THE PROMISED DAY IS COME - PART THREE
DIVINE RETRIBUTION ON THE QAJAR DYNASTY
The French Emperor had, it was reported, flung away Baha'u'llah's Tablet, and directed his minister,
as Baha'u'llah Himself asserts, to address to its Author an irreverent reply. The Grand Vizir of
Abdu'l-'Aziz, it is reliably stated, blanched while reading the communication addressed to his Imperial
master and his ministers, and made the following comment: "It is as if the king of kings were issuing his
behest to his humblest vassal king, and regulating his conduct!" Queen Victoria, it is said, upon reading
the Tablet revealed for her remarked: "If this is of God, it will endure; if not, it can do no harm." It was
reserved for Nasiri'd-Din Shah, however, to wreak, at the instigation of the divines, his vengeance on
One Whom he could no longer personally chastise by arresting His messenger, a lad of about
seventeen, by freighting him with chains, by torturing him on the rack, and finally slaying him.
To this despotic sovereign Baha'u'llah, Who denounced him as the "Prince of Oppressors," and as
one who would soon be made "an object-lesson for the world," had written:"Look upon this Youth, O king, with the eyes of justice; judge, then,
with truth concerning what has befallen Him. Of a verity, God has made you His shadow amongst men,
and the sign of His power unto all that dwell on earth."
And again :
"O king! Were you to incline your ears unto the shrill of the Pen of Glory and the cooing of the Dove of
Eternity ... you would attain unto a station from which you would behold in the world of being nothing
save the effulgence of the Adored One, and would regard your sovereignty as the most contemptible of
your possessions, abandoning it to whosoever might desire it, and setting your face toward the horizon
aglow with the light of His countenance."
And again:
"We would hope, however, that His Majesty the Shah will himself examine these matters, and bring hope
to the hearts. That which We have submitted to you is indeed for your highest good."
This hope, however, was to remain unfulfilled. It was indeed shattered by a
reign which had been inaugurated by the execution of the Bab, and the imprisonment of Baha'u'llah in
the Siyah-Chal of Teheran, by a sovereign who had repeatedly instigated Baha'u'llah's successive
banishments, and by a dynasty that had been sullied by the slaughter of no less than twenty thousand of
His followers. The Shah's dramatic assassination, the ignoble rule of the last sovereigns of the House of
Qajar, and the extinction of that dynasty, were signal instances of the Divine retribution which these
horrid atrocities had provoked.
The Qajars, members of the alien Turkoman tribe, had, indeed, usurped the Persian throne. Aqa
Muhammad Khan, the eunuch Shah and founder of the dynasty, was such an atrocious, avaricious,
bloodthirsty tyrant that the memory of no Persian is so detested and universally execrated as his
memory. The record of his reign and that of his immediate successors is one of vandalism, of internal
warfare, of recalcitrant and rebellious chieftains, of brigandage, and medieval oppression, while the
annals of the reigns of the later Qajars are marked by the stagnation of the nation, the illiteracy of the
people, the corruption and incompetence of the government, the scandalous intrigues of the court, the
decadence of the princes, the irresponsibility and extravagance of the sovereign, and his abject
subservience to a notoriously degraded clerical order.
The successor of Aqa Muhammad Khan, the uxorious, philo progenetive Fath-'Ali Shah, the
so-called "Darius of the Age," was a vain, an arrogant, and unscrupulous miser, notorious for the
enormous number of his wives and concubines, numbering above a thousand, his incalculable progeny,
and the disasters which his rule brought upon his country. He it was who commanded that his Vizir, to
whom he owed his throne, be cast into a caldron of boiling oil. As to his successor, the bigoted
Muhammad Shah, one of his earliest acts, definitely condemned by the pen of Baha'u'llah, was the order
to strangle his first minister, the illustrious Qa'im-Maqam, immortalized by that same pen as the "Prince
of the City of Statesmanship and Literary Accomplishment," and to have him replaced by that lowbred,
consummate scoundrel, Haji Mirza Aqasi, who brought the country to the verge of bankruptcy and
revolution. It was this same Shah who refused to interview the Bab and imprisoned Him in Adhirbayjan,
and who, at the age of forty, was afflicted by a complication of maladies to which he succumbed,
hastening the doom forecast in these words of the Qayyum-i-Asma': "I swear by God, O Shah! If you
show enmity unto Him Who is His Remembrance, God will, on the Day of Resurrection, condemn you,
before the kings, unto hellfire, and you shall not, in very truth, find on that day any helper except God,
the Exalted."
Nasiri'd-Din Shah, a selfish, capricious, imperious monarch, succeeded to the throne, and, for half a
century, was destined to remain the sole arbiter of the fortunes of his hapless country. A disastrous
obscurantism, a chaotic administration in the provinces, the disorganization of the finances of the realm,
the intrigues, the vindictiveness, and profligacy of the pampered and greedy courtiers, who buzzed and
swarmed round his throne, his own despotism which, but for the restraining fear of European public
opinion and the desire to be thought well of in the capitals of the West, would have been more cruel and
savage, were the distinguishing features of the bloody reign of one who styled himself "Footpath of
Heaven," and "Asylum of the Universe." A triple darkness of chaos, bankruptcy and oppression
enveloped the country. His own assassination was the first portent of the revolution which was to restrict
the prerogatives of his son and successor, depose the last two monarchs of the House of Qajar, and
extinguish their dynasty. On the eve of his jubilee, which was to inaugurate a new era, and the
celebration of which had been elaborately prepared, he fell, in the shrine of Shah Abdu'l-'Azim, a victim
to an assassin's pistol, his dead body driven back to his capitol, propped up in the royal carriage in front
of his Grand Vizir, in order to defer the news of his murder.
"It was whispered," writes an eyewitness of both the ceremony and the assassination, "that the day
of the Shah's celebration was to be the greatest in the history of Persia... Prisoners were to be released
without condition, and a general amnesty was to be proclaimed; peasants were promised exemption from
taxes for at least two years. ...the poor were to be fed for months. Ministers and officials were already
intriguing for honors and pension from the Shah. Shrines and sacred places were to open their gates to
all wayfarers and pilgrims, and the siyyids and mullas were taking cough medicine to clear their throats to
sing and chant the praises of the Shah in all the pulpits. The mosques were swept and prepared for
general meetings and public prayers in behalf of the Sovereign... Sacred fountains were enlarged to hold
more holy water, and the rightful authorities had foreseen that many miracles might take place on the day
of the jubilee, with the aid of these fountains.... The Shah had declared ... that he would renounce his
prerogatives as despot, and proclaim himself `The Majestic Father of all the Persians.' The city authority
was to relax its vigilant watch. No record was to be kept of the strangers who flocked to the
caravanserais, and the population was to be left free to wander the streets during the whole night." Even
the great mujtahids had, according to what had been reported to that same eyewitness, "decided, for the
time being, to discontinue persecuting the Babis and other infidels."
