Friday, November 30, 2007

On How to Show Who's Boss: Oh, it's a woman's thing

Dorothy Nelson has always inspired. -gw

As a member of the Bahá’í Faith, I believe in the process of consultation to resolve conflicts peacefully. I inserted materials on mediation, the closest thing to consultation, in my seminar on the administration of justice. One day at a faculty meeting, I overheard a faculty member say to another, just what is this thing called mediation that Dorothy is teaching in her seminar? The response was: “Oh, it’s a woman’s thing. She is trying to get everyone to love each other”. Well, it gives me the greatest pleasure to say that alternative dispute resolution (particularly mediation) is one of the hottest topics in the justice system today.

When I became the first woman dean, one of the senior faculty members called me into his office and advised me to arrive at the next faculty meeting 15 minutes late to show the faculty who was boss. Instead, I rushed home and baked 5 dozen chocolate cookies and arrived 15 minutes early to greet everyone. I also announced that we would have food at all faculty meetings henceforth.

http://randomsaladthoughts.blogspot.com/2007/11/amazing-post-by-female-bahai-judge.html

On Understanding and Cooperation for Peace: Kindly organized by the Baha'i community

On Summer Breezes for Baha'is: Dreams Never Get Old

Hummingbird
don't fly away

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Photo uploaded on May 15, 2007 by MrClean1982 on flickr, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 2.0 Generic

DREAMS NEVER GET OLD: SUMMER BREEZE - Seals & Crofts
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Jim Seals (Seals & Crofts) 2007
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Dash Crofts Concert 2-14-05

On Making the Crooked Straight: A Dear Photo of the Defenders

Found on Flickr. -gw

.leila says:
one of my favourite books. ever.

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"A masterly survey of the doctrinal and vital principles of this religion … a mine of information on Baha'i-theology, practice, and ethics, and the Baha'i-vision of the socio-political organization of the human family." (Prof. Christian Cannuyer, in: Mélanges de Science Religieuse)

" … authentically and in the best scholastic tradition responds to the largest accumulation of issues raised in polemical writings against the Baha'i… during the last one hundred years." (Prof. Heshmat Moayyad, in: Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society)

"… an important contribution to the critical study of the Baha'i religion in the history of religions." (Prof. Manfred Hutter, in: Journal of Contemporary Religion)

http://www.udoschaefer.com/books_e1.php

On Doing It for the Children: And discovering I couldn't deny that my soul was the soul of a Baha'i

This soul was nurtured to take the step of Faith through the Institute process and participation in the core activities of children's classes, devotional gatherings, and study circles. -gw

I have always searched for meaning in my life, always believed in the equality of all of mankind, always knew that I was put on this earth for a purpose—to serve humanity. Becoming a mother didn’t change that, if anything it made the search more crucial.

My mother says that I’ve tried every religion and she is not too far from the truth. I have definitely read-up on just about every faith and loosely practised most of the eastern beliefs in my adulthood—drifting toward Buddhism for its peace-loving qualities in a world where most wars and conflicts are related to religion. But having four children instilled a sense of urgency in me to find something more authentic than meditating sporadically, as I struggle to explain the complex ideas of material detachment and cessation of suffering to young children, yet celebrate all the Christian holidays, and irregularly attend my husband’s childhood church. Not only did I need something to believe, but in the face of the media’s overwhelming influence I needed my children to believe in God and to be with him everyday.

I had heard my Homoeopathy professor talk about the Baha’i faith on several occasions, and his talks always gave me a sense of peace and understanding, so my husband and I went to him for some insider information, which became my first step toward becoming Baha’i. Over the next year I read about the faith—a lot, I helped my oldest daughter do a project on the Baha’i faith for Girl Guides, I enrolled my two older girls in Baha’i children classes and brought my younger kids to virtue based Baha’i playgroup.

While each step was done for the benefit of my children, I began to take much more from the journey than I had anticipated, and soon I was attending Devotional gatherings and taking adult classes. I couldn’t deny that my soul was the soul of a Baha’i.

My husband has remained a follower of the United Church and we still celebrate the Christian holidays in addition to the Baha’i holy days. We teach our children about Jesus and the other manifestations of God including Baha’u’llah, we teach the Virtues, and most of all we teach them by example that we can live united with two faiths in one home.

On Human Rights Day, December 10th: Um Mundo, Uma Vida

From SAM. -gw

Um mundo, Uma Vida

One world, One Life




A maioria das pessoas que me conhece sabe do meu desejo de intervir ativamente pelos Direitos Humanos.
Most people who know me know of my desire to intervene actively for human rights.
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Mas enquanto a oportunidade mais realista não é encontrada, o mínimo que se pode fazer é utilizar as novas tecnologias como portas que nos abram essas oportunidades.
But while the most realistic opportunity is not found, the least we can do is use the technology as we open doors these opportunities.
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Por isso, faço o convite!

So do the invitation!
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Avanço o desafio!
Advance the challenge!
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Cada um de nós, seres humanos conscientes, tem notado que, por todo o globo, existe um sempre crescente de atrocidades contra a espécie humana.

Each of us, human beings aware, has noticed that, across the globe, there is an ever increasing atrocities against the human species.
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Mas, quantos de nós paramos para pensar sobre elas e mostrar a nossa indignação e asco?
But how many of us stop to think about them and show our indignation and asco?
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É essa a razão desta causa: criar uma rede ativa que leve o seu desagrado aos seus leitores.

That is the reason for this question: create an active network to take its dissatisfaction to their readers.
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No dia 10 de Dezembro , Dia Internacional dos Direitos Humanos , eu gostaria de nos ter a todos trabalhando em conjunto, como um mundo, uma vida , de modo a que todos os nossos leitores possam ter em mente de que somos, de facto, um mundo e uma vida .

On December 10, International Human Rights Day, I would like to have us all working together as a world, a life, so that all our readers can bear in mind that we are in fact a world and a life.
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Para os que possuem blog e desejem participar, é simples: Não há limites para as vossas imaginações (até porque a unidade deveria vir da diversidade)!.
For those who have blog and wish to participate, is simple: There are no limits to your imagination (because the unit should be of diversity)?.
+ Podem escolher uma situação particular ou geral;
They may choose a particular situation or general;
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Escrever sobre a economia e os direitos humanos, a perspectiva religiosa e os direitos humanos, a psicologia dos direitos humanos, filmes sobre direitos humanos, poemas, vídeos de música, pinturas;
Writing on the economy and human rights, the prospect religious and human rights, the psychology of human rights, human rights films, poems, videos, music, paintings;
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A vossa imaginação é o limite!

Your imagination is the limit!
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Os que não tem blogs, mas desejam participar, não se esqueçam que toda a tecnologia é um meio e não um fim, em si mesmo.

Those who do not have blogs, but want to participate, do not forget that all the technology is a means and not an end in itself.
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Usem os vossos
hi-5 , orkut , ou até mesmo no nickname do messenger ;
Use your hi-5, orkut, or even the nickname of the messenger;
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Podem só mesmo publicitar esta campanha a outras pessoas que tenham blog;

They may even publicize this campaign only to other people who have blog;
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Ou se inscrever e publicitar a nossa
comunidade de facebook .
Or sign up and publicize our community of facebook.
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O objetivo é fazer com que todos os que se conectem conosco entendam que, enquanto um único humano for privado de seus direitos, iremos todos continuar a trabalhar juntos, porque somos interconectos como um mundo, uma vida .
The goal is to make all that connect us understand that as a single man is deprived of their rights, we will all continue to work together, because we are interconectos as a world, a life.
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O nosso principal objetivo é lembrar que somos um mundo, uma vida .
Our main goal is to remember that we are one world, one life.
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Se quer participar desta iniciativa:

If you want to join this initiative:
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Envie um
email ;
Send an email;
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Informe através
da página de facebook ;
+
Ou deixe aqui um comentário.

Or leave a comment here.
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Os selos da campanha, desenvolvidos pelo amigo Lino Resende , seguirão em breve.
The stamps of the campaign, developed by friend Lino Resende, follow soon.
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Obrigado a todos!

Thanks to all!
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publicada por SAM às 19:02
Published by SAM to
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Fênix ad eternum
Phoenix ad forever
Cultura, Ciência, Religião
Culture, Science, Religion
porque em Feníxia

Because in Feníxia
o Conhecimento é um só Ponto

The Knowledge is a single point
e os Direitos são Universais

And the Rights are Universal

On Afghan Baha'is: The Website

Here is a message from a recent commenter to the post "On Religious Diversity in Afghanistan: True progress" -gw

"also check out Afghan Baha'is website, www.AfghanBahais.org"

Thursday, November 29, 2007

On Learning About the Baha'i Faith for the First Time: Christianity Explored

Denise from Singapore is a student at Warwick. -gw


we had a christianity explored meeting before the actual bible study. christianity explored is for pre believers to ask questions and stuff. it was quite interesting. there were two people of the baha'i faith there. so, i got to learn about it for the first time. :)

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Photo: "Atrium, Universityof Warwick," uploaded on May 15, 2006 by jisc_infonet on flickr,


On Photos from Nepal: Marco Visits Nepali Baha'i Villages

On Religious Tests: There were a few bonus multiple choice questions on the Baha'i Faith

Life is full of tests. Pass them. -gw


So, I wrote the second test for my religious studies course. I felt terrible. The problem was I didn't really know what the questions were asking for. They were so vague, and so broad. As well, they seemed to ask me the write the same answers three times at three different places in the paper. The only comfort was that I was pretty confident about the multiple choice and short answer part, and there were a few bonus multiple choice questions on Baha'i faith too.

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"Blogs can used to increase student achievement and test scores. Imagine having a classroom blog that allows you to enrich and assess student learning. Give students their own blogs so that their work can be seen by the whole school community. " Uploaded on December 22, 2005 by Misterteacher on flickr, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic.

On Spiritual Pursuit: The Baha'i Board Game

From Barney's profile on Facebook I learn of Spiritual Pursuit, the Baha'i board game, and the Facebook group devoted to it. -gw

Spiritual Pursuit - Baha'i board game
Spiritual Pursuit - second edition - is launching on 2 Jan 2008. Pre-order your copy now, and collect at the National Festival in Warwick.The game costs £23, and consists of a high quality board, 3 sets of questions on 10 topics, and counters for 9 players. The second edition comes in a presentation box. Topics are: Baha'u'llah The Bab' Abdu'l-Baha Calendar Administration Holy Places Messengers of God Prayers Famous Baha'is The Writings

Questions come in beginners, regular and hard categories, plus a bonus round. The game is ideal for adults, youth and children, and for both long-time Baha'is and those newly investigating the Faith. It is a great community game.

LIMITED EDITION - ONLY 500 AVAILABLE!
Orders and enquiries to spiritualpursuitgame@gmail.com
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On Curriculum Development: I'm writing about a Baha'i curriculum that is used all over the world

"negotiated curriculums,"
uploaded on March 7, 2006 by leighblackall on flickr,
licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic

Big subject. -gw

Curriculum Development – I’m writing about a Baha’i curriculum that is used all over the world and is meant to be universal (for Baha’is/non-Baha’is from any country in the world). So I’m going to explore how this curriculum was created and whether or not it is appropriate for all learning styles.




On Visitors to Baha'i Views: Keyword Searches

Bahai ViewsBaha'i Views
Country Share
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Why do people come to Baha'i Views? For many, it is a keyword search that brings them here. Of the 100 most recent visits to Baha'i Views, according to Sitemeter, these were the search words that brought the visitors here if search words were used. -gw

2
baptist and bahai faith
7
symbol of bahai
11
myspace star symbol
14
christ come in the clouds baha'ullah and the new era
15
bahai song resources
19
bahai home visits
20
the nightingale of paradise

21
bahai teaching story
25
african symbols meaning superior
28
myspace star symbols
30
"apostasy in the baha'i"
32
bahai dating
36
bahai views
37
bahai christmas present tree
38
french garden
43
bahais views on anger
44
baha'i marriage fortress of wellbeing
49
18 october 2007 universal house of justice door to door
50
china she
52
bahai values
54
star symbols used as tatoos
55
bahai prayer for "grandparents"
57
"year of separation" marriage
62
baha'i
64
bahai weddings
65
tu que estas en alto cielo
66
baha'i social enconomic development
67
isaac newton calculus
68
baha'i
69
bahai views
70
paradoxical questions
71
bahai paintings
72
bahai gardens
74
baha'i temple santiago, chile
75
bahai egypt

76
anna's presentation
79
bahai prayers cambodian
82
baha'i children's classes - abdu'l-baha
83
anna's presentation, baha'i
85
star symbols for myspace
86
bahai children classes material
89
bahai
90
anesthesiology symbols
91
paradoxical question
93
"tu que estas en alto cielo...echame tu bendicion!!!"
94
bahai questions
98
bahai december 2007 bosch


My conclusion is, people come here for many reasons. - gw

On Baha'is Providing Service in Zambia and French Guiana: Bright Spirits

Bright spirits, uploaded on August 28, 2006 by Jack.ed on flickr
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Service in Zambia:
Service (volunteer work) in Zambia at Banani International Secondary School
"True Liberty"

On Anna's Presentation: Amazing success for Baha'is

Next week our cluster will be holding a Ruhi Book 6 refresher class and be studying Anna's presentation. -gw

Amazing success with Anna's Presentation

Added: November 28, 2007
Mahendran in Johor Bahru explains to Suraj Chew amazing recent successes he has had presenting the Faith to 5 families


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVcIXP0c_Vs

Gloria Javid and Anna's Presentation

Suraj Chew interviews Gloria Javid from New Delhi on her success with using Anna's Presentation to convey the Faith.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

On Visiting with the Mormon Missionaries: My opportunity came to teach

A straightfoward teaching story from from a humble servant of Baha'u'llah. I like how she appreciates the missionaries' poise. -gw

I just got back from shopping to encounter boys in suits and carrying backpacks standing in front of the door of the home across the yard from me. They were talking about Joseph Smith. Oh boy, Mormon missionaries...

