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The Promise of World Peace
[A Statement by the Universal
House of Justice, Bahá'í World Center]
October 1985
To the Peoples of the World:
The Great Peace towards which people of good will throughout
the centuries have inclined their hearts, of which seers and poets
for countless generations have expressed their vision, and for
which from age to age the sacred scriptures of mankind have constantly
held the promise, is now at long last within the reach of the
nations. For the first time in history it is possible for everyone
to view the entire planet, with all its myriad diversified peoples,
in one perspective. World peace is not only possible but inevitable.
It is the next stage in the evolution of this planet -- in the
words of one great thinker, "the planetization of mankind".
Whether peace is to be reached only after unimaginable horrors
precipitated by humanity's stubborn clinging to old patterns of
behaviour, or is to be embraced now by an act of consultative
will, is the choice before all who inhabit the earth. At this
critical juncture when the intractable problems confronting nations
have been fused into one common concern for the whole world, failure
to stem the tide of conflict and disorder would be unconscionably
irresponsible.
Among the favourable signs are the steadily growing strength
of the steps towards world order taken initially near the beginning
of this century in the creation of the League of Nations, succeeded
by the more broadly based United Nations Organization; the achievement
since the Second World War of independence by the majority of
all the nations on earth, indicating the completion of the process
of nation building, and the involvement of these fledgling nations
with older ones in matters of mutual concern; the consequent vast
increase in co-operation among hitherto isolated and antagonistic
peoples and groups in international undertakings in the scientific,
educational, legal, economic and cultural fields; the rise in
recent decades of an unprecedented number of international humanitarian
organizations; the spread of women's and youth movements calling
for an end to war; and the spontaneous spawning of widening networks
of ordinary people seeking understanding through personal communication.
The scientific and technological advances occurring in this unusually
blessed century portend a great surge forward in the social evolution
of the planet, and indicate the means by which the practical problems
of humanity may be solved. They provide, indeed, the very means
for the administration of the complex life of a united world.
Yet barriers persist. Doubts, misconceptions, prejudices, suspicions
and narrow self-interest beset nations and peoples in their relations
one to another.
It is out of a deep sense of spiritual and moral duty that we
are impelled at this opportune moment to invite your attention
to the penetrating insights first communicated to the rulers of
mankind more than a century ago by Bahá'u'lláh, Founder of the
Bahá'í Faith, of which we are the Trustees.
"The winds of despair", Bahá'u'lláh wrote, "are,
alas, blowing from every direction, and the strife that divides
and afflicts the human race is daily increasing. The signs of
impending convulsions and chaos can now be discerned, inasmuch
as the prevailing order appears to be lamentably defective."
This prophetic judgement has been amply confirmed by the common
experience of humanity. Flaws in the prevailing order are conspicuous
in the inability of sovereign states organized as United Nations
to exorcize the spectre of war, the threatened collapse of the
international economic order, the spread of anarchy and terrorism,
and the intense suffering which these and other afflictions are
causing to increasing millions. Indeed, so much have aggression
and conflict come to characterize our social, economic and religious
systems, that many have succumbed to the view that such behaviour
is intrinsic to human nature and therefore ineradicable.
With the entrenchment of this view, a paralyzing contradiction
has developed in human affairs. On the one hand, people of all
nations proclaim not only their readiness but their longing for
peace and harmony, for an end to the harrowing apprehensions tormenting
their daily lives. On the other, uncritical assent is given to
the proposition that human beings are incorrigibly selfish and
aggressive and thus incapable of erecting a social system at once
progressive and peaceful, dynamic and harmonious, a system giving
free play to individual creativity and initiative but based on
co-operation and reciprocity.
As the need for peace becomes more urgent, this fundamental contradiction,
which hinders its realization, demands a reassessment of the assumptions
upon which the commonly held view of mankind's historical predicament
is based. Dispassionately examined, the evidence reveals that
such conduct, far from expressing man's true self, represents
a distortion of the human spirit. Satisfaction on this point will
enable all people to set in motion constructive social forces
which, because they are consistent with human nature, will encourage
harmony and co-operation instead of war and conflict.