Thus fell the one whose reign will remain forever associated with the most heinous crime in history --
the martyrdom of that One Whom the Supreme Manifestation of God proclaimed to be the "Point round
Whom the realities of the Prophets and Messengers revolve." In a Tablet in which the pen of Baha'u'llah
condemns him, we read: "Among them [kings of the earth] is the King of Persia, who suspended Him
Who is the Temple of the Cause [the Bab] in the air, and put Him to death with such cruelty that all
created things, and the inmates of Paradise, and the Concourse on high wept for Him. He slew,
moreover, some of Our kindred, and plundered Our property, and made Our family captives in the hands
of the oppressors. Once and again he imprisoned Me. By God, the True One! None can reckon the
things which befell Me in prison, save God, the Reckoner, the Omniscient, the Almighty. Subsequently
he banished Me and My family from My country, whereupon We arrived in Iraq in evident sorrow. We
tarried there until the time when the King of Rum [Sultan of Turkey] arose against Us, and summoned Us
unto the seat of his sovereignty. When We reached it there flowed over Us that whereat the King of
Persia rejoiced. Later We entered this Prison, wherein the hands of Our loved ones were torn from the
hem of Our robe. In such a manner has he dealt with Us!"
The days of the Qajar dynasty were now numbered. The torpor of the national consciousness had
vanished. The reign of Nasiri'd-Din Shah's successor, Muzaffari'd-Din Shah, a weak and timid creature,
extravagant and lavish to his courtiers, led the country down the broad road to ruin. The movement in
favor of a constitution, limiting the sovereign's prerogatives, gathered force, and culminated in the
signature of the constitution by the dying Shah, who expired a few days later. Muhammad-'Ali Shah, a
despot of the worst type, unprincipled and avaricious, succeeded to the throne. Hostile to the
constitution, he, by his summary action, involving the bombardment of the Baharistan, where the
Assembly met, precipitated a revolution which led to his deposition by the nationalists. Accepting, after
much bargaining, a large pension, he ignominiously withdrew to Russia. The boy-king, Ahmad Shah,
who succeeded him, was a mere cipher and careless of his duties. The crying needs of his country
continued to be ignored. Increasing anarchy, the impotence of the central government, the state of the
national finances, the progressive deterioration of the general condition of the country, practically
abandoned by a sovereign who preferred the gaieties and frivolities of society life in the European
capitals to the discharge of the stern and urgent responsibilities which the plight of his nation demanded,
sounded the death knell of a dynasty which, it was generally felt, had forfeited the crown. While abroad,
on one of his periodic visits, Parliament deposed him, and proclaimed the extinction of his dynasty, which
had occupied the throne of Persia for a hundred and thirty years, whose rulers proudly claimed no less a
descent than from Japhet, son of Noah, and whose successive monarchs, with only one exception, were
either assassinated, deposed, or struck down by mortal disease.
Their myriad progeny, a veritable "beehive of princelings," a "race of royal drones," were both a
disgrace and a menace to their countrymen. Now, however, these luckless descendants of a fallen
house, shorn of all power, and some of them reduced even to beggary, proclaim, in their distress, the
consequences of the abominations which their progenitors have perpetrated. Swelling the ranks of the
ill-fated scions of the House of Uthman, and of the rulers of the Romanov, the Hohenzollern, the
Hapsburg, and the Napoleonic dynasties, they roam the face of the earth, scarcely aware of the
character of those forces which have operated such tragic revolutions in their lives, and so powerfully
contributed to their present plight.
Already grandsons of both Nasiri'd-Din Shah and of Sultan Abdu'l-'Aziz have, in their powerlessness
and destitution, turned to the World Center of the Faith of Baha'u'llah, and sought respectively political
aid and pecuniary assistance. In the case of the former, the request was promptly and firmly refused,
while in the case of the latter it was unhesitatingly offered.
No wonder that Baha'u'llah, in view of the treatment meted out to Him by the sovereigns of the earth,
should, as already quoted, have written these words: "From two ranks amongst men power has been
seized : kings and ecclesiastics." Indeed, He even goes further, and states in His Tablet addressed to
Shaykh Salman: "One of the signs of the maturity of the world is that no one will accept to bear the
weight of kingship. Kingship will remain with none willing to bear alone its weight. That day will be the
day whereon wisdom will be manifested among mankind. Only in order to proclaim the Cause of God
and spread abroad His Faith will anyone be willing to bear this grievous weight. Well is it with him who,
for love of God and His Cause, and for the sake of God and for the purpose of proclaiming His Faith, will
expose himself unto this great danger, and will accept this toil and trouble."
I can do no better than quote some of Baha'u'llah's Own testimonies, leaving the reader to shape his
own judgment as to the falsity of such a deduction. In His "Epistle to the Son of the Wolf" He indicates
the true source of kingship: "Regard for the rank of sovereigns is divinely ordained, as is clearly attested
by the words of the Prophets of God and His chosen ones. He Who is the Spirit [Jesus] -- may peace be
upon Him -- was asked: `O Spirit of God! Is it lawful to give tribute to Caesar, or not?' And He made
reply: `Yea, render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that are God's.' He
forbade it not. These two sayings are, in the estimation of men of insight, one and the same, for if that
which belonged to Caesar had not come from God He would have forbidden it. And likewise in the
sacred verse: `Obey God and obey the Apostle, and those among you invested with authority.' By
`those invested with authority' is meant primarily and more specially the Imams -- the blessings of God
rest upon them. They verily are the manifestations of the power of God and the sources of His authority,
and the repositories of His knowledge, and the daysprings of His commandments. Secondarily these
words refer unto the kings and rulers -- those through the brightness of whose justice the horizons of the
world are resplendent and luminous."
And again : "In the Epistle to the Romans Saint Paul has written : `Let every soul be subject unto the
higher powers. For there is no power but of God ; the powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever,
therefore, resists the power, resists the ordinance of God.' And further: `For he is the minister of God, a
revenger to execute wrath upon him that does evil.' He said that the appearance of the kings, and their
majesty and power, are of God."
And again : "A just king enjoys nearer access unto God than anyone. Unto this testifies He Who
speaks in His Most Great Prison."
Likewise in the Bisharat (Glad-Tidings) Baha'u'llah asserts that "the majesty of kingship is one of the
signs of God." "We do not wish," He adds, "that the countries of the world should be deprived thereof."
