
__________ (1975)
Each One Teach One - A Call to the Individual Believer Illinois:
Baha’i Publishing Trust.
__________ (1977)
The Individual and Teaching - Raising the Divine Call
Illinois:Baha’i Publishing Trust.
__________ (1982)
The Light of Baha’u’llah Illinois:Baha’i Publishing Trust.
__________ (1964)
Some Answered Questions (collected and translated from the Persian
of Abdu’l-Baha by Laura Clifford Barney) (3rd ed.)
Illinois:Baha’i Publishing Trust.
__________ (1974)
The World Order of Baha’u’llah - Selected Letters (Shoghi Effendi)
(2nd rev. ed.) Illinois:Baha’i Publishing Trust.
Orthodox Baha’i Faith
(Winter 1974/75) Herald of the
Covenant - Special edition - Violation of the Covenant New Mexico:Orthodox
Baha’i Faith.
Orthodox Baha’is of
Australia, (1982) An Open Letter to the Heterodox Baha’is in
the West Australian April 17, 1982, Perth, Western
Australia.