I put all my stuff away, and I finished by the time they reached my door. They began by asking if I know about Jesus Christ and His latter mission. I told him how my grandparents are Mormon, my brother is Mormon, and much of my family is Mormon. They then asked if I was raised Mormon. I told them that I was raised Christian, but I decided to leave Christianity, and I joined the Baha'i Faith. They said they had never heard of the Baha'i Faith. So then, I told them about Baha'u'llah and the Bab. I mentioned the things I read from "Thief in the Night," in that the Bab is the return of Jesus, he came in 1844, caused much turmoil in Persia, and he was executed by Muslims. He announced that a greater one would come after him nine years later. That person turns out to be Baha'u'llah. He is the Lord of Hosts and the Holy Father. Baha'is believe he is the manifestation of God for this age. He wrote instructions for people to follow that would create the Kingdom of God on Earth. He sent letters to all the leaders of the world, including the Pope, that would allow the creation of God's kingdom, the elimination of all wars, and world unity. He taught of the elimination of all prejudice, and that there is only one race: the human race, and we should love all people. After saying all this, they expressed satisfaction that I appear to believe in Jesus, they gave me a card for ordering Mormon music, and they bid me farewell.

I seemed to do more talking than them. Their job was to teach others about Joseph Smith, but I ended up teaching them about Baha'u'llah. It's neat how that happened. I read some of the Book of Mormon in preparation for the times when would be faced with the circumstances of teaching them about the Baha'i Faith. I did so because many of my family members are Mormon. My opportunity came in the form of teaching Mormon missionaries. They seemed like they never heard of the Baha'i Faith. I wonder if they will investigate if further, or if I freaked them out with some the shocking things I said. I felt nervous when speaking to them. I haven't had any practice teaching the Baha'i Faith to other people, so naturally I felt nervous. It's amazing that they manage to teach their religion with such poise. They probably get lots of practice doing it. Discussing one's religion with other people unfamiliar with it is pretty nervewracking, and arguments could sometimes happen. I'm glad that this encounter happened peacefully. I now wonder if I talked too much, because they hardly did much speaking, but those guys certainly got to learn something new, today.


{Re-posted with permission}

Monday, November 26, 2007

On the Purpose of God's Tests: So that light may be distinguished from darkness

Crossreference List of Bahá'í Prayers - Sorted
edit / delete
saved by 1 other person ... 3 days ago


Thanks to locle999 on del.icio.us, I learn of a slew of Baha'i outlines and summaries, including this one. -gw

Nine purposes defined in the Kitáb-I-Iqán

Here are the first four purposes. -gw

The purpose of God’s tests: “…so that light may be distinguished from darkness, truth from falsehood, right from wrong, guidance from error, happiness from misery, and roses from thorns.” (KI 8)

The essential and highest purpose of creation is “divine unity and understanding.” (KI 28)

The purpose of symbolic terms is “to test and prove the peoples of the world; that thereby the earth of the pure and illuminated hearts may be known from the perishable and barren soil.” (KI 53)

The purpose of changing laws and ordinances: “…such things as throw consternation into the hearts of all men come to pass only that each soul may be tested by the touchstone of God, that the true may be known and distinguished from the false.” (KI 55)


What are the other five purposes? Find out here. -gw

http://akb.web.googlepages.com/home

On the Baha'i Festival of the Covenant: The impulse towards unity

Last night Bonita and I went to our community's Day of the Covenant celebration. Our Spiritual Assembly members participated in the election of the Regional Baha'i Council. And then we all watched a DVD on the Hands of the Cause. How appropriate! How very wonderful! -gw

"Baha'i Festival of the Covenant," Uploaded on November 26, 2007 by Dr Phil on flickr
Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic

What does it mean to be a Baha'i? It's shared meanings, for one. -gw

To be a member of a religion is to share its meanings, its hierarchy of values and its ordering of realities. For Baha'is, the meaning that is imposed upon the world consists of a belief that, in the present state of the world, the only salvation for humanity is to move on to the next stage of its social development, the unity of humankind and the emergence of a single global order: ‘The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens’ (Baha'u'llah, 1983, p. 250). For this order to emerge, an individual's source of identity has to change from a solely national, racial, religious or ethnic one to a global one. Hence the strong impulse in the Baha'i community towards unity. A religion that claims to be trying to unite the world cannot be effective or credible if it is not itself united.

From "Marginality and apostasy in the Baha'i community" by Moojan Momen
Religion Volume 37, Issue 3, September 2007, Pages 187-209

On Topic, BaHai Faith???: Finding peace and giving others space to find their own peace as well

Interesting discussion and lovely testimony to be found here in the "My Spirituality" forum. -gw


Black Hair Media Hair Forum : My Spirituality : Alternative Religions
Topic: BaHai faith???

I am a follower of the Baha'i faith, and I have been for the past 7 months. I guess I was tired of hearing how one religion was more right than all others, because I believe that there is truth to [at least] most religions. Baha'i isn't about finding religion and following traditions and whatnot, which I appreciate. It's about finding peace and giving others space to find their own peace as well. Since becoming one, I read the Bible much more than I did when I was a Christian, and I read the Quran and other holy books as well. Before, I tried to comprehend all the fallacies and inconsistencies in the holy books, whereas now I see what is good and real, those things being love, respect, unity and the oneness of all mankind. I absolutely love it!

BajanBaby11, Junior Member, Joined: 20 Oct 2007, Posts: 231
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On Having Eric Dozier and JB Eckl Over for Thanksgiving: He Maketh Victorious

One of my favorite current songs is "He Maketh Victorious" by Eric Dozier and JB Eckl. It is also a favorite of Mitko of Befriended Stranger. In the post below he writes of taking the duo home for a Thanksgiving meal. -gw

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Mitko on Nov 23rd 2007

Sunday, November 25, 2007

On Why the Closing of Maxwell School May Be Evidence of a Step Forward: Baha'i Children and Youth Are being Prepared for Excellence Everywhere

Northeast States Baha'i youth at NEBYfest, "on FIRE," uploaded on February 23, 2006 by BlakeRead on flickr,
licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic

My daughter-in-law Megan is a graduate of the Maxwell International School, a Baha'i boarding school offering a high school education on Vancouver Island in Canada. She loved her experience there. She is pursuing a teaching career in large part because of the inspiration she received at Maxwell.

Last night over a wonderful meal she had prepared at the end of a day members of the family spent hiking in the Olympic National Forest, we discussed the announced closing of Maxwell after 20 year of operation. The Baha'is of the Pacific Northwest feel a close connection to Maxwell, but so do Baha'is all over the world. The thought of its closure tugs at the heart of so many.

Maxwell has been operating under the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of Canada, which made the decision to close, after considerable consultation, I'm sure. I have no idea as the specifics of that consultation, of course, but I told Megan that I thought Maxwell's closing may be viewed as evidence of a profound step forward that has been taken by the global Baha'i community.

Maxwell is a boarding school. Parents wanting a certain kind of experience for their children, one that would ensure a devotion to the Cause, in addition to academic excellence, have sent their children to Maxwell. Maxwell has supported the enhancement of Baha'i identity in an extraordinary way.

Ten, 15, or 20 years ago one could not be as assured of the development of a strong Baha'i identity in the children of Baha'is as one can be today as a result of the Institute Process. There were not the supports in place locally, regionally, nationally, or globally, to support the development of Baha'i identity and the pursuit of academic excellence that there are now with the Institute emphasis on the holding of children's classes as one of the core activities of Baha'i life. The option of sending children away to attend a boarding school to is simply not as attractive as it was two decades ago. Happily, all over the world, Baha'is are now taking seriously the importance of children's education.

Flitzy Phoebie
It starts with children's classes for the very young. It continues with exciting and substantial activities for junior youth. Baha'i identity continues to grow through vigorous youth activities at the high school and college level. Baha'i identity comes to fruition in the Baha'i Year of Service that so many Baha'i young adults now engage in.

Service is what being a Baha'i is all about. Baha'is who have been inculcated in Baha'i values and trained in the practices of Baha'i life from their earliest years are, of course, best prepared for lives of service. With proper Baha'i education, Baha'i youth are protected from unnecessary suffering and innoculated from the dangers of marginality. Baha'i youth are being fully prepared for a life of excellence.


Flitzy Phoebie
Take a look at the faces of Baha'i children at the Leaves of One Tree children's class in our cluster. Look at the faces of Baha'i youth on Facebook or some other social networking vehicle. See who's coming to the Northeast States Baha'i Youth (NEBY) Conference. Be glad that the global Baha'i community has turned the corner and has taken the education of its children seriously. -gw

Friday, November 23, 2007

On the Heart of Islam: One God, equality of all the Believers, and better treatment of women

The My Hero Project - Muhammad the Prophet
save this
Muhammad the Prophet
to
Religion ... 3 hours ago



locle999 is bookmarking like crazy on del.icio.us. This evening he has been exploring pages of The My Hero Project, including one on Muhammad the Prophet. Baha'is feel a special calling to ensure that the beliefs of Islam and its contributions to our spiritual evolution are properly acknowledged. -gw

In his final sermon Muhammad summarised the heart of Islam:

- Belief in One God without images or symbols,

- Equality of all the Believers without distinction of race or class, the superiority of individuals being based solely on piety;

- Sanctity of life, property and honour;

- Abolition of interest, and of vendettas and private justice;

- Better treatment of women;

- Obligatory inheritance and distribution of the property of deceased persons among near relatives of both sexes, and removal of the possibility of the accumulation of wealth in the hands of the few."

From
the BBC World Service Web site

http://www.myhero.com/myhero/hero.asp?hero=muhammad

On the Use of Metaphor in Religion: "God may be like a mother hen but it doesn't mean God has feathers"

"Metaphor is the foundation of all learning: we understand new things in terms of things we already know."Uploaded on November 14, 2007 by jm3 on flickr, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic

"I never met-a-phor I didn't like." OK, I like puns, and this is a pun I've been using for years. The use of metaphors is essential in religious scripture. Religious truths cannot be conveyed any other way than metaphorically.

Here is a discussion in the comments section of a year-and-a-half old post that addresses the significance of metaphor.

Go to the web and you get these definitions for metaphor.

A figure of speech in which an expression is used to refer to something that it does not literally denote in order to suggest a similarity. wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

A figure of speech in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a likeness between them. Example: He was drowning in money.
csmp.ucop.edu/crlp/resources/glossary.html

A figure of speech in which one thing is described as if it were another, as in "Life is just a bowl of cherries."
oneonta.k12.ny.us/hs/murphy/terms.htm

A figure of speech in which two things that seem to have little in common are compared, usually in an arresting or memorable way. For instance, the song "You Are My Sunshine" compares the singer’s beloved to the center of our solar system as a way of expressing her importance in his life.
www.educationplanner.com/education_planner/essay_article.asp

Jn.6:48 I am the bread of life or eat my body and drink my blood- a figure of speech in which one object is liked to another by speaking of it as if it were the other but in fact is not.
www.calvarychapel.com/redbarn/terms.htm

A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things that are basically different but have something in common; unlike a simile, a metaphor does not contain the words like or as (ie, in the evening of life)
www.mdk12.org/instruction/curriculum/reading/glossary.shtml

Figurative language in which something unknown or imperfectly known is described in terms of something known. Frequently used biblical metaphors for God include father, king, rock, bridegroom; others are midwife and mother hen. God has some attributes of each of these figures, but is not limited to them. They are not intended literally: God may be nurturing like a mother hen, but that doesn't mean God has feathers.
gbgm-umc.org/umw/corinthians/glossary.stm

in metaphorical usage, expressions are used in a way that appears literally false. For example, using the word boiling to describe water which is simply too hot for comfort.
www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/clmt/MTbook/HTML/node98.html

Here is more on metaphors by Baha'is. -gw

"Baha'i Inspired Photography and Metaphors" by Jim Styan
"Metaphorical Certitude" by Ron Stevens
"Five Metaphors for Educators," by Rodney H. Clarken

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

On Family, Baha'i Family, and Marriage: Old Family Photos


Any Baha'i family is my family. That's the way I look at it.

I was exploring the blogroll of a Baha'i whose photo I had re-posted on Baha'i Views recently and came across a blog with this year-old post entitled "Family History" with some extraordinarily timeless photos from half a century ago of Baha'is in Egypt and Spanish Morocco, and pictures of Fugita, Hooper Dunbar, and Ali Nahkjavani. In all of these pictures is the blogger's grandmother. -gw


I think my grandmother is the only person I know who has had TWO thirty-year marriages in her life...incredible, isn't it?