In the Kitab-i-Aqdas He sets forth His purpose, and eulogizes the king who will profess His Faith:
"By the Righteousness of God! It is not Our wish to lay hands on your kingdoms. Our mission is to seize
and possess the hearts of men. Upon them the eyes of Baha are fastened. To this testifies the Kingdom
of Names, could you but comprehend it. Whoso follows his Lord, will renounce the world and all that is
therein; how much greater, then, must be the detachment of Him Who holds so august a station!" "How
great the blessedness that awaits the king who will arise to aid My Cause in My Kingdom, who will
detach himself from all else but Me! Such a king is numbered with the Companions of the Crimson Ark --
the Ark which God has prepared for the people of Baha. All must glorify his name, must reverence his
station, and aid him to unlock the cities with the keys of My Name, the Omnipotent Protector of all that
inhabit the visible and invisible kingdoms. Such a king is the very eye of mankind, the luminous
ornament on the brow of creation, the fountainhead of blessings unto the whole world. Offer up, O
people of Baha, your substance, nay your very lives, for his assistance."
In the Lawh-i-Sultan Baha'u'llah further reveals the significance of kingship: "A just king is the
shadow of God on earth. All should seek shelter under the shadow of his justice, and rest in the shade
of his favor. This is not a matter which is either specific or limited in its scope, that it might be restricted
to one or another person, inasmuch as the shadow tells of the One Who casted it. God, glorified be His
remembrance, has called Himself the Lord of the worlds, for He has nurtured and still nurtures everyone.
Glorified be, then, His grace that has preceded all created things, and His mercy that has surpassed the
worlds."
In one of His Tablets Baha'u'llah has also written : "The one true God, exalted be His glory, has
bestowed the government of the earth upon the kings. To none is given the right to act in any manner
that would run counter to the considered views of them who are in authority. That which He has reserved
for Himself are the cities of men's hearts; and of these the loved ones of Him Who is the Sovereign Truth
are, in this Day, as the keys."
In the following passage He expresses this wish: "We cherish the hope that one of the kings of the
earth will, for the sake of God, arise for the triumph of this wronged, this oppressed people. Such a king
will be eternally extolled and glorified. God has prescribed unto this people the duty of aiding whosoever
will aid them, of serving his best interests, and of demonstrating to him their abiding loyalty."
In the Lawh-i-Ra'is He actually and categorically prophesies the rise of such a king: "Before long
will God raise up from among the kings one who will aid His loved ones. He, verily, encompasses all
things. He will instill in the hearts the love of His loved ones. This, indeed, is irrevocably decreed by
One Who is the Almighty, the Beneficent." In the Ridvanu'l-'Adl, wherein the virtue of justice is exalted,
He makes a parallel prediction: "Before long will God make manifest on earth kings who will recline on
the couches of justice, and will rule amongst men even as they rule their own selves. They, indeed, are
among the choicest of My creatures in the entire creation."
In the Kitab-i-Aqdas He visualizes in these words the elevation to the throne of His native city, "the
Mother of the World" and "the Dayspring of Light," of a king who will be adorned with the twin ornaments
of justice and of devotion to His Faith: "Let nothing grieve you, O Land of Ta, for God has chosen you to
be the source of the joy of all mankind. He shall, if it be His will, bless your throne with one who will rule
with justice, who will gather together the flock of God which the wolves have scattered. Such a ruler will,
with joy and gladness, turn his face towards and extend his favors unto, the people of Baha. He indeed
is accounted in the sight of God as a jewel among men. Upon him rest forever the glory of God, and the
glory of all that dwell in the kingdom of His Revelation."
Those leaders who exercised guidance and control over the ecclesiastical hierarchies of their
respective religions have, likewise, been appealed to, warned, and reproved by Baha'u'llah, in terms no
less uncertain than those in which the sovereigns who presided over the destinies of their subjects have
been addressed. They, too, and more particularly the heads of Muslim ecclesiastical orders, have, in
conjunction with despots and potentates, launched their assaults and thundered their anathemas against
the Founders of the Faith of God, its followers, its principles, and its institutions. Were not the divines of
Persia the first who hoisted the standard of revolt, who inflamed the ignorant and subservient masses
against it, and who instigated the civil authorities, through their outcry, their threats, their lies, their
calumnies, and denunciations, to decree the banishments, to enact the laws, to launch the punitive
campaigns, and to carry out the executions and massacres that fill the pages of its history? So
abominable and savage was the butchery committed in a single day, instigated by these divines, and so
typical of the "callousness of the brute and the ingenuity of the fiend" that Renan, in his "Les Apôtres,"
characterized that day as "perhaps unparalleled in the history of the world."
It was these divines, who, by these very acts, sowed the seeds of the disintegration of their own
institutions, institutions that were so potent, so famous, and appeared so invulnerable when the Faith
was born. It was they who, by assuming so lightly and foolishly, such awful responsibilities were
primarily answerable for the release of those violent and disruptive influences that have unchained
disasters as catastrophic as those which overwhelmed kings, dynasties, and empires, and which
constitute the most noteworthy landmarks in the history of the first century of the Baha'i era.
This process of deterioration, however startling in its initial manifestations, is still operating with
undiminished force, and will, as the opposition to the Faith of God, from various sources and in distant
fields, gathers momentum, be further accelerated and reveal still more remarkable evidences of its
devastating power. I cannot, in view of the proportions which this communication has already assumed,
expatiate, as fully as I would wish, on the aspects of this weighty theme which, together with the reaction
of the sovereigns of the earth to the Message of Baha'u'llah, is one of the most fascinating and edifying
episodes in the dramatic story of His Faith. I will only consider the repercussions of the violent assaults
made by the ecclesiastical leaders of Islam and, to a lesser degree, by certain exponents of Christian
orthodoxy upon their respective institutions. I will preface these observations with some passages
gleaned from the great mass of Baha'u'llah's Tablets which, both directly and indirectly, bear reference to
Muslim and Christian divines, and which throw such a powerful light on the dismal disasters that have
overtaken, and are still overtaking, the ecclesiastical hierarchies of the two religions with which the Faith
has been immediately concerned.
