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March 2008

March 24, 2008

Being an Orthodox Bahá'í

By Megan Kathleen Olsen

It‘s not easy being an Orthodox Bahá'í. I should know. I’ve been one most of my life.

Being an Orthodox Bahá'í means being at odds with the world. It means never fitting in, never belonging. It means losing friends from the time you’re a child. It means losing lovers and loved ones and family members. It means being turned away at churches and shunned by church communities. It means being persecuted not for what you’ve done but for who you are.

Being an Orthodox Bahá'í means being asked to give up food and water for nineteen days once a year no matter how inconvenient or difficult the task; no matter what your schedule is or how dry the climate is where you live. It means having to explain to your coworkers, friends and family why you can’t eat lunch with them. It means strange looks of confusion and pity. It means a hasty conclusion that you are not one of them. It means you are decidedly different.

Being an Orthodox Bahá'í means you hesitate to tell people who you are, because you grow tired of the perplexed stares. You become weary of the dismissals of your explanations. You become enervated when your answers almost always dissatisfy questioning people, who suddenly become frightened by the possibility of your words.

For me, being an Orthodox Bahá'í has meant losing friends in every school I went to. It has meant crying myself to sleep at night, because I felt so alone, so unusual. It has meant being a permanent outsider no matter how hard I tried to fit in. It has meant having a Heterodox Bahá'í coworker ask not to be scheduled the same hours as me once she found out who I was. It has meant being excluded from reading a prayer at my own grandmother’s funeral. It has meant assimilating, because I was tired of standing out.

So I ask myself: Why am I an Orthodox Bahá'í?

I’m an Orthodox Bahá'í because my heart tells me I am. Because my soul knows I am. Because I come from a long line of brave, bold people who taught me the fight for the truth is worth the risk of alienation, of isolation, of pain and fear. Because I am a fourth generation warrior for a Faith worth dying for.

Being an Orthodox Bahá'í has meant finding strength when I felt weak; courage when I was scared; faith when I was in doubt, and love when I had anger in my heart. It has meant standing up before an unwelcoming world that does not understand, does not listen, does not care. It has meant standing up and standing alone, no matter how hard the winds of adversity have tried to knock me down.

I am an Orthodox Bahá'í, and I would not have it any other way.

March 18, 2008

What did he mean by the words "divorced from"?

In the discussions had by the Orthodox Baha'is about the importance of the living Guardianship to the Cause of Baha'u'llah, we often quote various provisions of the writings of Shoghi Effendi to indicate how the first Guardian of the Faith never wavered from his belief that the Guardianship would continue after his death. He alluded to future Guardians.  He laid plans for the erection of the Seat of the Guardianship on Mount Carmel.

Somehow the sans-Guardian Baha'is seem to simply ignore it.  I am sure they rationalize it by saying that the Guardian just didn't know the Guardianship would end.  This is absurd because he would have known that he didn't appoint anyone to the position.  If he never appointed anyone to succeed, and if he really was unable to appoint a successor, why was he wasting time on plans for the office of future guardians?

But there is one passage of Shoghi Effendi's writings that is difficult to explain away:

"Divorced from the institution of the Guardianship the World Order of Bahá'u'lláh would be mutilated and permanently deprived of that hereditary principle which, as 'Abdu'l-Bahá has written, has been invariably upheld by the Law of God. 'In all the Divine Dispensations,' He states, in a Tablet addressed to a follower of the Faith in Persia, 'the eldest son hath been given extraordinary distinctions. Even the station of prophethood hath been his birthright.' Without such an institution the integrity of the Faith would be imperiled, and the stability of the entire fabric would be gravely endangered. Its prestige would suffer, the means required to enable it to take a long, an uninterrupted view over a series of generations would be completely lacking, and the necessary guidance to define the sphere of the legislative action of its elected representatives would be totally withdrawn."  (The World Order of Baha'u'llah, p. 148)(Emphasis added)

Now some of the more creative members of the sans-Guardian organization of violators, remarkably will argue that the Guardianship is not divorced from the World Order of Baha'u'llah.  They would say that  they always have Shoghi Effendi's writings, and therefore the Guardianship has not been divorced from the Faith.