To choose such a course is not to deny humanity's past but to
understand it. The Bahá'í Faith regards the current world confusion
and calamitous condition in human affairs as a natural phase in
an organic process leading ultimately and irresistibly to the
unification of the human race in a single social order whose boundaries
are those of the planet. The human race, as a distinct, organic
unit, has passed through evolutionary stages analogous to the
stages of infancy and childhood in the lives of its individual
members, and is now in the culminating period of its turbulent
adolescence approaching its long-awaited coming of age.
A candid acknowledgement that prejudice, war and exploitation
have been the expression of immature stages in a vast historical
process and that the human race is today experiencing the unavoidable
tumult which marks its collective coming of age is not a reason
for despair but a prerequisite to undertaking the stupendous enterprise
of building a peaceful world. That such an enterprise is possible,
that the necessary constructive forces do exist, that unifying
social structures can be erected, is the theme we urge you to
examine.
Whatever suffering and turmoil the years immediately ahead may
hold, however dark the immediate circumstances, the Bahá'í community
believes that humanity can confront this supreme trial with confidence
in its ultimate outcome. Far from signalizing the end of civilization,
the convulsive changes towards which humanity is being ever more
rapidly impelled will serve to release the "potentialities
inherent in the station of man" and reveal "the full
measure of his destiny on earth, the innate excellence of his
reality".
I
The endowments which distinguish the human race from all other
forms of life are summed up in what is known as the human spirit;
the mind is its essential quality. These endowments have enabled
humanity to build civilizations and to prosper materially. But
such accomplishments alone have never satisfied the human spirit,
whose mysterious nature inclines it towards transcendence, a reaching
towards an invisible realm, towards the ultimate reality, that
unknowable essence of essences called God. The religions brought
to mankind by a succession of spiritual luminaries have been the
primary link between humanity and that ultimate reality, and have
galvanized and refined mankind's capacity to achieve spiritual
success together with social progress.
No serious attempt to set human affairs aright, to achieve world
peace, can ignore religion. Man's perception and practice of it
are largely the stuff of history. An eminent historian described
religion as a "faculty of human nature". That the perversion
of this faculty has contributed to much of the confusion in society
and the conflicts in and between individuals can hardly be denied.
But neither can any fair-minded observer discount the preponderating
influence exerted by religion on the vital expressions of civilization.
Furthermore, its indispensability to social order has repeatedly
been demonstrated by its direct effect on laws and morality.
Writing of religion as a social force, Bahá'u'lláh said: "Religion
is the greatest of all means for the establishment of order in
the world and for the peaceful contentment of all that dwell therein."
Referring to the eclipse or corruption of religion, he wrote:
"Should the lamp of religion be obscured, chaos and confusion
will ensue, and the lights of fairness, of justice, of tranquillity
and peace cease to shine." In an enumeration of such consequences
the Bahá'í writings point out that the "perversion of human
nature, the degradation of human conduct, the corruption and dissolution
of human institutions, reveal themselves, under such circumstances,
in their worst and most revolting aspects. Human character is
debased, confidence is shaken, the nerves of discipline are relaxed,
the voice of human conscience is stilled, the sense of decency
and shame is obscured, conceptions of duty, of solidarity, of
reciprocity and loyalty are distorted, and the very feeling of
peacefulness, of joy and of hope is gradually extinguished."
If, therefore, humanity has come to a point of paralyzing conflict
it must look to itself, to its own negligence, to the siren voices
to which it has listened, for the source of the misunderstandings
and confusion perpetrated in the name of religion. Those who have
held blindly and selfishly to their particular orthodoxies, who
have imposed on their votaries erroneous and conflicting interpretations
of the pronouncements of the Prophets of God, bear heavy responsibility
for this confusion -- a confusion compounded by the artificial
barriers erected between faith and reason, science and religion.
For from a fair-minded examination of the actual utterances of
the Founders of the great religions, and of the social milieus
in which they were obliged to carry out their missions, there
is nothing to support the contentions and prejudices deranging
the religious communities of mankind and therefore all human affairs.