It must not be inferred, however, that Baha'u'llah directed His historic addresses exclusively to the
leaders of Islam and Christianity, or that the impact of an all-pervading Faith on the strongholds of
religious orthodoxy is to be confined to the institutions of these two religious systems. "The time
foreordained unto the peoples and kindreds of the earth," affirms Baha'u'llah, "is now come. The
promises of God, as recorded in the Holy Scriptures, have all been fulfilled.... This is the Day which the
Pen of the Most High has glorified in all the Holy Scriptures. There is no verse in them that does not
declare the glory of His holy Name, and no Book that does not testify unto the loftiness of this most
exalted theme." "Were We," He adds, "to make mention of all that has been revealed in these heavenly
Books and Holy Scriptures concerning this Revelation, this Tablet would assume impossible
dimensions." As the promise of the Faith of Baha'u'llah is enshrined in all the Scriptures of past religions,
so does its Author address Himself to their followers, and particularly to their responsible leaders who
have intervened between Him and their respective congregations. "At one time," writes Baha'u'llah, "We
address the people of the Torah and summon them unto Him Who is the Revealer of verses, Who has
come from Him Who lays low the necks of men.... At another, We address the people of the Evangel
and say: `The All-Glorious is come in this Name whereby the Breeze of God has wafted over all
regions.'... At still another, We address the people of the Koran saying: `Fear the All-Merciful, and cavil
not at Him through Whom all religions were founded.'... Know , moreover, that We have addressed to
the Magians (Kings) Our Tablets, and adorned them with Our Law.... We have revealed in them the
essence of all the hints and allusions contained in their Books. The Lord, verily, is the Almighty, the
All-Knowing."
Addressing the Jewish people Baha'u'llah has written: "The Most Great Law is come, and the
Ancient Beauty rules upon the throne of David. Thus has My Pen spoken that which the histories of
bygone ages have related. At this time, however, David cried aloud and said : `O my loving Lord! Do
You number me with such as have stood steadfast in Your Cause, O You through Whom the faces have
been illumined, and the footsteps have slipped!'" And again: "The Breath has been wafted, and the
Breeze has blown, and from Zion has appeared that which was hidden, and from Jerusalem is heard the
Voice of God, the One, the Incomparable, the Omniscient." Furthermore, in His "Epistle to the Son of the
Wolf" Baha'u'llah has revealed: "Lend an ear unto the song of David. He said : `Who will bring me into
the Strong City?' The Strong City is Akka, which has been named the Most Great Prison, and which
possesses a fortress and mighty ramparts. O Shaykh! Peruse that which Isaiah has spoken in His Book.
He said : `Get up into the high mountain, O Zion, that brings good tidings ; lift up your voice with
strength, O Jerusalem, that brings good tidings. Lift it up, be not afraid ; say unto the cities of Judah :
"Behold your God! Behold the Lord God will come with strong hand, and His arm shall rule for Him."'
This Day all the signs have appeared. A Great City has descended from heaven, and Zion trembles and
exulted with joy at the Revelation of God, for it has heard the Voice of God on every side."
To the priestly caste, holding sacerdotal supremacy over the followers of the Faith of Zoroaster, that
same Voice, identifying itself with the voice of the promised Shah-Bahram, has declared: "O high
priests! Ears have been given you that they may hearken unto the mystery of Him Who is the
Self-Dependent, and eyes that they may behold Him. Wherefore flee you? The Incomparable Friend is
manifest. He speaks that wherein lies salvation. Were you, O high priests, to discover the perfume of
the rose garden of understanding, you would seek none other but Him, and would recognize, in His new
vesture, the All-Wise and Peerless One, and would turn your eyes from the world and all who seek it,
and would arise to help Him." "Whatsoever has been announced in the Books," Baha'u'llah, replying to a
Zoroastrian who had inquired regarding the promised Shah-Bahram, has written, "has been revealed and
made clear. From every direction the signs have been manifested. The Omnipotent One is calling, in this
Day, and announcing the appearance of the Supreme Heaven." "This is not the day," He, in another
Tablet declares, "whereon the high priests can command and exercise their authority. In your Book it is
stated that the high priests will, on that Day, lead men far astray, and will prevent them from drawing
near unto Him. He indeed is a high priest who has seen the light and hastened unto the way leading to
the Beloved." "Say, O high priests!" He, again addresses them, "The Hand of Omnipotence is stretched
forth from behind the clouds ; behold it with new eyes. The tokens of His majesty and greatness are
unveiled; gaze on them with pure eyes.... Say, O high priests! You are held in reverence because of My
Name, and yet you flee Me! You are the high priests of the Temple. Had you been the high priests of
the Omnipotent One, you would have been united with Him, and would have recognized Him.... Say, O
high priests! No man's acts shall be acceptable, in this Day, unless he forsakes mankind and all that
men possess, and sets his face towards the Omnipotent One."
It is not, however, with either of these two Faiths that we are primarily concerned. It is to Islam and,
to a lesser extent, to Christianity that my theme is directly related. Islam, from which the Faith of
Baha'u'llah has sprung, even as did Christianity from Judaism, is the religion within whose pale that Faith
first rose and developed, from whose ranks the great mass of Baha'i adherents have been recruited, and
by whose leaders they have been, and indeed are still being, persecuted. Christianity, on the other
hand, is the religion to which the vast majority of Baha'is of non-Islamic extraction belong, within whose
spiritual domain the Administrative Order of the Faith of God is rapidly advancing, and by whose
ecclesiastical exponents that Order is being increasingly assailed. Unlike Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism
and even Zoroastrianism which, in the main, are still unaware of the potentialities of the Cause of God,
and whose response to its Message is as yet negligible, the Muhammadan and Christian Faiths may be
regarded as the two religious systems which are sustaining, at this formative stage in its evolution, the
full impact of so tremendous a Revelation.
Let us, then, consider what the Founders of the Baha'i Faith have addressed to, or written about, the
recognized leaders of Islam and Christianity. We have already considered the passages with reference
to the kings of Islam, whether as Caliphs reigning in Constantinople, or as Shahs of Persia who ruled the
kingdom as temporary trustees for the expected Imam. We have also noted the Tablet which Baha'u'llah
specifically revealed for the Roman Pontiff, and the more general message in the Suriy-i-Muluk directed
to the kings of Christendom. No less challenging and ominous is the Voice that has warned and called to
account the Muhammadan divines and the Christian clergy.
"Leaders of religion,"
is Baha'u'llah's clear and universal censure pronounced in the Kitab-i-Iqan, "in every age, have hindered their people from attaining the shores of
eternal salvation, inasmuch as they held the reins of authority in their mighty grasp. Some for the lust of
leadership, others through want of knowledge and understanding, have been the cause of the
deprivation of the people. By their sanction and authority, every Prophet of God has drunk from the
chalice of sacrifice, and winged His flight unto the heights of glory. What unspeakable cruelties they that
have occupied the seats of authority and learning have inflicted upon the true Monarchs of the world,
those Gems of Divine virtue! Content with a transitory dominion, they have deprived themselves of an
everlasting sovereignty."
