THE UNIQUE ACTION OF THE SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLY OF LUCKNOW, INDIA IN 1957,
AFTER THE DEMISE OF THE FIRST GUARDIAN,
SHOGHI EFFENDI
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INTRODUCTION
The seven members of the LSA
of Lucknow, all of whom must be receiving their reward in the ABHA Kingdom, are calling,
not only the Baháís of India, but the Baháís of the world to follow their
example in giving preminence to the writings of Baháulláh, and
Abdul-Bahá and sever their ties with the sans-Guardian organization, join the
true Faith i.e., the Orthodox Baháí Faith, and assist the third Guardian, beloved
Joel B. Marangella, to establish the World Order of Baháulláh.
In this period of strife, India is privileged to
be a light to the world, the Torch-bearer of a message of universal brotherhood. Indian
culture possesses the capacity for rejuvenation, and can without loss of continuity bring
about a spiritual change. Indian people, though somewhat slow-going have the strength and
vitality of youth, and so have preserved their basic human instinct for love of the truth.
Their instinct reacts infallibly to the impact of realities. They are capable of effecting
changes, not by imposition nor by intimidation, but by the process of education, a
spiritual refining.
How many of us are aware that the Local Spiritual
Assembly of Lucknow, upon the passing of Shoghi Efendi in 1957, stood up valiantly for
this very basic human instinct of LOVE FOR THE TRUTH, and faithfully demonstrated its
fidelity to the Will And Testament of Abdul-Bahá, in refusing to conform to
the dictates of ten Persian Hands of Cause who conspired to make the Religion of
Baháulláh conform to their own whims and wishes? These Persian Hands of the
Cause were bent upon exploitation of the Sacred Name in following a policy of imposition
and intimidation.
It is a well known fact that when men follow a
policy of secret collusion, of which these Persian Hands were guilty at the very first
conclave of Hands, held in Akká following the passing of Shoghi Effendi, they cut
themselves off from the truth and they become deluded by ignorance, and develop satanic
perversity or egotism that proclaims itself absolute both in knowledge and power. The LSA
of Lucknow, undeterred by this policy of intimidation, passed a resolution in the presence
of seven members of the Assembly on November 9th, 1957, resolving that "the
activities of this L.S.A. be suspended till the appointment of the next Guardian of the
Faith."
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THE
SECOND GUARDIAN, CHARLES MASON REMEYS
COMMENT ON THE LETTER OF ASSEMBLY OF LUCKNOW
(http://Bahai-Guardian.com/daily.observe.html#_Toc415050698)
This afternoon [12 February 1959] there was a meeting of the seven
of us Custodian Hands of the Cause now here in the Holy Land at which there was a
discussion of many things details of the comings and goings of pilgrims all of
routine work, and a letter from the Local Assembly of Lucknow, India, was laid upon the
table without remark, someone saying that it was a local problem a matter that
should be referred not to the Hands but to the National Assembly of India.
Seeing the letter, as it lay there on the table, I
glanced at it and was astonished indeed at its contents. It was a record of the action of
that local Assembly in which seven of the nine members had united to dissolve that local
body until such time as the Guardianship be renewed and functioning again this
letter (this copy of which was addressed to the hands in the Holy Land, dated 18 November
1958) was being sent to the Indian National Assembly in New Delhi. This was indeed a most
remarkable statement (in six short paragraphs and all on one sheet of paper) of the
reasons why these friends cannot accept the present condition of the Cause without a
Guardian, so the only thing that they could do was to dissolve their Assembly until they
could again function as a Local Assembly of the Administration as given in the Will and
established by the first Guardian of the Faith, Shoghi Effendi.
Therein I found an epitome of the main and vital
points that I have urged the Hands to consider and about which they, as an overwhelming
majority, will so far do nothing. These men of Lucknow who wrote that letter are indeed
clear thinkers, as are those of the German National Assembly. It is a masterly piece of
statement, most extreme in its expression (it could not be more extreme) but with a
foundation as firm as the foundation of the Will and Testament of the Master
Abdul-Bahá ...it gave me more hope than any of the other objections so far
received by the Custodian Hands objections to the action of the Hands in their
tacit scrapping of the Guardianship that is of a divine nature and of their putting up in
its place, the present human organization...
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THE ORIGINAL
LETTER WRITTEN BY
THE LOCAL SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLY OF LUCKNOW
(Guardian's Web Site
under the following URL:
http://Bahai-Guardian.com/Question.html
Resolution passed in the presence of seven members of the
Assembly (L.S.A. LUCKNOW) on November 9th,1957
REGISTERED SOCIETY NO. 141 NOVEMBER 18, 1958
(U.P. INDIA) RAFFANIAN
L.S.A. (LUCKNOW) HAIFA, ISRAEL
Where as by a resolution passed in the presence of
seven members of the Assembly on November 9th,1957, it was resolved that "the
activities of this L.S.A. be suspended til the appointment of the next Guardian of the
Faith" and the same was intimated to the N.S.A., New Delhi, and whereas it comes
under the purview of the Supreme Council, so therefore it behooves this assembly to place
the following arguments without prejudice, before the aforementioned Supreme Council
through Raffanian, Haifa (Israel):
1. Mans nature is two-fold; he is spirit and
body and therefore, at once, a citizen of this world and of the Heavenly City.