The teaching that we should treat others as we ourselves would
wish to be treated, an ethic variously repeated in all the great
religions, lends force to this latter observation in two particular
respects: it sums up the moral attitude, the peace-inducing aspect,
extending through these religions irrespective of their place
or time of origin; it also signifies an aspect of unity which
is their essential virtue, a virtue mankind in its disjointed
view of history has failed to appreciate.
Had humanity seen the Educators of its collective childhood in
their true character, as agents of one civilizing process, it
would no doubt have reaped incalculably greater benefits from
the cumulative effects of their successive missions. This, alas,
it failed to do.
The resurgence of fanatical religious fervour occurring in many
lands cannot be regarded as more than a dying convulsion. The
very nature of the violent and disruptive phenomena associated
with it testifies to the spiritual bankruptcy it represents. Indeed,
one of the strangest and saddest features of the current outbreak
of religious fanaticism is the extent to which, in each case,
it is undermining not only the spiritual values which are conducive
to the unity of mankind but also those unique moral victories
won by the particular religion it purports to serve.
However vital a force religion has been in the history of mankind,
and however dramatic the current resurgence of militant religious
fanaticism, religion and religious institutions have, for many
decades, been viewed by increasing numbers of people as irrelevant
to the major concerns of the modern world. In its place they have
turned either to the hedonistic pursuit of material satisfactions
or to the following of man-made ideologies designed to rescue
society from the evident evils under which it groans. All too
many of these ideologies, alas, instead of embracing the concept
of the oneness of mankind and promoting the increase of concord
among different peoples, have tended to deify the state, to subordinate
the rest of mankind to one nation, race or class, to attempt to
suppress all discussion and interchange of ideas, or to callously
abandon starving millions to the operations of a market system
that all too clearly is aggravating the plight of the majority
of mankind, while enabling small sections to live in a condition
of affluence scarcely dreamed of by our forebears.
How tragic is the record of the substitute faiths that the worldly-wise
of our age have created. In the massive disillusionment of entire
populations who have been taught to worship at their altars can
be read history's irreversible verdict on their value. The fruits
these doctrines have produced, after decades of an increasingly
unrestrained exercise of power by those who owe their ascendancy
in human affairs to them, are the social and economic ills that
blight every region of our world in the closing years of the twentieth
century. Underlying all these outward afflictions is the spiritual
damage reflected in the apathy that has gripped the mass of the
peoples of all nations and by the extinction of hope in the hearts
of deprived and anguished millions.
The time has come when those who preach the dogmas of materialism,
whether of the east or the west, whether of capitalism or socialism,
must give account of the moral stewardship they have presumed
to exercise. Where is the "new world" promised by these
ideologies? Where is the international peace to whose ideals they
proclaim their devotion? Where are the breakthroughs into new
realms of cultural achievement produced by the aggrandizement
of this race, of that nation or of a particular class? Why is
the vast majority of the world's peoples sinking ever deeper into
hunger and wretchedness when wealth on a scale undreamed of by
the Pharaohs, the Caesars, or even the imperialist powers of the
nineteenth century is at the disposal of the present arbiters
of human affairs?
Most particularly, it is in the glorification of material pursuits,
at once the progenitor and common feature of all such ideologies,
that we find the roots which nourish the falsehood that human
beings are incorrigibly selfish and aggressive. It is here that
the ground must be cleared for the building of a new world fit
for our descendants.
That materialistic ideals have, in the light of experience, failed
to satisfy the needs of mankind calls for an honest acknowledgement
that a fresh effort must now be made to find the solutions to
the agonizing problems of the planet. The intolerable conditions
pervading society bespeak a common failure of all, a circumstance
which tends to incite rather than relieve the entrenchment on
every side. Clearly, a common remedial effort is urgently required.
It is primarily a matter of attitude. Will humanity continue in
its waywardness, holding to outworn concepts and unworkable assumptions?
Or will its leaders, regardless of ideology, step forth and, with
a resolute will, consult together in a united search for appropriate
solutions?
