27 December 2009

In Time of Generosity, 600,000 Nepalis Denied Urgent Food Aid

In this season of giving, a sad plight to reflect on. The number of lives affected is staggering, while the money needed is, as shown below, relatively little. In this connection, 'Abdu'l-Bahá stated:
The greatest means for prevention [of extreme poeverty] is that whereby the laws of the community will be so framed and enacted that it will not be possible for a few to be millionaires and many destitute. One of Bahá'u'lláh's teachings is the adjustment of means of livelihood in human society.

Hence the urgency of spreading knowledge of this divine System!
A satisfactory solution to the world's present economic crisis lies in a profound change of heart and mind which only religion can produce.
- Bahá'í International Community, Teachings

Nepali village kids

U.N. stops food aid to over half a million Nepalis

NEW DELHI (AlertNet) - The United Nations has been forced to stop feeding over half a million people in Nepal due to a critical funding shortfall caused by the financial downturn, a World Food Programme (WFP) official said on Wednesday.

The U.N. agency says it needs $20 million to continue feeding 600,000 people -- more than a quarter of the total number it was assisting -- in the impoverished Himalayan nation over the next three months. ...

Nepal already has the some of the world's highest rates of child malnutrition, with about 48 percent of children under five considered poor or inadequately fed. "This is essentially a silent emergency," said Hyde [WFP's deputy country representative]. "This is because those who are being impacted the greatest are in some of the most isolated places on earth."

From Reuters AlertNet - access here.


A fountain on the upper Terraces of the Shrine of  ...

"We must be like the fountain or spring that is continually emptying itself of all that it has and is continually being refilled from an invisible source... [T]his is the secret of right living."
 - Shoghi Effendi, Compilation

From the Bahá'í writings on caring for those in need:
What could be better before God than thinking of the poor? For the poor are beloved by our heavenly Father. When Christ came upon the earth, those who believed in Him and followed Him were the poor and lowly, showing that the poor were near to God. ... [T]he poor are especially beloved of God. Their lives are full of difficulties, their trials continual, their hopes are in God alone. Therefore, you must assist the poor as much as possible, even by sacrifice of yourself. No deed of man is greater before God than helping the poor. ... Each one of you must have great consideration for the poor and render them assistance. Organize in an effort to help them and prevent increase of poverty. The greatest means for prevention is that whereby the laws of the community will be so framed and enacted that it will not be possible for a few to be millionaires and many destitute. One of Bahá'u'lláh's teachings is the adjustment of means of livelihood in human society. Under this adjustment there can be no extremes in human conditions as regards wealth and sustenance. ...

- 'Abdu'l-Bahá, PUP 216

Photo sources are here and here (latter copyright Bahá'í International Community).

25 December 2009

The vision of a peaceful world


Bahá'u'lláh wrote in the 19th century: "Let your vision be world embracing, rather than confined to your own selves."
How might we participate in this vision, and what might it enable us
to do?
Here from the head of Worldwide Federation of UN Associations (WFUNA):

"Global citizenship has been an ongoing theme for the WFUNA in the past year. Every individual who is a part of our network is a Global Citizen. We are all committed to the ideals of the United Nations, express an acute interest in today's global issues, and are working towards a world of peaceful cooperation, sustainable development, and human rights for all people."

- Bonian Golmohammadi, Secretary-General http://is.gd/5ALZz



    God's greatest gift to man is that of intellect, or understanding...
    Possessing this gift, he...can frequently...reach out with prophetic vision.
    God gave this power to man that it might be used for the advancement of civilization, for the good of humanity, to increase love and concord and peace. ... Christ has commanded that [we] should love [our fellow-creatures as ourselves]!
    I hope that you will use your understanding to promote the unity and tranquillity of mankind, to give enlightenment and civilization to the people, to produce love in all around you, and to bring about the universal peace. ...
   [A]cquire more and more knowledge. Assuredly one may learn to the end of one's life! Use your knowledge always for the benefit of others; so may war cease on the face of this beautiful earth, and a glorious edifice of peace and concord be raised.

    If you desire with all your heart, friendship with every race on earth, your thought, spiritual and positive, will spread; it will become the desire of others, growing stronger and stronger, until it reaches the minds of all men.
    Do not despair! Work steadily. Sincerity and love will conquer hate. How many seemingly impossible events are coming to pass in these days! Set your faces steadily towards the Light of the World. ...