And again, in that same Book : "Among these `veils of glory' are the divines and doctors living in the days of the Manifestation of God, who, because of their want of discernment and their love and eagerness for leadership, have failed to submit to the Cause of God, nay, have even refused to incline their ears unto the Divine Melody. `They have thrust their fingers into their ears.' And the people also, utterly ignoring God and taking them for their masters, have placed themselves unreservedly under the authority of these pompous and hypocritical leaders, for they have no sight, no hearing, no heart, of their own to distinguish truth from falsehood. Notwithstanding the divinely inspired admonitions of all the Prophets, the Saints, and Chosen Ones of God, enjoining the people to see with their own eyes and hear with their own ears, they have disdainfully rejected their counsels and have blindly followed, and will continue to follow, the leaders of their Faith. Should a poor and obscure person, destitute of the attire of the men of learning, address them saying: `Follow, O people, the Messengers of God,' they would, greatly surprised at such a statement, reply: `What! Meanest you that all these divines, all these exponents of learning, with all their authority, their pomp, and pageantry, have erred, and failed to distinguish truth from falsehood? Do you, and people like yourself, pretend to have comprehended that which they have not understood?' If numbers and excellence of apparel be regarded as the criterions of learning and truth, the peoples of a bygone age, whom those of today have never surpassed in numbers, magnificence and power, should certainly be accounted a superior and worthier people." Furthermore, "Not one Prophet of God was made manifest Who did not fall a victim to the relentless hate, to the denunciation, denial and execration of the clerics of His day! Woe unto them for the iniquities their hands have formerly wrought! Woe unto them for that which they are now doing! What veils of glory more grievous than these embodiments of error! By the righteousness of God! To pierce such veils is the mightiest of all acts, and to rend them asunder the most meritorious of all deeds!" "On their tongue," He moreover has written, "the mention of God has become an empty name; in their midst His holy Word a dead letter. Such is the sway of their desires, that the lamp of conscience and reason has been quenched in their hearts.... No two are found to agree on one and the same law, for they seek no God but their own desire, and tread no path but the path of error. In leadership they have recognized the ultimate object of their endeavor, and account pride and haughtiness as the highest attainments of their hearts' desire. They have placed their sordid machinations above the Divine decree, have renounced resignation unto the will of God, busied themselves with selfish calculation, and walked in the way of the hypocrite. With all their power and strength they strive to secure themselves in their petty pursuits, fearful lest the least discredit undermine their authority or blemish the display of their magnificence."
"The source and origin of tyranny,"
Baha'u'llah in another Tablet has affirmed, "have been the divines. Through the sentences pronounced by these
haughty and wayward souls the rulers of the earth have wrought that which you have heard....
The reins of the heedless masses have been, and are, in the hands of the exponents of idle fancies and vain imaginings. These decree what they please. God, verily, is clear of them, and We, too, are clear of them, as are such as have testified unto that which the Pen of the Most High has spoken in this glorious Station."
"The leaders of men," He has likewise asserted, "have, from time immemorial, prevented the people from turning unto the Most Great Ocean. The Friend of God [Abraham] was cast into fire through the sentence pronounced by the divines of the age, and lies and calumnies were imputed to Him Who discoursed with God [Moses]. Reflect upon the One Who was the Spirit of God [Jesus]. Though He showed forth the utmost compassion and tenderness, yet they rose up against that Essence of Being and Lord of the seen and unseen, in such a manner that He could find no refuge wherein to rest. Each day He wandered unto a new place, and sought a new shelter. Consider the Seal of the Prophets [Muhammad] -- may the souls of all else except Him be His sacrifice! How grievous the things which befell that Lord of all being at the hands of the priests of idolatry, and of the Jewish doctors, after He had uttered the blessed words proclaiming the unity of God! By My life! My pen groans, and all created things cry out by reason of the things that have touched Him, and denied His Testimony, and gainsaid His signs."
"The foolish divines," another Tablet declares, "have laid aside the Book of
God, and are occupied with that which they themselves have fashioned. The Ocean of Knowledge is
revealed, and the shrill of the Pen of the Most High is raised, and yet they, even as earthworms, are
afflicted with the clay of their fancies and imaginings. They are exalted by reason of their relationship to
the one true God, and yet they have turned aside from Him! Because of Him have they become famous,
and yet they are shut off as by a veil from Him!"
"The pagan priests," in yet another Tablet is written, "and the Jewish and Christian divines, have
committed the very things which the divines of the age, in this Dispensation, have committed, and are still
committing. Nay, these have displayed a more grievous cruelty and a fiercer malice. Every atom bears
witness unto that which I say."
To these leaders who "esteem themselves the best of all creatures and have been regarded as the
vilest by Him Who is the Truth," who "occupy the seats of knowledge and learning, and who have named
ignorance knowledge, and called oppression justice," and who, "worship no God but their own desire,
who bear allegiance to nothing but gold, who are wrapt in the densest veils of learning, and who,
enmeshed by its obscurities, are lost in the wilds of error" -- to these Baha'u'llah has chosen to address
these words :
"O concourse of divines! You shall not
henceforward behold yourselves possessed of any power, inasmuch as We have seized it from you, and
destined it for such as have believed in God, the One, the All-Powerful, the Almighty, the Unconstrained."
In the Kitab-i-Aqdas we read the following: "Say: O leaders of religion! Weigh not the Book of God with such standards and sciences as are current amongst you, for the Book itself is the unerring Balance established amongst men. In this most perfect Balance whatsoever the peoples and kindreds of the earth possess must be weighed, while the measure of its weight should be tested according to its own standard, did you but know it. The eye of My loving-kindness weeps sore over you, inasmuch as you have failed to recognize the One upon Whom you have been calling in the daytime and in the night season, at even and at morn....
O you leaders of religion!
Who is the man amongst you that can rival Me in vision or insight? Where is he to be found that dares to
claim to be My equal in utterance or wisdom? No, by My Lord, the All-Merciful! All on the earth shall
pass away; and this is the face of your Lord, the Almighty, the Well-Beloved....
Say: This, verily, is the heaven in which the Mother Book is treasured, could you but comprehend it.
He it is Who has caused the Rock to shout, and the Burning Bush to lift up its voice, upon the Mount
rising above the Holy Land, and proclaim: `The Kingdom is God's, the sovereign Lord of all, the
All-Powerful, the Loving!' We have not entered any school, nor read any of your dissertations. Incline
your ears to the words of this unlettered One, wherewith He summons you unto God, the Ever-Abiding.
Better is this for you than all the treasures of the earth, could you but comprehend it."
O concourse of divines!
Beware lest you be the cause of strife in the land, even as you were the cause of the repudiation of the
Faith in its early days. Gather the people around this Word that has made the pebbles to cry out: `The
Kingdom is God's, the Dawning-Place of all signs!'... Tear the veils asunder in such wise that the
inmates of the Kingdom will hear them being rent. This is the command of God, in days gone by, and for
those to come. Blessed the man that observes that whereunto he was bidden, and woe betide the
negligent."