Those who care for the future of the human race may well ponder
this advice. "If long-cherished ideals and time-honoured
institutions, if certain social assumptions and religious formulae
have ceased to promote the welfare of the generality of mankind,
if they no longer minister to the needs of a continually evolving
humanity, let them be swept away and relegated to the limbo of
obsolescent and forgotten doctrines. Why should these, in a world
subject to the immutable law of change and decay, be exempt from
the deterioration that must needs overtake every human institution?
For legal standards, political and economic theories are solely
designed to safeguard the interests of humanity as a whole, and
not humanity to be crucified for the preservation of the integrity
of any particular law or doctrine."
II
Banning nuclear weapons, prohibiting the use of poison gases,
or outlawing germ warfare will not remove the root causes of war.
However important such practical measures obviously are as elements
of the peace process, they are in themselves too superficial to
exert enduring influence. Peoples are ingenious enough to invent
yet other forms of warfare, and to use food, raw materials, finance,
industrial power, ideology, and terrorism to subvert one another
in an endless quest for supremacy and dominion. Nor can the present
massive dislocation in the affairs of humanity be resolved through
the settlement of specific conflicts or disagreements among nations.
A genuine universal framework must be adopted.
Certainly, there is no lack of recognition by national leaders
of the world-wide character of the problem, which is self-evident
in the mounting issues that confront them daily. And there are
the accumulating studies and solutions proposed by many concerned
and enlightened groups as well as by agencies of the United Nations,
to remove any possibility of ignorance as to the challenging requirements
to be met. There is, however, a paralysis of will; and it is this
that must be carefully examined and resolutely dealt with. This
paralysis is rooted, as we have stated, in a deep-seated conviction
of the inevitable quarrelsomeness of mankind, which has led to
the reluctance to entertain the possibility of subordinating national
self-interest to the requirements of world order, and in an unwillingness
to face courageously the far-reaching implications of establishing
a united world authority. It is also traceable to the incapacity
of largely ignorant and subjugated masses to articulate their
desire for a new order in which they can live in peace, harmony
and prosperity with all humanity.
The tentative steps towards world order, especially since World
War II, give hopeful signs. The increasing tendency of groups
of nations to formalize relationships which enable them to co-operate
in matters of mutual interest suggests that eventually all nations
could overcome this paralysis. The Association of South East Asian
Nations, the Caribbean Community and Common Market, the Central
American Common Market, the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance,
the European Communities, the League of Arab States, the Organization
of African Unity, the Organization of American States, the South
Pacific Forum -- all the joint endeavours represented by such
organizations prepare the path to world order.
The increasing attention being focused on some of the most deep-rooted
problems of the planet is yet another hopeful sign. Despite the
obvious short-comings of the United Nations, the more than two
score declarations and conventions adopted by that organization,
even where governments have not been enthusiastic in their commitment,
have given ordinary people a sense of a new lease on life. The
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, and the similar measures
concerned with eliminating all forms of discrimination based on
race, sex or religious belief; upholding the rights of the child;
protecting all persons against being subjected to torture; eradicating
hunger and malnutrition; using scientific and technological progress
in the interest of peace and the benefit of mankind -- all such
measures, if courageously enforced and expanded, will advance
the day when the spectre of war will have lost its power to dominate
international relations. There is no need to stress the significance
of the issues addressed by these declarations and conventions.
However, a few such issues, because of their immediate relevance
to establishing world peace, deserve additional comment.
Racism, one of the most baneful and persistent evils, is a major
barrier to peace. Its practice perpetrates too outrageous a violation
of the dignity of human beings to be countenanced under any pretext.
Racism retards the unfoldment of the boundless potentialities
of its victims, corrupts its perpetrators, and blights human progress.
Recognition of the oneness of mankind, implemented by appropriate
legal measures, must be universally upheld if this problem is
to be overcome.
The inordinate disparity between rich and poor, a source of acute
suffering, keeps the world in a state of instability, virtually
on the brink of war. Few societies have dealt effectively with
this situation. The solution calls for the combined application
of spiritual, moral and practical approaches. A fresh look at
the problem is required, entailing consultation with experts from
a wide spectrum of disciplines, devoid of economic and ideological
polemics, and involving the people directly affected in the decisions
that must urgently be made. It is an issue that is bound up not
only with the necessity for eliminating extremes of wealth and
poverty but also with those spiritual verities the understanding
of which can produce a new universal attitude. Fostering such
an attitude is itself a major part of the solution.