    By the fire of the Love of God the veil is burnt which separates us from the Heavenly Realities, and with clear vision we are enabled to struggle onward and upward, ever progressing in the paths of virtue and holiness, and becoming the means of light to the world. 

- 'Abdu'l-Bahá http://is.gd/5ANxU, http://is.gd/5ANvv, http://is.gd/5AP4p



Fariborz Sahba, architect of the Mount Carmel Terraces  ...



Photo copyright Bahá'í International Community. View here.


24 December 2009

The mysterious power in God's mention, in glorifying His praise

Consider this passage:

Blessed is the spot, and the house, and the place, and the city, and the heart, and the mountain, and the refuge, and the cave, and the valley, and the land, and the sea, and the island, and the meadow where mention of God hath been made, and His praise glorified.

- Bahá'u'lláh http://is.gd/5ztAo

What is there, actually, in such a heavenly "blessing"?



The Shrine of Bahá'u'lláh

Photo copyright Bahá'í International Community. View here.

23 December 2009

The gift of remembrance - an opportunity to understand history


Excerpts from a thought-provoking article in the New York Times, and from the House of Justice's analysis of the significance of the events of the 20th century, Century of Light.




"...the gift of remembrance for peoples, as for individuals, is the beginning of any psychological cure. Hence the importance of the theme of decline.
"...one simple truth: Those who have the best tools to make history are also those who have the sharpest awareness of its tragic character. The great disasters of the 20th century are all part of our heritage. We are creatures of the decline and the abyss, thirsty for rebirth and salvation."

- The Decline of the West by THÉRÈSE DELPECH, published on NYTimes.com, December 21, 2009

The image

    The twentieth century, the most turbulent in the history of the human race, has reached its end. ...
    Only as humanity comes to understand the implications of what occurred during this [great turning point through which our world has passed in these crucial hundred years] will it be able to meet the challenges that lie ahead. The value of the contribution we as Bahá'ís can make to the process demands that we ourselves grasp the significance of the historic transformation wrought by the twentieth century. ... It is this opportunity that the following pages address.

- Century of Light, The Universal House of Justice, p. 1


Book cover from here.

22 December 2009

Time to wait?

Time to contemplate?















"There is no time to lose. There is no room left for vacillation. Multitudes hunger for the Bread of Life. The stage is set. The firm and irrevocable Promise is given. God's own Plan has been set in motion. It is gathering momentum with every passing day. The powers of heaven and earth mysteriously assist in its execution. Such an opportunity is irreplaceable. Let the doubter arise and himself verify the truth of such assertions. To try, to persevere, is to insure ultimate and complete victory."


"The Kingdom of God," writes 'Abdu'l-Bahá, "is possessed of limitless potency. Audacious must be the army of life if the confirming aid of that Kingdom is to be repeatedly vouchsafed unto it…. Vast is the arena, and the time ripe to spur on the charger within it. Now is the time to reveal the force of one's strength, the stoutness of one's heart and the might of one's soul." ...

- Shoghi Effendi, both excerpts from letter of January 28, 1939
http://is.gd/5wSkV, http://is.gd/5wRkM

Image source: sxu.hu

15 December 2009

Here and now

So much to do, so little time.
Yet above all, contentment, thankfulness;
Life doesn't end at death -
the here and NOW spells our eternal quest. 





Be not troubled because of hardships and ordeals; turn unto God, bowing in humbleness and praying to Him, while bearing every ordeal, contented under all conditions and thankful in every difficulty.


- 'Abdu'l-Bahá, Tablets 51


The virtues and attributes pertaining unto God are all evident and manifest, and have been mentioned and described in all the heavenly Books. Among them are...contentment with the things His Will hath provided, patience, nay, thankfulness in the midst of tribulation, and complete reliance, in all circumstances, upon Him.