And again:
Let us now consider more particularly the specific references, and the words
directly addressed, to Muslim ecclesiastics by the Bab and Baha'u'llah. The Bab, as attested by the
Kitab-i-Iqan, has "specifically revealed an Epistle unto the divines of every city, wherein He has fully
set forth the character of the denial and repudiation of each of them." While in Isfahan, that
time-honored stronghold of Muslim ecclesiasticism, He, through the medium of its governor, Manuchihr
Khan, invited in writing the divines of that city to engage in a contest with Him, in order, as He expressed
it, to "establish the truth and dissipate falsehood." Not one of the multitude of divines who thronged that
great seat of learning had the courage to take up that challenge. Baha'u'llah, on His part, while in
Adrianople, and as witnessed by His own Tablet to the Shah of Persia, signified His wish to be "brought
face to face with the divines of the age, and produce proofs and testimonies in the presence of His
Majesty, the Shah." This offer was denounced as a "great presumption and amazing audacity" by the
divines of Teheran, who, in their fear, advised their sovereign to instantly punish the bearer of that
Tablet. Previously, while Baha'u'llah was in Baghdad, He expressed His willingness that, provided the
divines of Najaf and Karbila -- the twin holiest cities next to Mecca and Medina, in the eyes of the Shi-ites
-- assembled and agreed regarding any miracle they wished to be performed, and signed and sealed a
statement affirming that on performance of this miracle they would acknowledge the truth of His Mission,
He would unhesitatingly produce it. To this challenge they, as recorded by Abdu'l-Baha in His "Some
Answered Questions," could offer no better reply than this: "This man is an enchanter; perhaps he will
perform an enchantment, and then we shall have nothing more to say." "For twelve years," Baha'u'llah
Himself has testified, "We tarried in Baghdad. Much as We desired that a large gathering of divines and
fair-minded men be convened, so that truth might be distinguished from falsehood, and be fully
demonstrated, no action was taken." And again: "And likewise, while in Iraq, We wished to come
together with the divines of Persia. No sooner did they hear of this, than they fled and said: `He indeed
is a manifest sorcerer!' This is the word that proceeded before time out of the mouths of such as were
like them. These [divines] objected to what they said, and yet, they themselves repeat, in this day, what
was said before them, and understand not. By My life! They are even as ashes in the sight of your Lord.
If He be willing, tempestuous gales will blow over them, and make them as dust. Your Lord, verily, does
what He pleases."
These false, these cruel and cowardly Shi-Ites clericals, who, as Baha'u'llah declared, had they not
intervened, Persia would have been subdued by the power of God in hardly more than two years, have
been thus addressed in the Qayyum-i-Asma: "O concourse of divines! Fear God from this day onwards
in the views you advance, for He Who is Our Remembrance in your midst, and Who comes from Us, is,
in very truth, the Judge and Witness. Turn away from that which you lay hold of, and which the Book of
God, the True One, has not sanctioned, for on the Day of Resurrection you shall, upon the Bridge, be, in
very truth, held answerable for the position you occupied."
In that same Book the Bab thus addresses the Shi-Ites, as well as the entire body of the followers of
the Prophet: "O concourse of Shi-Ites! Fear God, and Our Cause, which concerns Him Who is the Most
Great Remembrance of God. For great is its fire, as decreed in the Mother-Book." "O people of the
Koran! You are as nothing unless you submit unto the Remembrance of God and unto this Book. If you
follow the Cause of God, We will forgive you your sins, and if you turn aside from Our command, We will,
in truth, condemn your souls in Our Book, unto the Most Great Fire. We, verily, do not deal unjustly with
men, even to the extent of a speck on a date stone."
And finally, in that same Commentary, this startling prophecy is recorded : "Before long We will, in
very truth, torment such as waged war against Husayn [Imam Husayn], in the Land of the Euphrates, with
the most afflictive torment, and the most dire and exemplary punishment." "Before long," He also,
referring to that same people, in that same Book, has written, "will God wreak His vengeance upon them,
at the time of Our Return, and He has, in very truth, prepared for them, in the world to come, a severe
torment."
As to Baha'u'llah, the passages I cite in these pages constitute but a fraction of the references to the
Muslim divines with which His writings abound. "The Lote-Tree beyond Which there is no passing," He
exclaims, "cried out, by reason of the cruelty of the divines. It shouted aloud, and bewails itself." "From
the inception of this sect [Shi-Ite]," He, in His "Epistle to the Son of the Wolf," has written, "until the
present day, how great has been the number of the divines that have appeared, none of whom became
cognizant of the nature of this Revelation. What could have been the cause of this waywardness? Were
We to mention it, their limbs would cleave asunder. It is necessary for them to meditate, nay to meditate
for a thousand thousand years, that haply they may attain unto a sprinkling from the ocean of knowledge,
and discover the things whereof they are oblivious in this day. I was walking in the Land of Ta [Teheran]
-- the dayspring of the signs of your Lord -- when lo, I heard the lamentation of the pulpits and the voice
of their supplication unto God, blessed and glorified be He! They cried out and said: `O God of the world
and Lord of the nations! You behold our state and the things which have befallen us, by reason of the
cruelty of your servants. You have created us and revealed us for Your glorification and praise. You do
now hear what the wayward proclaim upon us in your days. By Your might! Our souls are melted, and
our limbs are trembling. Alas, alas! Would that we had never been created and revealed by You!' The
hearts of them that enjoy near access to God are consumed by these words, and from them the cries of
such as are devoted to Him are raised."
"These thick clouds," He, in that same Epistle, has stated, "are the exponents of idle fancies and
vain imaginings, who are none other than the divines of Persia." "By `divines' in the passage cited
above," He, in that same connection, explains, "is meant those men who outwardly attire themselves with
the raiment of knowledge, but who inwardly are deprived therefrom. In this connection We quote, from
the Tablet addressed to His Majesty the Shah, certain passages from the `Hidden Words' which were
revealed by the Abha Pen under the name of the `Book of Fatimih,' the blessings of God be upon her!
`O you that are foolish, yet have a name to be wise! Wherefore do you wear the guise of the shepherd,
when inwardly you have become wolves, intent upon My flock? You are even as the star, which rises
before the dawn, and which, though it seem radiant and luminous, leads the wayfarers of My city astray
into the paths of perdition.' And likewise He said : `O you seemingly fair yet inwardly foul! You are like
clear but bitter water, which to outward seeming is but crystal pure but of which, when tested by the
Divine Assayer, not a drop is accepted. Yea, the sunbeam falls alike upon the dust and the mirror, yet
differ they in reflection even as does the star from the earth : nay, immeasurable is the difference!'"
