The Baha'i Faith: A Short History
By Peter Smith
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Peter Smith
Peter Smith is an independent consultant based in Europe with 30 years of experience in the onshore and offshore sectors of the oil and gas industry. He has worked on design and construction projects for, Exxon, Total, Mobil, Woodside Petroleum, Shell, Statoil, Bluewater, Elf, and Huffco Indonesia.
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The Baha'i Faith - Peter Smith
The Bahá’í Faith
A SHORT HISTORY
‘Good, straightforward and authoritative … extremely readable’
JAMES THROWER in the Expository Times
‘Offer[s] factual accounts of the faith without proselytising [an] excellent introduction’
World Faiths Encounter
‘For the adult reader coming fresh to the faith present[s] a clear and knowledgeable view’
Education Review
The Bahá’í Faith
A SHORT HISTORY
Peter Smith
ONEWORLD
A Oneworld book
First published by Oneworld Publications, 1996
This ebook edition first published by Oneworld Publications, 2014
© Peter Smith 1996
All rights reserved.
Copyright under Berne Convention.
A CIP record for this title is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-1-85168-208-9
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CONTENTS
List of illustrations
Preface
Part I: THE BÁBÍ RELIGION, 1844–53
1 THE ISLAMIC AND IRANIAN BACKGROUND
Islam
Nineteenth-century Iran
Shaykhism
2 THE EMERGENCE OF THE BÁBÍ MOVEMENT
The Báb
The Báb’s declaration and claims
Initial expansion
The relationship with Shaykhism
Relationships with the ‘ulamá and secular authorities
The Báb’s early writings and teachings
3 THE DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW RELIGION
The Báb’s changing fortunes
Tabríz and Badasht
Bábí law and the Bayán
Later Bábí doctrine
4 CONFLICT AND COLLAPSE, 1848–53
The radicalization of Bábism
The beginnings of conflict: Ṭabarsí
The events of 1850
Collapse
Part II: THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE BAHÁ’Í FAITH
5 BAHÁ’U’LLÁH
Bahá’u’lláh and the revival of Bábism, 1853–66
The emergence of the Bahá’í Faith
The ‘Akká period
The growth of the Bahá’í community
6 THE WRITINGS AND TEACHINGS OF BAHÁ’U’LLÁH
Bahá’u’lláh’s awareness of the divine presence
Ethics and the spiritual path
The divine summons
Theology and metaphysics
The addresses to the rulers
Government and world order
Holy law
7 ‘ABDU’L-BAHÁ
Succession and ministry
Writings and talks
8 BAHÁ’Í COMMUNITIES, 1866–1921
Iran
The Ottoman Empire and Egypt
India and Burma
Russian Turkistan and Caucasia
The West
PART III: THE BAHÁ’Í FAITH SINCE 1922
9 SHOGHI EFFENDI
Writings and translations
Development of the administrative order
Systematic teaching plans
The Bahá’í World Centre
The Hands of the Cause, 1957–63
10 THE UNIVERSAL HOUSE OF JUSTICE
Writings, compilations and translations
Administration
Systematic planning
The further development of the Bahá’í World Centre
Social issues
Involvement with the United Nations
11 BAHÁ’Í COMMUNITIES, 1922 TO THE PRESENT
The Islamic heartland
The West
The Bahá’í ‘Third World’
CONCLUSION
From messianic Shi‘ism to a world religion
Charisma, organization and the Covenant
Major religious motifs
The future
Chronology of important dates
Further reading
Bibliography
Index
ILLUSTRATIONS
General view of Shíráz
Facsimile of the Báb’s Tablet to the first Letter of the Living
The fortress of Mákú
The castle of Chihríq
Mírzá Buzurg-i-Núrí
An example of Bahá’u’lláh’s own handwriting
An aerial view of ‘Akká
A view of the prison in ‘Akká, c. 1921
Bahá’u’lláh’s mansion at Bahjí
Entrance to the shrine of Bahá’u’lláh
‘Abdu’l-Bahá
The shrine of the Báb
‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s journeys in Europe and America
‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s investiture, Haifa, 1920
The funeral procession of ‘Abdu’1-Bahá
‘Abdu’l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi in Haifa
Bahá’í Temples in USA and Uganda
The Bahá’í Temple in Australia
The International Archives Building
Bahá’í Temples in Germany and India
The Seat of the Universal House of Justice
The Ishráqí family, executed in Iran in 1983
Map
The route of Bahá’u’lláh’s exile
Figure
The present-day structure of Bahá’í administration