- Bahá'u'lláh, Gleanings 290


From amongst all mankind hath He chosen you, and your eyes have been opened to the light of guidance and your ears attuned to the music of the Company above; and blessed by abounding grace, your hearts and souls have been born into new life. Thank ye and praise ye God that the hand of infinite bestowals hath set upon your heads this gem-studded crown, this crown whose lustrous jewels will forever flash and sparkle down all the reaches of time.
To thank Him for this, make ye a mighty effort, and choose for yourselves a noble goal. Through the power of faith, obey ye the teachings of God, and let all your actions conform to His laws. Read ye The Hidden Words, ponder the inner meanings thereof, act in accord therewith. Read, with close attention, the Tablets of Tarazát (Ornaments), Kalímát (Words of Paradise), Tajallíyyát (Effulgences), Ishráqát (Splendours), and Bishárát (Glad Tidings), and rise up as ye are bidden in the heavenly teachings. Thus may each one of you be even as a candle casting its light, the centre of attraction wherever people come together; and from you, as from a bed of flowers, may sweet scents be shed.


- 'Abdu'l-Bahá, Selections 35-6


"Success or failure, gain or loss, must...depend upon man's own exertions. The more he striveth, the greater will be his progress."


- Bahá'u'lláh, Gleanings 81-2

Photo source: stock.xchng



14 December 2009

Second threat of carbon emissions: Ocean acidification

Some relevant reports on this topical issue.

Excerpts from a Times Online article:

The changes being observed [in ocean acidity] are beginning to disrupt the ability of any organism to make shells out of calcium carbonate. Organisms that do this include corals, crabs, lobsters, small creatures vital to the diet of fish and plankton...

Video (3 min.) of U.S. Rep. Jay Inslee making a statement on global climate change science
Statement made in a December 2, 2009, governmental hearing. Two other videos (7 min.) referred to in the article included below can be viewed here and here.



In its statement, "Seizing the Opportunity: Redefining the challenge of climate change", the Bahá'í International Community wrote (2008):

[T]he search for solutions to climate change has revealed the limits of traditional technological and policy approaches. ... [They] have brought us...the [tremendous] opportunity to take the next step in the transition from a state-centered mode of interacting on the world stage to one rooted in the unity which connects us as the inhabitants of one biosphere, the citizens of one world and the members of one human civilization. ...
Source: BIC Statements

A graph from the BBC-article "'Acidifying oceans' threaten food supply, UK warns" showing the chemistry of acidification:



Regarding the hacked emails that stirred controversy recently over the science of climate change (more on that here):

[Mr. Yvo de Boer, the UN's top climate official] said the emails hacked from the British university fuelled scepticism... [Yet he] defended the rigorous review process by some 2,500 scientists of climate change research as solid and thorough.

Whoever leaked that clutch of Climategate emails last month... has unleashed upon the rest of us the phenomenon of the born-again climate sceptic, the kind of man...that...has been having second thoughts about climate change.
My first instinct is always to humour him... My follow-up question is this: "Do you know that climate change is not the only reason to be uneasy about carbon emissions?" ...
Ocean acidification has been quite scandalously left out of the reckoning in the past few weeks. I am not for a moment belittling the science behind man-made global warming. ... That levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are rising is not disputed. ...
We know the ocean absorbs about 25% of the carbon dioxide we emit each year. This CO2 dissolves through wind and wave action to form carbonic acid. This is altering the chemistry of the seas in ways that are not disputed and are far simpler to understand than the effect the same pollutants are having on the atmosphere. I recommend the startling practical demonstration on YouTube of what acidity will do to the oceans given by Jane Lubchenco, administrator of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration...this month.
Since the beginning of the industrial revolution in about 1750, sea water acidity has increased by 30%. The speed and degree of this change are faster than anything that had happened for 55m (million) years. The changes being observed are beginning to disrupt the ability of any organism to make shells out of calcium carbonate. Organisms that do this include corals, crabs, lobsters, small creatures vital to the diet of fish and plankton...
Projections show that by 2060, given the current rate of fossil-fuel emissions, sea water acidity could have increased by 120%. Lubchenco showed Congress a scary picture of what a shell would look like if it had spent a month in water as acidic as this. The shell had begun to dissolve.
Such an effect could trigger a chain of reactions through entire ecosystems, from whales to fish and shellfish, with huge implications for economies and wildlife. It could even stop the sea absorbing as much carbon dioxide as it does now, accelerating global warming. ...
Predictably, the science of ocean acidification, which is accepted by governments on both sides of the Atlantic, does not go uncontested by the global warming sceptics. They say you can't acidify the ocean because it washes over alkaline rocks. This process of weathering rocks is indeed how the alkalinity of the ocean will recover, but leading scientists say it will take hundreds of thousands of years. At the unprecedented speed that acidification is happening, the marine organisms will be knocked out before the rocks can dilute the acid [no reference here - A.].
There is plenty we still need to know about the acidification of the ocean. However, it looks as if unpleasant things start to happen if we go beyond 450 parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (bear in mind we reached 390ppm earlier this year). That is, coincidentally, the threshold for holding the Earth's average temperature rise down to a relatively "safe" 2C.
So ocean acidification, which people are beginning to call climate change's "evil twin", may be an even more pressing reason to move to a low-carbon economy than climate change itself. ...
Source: timesonline.co.uk