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

On Steve's Declaration: I opened my Baha'i prayer book and began to read a long prayer, slowly in order to grasp and savor every word

This is a Steve update. Waaay up! -gw


Soundtrack in my head: Kiltarten Road,
“Carol of the Field Mice”

It was an unusually warm day for a November 19th in Wisconsin. It was up in the 50’s and foggy. I could barely focus on the dinner conversation at the co-op house. After dinner, I ventured outside. I had a lot on my mind as I walked toward the Wisconsin Union on the edge of Lake Mendota.

I walked into the Union and cut through the Rathskellar. The place seemed unusually noisy, but quiet greeted me as I walked out onto the Union patio. No one was there on the patio—who would be on a November night? I walked past the empty metal tables and chairs and stepped up to the water’s edge. The lake was enshrouded in fog, yet it was remarkably windy and the waves churned.

I'd been here many times before when needing a quiet moment to gather my thoughts. I often travelled to Madison before I moved here, and it was here that I'd often contemplate moving here and starting a new life here. One of the reasons I wanted to move up here was to help estabish Mahikari here in the Madison area. Ironically, I was now here for a different purpose...

I walked out onto a part of the patio that sticks out like a pier, so that I would be surrounded by water on three sides. People were leaving it just as I approached it. I walked to the water’s edge, opened my Baha'i prayer book, and began to read a long prayer. I read it slowly in order to grasp and savor every word.

Then I sat down and meditated on my life since the day I was introduced to the Baha'i Faith nineteen years ago this month. I thought about what was happening with me then and what has happened since. Just as I was concluding my meditation, a friendly fisherman came up to me and asked me if it was okay for him to fish there. I told him it was fine and we chatted for a few minutes. Then I told him I was getting chilly and I walked down the shoreline a bit and found another place to sit.

Then I offered more prayers. When I finished, I pulled out of my shirt pocket a 3 x 5 index card with blue printing on it. Someone gave me this card three months ago when I first showed up at the Baha'i Center here in Madison. On the top of the card, the words “Baha'i Declaration” were printed. I filled in my name and address, birth date, phone number, and signed and dated the card.

There’s so much more I could say, and so much more I will say, but I’m getting tired and sleepy. It’s been a long but exciting day.

So for now, just mark the time at 7:52 p.m., November 19, 2007. At that very moment, I declared myself a Baha'i.

"Declaration," posted on Monday, November 19, 2007 at 22:37 by Steve McClure , The Different Drummer Sountrack
vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
>Post a Comment< do post a comment to Steve. -gw

On the Spiritual Education of Children: Gets my dander up. :o)

This one's all in the family. -gw


I'm always questioning and testing my beliefs. I read some to him from a rather good book about the testable proofs of the Baha'i Revelation in a book called "The Challenge of Baha'u'llah" There's at least 30 proofs outlined in the book that anyone can check out for themselves: read what Baha'u'llah wrote about whatever and then see what happened. You decide if it's truth or not. But do not start saying stuff to me without even reading anything if you are one of my children! Gets my dander up. :o)


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On Liberty: This most mighty Stronghold

Todd has done a lot of work here in examining what true liberty means. -gw

The Baha'i Liberty Blog
Liberty/Justice/In God We Trust


"The Ancient Beauty hath consented to be bound with chains that mankind may be released from its bondage, and hath accepted to be made a prisoner within this most mighty Stronghold that the whole world may attain unto true liberty."

A Free Market Theory to Ending the Extremes between the Rich and Poor

On Global Warming and Karma: What goes around, comes around

"Global Warming Day of Action, St. Paul (Step It Up MN 4/14/2007) ," uploaded on April 14, 2007 by Tony Webster on flickr

What goes around, comes around. -gw

Baha'i Views: On Global Warming: The Baha'i Community Furthers the ...
On Global Warming: The Baha'i Community Furthers the Discussion ... on ethics at the UN Commission on Sustainable Development sponsored by the Baha'i faith. ...bahaiviews.blogspot.com/2007/05/on-global-warming-bahai-community.html - 74k - Cached - Similar pages


What Goes Around--Comes Around
The cliché, “What goes around, comes around,” is the American definition for Karma. Karma—from the root kri, "to do"—is the means by which you become the ...ezinearticles.com/?What-Goes-Around--Comes-Around&id=180369 - 41k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

On PowerPoints to the People: Baha'is and the Internet

PowerPoints to the People! -gw

Baha'i Blog Survey - Phoenix Conference
Cultivating the Roots Presentation
NEBY Fest Presentation

Individual Initiative on the Internet
Participation and the Internet
Blogging and the Baha'i Faith
Podcasting
Guidelines for Internet Communication
Basics of Search Engine Optimization
Building Internet Communities

Monday, November 19, 2007

On Anna's Presentation: We told them that Baha'u'llah is the Manifestation of God for Today

Edifying Facebook chatter. -gw

Reuben (no network) replied to Jenia's post on Nov 1, 2007 at 7:48 PM.
Once did book 2 with seekers. When we came to the part about Baha'u'llah, we told them that Baha'u'llah is the manifestation of today and asked do you believe? and all of the response were positive.

Niko (Hungary) replied to
Reuben's post on Nov 17, 2007 at 3:15 PM.
Very interesting, Reuben! Did they also enroll into the Baha'i community?

Reuben (no network) replied to Niko's post on Nov 18, 2007 at 6:43 AM.
Yea of course! we confirmed their believe by doing Anna's presentation and asking these questions: "Do you agree that Baha'u'llah's teaching addresses the needs and exigency of this age?" (if yes) "Do you agree that Baha'u'llah is the Manifestation of God for this day? (if yes) "If you agree for both questions, then you're already a Baha'i! you can now join us in our quest to bring about world unity, what say you?"


http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?uid=2350349631&topic=3177

On the del.icio.us Rapturous News: Baha'i...fastest growing major religion

"Rapture sign -- Holding up well after 14 years..."

Uploaded on June 11, 2006 by marcn on flickr

From the prolific bookmarker del.icio.us / locle999 these great finds. gw

Rapture: Bahai faith increases
save this
Bahai faith increases
to
Baha ... saved by 1 other person ... 5 hours ago

Theo's Sanctuary: Bahai...fastest growing major religion
save this
Bahai...fastest growing major religion
to
Baha ... 5 hours ago

The Association of Religion Data Archives QuickLists
save this
World religions 2005
to
Baha ... saved by 1 other person ... 5 hours ago

Hear my cry, O God; listen to my prayer. From the ends of the earth I call to you, I call as my heart grows faint; lead me to the rock that is higher than I. For you have been my refuge, a strong tower against the foe. I long to dwell in your tent forever and take refuge in the shelter of your wings. For you have heard my vows, O God; you have given me the heritage of those who fear your name. Increase the days of the king's life, his years for many generations. May he be enthroned in God's presence forever; appoint your love and faithfulness to protect him. Then will I ever sing praise to your name and fulfill my vows day after day.

Psalm 61:1-8 NIV Listen

More del.icio.us Discoveries: Revelação Progressiva é a ótima imagem feita pelo Sr. Luis Celso Coltro

From del.icio.us / o.bemfica, who did his Internet exploring on November 6th, today I am informed through his efforts of a helpful graphic in Portuguese. -gw

Individuo - Krishna
Familia - Abraoo
Aldaeia - Moises
Tribo - Zoroastro
Cla - Buda
Cidade - Cristo
Nacao - Maome
Planeta - Bab & Baha'u'llah
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On the Fall of American Modernity: Institutions and practices will be lost within a new world-cultural mix

deli.cio.us reading, thanks to vicali, whom I have chosen to include on my del.icio.us / network. vicali's effort to make a few keystrokes saved this gem up for the likes of me to enjoy 3 months later. It is a gem that only a Baha'i can truely appreciate. Thanks, Vic! -gw

The Fall of Modernity save this to religion culture america ... saved by 96 other people ... on aug 26

The subsiding of modernity may be liberating. Freed from the world center, we might find a safer place to survey an evolving humanity. No longer the object of all attack, we might productively rethink our national purpose. Old modernity’s institutions and practices will be folded into, and thus partly lost within, a new world-cultural mix. This may not be our preferred outcome. But losing our claim to the universal opens the way to new realities. We might take comfort that American modernity will be a part of them.

On Raised a Baptist But Now a Baha'i: Family Religious History at Thanksgiving

flickr

Thanksgiving is a time when extended families get together, a time for noting family history, including religious history. How many families are united in one faith today? How many families are like Marciepooh's? -gw

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Mom's early church was a Southern Baptist one. PawPaw resigned from the church because he disagreed with some racist policies they had. Granny was too embarrassed to go to church without her husband and Mom thought "woohoo no church on Sundays!" So Mom didn't attend any where for several years. When she was a teenager she went to the Methodist (I think) church with some of her friends, because they had a good youth group. When she was younger she had "walked the aisle" and been baptized mainly to get the preacher to stop bugging her about it. Her older boys were raised in S. Baptist churches, as far as I know. One sometimes attends mass with his wife; the other is Baha'i. Mom isn't sure there is a God.
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{Photo licensed under

Sunday, November 18, 2007

On a Baby Baha'i Blog: Hello to all who stumble here

My wife and I just got back from a Baha'i baby shower for a mother who is two weeks from delivery. The Baby Baha'i below has already arrived. Don't you just love babies! -gw

Hello to all who stumble here. The goal of this blog is one based in self exploration (as of all blogs). The last couple months and a half of my life have been turbulent to say the least. I have experienced my biggest downs, but have found the capacity to reorient my life around something much more powerful: God. In particular, God seen through the lens of the Baha'i faith.Therefore, my blog is going to be as forward looking as possible. I do not wish to dwell on the past shortcomings and heartbreaking moments of my life, unless they can help me learn something new or gain a new appreciation. Undoubtedly, my current thought processes and actions are shaped by what has occurred in my immediate past, but if I allow myself to be bogged down in the anxieties and dwellings of what could have been or what it all means, I will fall victim to my past.

Suffice it to say, that the past is the past, with all its imperfections and I accept it. I am powerless to change any of it therefore I must turn it over with all its imperfections to God. However, I am able to change my perceptions and beliefs about the past and present and for that I pray for courage.

I came to the Baha'i faith in a period of time when calamities and anxieties filled my head and crippled the essence of my being. I am not completely out of the water yet, but I hope that through prayer and maybe even these posts (which are much more for me than you) that I can come to a greater understanding of where I have been and where I am going.

The Baha'i faith has provided me a new path to change everything from my thought patterns, to my actions, to my future ambitions. However, it all starts with faith. Faith and love in believing that Bah'a'ullah was the most recent prophet of God. All things spring from this. And I truly do believe in Baha'u'llah as a manifestation of God, after many study circles, prayer meetings and readings.

However, becoming a completely faithful Baha'i does not happen over night. Hence, I hope other new believers and those interested in the faith can find solace in the struggles that are bound to fill the following posts.

Baby Baha'i, "New Beginnings," A Life In Adjustment

{Re-posted with permission}

Uploaded on June 22, 2007 by kudaker on flickr, licensed under Creative Commons, some rights reserved

More Melodies of a Nightingale: From China She Singeth of the Friend

Give ear to the sayings of the Friend and turn towards His paradise. Worldly friends, seeking their own good, appear to love one the other, whereas the true Friend hath loved and doth love you for your own sakes; indeed He hath suffered for your guidance countless afflictions.


Thanks to my Facebook friend Marc I have a new Facebook friend Elika, who singeth of the true Friend.
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Her music has been available for 10 years. She has new music coming. I am listening at this moment to her version of "This Is Faith" on her MySpace page. It is very powerful and lovely. -gw
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'Melodies of the Nightingale' was produced in 1997 and 'Melodies of the Nightingale for the family' in 2001. I am working on my next CD entitled 'Fire and Gold', which will be completed at the end of 2007. I am also creating a CD of instrumental music that will be completed in 2008. Welcome to hear samples of a few pieces from 'Fire and Gold' at
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O SON OF BEING! Busy not thyself with this world, for with fire We test the gold, and with gold We test Our servants.
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On a Gift of Music: From Louhelen with Love

My son Tarazullah mailed me this CD from Louhelen when he was doing his Year of Service there. There are so many good songs on this compilation. These songs are now available for free download from the Louhelen site. -gw

Fruits of the Spirit CD

Friends of Louhelen have contributed to a music collection called “Fruits of the Spirit”. Selections are now available to download.

To download a selection (Windows users), click your right mouse button on the link and select "Save Link as..." from the menu.