Unbridled nationalism, as distinguished from a sane and legitimate
patriotism, must give way to a wider loyalty, to the love of humanity
as a whole. Bahá'u'lláh's statement is: "The earth is but
one country, and mankind its citizens." The concept of world
citizenship is a direct result of the contraction of the world
into a single neighbourhood through scientific advances and of
the indisputable interdependence of nations. Love of all the world's
peoples does not exclude love of one's country. The advantage
of the part in a world society is best served by promoting the
advantage of the whole. Current international activities in various
fields which nurture mutual affection and a sense of solidarity
among peoples need greatly to be increased.
Religious strife, throughout history, has been the cause of innumerable
wars and conflicts, a major blight to progress, and is increasingly
abhorrent to the people of all faiths and no faith. Followers
of all religions must be willing to face the basic questions which
this strife raises, and to arrive at clear answers. How are the
differences between them to be resolved, both in theory and in
practice? The challenge facing the religious leaders of mankind
is to contemplate, with hearts filled with the spirit of compassion
and a desire for truth, the plight of humanity, and to ask themselves
whether they cannot, in humility before their Almighty Creator,
submerge their theological differences in a great spirit of mutual
forbearance that will enable them to work together for the advancement
of human understanding and peace.
The emancipation of women, the achievement of full equality between
the sexes, is one of the most important, though less acknowledged
prerequisites of peace. The denial of such equality perpetrates
an injustice against one half of the world's population and promotes
in men harmful attitudes and habits that are carried from the
family to the workplace, to political life, and ultimately to
international relations. There are no grounds, moral, practical,
or biological, upon which such denial can be justified. Only as
women are welcomed into full partnership in all fields of human
endeavour will the moral and psychological climate be created
in which international peace can emerge.
The cause of universal education, which has already enlisted
in its service an army of dedicated people from every faith and
nation, deserves the utmost support that the governments of the
world can lend it. For ignorance is indisputably the principal
reason for the decline and fall of peoples and the perpetuation
of prejudice. No nation can achieve success unless education is
accorded all its citizens. Lack of resources limits the ability
of many nations to fulfil this necessity, imposing a certain ordering
of priorities. The decision-making agencies involved would do
well to consider giving first priority to the education of women
and girls, since it is through educated mothers that the benefits
of knowledge can be most effectively and rapidly diffused throughout
society. In keeping with the requirements of the times, consideration
should also be given to teaching the concept of world citizenship
as part of the standard education of every child.
A fundamental lack of communication between peoples seriously
undermines efforts towards world peace. Adopting an international
auxiliary language would go far to resolving this problem and
necessitates the most urgent attention.
Two points bear emphasizing in all these issues. One is that
the abolition of war is not simply a matter of signing treaties
and protocols; it is a complex task requiring a new level of commitment
to resolving issues not customarily associated with the pursuit
of peace. Based on political agreements alone, the idea of collective
security is a chimera. The other point is that the primary challenge
in dealing with issues of peace is to raise the context to the
level of principle, as distinct from pure pragmatism. For, in
essence, peace stems from an inner state supported by a spiritual
or moral attitude, and it is chiefly in evoking this attitude
that the possibility of enduring solutions can be found.
There are spiritual principles, or what some call human values,
by which solutions can be found for every social problem. Any
well-intentioned group can in a general sense devise practical
solutions to its problems, but good 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. Leaders of governments
and all 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.
III
The primary question to be resolved is how the present world,
with its entrenched pattern of conflict, can change to a world
in which harmony and co-operation will prevail.
World order can be founded only on an unshakeable consciousness
of the oneness of mankind, a spiritual truth which all the human
sciences confirm. Anthropology, physiology, psychology, recognize
only one human species, albeit infinitely varied in the secondary
aspects of life. Recognition of this truth requires abandonment
of prejudice -- prejudice of every kind -- race, class, colour,
creed, nation, sex, degree of material civilization, everything
which enables people to consider themselves superior to others.