"We have invited all men," Baha'u'llah, in another Tablet, has stated, "to turn towards God, and have
acquainted them with the Straight Path. They [divines] rose up against Us with such cruelty as has
sapped the strength of Islam, and yet most of the people are heedless!" "The children of Him Who is the
Friend of God [Abraham]," He moreover has written, "and heirs of the One Who discoursed with God
[Moses], who were accounted the most abject of men, have split the veils asunder, and rent the
coverings, and seized the Sealed Wine from the hands of the bounty of Him Who is the Self-Subsisting,
and drunk their fill, while the detestable Shi-Ites divines have remained, until the present time, hesitant
and perverse." And again: "The divines of Persia committed that which no people amongst the peoples
of the world have committed."
"If this Cause be of God,"
He thus addresses the Minister of the Shah in Constantinople, "no man can prevail against it; and if it be not of God, the divines amongst you, and
they that follow their corrupt desires, and such as have rebelled against Him, will surely suffice to
overpower it."
"Of all the peoples of the world," "In this day," is His caustic denunciation, "the world is redolent with the fragrances of the robe of the
Revelation of the Ancient King ... and yet, they [divines] have gathered together, and established
themselves upon their seats, and have spoken that which would put an animal to shame, how much more
man himself! Were they to become aware of one of their acts, and perceive the mischief it has wrought,
they would, with their own hands, dispatch themselves to their final abode."
"I swear by the Day star that shines above the Horizon of Utterance!" He asserts, "A paring from the
nail of one of the believing handmaidens is, in this day, more esteemed, in the sight of God, than the
divines of Persia, who, after thirteen hundred years' waiting, have perpetrated what the Jews have not
perpetrated during the Revelation of Him Who is the Spirit [Jesus]." "Though they rejoice," is His
warning, "at the adversities that have touched Us, the day will come whereon they shall wail and weep."
In the Suriy-i-Muluk, addressing the entire company of the ecclesiastical leaders of Sunni Islam in
Constantinople, the capital of the Empire and seat of the Caliphate, He has written: The voice of Abdu'l-Baha, the Center of the Covenant of God, has, likewise, been raised,
announcing the dire misfortunes which were to overtake, soon after His passing, the ecclesiastical
hierarchies of both Sunni and Shi-Ite Islam. "This glory," He has written, "shall be turned into the most
abject abasement, and this pomp and might converted into the most complete subjugation. Their palaces
will be transformed into prisons, and the course of their ascendant star terminate in the depths of the pit.
Laughter and merriment will vanish, nay more, the voice of their weeping will be raised." "Even as the
snow," He moreover has written, "they will melt away in the July sun."
The dissolution of the institution of the Caliphate, the complete secularization of the state which had
enshrined the most august institution of Islam, and the virtual collapse of the Shi-Ite hierarchy in Persia,
were the visible and immediate consequences of the treatment meted out to the Cause of God by the
clergy of the two largest communions of the Muslim world.
THE FALLING FORTUNES OF SHI-ITE ISLAM
Let us first consider the visitations that have marked the falling fortunes of
Shi-Ite Islam. The iniquities summarized in the beginning of these pages, and for which the Shi-Ite
ecclesiastical order in Persia is to be held primarily answerable; iniquities which, in the words of
Baha'u'llah, had caused "the Apostle [Muhammad] to lament, and the Chaste One [Fatimih] to cry out,"
and "all created things to groan, and the limbs of the holy ones to quake"; iniquities which had riddled the
breast of the Bab with bullets, and bowed down Baha'u'llah, and turned His hair white, and caused Him
to groan aloud in anguish, and made Muhammad to weep over Him, and Jesus to beat Himself upon the
head, and the Bab to bewail His plight -- such iniquities indeed could not, and were not to, remain
unpunished. God, the Fiercest of Avengers, was lying in wait, pledged "not to forgive any man's
injustice." The scourge of His chastisement, swift, sudden and terrible, was, at long last, let loose upon
the perpetrators of these iniquities.
A revolution, formidable in its proportions, far-reaching in its repercussions, amazing in the absence
of bloodshed and even of violence which marked its progress, challenged that ecclesiastical ascendency
which, for centuries, had been of the essence of Islam in that country, and virtually overthrew a hierarchy
with which the machinery of the state and the life of the people had been inextricably interwoven. Such a
revolution did not signalize the disestablishment of a state-church. It indeed was tantamount to the
disruption of what may be called a church-state -- a state that had been hopefully awaiting, even up till
the moment of its expiry, the gladsome advent of the Hidden Imam, who would not only seize the reins of
authority from the shah, the chief magistrate who was merely representing him, but would also assume
dominion over the whole earth.
The spirit which that clerical order had so assiduously striven, during a whole century, to crush; the
Faith which it had, with such ferocious brutality, attempted to extirpate; were now, in their turn, through
the forces they had engendered in the world, deranging the equilibrium, and sapping the strength, of that
same order whose ramifications had extended to every sphere, duty, and act of life in that country. The
rock wall of Islam, seemingly impregnable, was now shaken to its foundations, and was tottering to its
ruin, before the very eyes of the persecuted followers of the Faith of Baha'u'llah. A sacerdotal hierarchy
that had held in thrall for so long the Faith of God, and seemed, at one time, to have mortally struck it
down, now found itself the prey of a superior civil authority whose settled policy was to fasten, steadily
and relentlessly, its coils around it.
The vast system of that hierarchy, with all its elements and appurtenances -- its shaykhu'l-Islams
(high priests), its mujtahids (doctors of the law), its mullas (priests), its fuqahas (jurists), its imams
(prayer-leaders), its mu'adhdhins (criers), its vu'azz (preachers), its qadis (judges), its mutavallis
(custodians), its madrasihs (seminaries), its mudarrisins (professors), its tullabs (pupils), its qurra's
(intoners), its mu'abbirins (soothsayers), its muhaddithins (narrators), its musakhkhirins (spirit-subduers),
its dhakirins (rememberers), its ummal-i-dhakat (almsgivers), its muqaddasins (saints), its munzavis
(recluses), its sufis, its dervishes, and what not -- was paralysed and utterly discredited. Its mujtahids,
those firebrands, who wielded powers of life and death, and who for generations had been accorded
honors almost regal in character, were reduced to a deplorably insignificant number. The beturbaned (?)
prelates of the Islamic church who, in the words of Baha'u'llah, "decked their heads with green and white,
and committed what made the Faithful Spirit to groan," were ruthlessly swept away, except for a handful
who, in order to safeguard themselves against the fury of an impious populace, are now compelled to
submit to the humiliation of producing, whenever the occasion demands it, the license granted them by
the civil authorities to wear this vanishing emblem of a vanished authority. The rest of this turbaned
class, whether siyyids, mullas, or hajis, were forced not only to exchange their venerable headdress for
the kulah-i-farangi (European hat), which not long ago they themselves had anathematized, but also to
discard their flowing robes and don the tight-fitting garments of European style, the introduction of which
into their country they had, a generation ago, so violently disapproved.