1. You Can Call on Him *
(Ernestine Atkins)
Voices—Ernestine Atkins, Kay Yoder
Drums—Aaron Ferrara
Track produced and engineered by Chris Ruhe and John Ebata

2. The Nightingale *
(Chris Ruhe)
Voice—Nuria Pettier

3. Glory Be to My Lord *
(Bahá’í Writings, music by Chris Ruhe)
Fluegelhorn—Gray Bishop*

4. Equal but not the Same *
(Susan Engle)
Voices—Susan Engle and Khalil Moutrie

5. Healing Prayer *
(Bahá’í Writings, music by Dan Darling)
Voice and Piano—Dan Darling
Fluegelhorn—Gray Bishop

6. Bahá’u’lláh *
(Chris Ruhe)
Voices—Chris Ruhe and John (Beaujack) Mangum
Saxophone—Alastair Drong

7. Call of the Peace Warrior *
(Bea Castro)
Cedar Flute—Bea Castro

8. Refresh and Gladden *
(Bahá’í Writings, music by Kathy Tahiri)
Voice—Sarah Scott
Keyboard—Kathy Tahiri

9. Love Is the Secret *
(Bob Simms)
Guitar—Bob Simms
Louhelen Children’s Choir—Justin Lepard, Thomas Voutsos, Raina Peterson, Daniel Rosenfield, Matthew Lozen-Kowalski, Paula Zitnick, Corinne Taborn, Noah Sawyer, and Bob Simms

10. The Queen of Carmel *
(Jeannie Merday)
Voices—Tracy Freeman and Jan Rhody
Piano—Jan Rhody

11. The Vision of Louhelen *
(Words of Shoghi Effendi, music by Daniel Lorsignol)
Guitar—Daniel Lorsignol
Voices—David Freeman and Rhonda Schmicker

12. This Is Faith *
(Words by Ruhiyyih Khanum, Queen Marie of Romania, and Chris Ruhe. Music by Chris Ruhe)Voice—Florence Carter

13. Kam Kam Ruz Beh Ruz *
(Bob Simms)
Guitar and Voice—Bob Simms
Voices—Louhelen Children’s Choir (see track 8)

14. We Have Come to Sing Praises *
(Van Gilmer)
Voices—Van and Cookie Gilmer, Ernestine Atkins, Kay Yoder
Piano—Van Gilmer

15. We Can Move the World *
(Joe Crone)
Voices—Joe Crone, Shirlene Zarin-Taj Brown, Ernestine Atkins, Kay Yoder
Keyboards and Programming—John Ebata**

16. Paradise of the Placeless
(Bahá’í Writings, music by Red Grammer)
Voice and Guitar—Red Grammer

17. Make Thy Beauty *
(Bahá’í Writings, music by John Ebata)
Voice—Shirlene Zarin-Taj Brown
Piano—John Ebata**

18. The Generation of Light
(Music from Armenian Folk Tradition, words by Dr. Iraj Khadem)
Voice—Narges
Music track and production—Louie Shelton

19. Keep Holding On *
(Shirlene Zarin-Taj Brown)
Voices—Shirlene Zarin-Taj Brown, Ernestine Atkins, Kay Yoder
Keyboards and programming—John Ebata**

20. Musical Interlude in Bayate-Esfahan
(Kiu Haghighi)
Santour and Tombak—Kiu Haghighi

21. Bahá’u’lláh Wam *
(South African Melody)
Voice—Ruhiyyih Yuille
Drums—Saleef Kafajouffe

22. Protect Us *
(Words by the Báb, music by Ernestine Atkins)
Voices—Ernestine Atkins and Kay Yoder
Piano—John Ebata**

*Songs recorded at Louhelen, July 2001
**These tracks produced and engineered by John Ebata
***All other guitars, keyboards, percussion and voices by Chris Ruhe

http://www.louhelen.org/fruits.html

On Songs of the Nightingale: From the Baha'i Writings and the iPod

"Thrush Nightingale - Luscinia luscinia,
Russia, Moscow, 05/15/2007" Uploaded on May 16, 2007 by Sergey Yeliseev on flickr, licensed under Creative Commons Some rights reserved.

O Brother! Not every sea hath pearls; not every branch will flower, nor will the nightingale sing thereon. Then, ere the nightingale of the mystic paradise repair to the garden of God, and the rays of the heavenly morning return to the Sun of Truth—make thou an effort, that haply in this dustheap of the mortal world thou mayest catch a fragrance from the everlasting garden, and live forever in the shadow of the peoples of this city.

http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/b/SVFV/svfv-7.html.iso8859-1?query=nightingale&action=highlight#gr6

Let Bahá’u’lláh Himself shed the illumination of His words upon our path as we steer our course amid the pitfalls and miseries of this troubled age. More than fifty years ago, in a world far removed from the ills and trials that now torment it, there flowed from His Pen these prophetic words: “The world is in travail and its agitation waxeth day by day. Its face is turned towards waywardness and unbelief. Such shall be its plight that to disclose it now would not be meet and seemly. Its perversity will long continue. And when the appointed hour is come, there shall suddenly appear that which shall cause the limbs of mankind to quake. Then and only then will the Divine Standard be unfurled and the Nightingale of Paradise warble its melody.”

http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/se/WOB/wob-16.html.iso8859-1?query=nightingale&action=highlight#gr4

The mystic nightingale is singing for them; will they not listen? The bird of paradise is warbling; will they not hear? The Angel of the Kingdom of Abhá is calling to them; will they not hearken? The Messenger of the Covenant is pleading; will they not heed?

http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/o/BNE/bne-51.html.iso8859-1?query=nightingale&action=highlight#gr6

Thou must warble, like the nightingale of significances, in the rose garden so that thou mayest inspire all the birds of the meadow to chant and to sing.

http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/c/JWTA/jwta-23.html.iso8859-1?query=nightingale&action=highlight#gr7

He is the King, the All-Knowing, the Wise! Lo, the Nightingale of Paradise singeth upon the twigs of the Tree of Eternity, with holy and sweet melodies, proclaiming to the sincere ones the glad tidings of the nearness of God, calling the believers in the Divine Unity to the court of the Presence of the Generous One, informing the severed ones of the message which hath been 210 revealed by God, the King, the Glorious, the Peerless, guiding the lovers to the seat of sanctity and to this resplendent Beauty.

http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/c/BP/bp-173.html.iso8859-1?query=nightingale&action=highlight#gr3

Thus doth the Nightingale utter His call unto you from this prison. He hath but to deliver this 211 clear message. Whosoever desireth, let him turn aside from this counsel and whosoever desireth let him choose the path to his Lord.

http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/c/BP/bp-173.html.iso8859-1?query=nightingale&action=highlight#gr7

A few song of the Nightingale from my iPod. -gw

"Nightingale," Carole King, Her Greatest Hits: Songs from Long Ago
He needs to hear a tender word
Won't you sing him home again
Nightingale, she sails away up on a sea of song
Nightingale, she serenades his lonely, lonely life along

"Nighingale of Paradise, Adrienne Ewing-Roush, Lift Up Your Voices and Sing, Vol. 1
Nightingale of Paradise, you sing of love
Flooding all the world with light

"Respighi: The Birds - The Nightingale," Louis Lane: Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Bella Tuscany

"The Nightingale," Nuria Pettier, Fruits of the Spirit
The nightingale is singing
All over the world
All over the world
The nightingale, Baha'u'llah
The nightingale, Baha'u'llah

On del.icio.us Fun on the INternet: Get INto it!

" Ecosystem,"
uploaded on November 9, 2007 by Daneel Ariantho on flickr

del-icio.us fun. Tag, you're it. -gw

1 art,
39
Baha'i
9
Baha'u'llah
1
basilica
1
bedtime
1
best
1
birth
1
blogger
1
BMG
1
book
1
bookmarker
1
Bosch
1
campus,
1
celebration
1
children's_classes
1
China
1
Christmas
1
clipart
1
collaboration
1
college
1
compliation
1
covenant
1
daily
1
death
3
devotional
2
downloads
1
dozier,
1
drums
1
eckl
1
Egypt
1
elections
1
extraordinary
1
farming
1
feast
1
gospel
10
holyday
1
iconography
1
impressions
1
inspiration
1
interfaith
1
iowa
1
Israel
1
Italian
2
jazz
1
learning
1
liberty
2
locle999
1
Los_Angeles
1
matchmaking
1
money
5
music
6
musician
2
new
1
new_blog
1
one
1
online
1
organic
1
Panchgani
1
parenting
1
people
1
Peseschkian
1
planet
1
poetry
1
politics
1
pschotherapy
1
Qurratulayn
1
Ruhi
1
Russian
1
scouting
1
search
3
seeker
1
Singapore
1
slides
1
story
1
summer_school
1
teaching
1
testimonial
1
threshold
1
tonga,
1
Tribble
1
Universal_House_of_Justice
1
Vanatu
1
virtues
1
website
1
women
1
youth
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zoroastrian

http://del.icio.us/bahai_views

Friday, November 16, 2007

On the Persecution of Baha'is in Iran: A Musician's Story

As Marco has called to my attention, Ruth Glenhill, The Times Online religion correspondent, addresses the worsening conditions for Iranian Baha'is with a story about a Baha'i musician who was denied first being able to study music in Iran and later to perform there. -gw

'Since I was a child I wanted to become a musician. I loved playing the piano. But after my high school graduation I was not accepted to enter the university in Iran.' She was able to go to the unofficial Baha'i higher education institution, but there was no music course on offer. 'I had no other choice and I applied for civil engineering which I did not enjoy, I did not do well and hardly passed the exams. After my BA I decided to go abroad and went to Moscow in order to study music there. It was fantastic, I was able to live my childhood’s dream and I graduated with distinction. I could not wait to return to Iran and start working as a musician.'

But she was held back again. 'In order to perform in public I needed to fill out a form that asked for to the artists’ religion. Like the entrance exam it only had items for Muslim, Jew, Christian and Zoroastrian. When I put Baha’i I was denied. I was not allowed to perform, I was not allowed to play in an orchestra and I was not allowed to give piano lessons."

http://timescolumns.typepad.com/gledhill/2007/11/iran-ruthless-i.html

On the Baha'i Faith and Political Clout: Reconciling Viewpoints


Let me bring forward these two astute comments made to the previous "No political clout?" post. -gw

Anonymous said...
This view that Baha'is do not get involved in partisan politics is often times taken to mean that Baha'is are not involved in politics at all (thus the irrelevance label). Nothing could be further from the truth.


The world is inherently political. That is to say, anytime you get a group of people together, politics will inevitably be jockeying for a seat at the table.

Baha'is understand this as well as anyone.

The difference for them is that politics which devolves into a partisan shouting match is not only counter-productive but destructive to furthering the realization of their core belief: the unity of human kind.

Anonymous [2] said...
As Anon observed, the question of Baha'i involvement in public affairs is a bit more nuanced. The Baha'i International Community and National Assemblies frequently speak on issues of principle that in the words of the Universal House of Justice are "aimed at influencing the processes towards world peace, particularly through the community's involvement in the promotion of human rights, the status of women, global prosperity, and moral development." See statements.bahai.org for a wide ranging number of Baha'i perspectives and **policy** recommendations on different questions.


In another communication, the House of Justice explains that the "aim of Baha'is is to reconcile viewpoints, to heal divisions, and to bring about tolerance and mutual respect among men, and this aim is undermined if we allow ourselves [Baha'is] to swept along by the ephemeral passions of others. This does not mean that Baha'is cannot collaborate with any non-Baha'i movement; it does mean that good judgement is required to distinguish those activities and associations which are beneficial and constructive from those which are divisive."

http://bahaiviews.blogspot.com/2007/11/on-baha-faith-no-political-clout.html

On Facebook for Baha'is: More Than an Internet Diversion

Yeah, I'm on Facebook. Thanks to Child o' Africa.

Of course, I've been on MySpace and LiveJournal but only to be able to access and post comments, usually requests to excerpt and re-post. Facebook has been different, although I'm not sure why. It seems a little more grown up than MySpace, for one, but there are other factors, too, that just have not become clear to me yet.

Using a social networking tool is somewhat embarrassing for me. You know, the business of asking someone to be your Friend. Anyone can come to a blog if it's public, Friend, friend, or even foe. I like that. Blogging feels more impersonal, given the re-posting format of Baha'i Views.

BV is not a blog that draws many comments. It makes more sense for a reader who likes a particular post to go to the original site for any commenting. BV has a place in the blogosphere, but not necessarily as one for dialogue or debating issues. There are lots of other sites much better designed for that. It's forte is in presenting ideas and conveying values through juxtaposition of text and pictures in such a way that another entire new layer of meaning is demonstrated. It is a collage that, hopefully, is reflective of the positive energy and spirit of the Faith.

Back to Facebook. For a blogger, a Facebook profile can show one's personal side in a way that seems acceptable, something short of mere self-promotion. Facebook is ultimately a Friend Wheel (see image below) of inteconnection.

Social networking on a vehicle like Facebook can include joining and starting groups. I started one, Baha'is of Pierce County, as a way to further link the Baha'is in my cluster, Cluster 19 here. It's off to a ... start. Whether it will ever include more than just a small portion of believers in the county remains to be seen.

There are a lot of barriers for Baha'is to overcome. Facebook has been, let's face it, a young person's game. For the many Baha'is who no longer can consider themselves youth, there are certain, let's call them cultural, barriers to jump over.

But, Baha'is are being asked to do things differently in this new era of the Institute Process, for example. We're breaking the mold for the Way Things Are To Be Done, finally. Baha'is are stepping up. Doing things differently for the sake of the Cause.
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Being a Baha'i is all about being a part of a social network, the most fundamental network you can have, the network of your Faith community. It is how humanity has been spiritualized and unified since Day One.

May Cluster 19 be an inspiration for the rest of the Baha'i world! May Baha'i Views raise the level of awareness for the Faith and all it stands for among its readers, both Baha'i and non-Baha'i! Long live Facebook and its brethren and successors!
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Here is Child of Africa's description of her becoming involved with Facebook. -gw

I have a new internet diversion--Facebook. I signed up for an account a while ago just to see what all the fuss was about and haven't paid much attention to it. But recently more friends have been signing up with facebook and finding me and adding me as a friend and I finally clicked the link to, in the wink of an eye, find all the friends in my email contacts who were on Facebook and I asked them to friend me and it seems to continue to expand from there...friends of friends find you and friend you. Then you browse friends of friends and find more friends to friend. Suddenly I am in touch with long lost primary or high school classmates still in Africa or now in England or Ireland, friends from China, friends from graduate school andBaha'i friends from various periods of my life. And I have a gallery of friends photos right there in my friends section, my "Facebook" with status updates on their whereabouts and state of mind.