Acceptance of the oneness of mankind is the first fundamental
prerequisite for reorganization and administration of the world
as one country, the home of humankind. Universal acceptance of
this spiritual principle is essential to any successful attempt
to establish world peace. It should therefore be universally proclaimed,
taught in schools, and constantly asserted in every nation as
preparation for the organic change in the structure of society
which it implies.
In the Bahá'í view, recognition of the oneness of mankind "calls
for no less than the reconstruction and the demilitarization of
the whole civilized world -- a world organically unified in all
the essential aspects of its life, its political machinery, its
spiritual aspiration, its trade and finance, its script and language,
and yet infinite in the diversity of the national characteristics
of its federated units."
Elaborating the implications of this pivotal principle, Shoghi
Effendi, the Guardian of the Bahá'í Faith, commented in 1931 that:
"Far from aiming at the subversion of the existing foundations
of society, it seeks to broaden its basis, to remold its institutions
in a manner consonant with the needs of an ever-changing world.
It can conflict with no legitimate allegiances, nor can it undermine
essential loyalties. Its purpose is neither to stifle the flame
of a sane and intelligent patriotism in men's hearts, nor to abolish
the system of national autonomy so essential if the evils of excessive
centralization are to be avoided. It does not ignore, nor does
it attempt to suppress, the diversity of ethnical origins, of
climate, of history, of language and tradition, of thought and
habit, that differentiate the peoples and nations of the world.
It calls for a wider loyalty, for a larger aspiration than any
that has animated the human race. It insists upon the subordination
of national impulses and interests to the imperative claims of
a unified world. It repudiates excessive centralization on one
hand, and disclaims all attempts at uniformity on the other. Its
watchword is unity in diversity".
The achievement of such ends requires several stages in the adjustment
of national political attitudes, which now verge on anarchy in
the absence of clearly defined laws or universally accepted and
enforceable principles regulating the relationships between nations.
The League of Nations, the United Nations, and the many organizations
and agreements produced by them have unquestionably been helpful
in attenuating some of the negative effects of international conflicts,
but they have shown themselves incapable of preventing war. Indeed,
there have been scores of wars since the end of the Second World
War; many are yet raging.
The predominant aspects of this problem had already emerged in
the nineteenth century when Bahá'u'lláh first advanced his proposals
for the establishment of world peace. The principle of collective
security was propounded by him in statements addressed to the
rulers of the world. Shoghi Effendi commented on his meaning:
"What else could these weighty words signify", he wrote,
"if they did not point to the inevitable curtailment of unfettered
national sovereignty as an indispensable preliminary to the formation
of the future Commonwealth of all the nations of the world? Some
form of a world super-state must needs be evolved, in whose favour
all the nations of the world will have willingly ceded every claim
to make war, certain rights to impose taxation and all rights
to maintain armaments, except for purposes of maintaining internal
order within their respective dominions. Such a state will have
to include within its orbit an International Executive adequate
to enforce supreme and unchallengeable authority on every recalcitrant
member of the commonwealth; a World Parliament whose members shall
be elected by the people in their respective countries and whose
election shall be confirmed by their respective governments; and
a Supreme Tribunal whose judgement will have a binding effect
even in such cases where the parties concerned did not voluntarily
agree to submit their case to its consideration.
"A world community in which all economic barriers will have
been permanently demolished and the interdependence of capital
and labour definitely recognized; in which the clamour of religious
fanaticism and strife will have been forever stilled; in which
the flame of racial animosity will have been finally extinguished;
in which a single code of international law -- the product of
the considered judgement of the world's federated representatives
-- shall have as its sanction the instant and coercive intervention
of the combined forces of the federated units; and finally a world
community in which the fury of a capricious and militant nationalism
will have been transmuted into an abiding consciousness of world
citizenship -- such indeed, appears, in its broadest outline,
the Order anticipated by Bahá'u'lláh, an Order that shall come
to be regarded as the fairest fruit of a slowly maturing age."