Tables
Selected Bahá’í administrative statistics, 1928–95
LSAs and localities: 1949, 1964 and 1992
PREFACE
This book provides a short history of the Bahá’í Faith and of the Bábí movement from which it sprang. It is written for those who would like a succinct account of a religion that has become increasingly well known in recent years and has succeeded in gaining a widespread following throughout the world. I have sought to make use of the latest research on the two religions, but have tried to avoid weighting down the text with too many scholarly references. Readers wishing for more detail are referred to my The Babi and Baha’i Religions and A Concise Encyclopedia of the Bahá’í Faith (see references). Inevitably with such a brief work describing complex historical developments, I have had to omit much and to skate over difficult issues. I can only hope that the ice is not too thin.
Undoubtedly, one area that has been neglected is what might be termed the ‘faith’ dimension of history. For believers, the history of their own religion is more than simply a catalogue of events. Central episodes in particular are invested with mythical and theological meaning that give a colour and texture far different from an academic narrative such as this. Again, I have not included any extended discussion of the wider significance of events or sought to encompass them within some explicit theoretical framework.
Although the Bahá’í Faith grew out of the Bábí movement and its followers regard the Báb as one of the founders of the Bahá’í Faith, the two religions are very different. Rooted in mid-nineteenth-century Iranian Islam, Bábism may seem alien to many modern Western readers; a brief introduction to the Islamic and Iranian background is therefore provided. For its part, the Bahá’í Faith has clearly undergone an enormous transformation over the 132 years of its existence, most particularly in developing from a movement almost entirely confined to the Middle East into what is effectively a small-scale world religion (now with about five million followers). In the process, it has lost much of its contact with the Islamic and Iranian culture that originally surrounded it. While casual references in the press (and even in some textbooks on comparative religion) may still give the impression that the Bahá’í Faith is an Iranian religion, this is no longer the case. Bahá’ís respect Iran as the land of their religion’s birth and regard Islam as part of the process of divine revelation that includes all the major world religions, but they stress the independence of their Faith. Demographically, too, Iranians now comprise only a small minority in a religion whose main centres of growth are in monsoon Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America.
Moojan Momen and Juan Cole were kind enough to read through the draft of this book. To them my thanks. They are guiltless for the faults that remain. I must also thank Firouz Anaraki for his logistical support, Sammireh Smith for typing parts of the original manuscript and my children for their good-natured endurance of the trials engendered by fathers who write books. Very special thanks must go to Hassan Sabri and to Roger and Muriel Wilkinson for their encouragement, and to them this book is dedicated.
Peter Smith
Bangkok
Part I
THE BÁBÍ RELIGION, 1844–53
1
THE ISLAMIC AND IRANIAN BACKGROUND
The Bahá’í Faith centres on the person of Bahá’u’lláh (1817–92), its prophet-founder, but to understand its origins, we must examine both the Bábí movement from which it emerged and the complex world of mid-nineteenth century Iranian Shí‘ism in which Bábism is rooted. The Bahá’í Faith has long since developed in ways that make it distinctively different from Islam, but some reference to these Islamic and Iranian roots is essential. Not only did the Bábí religion emerge as a movement within Shí‘í Islam, but the Bábís and early Bahá’ís were almost all Iranians who had formerly been Shí‘í Muslims; the writings of the Báb (1817–50) – the founder of Bábism – and to a lesser extent those of Bahá’u’lláh are pervaded by Islamic concepts; and many Bábí and Bahá’í practices bear an obvious resemblance to those of Islam.