Brings to mind once again that sentence about the system of world inter-communication in a paragraph in Shoghi Effendi's writings written in the 1930s
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The unity of the human race, as envisaged by Bahá’u’lláh, implies the establishment of a world commonwealth in which all nations, races, creeds and classes are closely and permanently united, and in which the autonomy of its state members and the personal freedom and initiative of the individuals that compose them are definitely and completely safeguarded. This commonwealth must, as far as we can visualize it, consist of a world legislature, whose members will, as the trustees of the whole of mankind, ultimately control the entire resources of all the component nations, and will enact such laws as shall be required to regulate the life, satisfy the needs and adjust the relationships of all races and peoples. A world executive, backed by an international Force, will carry out the decisions arrived at, and apply the laws enacted by, this world legislature, and will safeguard the organic unity of the whole commonwealth. A world tribunal will adjudicate and deliver its compulsory and final verdict in all and any disputes that may arise between the various elements constituting this universal system. A mechanism of world inter-communication will be devised, embracing the whole planet, freed from national hindrances and restrictions, and functioning with marvellous swiftness and perfect regularity.

{Image: "Look! It's The Social!: facebook Friend Wheel,"

Thursday, November 15, 2007

On Return to Panchgani: The Search for Sureka

Like stories? Boy, does Samuel have a great story to tell. In three parts and with great pictures he tells the story of trying to track down a woman who figured prominently in his life when he was a child in India. -gw

Sureka is the woman who served as a maid for us and the Rushdys before us, and who became a part of both of our families. On the morning my mother and I left, Sureka was the most emotional. Whether she even heard me or not is irrelevant, but the 12-year-old-me told her that I would see her again in six years. I figured that I would be done high school by then and I could return to India to do a Baha’i youth year of service. About seven years later I did do a year of service, but it ended up being in Macau and Thailand. Now here we are eleven years and a university degree later and I happened to land a job one state away from Panchgani.

This weekend, as my camera and are walking down memory lane I will also following Sureka’s trail. At this point all I have is a list of names of people who may be able to locate her via e-mails from the Rushdys that are spread across the globe. I have no phone number, no last name and no clue where she is.

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{Re-posted with permission}
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On the Baha'i Faith: Fastest growing religion in the world

From a blog post entitled, "One Truth, Many Religions." -gw

The Baha’i faith is actually the fastest growing (by percentage) religion in the world.

http://maritimemormon.blogspot.com/2007/11/one-truth-and-many-religions.html

Original source for the information, an article in The Salt Lake Tribune: http://www.adherents.com/misc/WCE.html

On the Baha' Faith: No political clout?

Presbyterian Church bell tower in Arkansas, uploaded on June 30, 2007 by mikmartin on flickr, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic

Baha'is are to avoid partisan politics like the plague. This stance honors the importance of unity in the world and is a protection. Some find this position odd, as this pastor does in his final installment of a series of posts on interfaith relations. -gw

There are many who claim to be “Christians” but their world view has seriously departed from the Christian world view. Many pastors and seminary professors fall into this group of people. [Among] the options that such people face:

Become a part of the Baha’i faith. This would probably fit well with their world view. The problem with such a move involves the loss of political clout! The Baha’i church is viewed as a politically irrelevant group and has no political influence.

Pastor Lance, "Inter-faith Relations, One of Many Ways to God or an Abomination to God? (conclusion)," Full Court Presby:Critical look at the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

On Baha'i-Inspired Music: Russ Salton's Heart Is on Fire

There are Baha'i musicians in the world, and there are Baha'i musicians in your very own cluster, in my case, the proverbial WA Cluster 19. Introducing (if you need one) the much-loved Russ Salton, who is pictured below with guitar in hand playing a tune at the monthly musical fireside in his home. Russ attended the recent Bosch Music Industry Weekend. -gw
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I had the amazing opportunity to play consistently in a band called "Friends" in the Los Angeles music scene at its hottest. After seven years of non-stop 'entertaining' and striving to get signed by a large record company, I decided to move to Seattle; mountains, rivers, green as far as the eye can see...and rain. Now I'm back to a space creating music from the depths of my soul. Meaningful lyrics, enticing melodies and production from the "old school". The musical styles range from acoustic to rock and reggae to R&B. Take a test drive and enjoy!
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http://cdbaby.com/cd/russsalton

For picture of the first Bosch Music Industry Weekend attendees, including Russ, click here. -gw

{Photo by flitzy phoebie}

More on the InterFaith Concert in DC: Sharing in our common humanity, but not trivializing our differences

Sikh Kirthani Jatha performs hymns

Still more on the recent InterFaith Concert in DC. -gw

"A Celebration of the Sacred in Song, Dance and Chant," was held at the Basilica of the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception just up the street tonight. A friend from grad school and his wife are in one of the participating choirs (The Metropolitan Baha'i Chorale) and very graciously gave me a couple of complimentary tickets. It was well attended and quite enjoyable. ...

I have to say, and I'm not being partisan, that the St. Francis of Assisi choir kicked butt! They gave a stunning performance of Palestrina's Sicut Cervus and another absolutely mystical rendition of a modern arrangement for Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence (which is a prayer from the ancient Liturgy of St. James). [And why is it that when we're representing the rich Catholic musical heritage in an inter-faith event we'll trot out this kind of beautiful stuff that one is quite unlikely to hear in ordinary Catholic worship around the country?]

...one doesn't have to go too far below the surface to witness some tensions: for instance, one of the pieces performed by the Baha'i chorus was a hymn composed to strengthen Baha'is facing persecution after the Islamic revolution in Iran in 1979. And, though the adhan performed by Native Deen was quite lovely, I must say, it was a bit startling to hear that Islamic call to prayer, proclaiming the greatness of Allah, and of his Prophet, resound through this beautiful Byzantine basilica.

Don't get me wrong: such initiatives are good and nothing unites people like lifting voices together in praise. And yes, there is the danger of simply adopting the relativism of the larger culture. However, people of different faiths coming together, not ignoring or trivializing our differences, but sharing in our common humanity, especially in our common humanity as religious creatures: now that's something to celebrate.
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{Re-posted with permission}

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

On Symbols of Everlasting Baha'i Love: Thomas the Tank Engine

My best Baha'i blog snippet (and run-on sentence) of the day. -gw

She gave me a Thomas the Tank engine badge to put on my bag before she left, let that be a symbol of my everlasting Baha'i community love.

http://isikenai.livejournal.com/72218.html

On the Muslim Hip-Hop Group at the Basilica: His close second was Baha'i

http://www.bahaigospel.org/

So how did the DC InterFaith event go, you ask? -gw

I went to an Interfaith concert at the Basilica at Catholic University last night. There were Baha'i, Sikh, Buddist, Islamic, LDS, Protestant (AME), Catholic, Hindu, Jews, and...I'm missing an Asian religion or two.

It was awesome. My favorite was the three-person Muslim hip hop group who rapped "For the Prophets", and the close second was the Bahai chorale - that was beautiful. The Catholics did a polyphony number that was lovely, and the Jewish folk quartet was a lot of fun. All of the performers performed an opening and closing song together, and I really felt the spirit during it. Great experience.

katzamboni, "I Love Living Here," The Chronicle of Katie's Frustrations

On Baha'i meditative practices: Interfaith Dialogue at the Longhouse

In the longhouse. -gw
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Longhouse, Every Thursday
Potluck Dinner: 5 PM

Celebration & Meditation: 6 PM

Nov. 29: 'BAHAI
'Evergreen student, Chris Allman,
shares the world's youngest
religion, Baha'i,
its universal values,
and meditation practice.
5 PM - Potluck
6PM - Baha'i

Common Bread
Interfaith Dialog & Contemplative Space for The Evergreen Community

Who We Are:
Common Bread is supported by Thurston County Ministries in Higher Education.

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On Baha'i Karaoke: Sing-a-long with Joy

Baha'i karaoke. -gw
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City of Joy sings Isaiah ...
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My purpose in posting Baha'i karaoke videos is to provide Baha'i communities with a way to have music that people can sing along with at Baha'i meetings & devotionals. - Joel Smith
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http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7184663210053103690

On Baha'u'llah and the Kebab: It has been some time that I have not partaken of meat

"The persian way," Uploaded on June 18, 2007 by Sorosh on flickr
On of my new Friends on Facebook, Justin, has joined the Vegetarian Baha'is group. Going over to the group, I noted on the Wall of the site Wendi's comment regarding a passage in her husband Moojan's new book Baha'u'llah: A Short Biography (One World Publisher) indicating that Baha'u'llah was basically a vegetarian, with the exception of an occasional kebab, if this story is any indication. -gw

'When it came time to eat, a portion of the food was taken to Baha'u'llah and it was said to him: "This is what Zayn has cooked." He replied: "Although it has been some time that I have not partaken of meat, because Zayn has put himself to a lot of trouble, I will take a small portion to eat." ['cited from Zayn, Khátirát, vol. 1, pp. 146-8]

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2212936051&ref=nf

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

On Thomas .K. Cheyne (1841-1915), Biblical Scholar and Bahā'ī: A Saul Who Became a Paul

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Anonymous brings to my attention in a comment to the previous post "On Religious Fundamentalists and the Exceptional T.K. Cheyne", this website of a work-in-progress on Cheyne for which I am grateful. What wonderful scholarship! -gw
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From a letter by Cheyne to Abdu'l-Baha reproduced in the Star of the West vol. 3 page 287:
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I fear that university circles are not likely to be open-minded enough to receive the message of Bahaism. But who would have expected a Saul to become a Paul? 6
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To which Stephen Lambden notes:
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6 The reference to a Jewish "Saul" [of Tarsus = Paul, a staunch Pharisee and anti-Christian) becoming the Christian "Paul" (the self-proclaimed early Christian apostle to the Gentiles and author of several New Testament books) may perhaps be an allusion to the Christian priest Cheyne as the professorial academic changing to become becoming a Ruhani (Spiritual) champion of "Bahaism" or the Bahā'ī religion.
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On The Situation Facing Egyptian Baha'is: انتقادات "لـ"عدم اعتراف مصري بديانات الأقلية

Thanks to Zina of the Facebook group STOP THE PERSECUTION OF THE BAHA'IS OF EGYPT for these links. -gw

انتقادات "لـ"عدم اعتراف مصري بديانات الأقلية"

وجهت جماعات حقوق الانسان في مصر انتقادات للسلطات"بسبب اجبارها الأقليات على انكار دينها في الوثائق الرسمية".
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ويتوجب على المصريين فوق سن السادسة عشرة حمل وثائق اثبات الشخصية تثبت انتماءهم الديني، والخيار الوحيد هو الاسلام أو المسيحية أو اليهودية.
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7091412.stm

On the InterFaith Concert Tonight: Is Ecumenicity Simply an Opportunity for "Poaching"?

Tonight, a concert. -gw

IFC's 28th Annual InterFaith Concert:
A Celebration of the Sacred in Song, Dance and Chant!
Tuesday, November 13, 7:30 pm
at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception
400 Michigan Avenue NE
Washington, DC 20017
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Featuring the Talents of 217 Musicians from Nine Different Faith Traditions
Metropolitan Washington Baha'i Chorale * SGI-USA (Buddhist) New Century Chorus
Pushpanjali Dance Group (Hindu / Jain) * Native Deen (Islamic) * Fabrangen Fiddlers Band (Jewish)
The Latter-day Saints Mt. Vernon Choir * Metropolitan AME Mighty Men's Choir (Protestant)
St. Francis of Assisi Roman Catholic Church Adult Choir * Sikh Kirtani Jatha (pictured below
)
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http://www.ifcmw.org/default.asp?page=2007%20Concert

But not everyone is happy with ecumenicity. -gw
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And who is really comfortable with this arrangement? I would guess that the faithful Muslim or Mormon is going to look forward to this event primarily for the opportunity to "poach" those of the others faith groups present... but I've always been a nay-sayer.
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On the Music Industry Weekend at Bosch: Fabulous Baha'i Music by 2B1


From Darrell's post about Music Industry Weekend at Bosch, I learn of many more great Baha'i musicians and their websites. Here is the first of many I intend to feature. -gw



http://www.2b1band.com/

On Quiet Charm and Spiritual Grace: She was like a gemstone in a box of rocks

A loving remembrance of an individual believer. -gw

Bessie Mae Evans died last week in Alabama. She was a 63-year-old black woman from a little town called Camp Hill. She had numerous health issues, and a heart of gold. She was step-mother to my bride Deb. Most folks don’t know this, but Bessie loved the Baha’i teachings. She memorized her favorite prayer, and would sing it with Deb from time to time:

“O God, guide me, protect me, make of me a shining lamp and a brilliant star. Thou art the Mighty and the Powerful.” - ‘Abdu’l-Bahá

Over the past five days, Deb and I made the difficult journey back to that little town for Bessie’s funeral. It’s in a part of the world where racism still lurks beneath a sociable veneer and the pain it has inflicted is reflected in the eyes of everyone you meet. Throughout our trip we could see both the condescension and the suspicion veiled behind cautious smiles and “how do you do’s”. But we also saw some heartfelt sorrow and some cathartic healing. Bessie’s daughter “Keela” (Deb’s half-sister), had a rough time. Our prayers for healing and peace are with her now.