2. The State of Guardianship is the supermost
thing upon Earth, for the Guardians are not only Gods lieutenants upon earth, and
sit upon Gods throne, but even by God Himself they are called Gods. That which
concerns the mystery of The Guardians power is not lawful to be disputed, for, that
is to wade into the weakness of Gods, and to take away the mystical reverence that belongs
unto the temporal presence of them that sit in the Throne of God.
3. The Guardian ought to have no equal in his
realm because this would nullify the rule that an equal cannot have authority over his
equals. Still less ought he to have a superior or anyone more powerful than he, for he
would then be below his own deputies and it is impossible that inferiors should be equal
to the Supreme.
4. The Supremacy of the Guardian in spiritual
matters is absolute under God. Substantially He is the "AKDAS" in the sense that
he can neither be removed nor held responsible and has ultimate authority over the rest of
the hierarchy, which his deputies have not. The Guardian has full power to create Hands of
the Cause and can do so without any of the customary forms of election.
5. The unique power possessed by The Guardian
alone, is, therefore a "Divine Right". It confers a peculiar superiority, a
power of revision and supervision over all other forms of authority whether ecclesiastical
or secular. In substance the Guardian alone is the head of the entire legal system, not,
indeed, as a universal executive but as a court of final authority which functions not in
absentia but by presence. It is evident that it is impossible to invest the community or
even the Hands of the Cause, with the supreme authority which is the Divine prerogative of
the Guardian.
6. The present system is but conciliary and the
concilliarists have set against it the ideal of a harmony of powers cooperating by free
and mutual consent. Such an argument is fought with the implication that God had changed
the mode of imposing His Divine Right according to the wishes of the few. Such a
democratic conception is vitally opposed to the Spirit of the Faith. The concilliarist
theory strands curiously balanced between past and present. Wherever authority stands upon
the exploitation of a sacred name, intimidation has to be adopted as policy on
considerations.
L.S.A. Lucknow in animated suspense till the
consecration of the Guardian on His vacant throne.
51 Sundarbagh,
Lucknow U.P. (India)
Copied from the original letter by C.M.R.
"Gupta" was the name of the writer of Lucknow, India.
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THE
THIRD GUARDIAN, JOEL B. MARANGELLAS
APPEAL TO THE INDIAN BAHÁÍS
During the 36-year ministry of the first Guardian
of the Faith, Shoghi Effendi, the Baháís proclaimed their undying fidelity to the
Covenant of Baháulláh and to the appointed Centre of that Covenant,
`Abdul-Bahá. In Abdul-Bahá they recognised, not only the Centre to
whom all should turn following the Ascension of Baháulláh as the sole
Interpreter of the Holy Word but the true Exemplar of their Faith and the "perfect
Architect" of a divinely-conceived Administrative Order an Order, unique in
religious history and the distinguishing feature of their Faith. As Shoghi Effendi has
said "this Order constitutes the very pattern of that divine civilisation which
the almighty Law of Baháulláh is designed to establish upon earth."
Baháulláh, Himself, extolled this future Order as "this unique,
this wondrous System the like of which mortal eyes have never witnessed."
As every Baháí knows, this unique
Administrative Order was delineated by the unerring Pen of Abdul-Bahá in His
Will and Testament, a sacred and divinely-conceived Document acclaimed by Shoghi Effendi
as the very "Child of the Covenant", for he explained: "The
creative energies released by the Law of Baháulláh, permeating and evolving
within the mind of Abdul-Bahá, have by their very impact and close
interaction given birth to an Instrument which may be viewed as the Charter of the New
World order which is at once the glory and promise of this most great Dispensation. The
Will may thus be acclaimed as the inevitable offspring resulting from that mystic
intercourse between Him Who communicated the generating influence of His divine Purpose
and the One Who was its vehicle and chosen recipient. Being the Child of the Covenant
the Heir of both the Originator and the Interpreter of the Law of God the
Will and Testament of Abdul-Bahá can no more divorced from Him Who supplied
the original and motivating impulse than from the One Who ultimately
conceived it." Hence, as Shoghi Effendi has stated, this momentous Document
should be considered as "Their Will." Moreover, in expatiating on
the sacred character of this divine Charter, Shoghi Effendi conferred on this Document a
rank co-equal with The Most Holy Book revealed, by Baháulláh the Kitáb-i-Aqdas
stating that "A study of these sacred documents will reveal the close
relationship that exists between them" and "that they are not only
complementary, but that they mutally confirm one another and are inseparable parts of one
complete unit." And he has said further, "For nothing short of the
. . . provisions of their Will could possibly safeguard the Faith for which They have both
so gloriously labored all Their lives."