Photo source: stock.xchng

11 December 2009

Human Rights issue at crux of nations' development, prosperity

"[T]oday on Human Rights Day, the United Nations is urging everyone everywhere in the world to embrace diversity and end discrimination."




Following are excerpts from a compelling statement by a top U.N. official on the universal imperative of safeguarding the rights of the poor and underprivileged in all countries.

Bahá'u'lláh has likewise highlighted the virtue of
unity in diversity -

"[R]egard ye not one another as strangers. Ye are the fruits of one tree, and the leaves of one branch."(1)

From UN Dispatch.
Special Guest Post for Human Rights Day: Navi Pillay

Mark Leon Goldberg
- December 9, 2009


By Navi Pillay, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

Old and new forms of discrimination and intolerance continue to divide communities all over the world. Sentiments of xenophobia are on the rise. They are often manipulated for demagogic purposes or even for sinister political agendas. Day after day, their corrosive effects undermine the rights of countless victims. This is why today on Human Rights Day, the United Nations is urging everyone everywhere in the world to embrace diversity and end discrimination. ...


Persons with disabilities make up the world's largest and most disadvantaged minority. For example, 98% of children with disabilities in developing countries do not attend school. Indigenous peoples represent 5% of the world's population, but 15% of its poorest people. Women account for two-thirds of the world's working hours and produce half of the world's food. Yet, due to discrimination and stereotypical gender roles, they earn only 10% of the world's income and own less than 1% of the world's property.
History has proved time and again that, when discrimination, inequality and intolerance are allowed to take root, they may shatter the very foundations of societies and damage them for generations. Left unchecked, they may spill across borders and poison relations among nations. ...
It is undeniable that progress has been remarkable, but we should not pause. Discrimination does not go away by itself. It must be challenged at every turn. We must move forward and move quickly.


We must never lose sight of the fact that the enjoyment of human rights enriches us all. Conversely, when human dignity is undercut or denied by human rights violations, then such abuses affect all of us. This is particularly true in our increasingly multi-ethnic and multicultural societies. ...
On this very day in 1948, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights stated unequivocally that all human beings are born equal in dignity and rights. More than sixty years later, these words resonate with unaltered poignancy. Let us make the Universal Declaration of Human Rights' principles of equality, freedom and dignity for all a reality everywhere. Universal tolerance and respect for diversity is our goal.
Source: http://www.undispatch.com/node/9243
Logo obtained here.


Notes:
(1) Bahá'u'lláh, Tablets 164
 

10 December 2009

Temples symbolize human rights, oneness of humanity

Human Rights Day is marked in Germany with concern expressed over human rights violations in Iran.




"The Baha'i House of Worship is itself an architectural monument to human rights, since different religions come into contact here."

- Kordula Schulze-Asche, chairwoman of the Green Party in the German federal state of Hesse.


The Bahá'í House of Worship in Langenhain, Germany

Full story: "Human Rights Day in Germany puts spotlight on Iran" http://news.bahai.org/story/740

There are spiritual principles, or what some call human values, by which solutions can be found for every social problem. ... [G]ood intentions and practical knowledge are usually not enough. The essential merit of spiritual principle is that it not only presents a perspective which harmonizes with that which is immanent in human nature, it also induces an attitude, a dynamic, a will, an aspiration, which facilitate the discovery and implementation of practical measures. ... [A]ll in authority would be well served in their efforts to solve problems if they would first seek to identify the principles involved and then be guided by them.

- The Universal House of Justice, The Promise of World Peace http://info.bahai.org/article-1-7-2-1.html


Musician Anke Keitel explains the ties she feels with the young people of Iran.

Photos Copyright Bahá'í International Community. View here and here.