We connected again, however briefly, with Deb’s family. I met some relatives I had never met before, including my brother-in-law Kenny. He’s a man with a sharp wit and a great sense of humor. And it was good to see the other “brother-men” again too - Jerome, Chris and Wendell. Whenever those guys get together, it’s a rowdy party, just short of a competition…or perhaps even a bench warrant.

Saturday morning breakfast, prepared for the whole extended family by Deb’s mom Ruby, was a veritable exhibition of “southern cooking” on a scale that would give any roadhouse a run for its money. Biscuits, eggs, grits, salt-pork, fried green tomatoes - Man! talk about cholesterol looking for a place to park! Well YES I ate some! Not so, however my vegetarian bride (her brothers don’t understand her at all).

All in all, it was quite a send-off for a gentle lady of quiet charm and spiritual grace. Bessie’s warm memory, cast against the specter of that hard-luck town, was a stark contrast. She was like a gemstone in a box of rocks.

Good-bye Bessie, with love,
///Darrell & Deb
Darrell Rodgers
Singer, Songwriter, Performer, Humorist
http://darrellsongs.com/

{Re-posted with permission}

Monday, November 12, 2007

On Birth of Baha'u'llah: A Blog-Search Montage of Remembrances


A Baha'i garden in Edirne
Baha'u'llah at one time lived in a house in the precincts of this garden

Uploaded on April 29, 2007 by Bassi Baba on flickr
{Photo licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic}

Birth of Baha'u'llah
10 hours ago by Sunshine Today is the day Baha'u'llah was born- technically it's a Baha'i Holy Day (as well as veteran's day) but i dont get the day off, and i'm feeling gloomy- think positive think positive-
Caviar Wishes - http://caviarwishes.blogspot.com/
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Good News
14 hours ago by Mamita Umita on
Mamita Umita
I made it to 30 yesterday, and celebrated the birth of Baha'u'llah as well. So far so good.

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Celebrating the Birth of Baha'u'llah ...
Today, 12 November, Baha'is around the world celebrate the birth of Baha'u'llah, the prophet founder of the Baha'i Faith. In this Most Glorious Day, i would like to share with you all, dear family and friends, our joy and happiness with a special poem dedicated ...
1 day ago · 48 words ·
Yummy Mummy by Yummy Mommy
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November 12th
16 hours ago by Leila on
bilingual baby
All over the world, Baha’is and their friends are celebrating the Birth of Baha’u'llah, prophet-founder of the Baha’i Faith.

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Birthday of Baha'u'llah ... tags: baha'i
"Tread ye the path of justice and equity in all things." ~Baha'u'llah~ Today I went over to Durham to celebrate the Birth of Baha'u'llah. Took the bus to Chester-le-street to meet up with Fereshteh to go together to Durham. The gathering was a fun one, meeting ...
1 day ago · 235 words ·
Me & The Life That I Drag Along by Szue
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Happy Holidays:
17 hours ago on
Matthew Distracts Himself
Today is the celebration of the birth of Baha’U’Llah.

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Promise of All Nations
tags: religion · african american · baha'i faith
... will be commemorating the Birth of Baha'u'llah, Founder of the Baha'i Faith. This is one of my favorite Baha'i Holy Days of the year. Coincidentally... by different names in a variety of faith traditions. The commemoration of the Birth of Baha'u'llah for Baha'is can be seen as one way ... 4 days ago · 641 words ·
Bahá’í Thought and Black ... by Phillipe Copeland
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We attended Tim and Debbie's Devotional meeting on Sunday, which is
23 hours ago by Bonita on Flitzy Phoebie
Here, Mauricio is singing a Baha'i prayer. November 12th is a Baha'i Holy Day, the Birth of Baha'u'llah.
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Birth of Baha'u'llah - November 12
One tells of a dream that Baha’u'llah related to his father....
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Mon, Nov 12 2007 2:21 AM on Much ado about nothing
Yesterday as I was reading a prayer/quote for the Birth of Baha'u'llah and personally I think it's important to know the meaning of the words you're...
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Celebration for Birth of Baha'u'llah
6 hours ago by The Boughs We had an interesting celebration on November 12 to make the Birth of Baha’u’llah, the founder of the Baha’i Faith. Celebrations for the occasion are held all over the world every year and each countries celebrations vary according to ...
Adventures in Vanuatu - http://vanuatu19.blogspot.com/
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Birth of Baha'u'llah (Baha'i)
Mon, Nov 12 2007 2:08 AM by johnhanscom on
Photos from djwudi's contacts
...johnhanscom posted a photo:

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Happy Holy Day!!
7 hours ago by The Eady-Naraghi Family Today in the world the Baha'is celebrate the Birth of Baha'u'llah, Founder of the Baha'i Faith, and last night we went to the Baha'i Center with my parents to celebrate it with the friends in Cedar Rapids. The program was joyous, ...
Bahia Eady - http://bahia-eady.blogspot.com/
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The Birth of Baha'u'llah, November 12, 1817
11 hours ago by Neva F. Darbe Last night at the Baha'i Center in Las Vegas, Nevada we celebrated the Birth of Baha'u'llah. We celebrated with prayers, dancing (the youth performed for the community), singing and slide shows depicting the life of Baha'u'llah. ...
Poet999 - A Butterfly Emerges From Her Cocoon - http://poet999.blogspot.com/

On Songs of Spiritual Longing: Tu que estas en alto cielo, Echame tu bendiciòn

Uploaded on October 12, 2004 by Nuevo Anden

LOS LONELY BOYS LYRICS
"Heaven"
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Save me from this prison
Lord help me get away
Cause only you can save me now
From this misery
Cause I've been lost in my own place
And I'm getting' weary
How far is heaven
And I know I need to change
My ways of livin'
How far is heaven,
Lord can you tell me
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Here are two songs of spiritual longing, it seems to me, the kind of longing that leads people to investigate the Baha'i Faith when the Faith is presented to them by loving souls. -gw

LOS LONELY BOYS LYRICS
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"Crazy Dream"
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I tried to find myself
For a very long time
Somewhere I lost myself
Its so hard to find my way back home
My body's roaming all day long
Feels like a real bad dream
I try so hard to break free
And even though I try
Something else is got a hold on me
Will I ever be in control of me
When will I wake up
Escape from this crazy dream
Maybe tomorrow
I'll find a better dream for me
The shiver in my soul
Whoa I think I'm gonna go
But in the depth of my mind
There's a place that only I have seen
Will it ever be reality

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On the Baha'i Year of Patience: Current mood, hopeful

Koool Mama shares her experience of being in a Baha'i Year of Patience. -gw

Current mood: hopeful
Category: Blogging

This is a photo of me at 33

I am settled into an apartment all my own which I moved to in August 2007 and June 29, 2007 commenced a Baha'i Year of Patience. The Year of Patience is a year of separation from one's spouse to think about one's marriage and decide what comes next. I am a third of the way through the YOP and have already decided I must move on from the marriage after twenty-seven years. I think my spouse must feel the same way as we do not contact each other at all.

I spent the month of July past in a women's crisis shelter, a very lovely old restored house with a great staff of supportive women who helped me to understand and come to terms with the things that occurred to break down the marriage and how I had turned a blind eye on these things until at last the time came to draw a line and say "no more." I deserve to move on and create a happier life.

While Baha'u'llah wishes marriage to be a fortress for well-being and is against marital discord, He does permit divorce for those who are unable to continue on in painful circumstances. The Baha'i marriage vow is a very simple one: "We will all verily, abideby the Will of God." It is God's Will that married couples are like two wings of a bird. The bird cannot fly unless the wings work in unison and harmony as equals. But if one wing or both are injured, the bird is disabled. So I am a broken wing who must mend and remain flightless until I heal. I do hope I will fly one day as the complementary wing of another partner.

Koool Mama, "Hurricane Noel," MySpace

{Re-posted with permission}

Sunday, November 11, 2007

On Religious Fundamentalists and the Exceptional T.K. Cheyne: He seems to have allowed his being a Baha'i to influence his scholarship

Do we have an innate desire to ask questions or is interrogation something we need to learn? If questions are the means by which one stirs the passive mind and awakens the soul, how can they be asked so as to alert the mind to passionate inquiry rather than providing it with false choices?

Why do we sometimes fear questions? Or is it the answers that we fear? How can we guard against questions that coerce, that manipulate? Can questions freely asked tap the vast resources of spiritual, intellectual and emotional power?

Dr Nahkjavani challenges fundamentalist thinking by asking questions about:


* scholarship; * priestcraft; * fear; * freedom; * women; * the law, and about the nature of fundamentalism itself.

http://www.bahai-publishing-trust.co.uk/acatalog/BPT_SPIRITUALITY_79.html
Bahiyyih Nakhjavani (1990). Asking Questions: A Challenge to Fundamentalism. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-314-3.

This is a book I dearly love. It's subject is fundamentalism, which is also the subject of a post by the blogger of Plowman Ministries, MRU, Inc., which consists of the text of a letter he has written to one of his old professors. "I had confessed to him that I am no longer a fundamentalist, and therefore no longer felt threatened by a number of the old bogeys we were trained to do battle with," he writes in providing the context for the letter. In his letter he mentions T.K. Cheyne, who met Abdu'l-Baha and became a Baha'i.

Another thing that has disappointed me as I have broadened my study a bit is to find that Wellhausen and other higher critics are misrepresented by their fundamentalist opponents, just as much as fundamentalists are misrepresented by hard-core liberals. I was led to believe that guys like Wellhausen rejected the inspiration of Scripture outright. The truth is, it’s a lot more complicated than that. When I read William Robertson Smith’s Religion of the Semites, a century-old work heavily influenced by Wellhausen, I was deeply moved by the devotional tone of his work, especially in the second and third series of lectures which were recently published from his notes. The early higher critics were men of faith. This does not mean that their ideas are necessarily correct, but we should at least approach them as our brothers and sisters. (There are a number of exceptions, of course. Cheyne, the editor of Encyclopedia Biblica converted to Bahai late in life, and seems to have allowed this to influence his scholarship to a great degree.)
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Here is background on Canon Cheyne. -gw
"Harris Manchester College "
Uploaded on August 8, 2007 by RiskFate on flickr
The most significant event in this association was the visit of Abdu’l-Baha to Oxford on 31st December 1912. At the invitation of Canon T.K. Cheyne, D.Litt, D.D, he spoke to a large and varied audience in the library at Manchester College (now Harris Manchester College). The title of his talk was “Aspects of Nature and Divine Philosophy”, and he spoke about the two branches of human knowledge, science and religion. Science had begun to enable mankind to escape from the physical constraints imposed by nature, and religious knowledge and understanding now needed to catch up. The fundamental basis of religion was love, but this had been forgotten. Religions must unite to create peace

The lecture, chaired by Dr Eslin Carpenter, Principal of Manchester College, was extensively reported in the Oxford Times of January 3rd 1913 and in the Oxford Chronicle the following day. After the event, Abdu’l-Baha took tea with Canon and Mrs Cheyne at their home at South Elms, Parks Road, and then took a train back to London. A month later Canon Cheyne wrote to an acquaintance, John Craven:

"Why I am a Baha’i is a large question, but the perfection of the character of Baha’u’llah and Abdu’l-Baha is perhaps the chief reason…I am one of the Baha’is who remain in their mother church."

http://www.oxfordbahais.com/history.html

{Harris Manchester College photo licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic}

Upon Graduation and the Possibility of Doing a Baha'i Year of Service: Your present plans are going to succeed

b is agonizing over the options facing her, including the possibility of doing a Year of Service.

I'm graduating. This is supposed to make me happy, but it's kind of bittersweet. It's freeing me up for my year of service, which I've always wanted to do, and never been able to do... and I can't keep postponing it. Once I even rationalized, well, I'll pioneer when I retire. What if I don't live that long? How can I come to grips with myself knowing I had an opportunity to do something important and then tabled it? It's not just the experience. It's the Year of Service. Baha'i's are encouraged to participate in a Year of Service and I've not done one.

http://banaf5h3h.blogspot.com/2007/11/happiness-comes-in-little-pills.html

{Photo: "The Future Looks Bright ,"Uploaded on May 21, 2007 by Cayusa on flickr,

On Tags and Единство Пророков Единство Религий Прогрессирующее Откровение: Slides Shows About the Baha'i Faith in Russian

bab russia faith единство мир бог религия вера бахаизм бахаи bahai unite world peace

Tag, you're it. I'm learning a lot about tags. flickr uses tags. So does del.icio.us, which explains them this way. -gw

What are tags? Tags are one-word descriptors that you can assign to your bookmarks on del.icio.us to help you organize and remember them. Tags are a little bit like keywords, but they're chosen by you, and they do not form a hierarchy. You can assign as many tags to a bookmark as you like and rename or delete the tags later. So, tagging can be a lot easier and more flexible than fitting your information into preconceived categories or folders.