Lets consider these words "divorced from".  The dictionary definition is simply that it is severed or disunited from. There is no longer a living Guardian holding office in the sans-Guardian organization, and yet they believe the Guardianship has not been severed?

Imagine after your ex-wife wins the lottery, trying to suggest that you are not divorced from your ex-wife --- because why? You still have the wedding ring? You have old love letters?  You were once her husband so you are not divorced?

I got to wondering whether Shoghi Effendi ever used the words "divorced from" in other contexts, and lo and behold I found some quotations (computers are fantastic). The emphasis in the quotes below were added.

1. Shoghi Effendi, on the Mashriqu'l-Adhkar:

"Divorced from the social, humanitarian, educational and scientific pursuits centering around the Dependencies of the Mashriqu'l-Adhkar, Bahá'í worship, however exalted in its conception, however passionate in fervor, can never hope to achieve beyond the meagre and often transitory results produced by the contemplations of the ascetic or the communion of the passive worshiper." (Baha'i Administration, p. 185)

A pattern seems to be emerging here.  I suppose they could say that the Dependencies of the Mashriqu'l-Adhkar are not divorced from it because they once had a nursing home for the elderly at the Wilmette Baha'i House of Worship.  Never mind the fact that they no longer have any Dependencies.

2.  Shoghi Effendi, on the World Order of Baha'u'llah:

"{T]he Guardian feels the necessity for all teachers to stress the fact that the World Order of Bahá'u'lláh can, under no circumstances, be divorced from the spiritual principles and  teachings of the Cause...." (Directives from the Guardian, p. 67)

Good one.  Following their logic, they might argue that they once had spiritual principles and teachings of the Cause, so it is not divorced from them, even though everybody knows that there is nothing spiritual about the Baha'i administration of the sans-Guardian variety.

3.  Shoghi Effendi, on true religion:

"Divorced from true religion, morals lose their effectiveness and cease to guide and control man's individual and social life. But when true religion is combined with true ethics, then moral progress becomes a possibility and not a mere ideal."  (Directives from the Guardian, p. 84) 

I think I am getting the hang of this rationalization thing.  You just argue that you once had true religion combined with your morals, so moral progress is still a possibility?

4.  Shoghi Effendi, on Sohrab (former secretary of Abdul-Baha):

"What he [Sohrab] teaches at present is so far divorced from our beloved Faith, and so tinged with the doctrines of many "cults" which we see thriving at present, as to be almost unrecognizable."  (Light of Divine Guidance v I, p. 135)

I get it, but since Sohrab once faithfully followed the teachings, what he teaches is really not divorced from the Faith.

5.  Shoghi Effendi on the Bab:

"The Faith of the Báb should not be divorced from that of Bahá'u'lláh."  (The Unfolding Destiny of the British Baha'i Community, p. 426)

But we could throw it out now because since it was once united with the Faith of Baha'u'llah, its not really  divorced from it.

6.  Shoghi Effendi on the Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Bahá:

"Being the Child of the Covenant -- the Heir of both the Originator and the Interpreter of the Law of God -- the Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Bahá can no more be divorced from Him Who supplied the original and motivating impulse than from the One Who ultimately conceived it." (The World Order of Baha'u'llah, p. 144)

Yes, but we still have the Will and Testament even though we are no longer following it!  I see how this rationalization works!

It makes no sense.

Jeffrey

March 07, 2008

"Baha'i Internet Agency":the dangers of Facebook friends

Watch out, the "legendary" Baha'i Internet Agency (the "BIA")is on the warpath against social web sites such as "Facebook" because you never know what friends you might pick up.  Here is an actual BIA email on the subject.