Resemblance and derivation are not the same as identity, of course, and to describe the Bahá’í Faith as a Muslim sect – as some writers are still inclined to do – is highly misleading, and as inaccurate as describing second-century Christianity as a Jewish sect.
ISLAM
Those aspects of the Islamic tradition that are replicated most clearly in the Bábí and Bahá’í religions concern the concepts of revelation and holy law. Thus, in all three religions it is believed that God has addressed humanity through a series of divinely appointed messengers – including Abraham, Moses, Jesus and Muḥammad – and that divine guidance for the present age is partly enshrined in a body of holy law based on scriptural revelations brought by the latest divine messenger. It is these same points, however, that most sharply separate the Bábís and Bahá’ís from orthodox Muslims. For Muslims, Muḥammad is the ‘seal of the prophets’ (understood to mean the last) and the Islamic holy law (the sharí‘a) provides the standard for human behaviour until the resurrection (qiyáma). For Bábís and Bahá’ís, the resurrection has already come; the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh are divine messengers (Bahá’ís generally use the term ‘Manifestation of God’ rather than ‘prophet’, and include Krishna, Zoroaster and the Buddha in their list of Manifestations); and Islamic law has been abrogated and replaced by the successive revelations of the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh as the proper guides for human beings in the contemporary world. These later revelations contain elements reminiscent of Islam, but are at the same time distinctively different (see chapters 3 and 6 for the main elements of Bábí and Bahá’í law).
Twelver Shí‘ism
The branch of Islam that formed the primary matrix in which the Bábí and Bahá’í religions developed was Twelver (Itbná-‘Ashariyyá) Shí‘ism, the state religion of Iran since the sixteenth century.
Shí‘ism differs from the Sunní Islam of most Muslims in various ways. Central to it is the devotion shown to a series of Imáms (leaders) who were related to the Prophet Muhammad and whom Shí‘ís regard as the recipients of divine grace and guidance. A Shí‘í is a ‘partisan’ of the Imáms. Various Shí‘í sects have developed, each with its own distinctive teachings and list of Imáms. The Twelvers, now the largest of various Shí‘í groups, recognize a succession of twelve Imáms, starting with Muḥammad’s cousin and son-in-law, ‘Alí ibn Abí Ṭálib (d. 661), and continuing through his descendants until Muḥammad al-Mahdí, who disappeared mysteriously in the year 873/4 (AH 260).
In the absence of the Imám, Twelver Shi‘ism has developed an intense messianic motif. The Twelfth Imám is regarded as hidden from the eyes of the faithful until the end of time, when he will return to vanquish his opponents and establish a kingdom of peace and justice. Messianic beliefs are also found in Sunnism, forming a recurrently active element in popular religion, but receive little official sanction.
Shí‘ís regard the writings, sayings and deeds of the Imáms as an additional source of divine guidance to the revelations of the Qur’án and the oral statements and practices (the hadíth) attributed to Muḥammad. In this they diverge sharply from the Sunnís, for whom only the latter constitute the basis for their path of tradition (sunna). Differences in ritual practice, social law and religious beliefs follow from this divergence, including a far greater readiness on the part of some Shí‘í thinkers to study gnosticism. One such gnostically inclined group – the Shaykhís – played a key role in the genesis of Bábism.
Institutionally, Twelver Shí‘ism also diverges from Sunnism in the role assumed by the religiously learned (the ‘ulamá). This has changed over time, reflecting the varying fortunes of Shí‘ism, but since the late seventeenth century the ‘ulamá have been able to establish a degree of authority and autonomy from government control unparalleled in Sunní states. The nature of the Islamic revolution in Iran, which took place in 1979, reflects this development, and the power of the clerical establishment was a major factor in both the expansion and the persecution of the Bábí movement.
Shí‘ism also contains a strong popular emphasis on