So consider the tags at the beginning of this post and the slideshow associated with them, the second in a series of four slideshows in Russian about the Baha'i Faith. -gw

The Baha'i Faith in Russian language - 2
From:
kushtar, 3 hours ago

On Marching to a Different Drummer, Liberal Christian, Pagan, Mahikari, and Baha'i: Steve Prepares to Do a Devotional


I have been part of a Baha'i study circle at the Madison Baha'i Center, and I have nearly completed Ruhi Book One. The last class will be this Sunday. What has surprised me is that I have already been invited to put together a devotional service for this Sunday. This particular service is on the eve of the birthday of Baha’u’llah, the prophet founder of the Baha'i Faith. I am flattered, indeed, considering that I have not declared myself a Baha'i at this point. Methinks they might be a bit too trusting, but that’s just me.


A Baha'i devotional consists of readings from multiple religions on a certain theme. The notion is very consistent with the Baha'i belief that the founders of all major religions (plus many other prophets unknown to modern humankind) all were sent by the same God.

The local Baha’is have told me about a fascinating resource called Ocean. I downloaded it earlier this week. Ocean is a program that stores the texts of Baha'i books, books from other major religions, and other spiritual texts. Built into it is a search engine that can search the entire texts of all these books for words and phrases. I’d describe Ocean as “Baha’is going geek-brilliant,” harnessing computer technologies unimaginable in Baha’u’llah’s day to really demonstrate the notion of the common origin of spiritual traditions.

I decided to test Ocean by entering the word “prayer” into the search engine, figuring it would give me the widest scope of search engine hits. It came up with 10,161 sentences in 1,457 documents. Almost half were Baha'i texts, but it also included, among other things, Confessions of St. Augustine, the Divine Comedy of Dante, the King James Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Bhagavad Gita, the Upanishads, the Vedas, four different translations of the Qu’ran, writings by Rumi (one of my favorite writers!), the Torah, and a Taoist text. I could keep myself fascinated for days, weeks, and months at a time.

So we’ll see how it goes. In the liberal Protestant church I grew up in, our Sunday School class had the privilege to organize a church service. I’ve organized Pagan rituals, and served as a prayer leader at Mahikari cerermonies. So it can’t be too hard, right?
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{Re-posted with permission}

Friday, November 09, 2007

On Social Bookmarking: del.icio.us links for Baha'i study

I'm grateful to dragfyre of doberman pizza for turning me on to del.icio.us. -gw

del.icio.us is a social bookmarking website -- the primary use of del.icio.us is to store your bookmarks online, which allows you to access the same bookmarks from any computer and add bookmarks from anywhere, too. On del.icio.us, you can use tags to organize and remember your bookmarks, which is a much more flexible system than folders.

You can also use del.icio.us to see the interesting links that your friends and other people bookmark, and share links with them in return. You can even browse and search del.icio.us to discover the cool and useful bookmarks that everyone else has saved -- which is made easy with tags.
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http://del.icio.us/about/
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As soon as I start to peruse dragfyre's bookmarks, I "want them." And, gosh, I guess I can have them. That's the idea. Share the inspiration. Here is an example of one of dragfyre's finds. -gw
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UHJ letter: proselytizing.covenant.html
to
bahai, teaching ... saved by 1 other person ... 42 mins ago

On Immigrants Divided: Muslim and Christian

"Muslim in a Bus," uploaded on September 21, 2007 by Mon Solo on flickr

Greg and Sara have returned from Baha'i pioneering in Indonesia. They now have contact with Indonesians in Colorado where they live now. Sara notes a division among Indonesian immigrants. -gw

We've also been attending various events taking place in the Colorado Indonesian community. I still can't get over seeing little Muslim girls with their heads covered wearing velvet dresses, thick tights, and winter coats - after Indonesia, the contrast is so shocking to me. I expect to see flimsy summer dresses and bare feet every time I see one of them! Strangely, it seems that the Muslim and Christian (predominantly of Chinese decent) Indonesian populations continue to remain separate in America.

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On Speed Dating: I told her I do like the Baha'i Faith

I have found proof that the Baha'i Faith can come up even during an 8-minute speed-date. -gw


I did find a topic she was interested in so it wasn't super bad. I told her that my mom was a Baha'i and of course she never heard of it. She asked if I was religious and I told her no, but I do like the Baha'i faith due to the fact it is very inclusive. The whole not going to hell thing. Turns out she is a catholic and hated that part of her faith. So there now that she is interested in having a conversation, our time is over. How sad ;).

a MySpace blog entry
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Thursday, November 08, 2007

On Living in Intimate Accord: Peace will come about gradually

Abdul-Baha on "The Coming of Peace." -gw


“By what process” continued the questioner, “will this peace on earth be established? Will it come at once after a universal declaration of the Truth?”

“No, it will come about gradually,” said ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. “A plant that grows too quickly lasts but a short time. You are my family” and he looked about with a smile, “my new children! if a family lives in unison, great results are obtained. Widen the circle; when a city lives in intimate accord greater results will follow, and a continent that is fully united will likewise unite all other continents. Then will be the time of the greatest results, for all the inhabitants of the earth belong to one native land.”

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Photo: "UK - London - South Bank: County Hall," construction for which was begun in 1911. Abdu'l-Baha arrived in London in September of 1911. Uploaded on November 23, 2006 by wallyg on flickr.
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"County Hall was the headquarters of London County Council and later the Greater London Council (GLC). ... Construction was started in 1911 and it was opened in 1933 by King George V. The later buildings (North, South and Island blocks) were completed later, the last in 1974. For sixty-four years County Hall served as the headquarters of local government for London." http://flickr.com/photos/wallyg/304262744/
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On Mentions of the Baha'i Faith: Emptying my Favorites into the Internet Ether, Batch 2


Uploaded on February 23, 2006 by the pink sip on flickr

You may remember On Mentions of the Baha'i Faith: Emptying my Favorites into the Internet Ether, Batch 1. I still bookmark like crazy. Fascinating blog posts that mention the Baha'i Faith and are worthy of wide readership are still piled up on my Favorites list. It's time for action, Phase II. There are more very moving stories, humor, great pics, personal reflection, and insightful analysis here. As before, some are raw gemstones and others are already highly polished. Each and every one constitutes evidence of the progress of the Cause in some way. Post that are months old already, here is Batch Two, with still more to go. What's accumulating on your Favorites? -gw

http://londonintern.livejournal.com/3803.html
http://anisa9.blogspot.com/2007/06/barli.html
http://thisismelivingmylife.blogspot.com/search?q=baha%27i http://spiritualgleanings.blogspot.com/2007/09/god-unknowable-essence.html http://theresetinkering.blogspot.com/2007/05/ted-talk-creativity.html
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On Those Who Have Ears to Hear: "Journey from Eden," Pointless Suffering

I Read the News Today, Oh Boy! as I do every morning sitting in my chair, 20 or 30 minutes of reflecting on the world before I get up, get dressed, and head off to work. I saw pictures of street protests in Venezuela and Pakistan this morning. This was today. Tomorrow there will be other images to contemplate the meaning of.

Then on my way to work I listened to Steve Miller's hit anthology, one song in particular, "Journey from Eden," another of the countless songs that can be used as a vehicle for teaching the Faith of Baha'u'llah to those who have ears to hear. -gw

Listen to the blackbird sadly sing
For you, for me
Look at all the pointless suffering
Humanity
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I am dreaming of a garden
And I see the midnight flight
Of a blackbird, through my vision
To the light
To the light
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She is standing in the doorway
With the love light in her eye
And she beckons me to journey
Through the night
Through the night
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Listen to the blackbird sadly sing
For you, for me
Look at all the pointless suffering
Humanity
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To the people, who are naked
As they breathe in amber haze
Wandering endlessly narcotic
Through the maze
Through the maze
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To the leaders, who are timeless
As they flaunt their warlike ways
Flying endlessly o'er the wasteland
Seeking praise
Seeking praise
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Listen to the blackbird sadly sing
For you, for me
Look at all the pointless suffering
Humanity
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http://www.lyricsdownload.com/the-steve-miller-band-journey-from-eden-lyrics.html

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

On World Peace Week in Huddersfield: I learned a lovely song

singingasong learns a new song. -gw

岁月如歌
World peace week activity series were taken on 27 Oct. When I passed by the library of town, I noticed several Baha'i friends presented something in front of the door. It's a multi-faith gathering to mark World Peace Week. I joined in and learned a lovely song there.

http://singingasong.spaces.live.com/Blog/

On Dinner Discussion: Baha'i structure/oversight

"Main course duck menu ," Uploaded on February 28, 2007 by Vanessa Pike-Russell on flickr
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I pigged out on extra-crispy thai duck with basil, and decided I liked (for the first time) San Pellegrino water with lime. The discussion at dinner ranged over all kinds of things from Baha'i structure/oversight compared to meeting structure/politics

Bethany, "Day 6 - This is Me," In My Middle: Bethany's musings on life in an attempt to remove years of masks and walls and start behaving irresponsibly for once
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{Photo licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic}

On an Unusual Guy: Incluso en el campo de la religión, la mía no es nada habitual (fé Baha'i).

"tangofusion___7 ," uploaded on September 1, 2005 by dekay on flickr

From Mexico, a new blog. In his first post the blogger tells us of his music tastes, including tango fusion, and of his Faith. -gw

Yo debute en este mundo un 27 de Agosto, hace 21 años, teniendo raíces hispano-portuguesas, soy lo que se puede llamar una persona con gustos 'variados'; a que me refiero con esto: pues mis tipos de música favoritos van desde el tango fusión, a la música de la lucha libre americana, pasando por cantos budistas/ gregorianos/ tibetanos, el acid jazz hasta el new age (y sigue así...), mi sentido del humor es muy diferente al habitual, mi pintor favorito es Salvador Dalí, incluso en el campo de la religión, la mía no es nada habitual (fé Baha'i).

Son of a Gun, "Bienvenidos!" Me, Myself & Cactus Jack!
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{Photo licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic}

On Spirituality: If my friends had been reluctant to let me into their spiritual world, who would I be?

I wonder who I would be – how much more ignorant and impoverished – if my friends and neighbors of the last fifteen years had been reluctant to let me in to their spiritual world. My four closest friends in college were, as part of their identity:

1) an orthodox Jew
2) A member of Opus Dei (a group within Catholicism)
3) A member of Campus Crusade for Christ
4) A Baha'i
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On The Life of Baha'u'llah: A New Website



From Dan I learn today of the new website on the life of Baha'u'llah. -gw

On Finding a Baha'i Technician Whose Charges Are Very Reasonable: Brilliant

Here is to brilliant Baha'i technicians! -gw

My PC refused to connect to the internet.With just over 100 LJ friends, I can't catch up. So I'll start afresh here tomorrow.The best outcome for me was that I've found a brilliant Baha'i technician, José,whose charges are very reasonable

http://fluffyblanket.livejournal.com/174773.html

On Stories: In Dreams and in Pixels

There is a story here. -gw

Shoghi Effendi, the eldest grandson of 'Abdu'l-Baha, was in a dream that haunted my Iranian grandfather when he was a Muslim who persecuted Baha'is.

"remember"
love from leila
[luhv frʌm ˈleylə]: a gallimaufry.


There are also stories here. -gw

Photo: "Pixel's world,"
Uploaded on September 30, 2007 by Twistiti on flickr

On Sent-by-a-Seeker: May I have this dance?

Sent by Tim. OK, it's true, I don't normally post on funny animal videos here, but, as Tim points out, this was sent by a seeker, so it fits, right? -gw

OK, I know, it's just a funny animal video. But it was sent to me by a seeker. Also, I think you will agree it is the finest dancing bird you have ever seen. Actually funky!

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Tuesday, November 06, 2007

On Flickr: Baha'i Photo Finds

These images from Israel, somewhat unusual and both tagged "Baha'i," are licensed under Creative Commons Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic and appear on


"Baha'i Pilgrimage - 232"
Uploaded on July 10, 2007 by BlakeRead

"From Israel with love"



On Looking into FUNDAEC and Ruhi in Columbia: How the Baha'is aren't caught up in making things more complicated than they need to be

Ryan is back from a trip to Columbia. -gw
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During the trip I was able to get to know FUNDAEC and its processes a lot better including the SAT program, its implementation in some of the Baha’i schools in the area, the Centro Universitario para el Bienestar Rural (CUBR), as well as some of the processes of the Baha’i Community of Cali as well as the cluster surrounding Puerto Tejada (where the Ruhi Institute is). I sat-in on some of the classes in the Ruhi-Arbab Baha’i School in Puerto Tejada, observed how they implemented the SAT program there, and was even able to help out with the 6th and 8th grade classes. At the Rural University I was able to sit-in on some classes, as well as get to know some of the professors and students. During one week I travelled to Risaralda which is a department north of the Cauca Valley and was able to participate in a full three-day training on one of the SAT books on polynomials. That was really great because I was able to get to know some of the tutors and discuss the challenges they are facing as well as observe their wholehearted dedication to the vision of the program. Where I was in Risaralda was very nice… the weather was cooler than in Cali and the hills covered in coffee-shrubs/trees are quite pretty to look at. Finally, I was able to observe a few study circles using materials from the Ruhi Institute, participate in an intensive training for youth in the area, as well as observe an evaluation meeting where the Core Team makes a plan for the upcoming cluster reflection meeting.