The implementation of these far-reaching measures was indicated
by Bahá'u'lláh: "The time must come when the imperative necessity
for the holding of a vast, an all-embracing assemblage of men
will be universally realized. The rulers and kings of the earth
must needs attend it, and, participating in its deliberations,
must consider such ways and means as will lay the foundations
of the world's Great Peace amongst men."
The courage, the resolution, the pure motive, the selfless love
of one people for another -- all the spiritual and moral qualities
required for effecting this momentous step towards peace are focused
on the will to act. And it is towards arousing the necessary volition
that earnest consideration must be given to the reality of man,
namely, his thought. To understand the relevance of this potent
reality is also to appreciate the social necessity of actualizing
its unique value through candid, dispassionate and cordial consultation,
and of acting upon the results of this process. Bahá'u'lláh insistently
drew attention to the virtues and indispensability of consultation
for ordering human affairs. He said: "Consultation bestows
greater awareness and transmutes conjecture into certitude. It
is a shining light which, in a dark world, leads the way and guides.
For everything there is and will continue to be a station of perfection
and maturity. The maturity of the gift of understanding is made
manifest through consultation." The very attempt to achieve
peace through the consultative action he proposed can release
such a salutary spirit among the peoples of the earth that no
power could resist the final, triumphal outcome.
Concerning the proceedings for this world gathering, `Abdu'l-Bahá,
the son of Bahá'u'lláh and authorized interpreter of his teachings,
offered these insights: "They must make the Cause of Peace
the object of general consultation, and seek by every means in
their power to establish a Union of the nations of the world.
They must conclude a binding treaty and establish a covenant,
the provisions of which shall be sound, inviolable and definite.
They must proclaim it to all the world and obtain for it the sanction
of all the human race. This supreme and noble undertaking -- the
real source of the peace and well-being of all the world -- should
be regarded as sacred by all that dwell on earth. All the forces
of humanity must be mobilized to ensure the stability and permanence
of this Most Great Covenant. In this all-embracing Pact the limits
and frontiers of each and every nation should be clearly fixed,
the principles underlying the relations of governments towards
one another definitely laid down, and all international agreements
and obligations ascertained. In like manner, the size of the armaments
of every government should be strictly limited, for if the preparations
for war and the military forces of any nation should be allowed
to increase, they will arouse the suspicion of others. The fundamental
principle underlying this solemn Pact should be so fixed that
if any government later violate any one of its provisions, all
the governments on earth should arise to reduce it to utter submission,
nay the human race as a whole should resolve, with every power
at its disposal, to destroy that government. Should this greatest
of all remedies be applied to the sick body of the world, it will
assuredly recover from its ills and will remain eternally safe
and secure."
The holding of this mighty convocation is long overdue.
With all the ardour of our hearts, we appeal to the leaders of
all nations to seize this opportune moment and take irreversible
steps to convoke this world meeting. All the forces of history
impel the human race towards this act which will mark for all
time the dawn of its long-awaited maturity.
Will not the United Nations, with the full support of its membership,
rise to the high purposes of such a crowning event?
Let men and women, youth and children everywhere recognize the
eternal merit of this imperative action for all peoples and lift
up their voices in willing assent. Indeed, let it be this generation
that inaugurates this glorious stage in the evolution of social
life on the planet.
IV
The source of the optimism we feel is a vision transcending the
cessation of war and the creation of agencies of international
co-operation. Permanent peace among nations is an essential stage,
but not, Bahá'u'lláh asserts, the ultimate goal of the social
development of humanity. Beyond the initial armistice forced upon
the world by the fear of nuclear holocaust, beyond the political
peace reluctantly entered into by suspicious rival nations, beyond
pragmatic arrangements for security and coexistence, beyond even
the many experiments in co-operation which these steps will make
possible lies the crowning goal: the unification of all the peoples
of the world in one universal family.
Disunity is a danger that the nations and peoples of the earth
can no longer endure; the consequences are too terrible to contemplate,
too obvious to require any demonstration. "The well-being
of mankind," Bahá'u'lláh wrote more than a century ago, "its
peace and security, are unattainable unless and until its unity
is firmly established." In observing that "mankind is
groaning, is dying to be led to unity, and to terminate its age-long
martyrdom", Shoghi Effendi further commented that: "Unification
of the whole of mankind is the hall-mark of the stage which human
society is now approaching. Unity of family, of tribe, of city-state,
and nation have been successively attempted and fully established.