"The dark blue and white domes" -- an allusion by Abdu'l-Baha to the rotund and massive headgears
of the priests of Persia -- had indeed been "inverted." Those whose heads had borne them, the arrogant,
fanatical, perfidious, and retrograde clericals, "in the grasp of whose authority," as testified by
Baha'u'llah, "were held the reins of the people," whose "words are the pride of the world,"
and whose "deeds are the shame of the nations," recognizing the wretchedness of their state, betook
themselves, crestfallen and destitute of hope, to their homes, there to drag out a miserable existence.
Impotent and sullen, they are watching the operations of a process which, having reversed their policy
and ruined their handiwork, is irresistibly moving towards a climax.
The pomp and pageantry of these princes of the church of Islam has already died out. Their
fanatical outcries, their clamorous invocations, their noisy demonstrations, are stilled. Their fatvas
(sentences), pronounced with such shamelessness, and at times embracing the denunciation of kings,
are a dead letter. The spectacular sight of congregational prayers, in which thousands of worshippers,
lined row upon row, participated, has vanished. The pulpits from whence they discharged the thunder of
their anathemas against the powerful and the innocent alike, are deserted and silent. Their waqfs, those
priceless and far-flung endowments -- the landed property of the expected Imam -- which in Isfahan
alone at one time embraced the whole of the city, have been wrested out of their hands, and brought
under the control of a lay administration. Their madrasihs (seminaries), with their medieval learning, are
deserted and dilapidated. The innumerable tomes of theological commentaries, super-commentaries,
glosses, and notes, unreadable, unprofitable, the product of misdirected ingenuity and toil, and
pronounced by one of the most enlightened Islamic thinkers in modern times as works obscuring sound
knowledge, breeding maggots, and fit for fire, are now buried away, overspread with cobwebs, and
forgotten. Their abstruse dissertations, their vehement controversies, their interminable discussions, are
outmoded and abandoned. Their masjids (mosques) and imam-zadihs (tombs of saints), which were
privileged to extend the bast (right of sanctuary) to many a criminal, and which had degenerated into a
monstrous scandal, whose walls rang with the intonations of a hypocritical and profligate clergy, whose
ornaments vied with the treasures of the palaces of kings, are either forsaken or fallen in ruin. Their
takyihs, the haunts of the lazy, the passive, and contemplative pietists, are either being sold or closed
down. Their ta'ziyihs (religious plays), acted with barbaric zeal, and accentuated by sudden spasms of
unbridled religious excitement, are forbidden. Even their rawdih-khanis (lamentations), with their
long-drawn-out, plaintive howls, which arose from so many houses, have been curtailed and
discouraged. The sacred pilgrimages to Najaf and Karbila, the holiest shrines of the Shi-Ite world, are
reduced in number and made increasingly difficult, preventing thereby many a greedy mulla from
indulging in his time-honored habit of charging double for making those pilgrimages as a substitute for
the religious-minded. The disuse of the veil which the mullas fought tooth and nail to prevent; the
equality of sexes which their law forbade; the erection of civil tribunals which superseded their
ecclesiastical courts; the abolition of the sighih (concubinage) which, when contracted for short periods,
is hardly distinguishable from quasi-prostitution, and which made of the turbulent and fanatical Mashhad,
the national center of pilgrimage, one of the most immoral cities in Asia; and finally, the efforts which are
being made to disparage the Arabic tongue, the sacred language of Islam and of the Koran, and to
divorce it from Persian -- all these have successively lent their share to the acceleration of that impelling
process which has subordinated to the civil authority the position and interests of Muslim clericals to a
degree undreamt of by any mulla.
Well might the once lofty-turbaned, long-bearded, grave-looking aqa (mulla), who had so insolently
concerned himself with every department of human activity, as he sits, hatless, clean shaven, in the
seclusion of his home, and perhaps listening to the strains of western music, blared upon the ethers of
his native land, pause to reflect for a while on the vanished splendor of his defunct empire. Well might
he muse upon the havoc which the rising tide of nationalism and skepticism has wrought in the
adamantine traditions of his country. Well might he recollect the halcyon days when, seated on a
donkey, and parading through the bazars and maydans of his native town, an eager but deluded
multitude would rush to kiss with fervor not only his hands, but also the tail of the animal on which he
rode. Well might he remember the blind zeal with which they acclaimed his acts, and the prodigies and
miracles they ascribed to their performance.
He might indeed look back further, and call to mind the reign of those pious Safavi monarchs, who
delighted to call themselves "dogs of the threshold of the Immaculate Imams," how one of those kings
was induced to go on foot before the mujtahid as he rode through the maydan-i-Shah, the main square of
Isfahan, as a mark of royal subservience to the favorite minister of the Hidden Imam, a minister who, as
distinct from the Shah's title, styled himself "the servant of the Lord of Saintship (Imam Ali)."
Was it not, he might well ponder, this same Shah Abbas the Great who had been arrogantly
addressed by another mujtahid as "the founder of a borrowed empire," implying that the kingdom of the
"king of kings" really belonged to the expected Imam, and was held by the Shah solely in the capacity of
a temporary trustee? Was it not this same Shah who walked the entire distance of eight hundred miles
from Isfahan to Mashhad, the "special glory of the Shi-Ite world," to offer his prayers, in the only way that
befitted the shahanshah, at the shrine of the Imam Rida, and who trimmed the thousand candles which
adorned its courts? Had not Shah Tahmasp, on receiving an epistle, penned by yet another mujtahid,
sprung to his feet, placed it on his eyes, kissed it with rapture, and, because he had been addressed as
"brother," ordered it to be placed within his winding-sheet and buried with him?
Might not that same mulla ponder the torrents of blood which, during the long years when he enjoyed
impunity of conduct, flowed at his behest, the flamboyant anathemas he pronounced, and the great army
of orphans and widows, of the disinherited, the dishonored, the destitute, and the homeless which, on
the Day of Reckoning, were, with one accord, to cry out for vengeance, and invoke the malediction of
God upon him?
That infamous crew had indeed merited the degradation in which it had sunk. Persistently ignoring
the sentence of doom which the finger of Baha'u'llah had traced upon the wall, it pursued, for well near a
hundred years, its fatal course, until, at the appointed hour, its death knell was sounded by those
spiritual, revolutionary forces which, synchronizing with the first dawning of the World Order of His Faith,
are upsetting the equilibrium, and throwing into such confusion, the ancient institutions of mankind.