Overall I was struck by the focus that the Baha’is have and how they aren’t caught up in making things more complicated than they need to be. There are many other things I’ve learned but will have to be saved for conversations with friends rather than posted here. (Much of my learning from the trip has to do with attitudes which are best shared one-on-one rather than a general post). My greatest concern upon leaving Colombia was that I would forget some of the attitudes I was resonating with so I wrote them down in my journal and have kept on reflecting on them while here. I’m clearly very thankful for the opportunity to travel to Colombia and get to know some of the organizations that have had indelible effects on me. The way ahead is not entirely clear but my sense is that the trip has provided me with some useful concepts and attitudes with which to approach upcoming decisions with regards to work and service to humanity.
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{Re-posted with permission}
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For more background on FUNDAEC and Ruhi, check out these llinks. -gw
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Monday, November 05, 2007

On Bahiyyih Nakhjavani:C’est un grand honneur de vous remettre les insignes de Docteur Honoris Causa de l’Université de Liège

A Baha'i treasure, novelist Bahiyyih Nakhjavani, was honored at the University of Liege recently, as I learned from a "wall" post of the "Baha'i Studies" Facebook group by Erfan. Below are the final remarks from the Discours de Madame Valérie Bada who made the presentation to Bahiyyih. -gw


Wikipedia
Si le monde est confus et chaotique, l’écriture l’ordonne et permet d’y trouver du sens. La dynamique de l’écriture en progrès reflète le mouvement de la pensée qui constamment se cherche, s’enrichit, se définit, s’affine et s’aiguise. Semblable à tous ses personnages nomades en quête de territoires imaginaires, l’écriture de Bahiyyih Nakhjavani est une écriture mouvante qui sans cesse se métamorphose au gré de la polyphonie de voix qu’elle crée et auxquelles elle donne des accents parfois truculents et souvent drôles.

Si l’œuvre de Bahiyyih Nakhjavani est écriture du monde, l’auteure quant à elle incarne dans son essence nomade l’écrivain du monde. Issue d’une illustre famille iranienne de confession bahaï, Bahiyyih Nakhjavani a vécu en Ouganda, en Sierra Leone, en Israël, en France, en Angleterre, au Canada et aux Etats-Unis. Cette errance consentie, libératrice et féconde semble procéder de l’intuition d’un identitaire universel puisé dans sa foi bahaï. Ses récits conçoivent une humanité recréée dans une unité salvatrice malgré les différences de langue, religion et race. Et c’est précisément dans cette totalité perçue dans la diversité et garante de liberté contre le totalitaire que s’inscrit la poétique de Bahiyyih Nakhjavani. C’est un grand honneur, Madame Nakhjavani, de vous remettre les insignes de Docteur Honoris Causa de l’Université de Liège.


Erfan also reported in his Facebook post on remarkable comments that the Rector made after the speech by Madame Bada. -gw

"I would like to add one word," he began. "I would like to mention the> grave situation of the Baha'i community in Iran ..."

And then, to my utter astonishment and confusion, to my amazement and joy, he proceeded to announce, himself, and without the least premeditation, how he felt this distinguished gathering should know that the Baha'i community in Iran was being so severely repressed, and that how Baha'i students were being denied access to education, even now at this very moment when they were about to open the academic year in Liège. He wished to take this opportunity to draw everyone's attention to this fact and to ask for the support of the University of Liège in expressing his indignation at this situation. To deny education to the next generation was utterly unacceptable, he said, and he felt that he had to mention this grave violation of human rights ....


On Growth: Hand-in-hand, shoulder-to-shoulder, promoting the common good

Quotable quotes. -gw

Learning about growth is a dynamic process. The more we do, the more we learn.
The International TeachingCentre
Baha'i World Centre
30 September 2007

Service to others is the way. Let it be your watchword, Abdu'l-Baha being your exemplar. Like him you can find practical ways of serving your fellow citizens. Strive to work hand-in-hand, shoulder-to-shoulder, with your fellow citizens in your efforts to promote the common good.
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The Universal House of Justice
9 September 2009
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"Shoulder to shoulder" Uploaded on February 4, 2007 by edwin_wisse on flickr

{Photo licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/deed.en-us}

Sunday, November 04, 2007

On Serving the Cause: I wore that helmut out of obediance

Rachel in Kampala, Uganda, is more than the "Bahai Office of External Affiars worker typer person" she describes herself as in her blog profile, as these pictures from inside the Baha'i House of Worship will testify. -gw

"Through the power of Thy transcendent might lift me up unto the heaven of Thy holiness" - From the Baha'i Writings

Billy and I on one of the days...the Olinga's insisted I wore that helmet...personally I hated it/it actually made things a little harder for me...so actually personally wearing it made things more dangerous not less. Cas see...if I fell...I would have been in a world of pain with or without it...but with it...not falling...I couldn't look around to see things so it often made me off balance and thusly more likely to fall...but...wore it out of obedience I did

Rachel, "I win," Greetings from Africa

{Re-posted with permission}

On Good Music for Travelling With Kids: Teaching not Preaching

An enduring classic, Teaching Peace. -gw

Another friend gave us a Red Grammer cd, Teaching Peace. This friend is of the Baha'i faith and I believe the singer may also be. However, there is no preaching on the cd, but messages that I think are wonderful and common to most religions (use words instead of violence, be kind, etc.).

From Atlanta to Tacoma: His friend told him this was something he should really look into

"And He has made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on all the face of the earth"
- Bible, Acts 17:26

I stopped by Rashid's home this morning. We spoke briefly on his doorstep. This man knows scripture!
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Rashid had called our local Baha'i phone number. I had tried to reach him by phone this past week, but his mailbox was full and I couldn't leave a message, so today I promised myself I would just drive over.
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I gave him my number on the back of a teaching card and a pamphlet. He called back while my wife were taking a hike in Point Defiance Park. Tonight I was able to return his call.
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We had a great 28 minute phone conversation. Baha'is are found, not made. This man sounds like a Baha'i, I'm tellin' ya.
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I'm going to go over on Tuesday and do another home-visit. And bring books at his request.
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Rashid heard about the Faith when a friend of his called him from Atlanta. Another friend had been attending a Baha'i study circle there and had become a Baha'i. His friend told him this sounded like something he should really look into.
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Rashid did. He called the Baha'i number here.
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I told him about our study circles on Wednesday night and devotional meeting on Thursday. I'm sure he will be partaking of the spirit of these gatherings soon. -gw

"Baha'i Unity Center, Atlanta GA," uploaded on July 20, 2005 by nekochan9 on flickr
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More on the New World Order: Different Versions

The New World Order is an important book by novelist H. G. Wells and features his belief that it would be beneficial to the world if a new world order ruled the world which would united all the worlds people and at the same time cause war to no longer exist.

http://books.google.com/books?id=hzpR2uASeT8C&dq=HG+Wells+New+World+Order&psp=1

Anonymous noted the following in a comment to a previous post here on a New World Order. gw

George, I think you will find that others had used New World Order before the Guardian popularised it amongst the Bahais, specifically HG Wells. The Baha'i version is "The New World Order of Baha'u'llah."

HG Wells book was published in January 1940, and 'The Goal of a New World Order', Shoghi Effendi's letter to the Baha'is, was dated 28 November 1931. The fact that is was nine years earlier is not really signficant. Anonymous is right, the signficant aspect here for Baha'is is that a "new world order" is enunciated by Baha'u'llah and outlined with great specificity. -gw

On Baha'i Devotional Meeting Resources: Programs for Tranquility

Just received from our Dawn, our "devotions liason" for our Area Teaching Committee, these resources for devotional meetings. -gw

The Baha’i Devotions Site - a website with over 200 devotional programs
http://www.bahaidevotions.org/





Tranquility Zones - the site of the devotional meetings of Swindon, England
http://www.tranquillity-zone.org.uk/index2.htm

On Building the Kingdom of God Soul by Soul: If they be so moved

These are souls I am praying for today. It is my hope that they will, should they be so moved, embrace the Faith of Baha'u'llah and work besides us in our global community to raise up the Kingdom of God on earth. -gw


* Russ * Rashid * Victoria * Mary Ellen * Myong * Jennifer * Sandy * Michael * Peter *

Incline your ears, O friends of God, to the voice of Him Whom the world hath wronged, and hold fast unto whatsoever will exalt His Cause. He, verily, guideth whomsoever He pleaseth unto His straight Path. This is a Revelation that infuseth strength into the feeble, and crowneth with wealth the destitute.

(Baha'u'llah, Gleanings from the Writings of Baha'u'llah, p. 183)

{Photo: Flitzy Phoebie}

On Home-Visits: She had our Baha'i materials up on the fridge

Received by email from one of the Friends here in town. -gw

PS I did another home visit to Vanessa on Sunday afternoon since Comcast messed up her plans to bring the boys to children's classes (Comcast came to install her cable during class time). We made Halloween cookies and finger puppets in class which I brought to Vanessa, Max and Eli as a welcome to their new home gift. Vanessa had our Baha'i materials up on her fridge!

Uploaded on October 28, 2007 by TEB471959 on flickr

Saturday, November 03, 2007

On "Baha'i" Songs: Songs Evocative of a Baha'i Perspective or Experience

New to Facebook, I have been adding songs to my profile using the iLike application. Friends can just click on the song for a sample. Songs I most want to share are those that are somehow evocative of the Baha'i perspective or experience. Each one deserves a separate post here, and I may try to do so in the future, but here is a listing of some of the songs I have chosen for starters. What are the songs similarly evocative for you? -gw


"Tomorrow" by Mouth Music

"Time's Up"by Living Colour

"This Island Earth" by The Nylons

"Things Ain't Like They Used To Be" by UB40

"Constant Craving" by k.d. lang

"Step Of Faith" by Carman

"Shaking The Tree" by Peter Gabriel

"Samuel F. B. Morse Sends The First Telegram" by Stan Freberg

"The Same" by Youssou N'Dour

"Runnin'" by Temple Yard

"Revival" by Reverend Hotorn Heat

"Farewell To Arms" by Emerson, Lake & Palmer

"Peace Train" by Cat Stevens

"Peace" by Bobby McFerrin

"One Love / People Get Ready / Sermon" by Neville Brothers

"My Sweet Lord" by George Harrison

"Common Ground" by Paul Winter Consort

"Shiny Happy People" by R.E.M

"Let's Get Together" by The Youngbloods

"New Day" by Iron Butterfly

"I Will Find You (Theme from the Last of the Mohicans)" by Clannad

"I'm On My Way" by The Proclaimers

"Hummingbird" by Seals & Crofts

"Bodhisattva" by Steely Dan

"Harmony" by Take 6

"Garden Song" by Arlo Guthrie

"Finally Woken" by Jem

"Dreaming On A World" by Tracy Chapman

"Communication" by Béla Fleck & The Flecktones

"Common Threads" by Bobby McFerrin

"Bhajan" by Sheila Chandra

"Brotherhood"by Santana

"Small World (Part One)" by Huey Lewis & The News

"Sacred Stones" by Sheila Chandra

"Two Thousand Years" by Billy Joel

"Ring Them Bells" Bob Dylan

"Ray Of Light" by Madonna

"Pure And Easy" by The Who

"Needed Time" by Eric Bibb

"Rhythms - Different People" by Us3

"Crystal Blue Persuasion" by Tommy James & The Shondells

"Conversation Peace" by Stevie Wonder

"Ain't No Stopping Us" Now by McFadden & Whitehead

"Everyday People" by Sly & The Family Stone

"From Way Up Here" by Pete Seeger

"Get It Together" by Seal

"Getting Started" by Buffy Sainte-Marie

"Going in the Right Direction" by Robert Randolph & The Family Band

Friday, November 02, 2007

On New Multimedia Initiatives of the US Baha'i Community: Baha'i Channel on YouTube

Note the new multimedia initiatives of the Baha'i National Community.


Podcasts are available on iTunes.

Streaming video is currently available on http://www.bahai.us/ and will be part of a Multimedia Video Center. -gw

On Blue Scholars and Hot Tubas on 6th Ave: Inspired Baha'is



The Third Annual 6th Avenue Dia de los Muertos Procession will be November 2nd at 7 pm. We will meet at Masa Restaurant (map) at 6th Ave & Pine Street at 6:45.
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Hey music lovers! Big stuff is happening on 6th Ave tonight in Tacoma. Father and son and both Baha'is, Tim and Isaac are playing tubas in the procession for the Dead of the Dead and the Baha'i-inspired rappers Blue Scholars are performing at Hell's Kitchen. My wife and I are going to try to take both events in. We'll go to the "all ages" Blue Scholar's performance, because we are definately "all ages." Here is one of countless blog mentions of Blue Scholars out there, this one from Germany. -gw
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Die Zentren des HipHop im Westen sind ganz klar Los Angeles und die Bay Area. Doch es gibt eine Stadt, in der man auf den ersten Blick keine große Szene vermuten würde, die sich aber nach oben arbeitet. Sie heißt Seattle. Einer dieser Vertreter Seattle's sind die 2 Studenten Geologic und Sabzi alias die Blue Scholars.

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Thursday, November 01, 2007

On Not So Subliminal Advertising: Baha'is, Buy from Leon's


Imran came across this which he shared with the Baha'is on Facebook.:) group. -gw
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On Baha'i Dating Ad: Objectionable Content?

Here is the ad. Here is a quiz:

(a) The content of this ad is not objectionable.
(b) The content is objectionable because of the people portrayed.
(c) The content is objectionable because of the use of the Greatest Name.
(d) The content is objectionable because of the numerical figure given for single Baha'is.