Enjoy:

28 February 2008

To All National Spiritual Assemblies

Dear Bahá'í Friends,

We have been requested by the World Centre to alert you to the current activities of the Covenant-breaker Martin Lavallee on Facebook.com.  This  individual administers the "Orthodox Bahá'is" page on Facebook and also has a personal page on the site.  There have been recent instances where Bahá'í youth with accounts on Facebook have unwittingly accepted invitations from Lavallee to be a "friend" or to become "members" of the Covenant-breaker page.  Further, as a consequence of the Facebook networking scheme, if an individual accepts a direct invitation from  Lavallee or any other member of his group, the "Friends" list (with e-mail addresses) of that individual becomes exposed.  In this way, those with insincere intentions have the potential to directly contact an increasing  number of Bahá'is, interactions that could pose a threat to the spiritual well-being of youth and other believers who are not deepened in the Covenant.

Each National Assembly will need to determine the necessity and most  appropriate manner of discreetly informing believers of this situation in consultation and with the assistance of the Counsellors.  In doing so it will of course be important to avoid creating undue anxiety or curiosity  about the nature of Covenant-breaker material on the Internet..

It is our intention to provide more general guidance in the near future about how online social networks can be constructively and safely used by Bahá'ís.

With loving greetings,

Matt Weinberg
Program Director
Bahá'í Internet Agency

cc:  Members of the Continental Boards of Counsellors


You better not go online until  the BIA lets us all know how we should behave on online social networks. What paranoid silliness.  Do you mean to tell me that things have become so bad that the Baha'is need to view "Guidelines" before they go internet surfing?

If the Baha'is in your organization are so weak in the Covenant that they cannot withstand receiving an email from Martin (a staunch Canadian believer whose social Facebook pages are strictly his own), then I think you guys better start "deepening" your believers.

I love the tone of this letter, though.  To achieve this tone, you need to mix in to your mind a whole bunch of fear and faithlessness, heavy doses of paranoia, and the ridiculous belief that you are serving God by writing silly guidelines of what others should read, do, speak, and hear, for their "own protection."   Does it ever occur to the Baha'is who think in this narrow-minded and fearful way, that the Baha'is ought to be able to associate with anyone they want, hear whatever ideas they want, and speak whatever opinions they hold, without a Baha'i administrative agency telling them what is right or wrong? Are they such fragile souls that they are the only adults in the world who need internet supervision?  Can anybody explain to me why anyone would put up with this kind of mind control silliness?

This strange idea needs to examined also: How can a person be said to have "unwittingly accepted invitations from Lavallee to be a "friend" or to become "members" of the" Facebook page?  They make it sound like some kind of deception is taking place.  In reality, Martin is just sending people invitations.  This is what people do on the social web sites. There is no horrendous conspiracy here.

It would seem to be that if the sans-Guardian Baha'is are the true Faith of Baha'u'llah, as they claim, and that the Orthodox Baha'i Faith is false and cannot be recognized as "Baha'i", then they would not fear the OBF so much.  If the OBF is false, then it cannot and will not prevail.  So why worry?  Are you really trying to protect your members so much as control them?  It sounds more like a control question, since if you were worried about protecting them, you would not be so DISCREET about it, but instead you would be out there educating your members about what is true and what is false, so they can make up their own mind.  Instead, you try to keep the truth away from them and convince them to avoid certain ideas because you know better.

The BIA is a very sick agency.  The sans-Guardian Baha'i Faith, currently occupying Haifa and Wilmette, are bastardized versions of the Baha'i Administration as it was originally intended to be, and they are paranoid about the OBF because they know something is wrong and they have something to hide, and to hide from.  This is a sign of spiritual sickness.

If you want to read their paranoid materials, you can find the Bahai Internet Agency Position papers online here:
http://www.abs.org.nz/blog/?p=11
http://www.bcca.org/bia/

Jeffrey


 


Notice:

  • The Orthodox Bahá'í Faith has no affiliation with the Bahá'í Faith presently headquartered in Wilmette, Illinois or Haifa, Israel. Opinions expressed are those of the blog author only who is solely responsible for its content, and are not necessarily the opinion of the Orthodox Bahá'í Faith or its members.

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