7 December 2009

Prayer -> action: a wholesome recipe for balanced living

Devotional meeting, then children's class - the perfect combination for a successful day. Thanks to those who made it happen!

The Keynote of success in the teaching field is study of the Word, Prayer, Meditation; and then action. Above all, perseverance in action. When these steps are followed in the realm of self-sacrifice, success will be achieved.

- Shoghi Effendi through his secretary, in High Endeavors, p. 27.


Devotional at the Bahá'í Center in Oslo

6 December 2009

Love, contentment, tranquillity

Contentment is where tranquility is found;
in assurance that one was "created rich,"
that all that befalls one is of "profit" to oneself
so long as one can be "content" therewith.

O SON OF MAN!
I loved thy creation, hence I created thee.
Wherefore, do thou love Me,
that I may name thy name and fill thy soul with the spirit of life.
- Bahá'u'lláh, The Hidden Words, A4



The cell occupied by Bahá’u’lláh in ‘Akká (Acre), Israel, restored.

O SON OF BEING!
Thou art My lamp and My light is in thee.
Get thou from it thy radiance and seek none other than Me.
For I have created thee rich and have bountifully shed My favor upon thee.
- Bahá'u'lláh, The Hidden Words, A11



I swear by My life!
Nothing save that which profiteth them can befall My loved ones.
To this testifieth the Pen of God, the Most Powerful, the All-Glorious, the Best Beloved.
- Bahá'u'lláh, quoted in The Advent of Divine Justice, 82


O SON OF SPIRIT!
Ask not of Me that which We desire not for thee,
then be content with what We have ordained for thy sake,
for this is that which profiteth thee,
if therewith thou dost content thyself.
- Bahá'u'lláh, The Hidden Words, A18


Photo Copyright 2009, Bahá'í International Community. View here.



4 December 2009

Dizzying power of "one righteous act"!


One righteous act is endowed with a potency that can so elevate the dust as to cause it to pass beyond the heaven of heavens. It can tear every bond asunder, and hath the power to restore the force that hath spent itself and vanished….

- Bahá'u'lláh, Gleanings 287


Informal picture of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá with Pauline Morse in His arms, Green Acre, United States of America. August 1912.


Photo Copyright Bahá'í International Community. View here.

A lesson in moderation - balancing professionalism with humanity in sport - as per Tiger Woods

The sempiternal lesson: moderation. Here from the Bahá'í writings:
"Whatsoever passeth beyond the limits of moderation will cease to exert a beneficial influence."

"Whoso cleaveth to justice, can, under no circumstances, transgress the limits of moderation. He discerneth the truth in all things, through the guidance of Him Who is the All-Seeing. ... All...things are subject to this same principle of moderation."

- Bahá'u'lláh, in Tablets 169 and Gleanings 343-4 respectively.
Below are experts from a very thoughtful article in The Times Online that highlights the limits of specialization (and idolization) in sports, with reference to pro-golfer Tiger Woods. Read it in full here.


December 3, 2009

Tiger must grow up – and his fans must let him

by Ed Smith

Once sport was a way to build character, now it tries to eliminate it. So it’s no surprise when the cracks start to show


The Woods legend has entrenched the cult of professional obsession, the Malcolm Gladwell view that anyone can be a genius so long as they practise for 10,000 hours. Woods has been the ultimate pin-up boy for that way of life. It’s long overdue for a serious rethink. Brilliant sportsmen, whatever they may tell you, are a lot like everyone else. Yes, sportsmen have to make sacrifices to get to the top; yes, there is a lot of pressure when they get there; yes, it’s a tough life. So is being a great surgeon, so is being a great teacher, so is being a great actor.

The pursuit of excellence, whatever the discipline, demands bravery and dedication. Sporting exceptionalism — that sport is a special realm populated by a superbreed — is a myth sold to gullible fans to boost TV viewing figures. ...

Doing only one thing for ever, without ever wondering if it can be entirely fulfilling, suits very few human beings.

It is a practical point as well as a moral one. Excessive narrowness isn’t just bad for you as a person, it’s bad for you as a performer. ...

The monomania of Tiger Woods or Geoff Boycott doesn’t work for many people. Now we are learning that it isn’t even working for Tiger Woods.

And anyway, surely one day it is only natural that golfers must fall out of love with golf. ...