World unity is the goal towards which a harassed humanity is striving.
Nation-building has come to an end. The anarchy inherent in state
sovereignty is moving towards a climax. A world, growing to maturity,
must abandon this fetish, recognize the oneness and wholeness
of human relationships, and establish once for all the machinery
that can best incarnate this fundamental principle of its life."
All contemporary forces of change validate this view. The proofs
can be discerned in the many examples already cited of the favourable
signs towards world peace in current international movements and
developments. The army of men and women, drawn from virtually
every culture, race and nation on earth, who serve the multifarious
agencies of the United Nations, represent a planetary "civil
service" whose impressive accomplishments are indicative
of the degree of co-operation that can be attained even under
discouraging conditions. An urge towards unity, like a spiritual
springtime, struggles to express itself through countless international
congresses that bring together people from a vast array of disciplines.
It motivates appeals for international projects involving children
and youth. Indeed, it is the real source of the remarkable movement
towards ecumenism by which members of historically antagonistic
religions and sects seem irresistibly drawn towards one another.
Together with the opposing tendency to warfare and self-aggrandizement
against which it ceaselessly struggles, the drive towards world
unity is one of the dominant, pervasive features of life on the
planet during the closing years of the twentieth century.
The experience of the Bahá'í community may be seen as an example
of this enlarging unity. It is a community of some three to four
million people drawn from many nations, cultures, classes and
creeds, engaged in a wide range of activities serving the spiritual,
social and economic needs of the peoples of many lands. It is
a single social organism, representative of the diversity of the
human family, conducting its affairs through a system of commonly
accepted consultative principles, and cherishing equally all the
great outpourings of divine guidance in human history. Its existence
is yet another convincing proof of the practicality of its Founder's
vision of a united world, another evidence that humanity can live
as one global society, equal to whatever challenges its coming
of age may entail. If the Bahá'í experience can contribute in
whatever measure to reinforcing hope in the unity of the human
race, we are happy to offer it as a model for study.
In contemplating the supreme importance of the task now challenging
the entire world, we bow our heads in humility before the awesome
majesty of the divine Creator, Who out of His infinite love has
created all humanity from the same stock; exalted the gem-like
reality of man; honoured it with intellect and wisdom, nobility
and immortality; and conferred upon man the "unique distinction
and capacity to know Him and to love Him", a capacity that
"must needs be regarded as the generating impulse and the
primary purpose underlying the whole of creation."
We hold firmly the conviction that all human beings have been
created "to carry forward an ever-advancing civilization";
that "to act like the beasts of the field is unworthy of
man"; that the virtues that befit human dignity are trustworthiness,
forbearance, mercy, compassion and loving-kindness towards all
peoples. We reaffirm the belief that the "potentialities
inherent in the station of man, the full measure of his destiny
on earth, the innate excellence of his reality, must all be manifested
in this promised Day of God." These are the motivations for
our unshakeable faith that unity and peace are the attainable
goal towards which humanity is striving.
At this writing, the expectant voices of Bahá'ís can be heard
despite the persecution they still endure in the land in which
their Faith was born. By their example of steadfast hope, they
bear witness to the belief that the imminent realization of this
age-old dream of peace is now, by virtue of the transforming effects
of Bahá'u'lláh's revelation, invested with the force of divine
authority. Thus we convey to you not only a vision in words: we
summon the power of deeds of faith and sacrifice; we convey the
anxious plea of our co-religionists everywhere for peace and unity.
We join with all who are the victims of aggression, all who yearn
for an end to conflict and contention, all whose devotion to principles
of peace and world order promotes the ennobling purposes for which
humanity was called into being by an all-loving Creator.
In the earnestness of our desire to impart to you the fervour
of our hope and the depth of our confidence, we cite the emphatic
promise of Bahá'u'lláh: "These fruitless strifes, these ruinous
wars shall pass away, and the `Most Great Peace' shall come."
THE UNIVERSAL HOUSE OF JUSTICE
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