Tiring of sport should be considered an essential part of growing up, a human badge of honour, not a cause for reproach. Professional sport is stuck in a dangerous state of arrested development where it demands that grown adults indefinitely retain the egotistical narrow-mindedness of teenagers. ...

Let's hope Woods’ unravelling prompts a shift in mood. So far he has been the standard-bearer for our age of professionalism: workaholic relentlessness, nothing left to chance, the elimination of emotion, it’s only the winning that counts, say nothing, follow the endorsements. ...

Now it is time for Act II... It’s time we all grew up — and allowed sportsmen to do the same.

Ed Smith is a former England cricketer. He is now a Times leader writer. www.edsmith.org.uk

Read the full article here.
Image from stock.xchng. View here (Image ID: 1166782).

1 December 2009

Motion, movement an inseparable concomitant of existence

If the full moon is almost straight above my head,
then the sun is almost directly below my feet.
And where am I?
On a globe traversing the heavens!


(The following is from 'Abdu'l-Bahá's "Tablet of the Universe")

Divine and all-encompassing Wisdom hath ordained that motion be an inseparable concomitant of existence, whether inherently or accidentally, spiritually or materially. This movement must be governed by some check or rein, some regulator or director, otherwise order will be disrupted and the spheres and bodies will fall from the heavens. For this reason God brought into being a universal attractive force between these bodies to hold sway over them and govern them, a force deriving from the firm ties, the mighty correspondence and affinity that exist between the realities of these limitless worlds. By the operation of this attractive force those holy and resplendent suns, with their luminous worlds, satellites and planets, circling and orbiting in their heavens, at once exerted attraction and were subject to it, induced motion and were themselves moved, began orbiting and set into orbit other bodies, shone forth and caused others to shine. ... Glory be to Him Who attracted them, laid firm hold on them, imbued them with effulgence, ordered them and set them in motion; and far from His glory be that which any of his creatures can affirm of Him or attribute to Him. ...


Know thou that the expressions of the creative hand of God throughout His limitless worlds are themselves limitless. Limitations are a characteristic of the finite, and restriction is a quality of existent things, not of the reality of existence.

This being the case, how can one, without proof or testimony, conceive of creation being bound by limits? Gaze with penetrating vision into this new cycle. Hast thou seen any matter in which God is bounded by limits which He cannot overstep? Nay, by the excellence of His glory! On the contrary, His tokens have encompassed all things and are sanctified and exalted beyond computation in the world of creation.

These are spiritual truths relating to the spiritual world. In like manner, from these spiritual realities infer truths about the material world. For physical things are signs and imprints of spiritual things; every lower thing is an image and counterpart of a higher thing. Nay, earthly and heavenly, material and spiritual, accidental and essential, particular and universal, structure and foundation, appearance and reality and the essence of all things, both inward and outward -- all of these are connected one with another and are interrelated in such a manner that you will find that drops are patterned after seas, and that atoms are structured after suns in proportion to their capacities and potentialities. ... Universal and particular are in reality incidental and relative considerations. The mercy of thy Lord, verily, encompasseth all things!

- 'Abdu'l-Bahá, Tablet of the Universe (provisional translation), read it here.


Photos of tonight's moon by the undersigned.

The poor as an inspiration

"[A]ssist the poor as much as possible, even by sacrifice of yourself."

Show me a greater motivating power to work for the common weal than this -

What could be better before God than thinking of the poor? For the poor are beloved by our heavenly Father. When Christ came upon the earth, those who believed in Him and followed Him were the poor and lowly, showing that the poor were near to God. When a rich man believes and follows the Manifestation of God, it is a proof that his wealth is not an obstacle and does not prevent him from attaining the pathway of salvation. After he has been tested and tried, it will be seen whether his possessions are a hindrance in his religious life. But the poor are especially beloved of God. Their lives are full of difficulties, their trials continual, their hopes are in God alone. Therefore, you must assist the poor as much as possible, even by sacrifice of yourself. No deed of man is greater before God than helping the poor. Spiritual conditions are not dependent upon the possession of worldly treasures or the absence of them. When one is physically destitute, spiritual thoughts are more likely. Poverty is a stimulus toward God. Each one of you must have great consideration for the poor and render them assistance.

- `Abdu'l-Bahá, The Promulgation of Universal Peace, p. 216


Teaching the Faith in Nedrini, Panama

Photo © Bahá’í World Centre - view here