As the Will and Testament of
Abdul-Bahá His"greatest legacy to posterity"
constitutes a part of the explicit Holy Text, it is clear that not one jot or
tittle of this Document may be annulled, altered or amended for as long as the
Dispensation of Baháulláh endures. Therefore, "This Divine
Masterpiece which the hand of the Master-builder of the world has designed for the
unification and the triumph of the world-wide Faith of Baháulláh,"
must, remain immutable and inviolable for no less than a full thousand years.
How then can any Baháí, claiming to accept
the divine origin and immutability of Abdul-Bahás Divine Charter and
its co-equal rank with The Most Holy Book, reconcile this belief with the insidious
doctrine promulgated by those who have abandoned the Guardianship that God has changed His
Mind ("BADAH") concerning the continuity of the Guardianship of the Cause? And,
consequently, in effect, declaring those provisions of Abdul-Bahás
Charter pertaining to the supreme institutions of the Baháí Administrative Order
null and void, a mere thirty-six years following the inception of the Administative Order,
due to the alleged inability or failure of Shoghi Effendi to appoint a successor under the
terms of that Divine Charter.
It should be clear, even to a non-Baháí
observer, that in the light of the foregoing, such a conclusion would constitute nothing
less than a flagrant repudiation of the previously professed belief of the Baháís
in the immutability of Abdul-Bahás Will and Testament. Indeed to
believe that Shoghi Effendi was unable or failed to appoint his successor, is to place him
in the position of being a party to the destruction of the World Order of
Baháulláh. For, to put an end to the Guardianship, the very heart and Centre
of the Cause, is to also destroy the two remaining supreme institutions of the
Administrative Order which depend on the presence of a living Guardian of the Faith,
namely, the Universal House of Justice, of which the Guardian is "the sacred
head and distinguished member for life" and the Hands of the Cause who are
appointed only by him.
Those familiar with the auspicious record of
Shoghi Effendis untiring labors during his ministry to erect the machiney of the
Baháí Administrative Order throughout the world and his copious writngs pertaining
to the distinguishing features of that Order, will vouch that they bear eloquent testimony
to the depths of his devotion, dedication, and undeviating fidelity to
Abdul-Bahás Testament and his unwavering resolve to faithfully
discharge every mandate bequeathed to us in that Charter as well as to
Abdul-Bahás other Charter, "The Tablets of the Divine
Plan." One may search his writings and not find a single phrase in them or in
his historic messages to the Baháí world alluding to anything but the
indispensability and the continuity of the Guardianship down through the ages to come of
the Dispensation of Baháulláh.
Indeed faithful to this sacred trust, Shoghi
Effendi carefully provided for the continuity of the Guardianship and publicly announced
the appointment of his successor to the Baháí world at the time. This being the
case, why was it that this all-important appointment was not recognized by the
Baháís, either then, or following the passing of Shoghi Effendi? The answer is to
be found in the erroneous beliefs and notions unfortunately held by most, if not all, of
the Baháís, as to the manner in which Shoghi Effendi would appoint his successor,
coupled with their equally fallacious views as to the qualifications that his successor
was required to possess. As Shoghi Effendi had been appointed to his supreme Office in the
Faith through the instrumentality of the Will and Testament of Abdul-Bahá
they automatically assumed (obviously without re-examining the phraseology of the Will)
that Shoghi Effendi would employ a similar instrument to appoint his successor, whereas if
they had closely re-examined the language inAbdul-Bahás Testament, they
would have noted that it is mandatory for the Guardian to appoint his successor "in
his own lifetime. . . that differences may not arise after his passing."
Thus, it would have been clear that the Guardians of the Faith are barred from using a
testamentary-type document in the appointment of their successors. The Baháís held
an equally false notion concerning the qualifications of the Guardians successor,
believing that only the Guardians son (Shoghi Effendi had no offspring) or a blood
relative of Baháulláh (misinterpreted by them to mean an Aghsán, who
Shoighi Effendi has defined as only the sons of Baháulláh) could inherit the
Guardianship whereas Abdul-Bahás Will permits the Guardian to choose "another
branch" (a male believer) whose exemplary fidelity and service to the
Covenant of Baháulláh the "Tree of the Covenant"
has qualified him to be a spiritual "branch" of that
glorious Tree.
Spiritually blinded, as they were (and still are),
by these preconceived ideas and notions, it is little wonder that the Baháís, as a
whole were ill-prepared to perceive the significance of the act taken by Shoghi Effendi to
assure the continuity of the Guardianship and to recognise the unique and ingenious manner
in which he had accomplished the appointment of his succesor (in a public, yet veiled
manner).
Some five years prior to his passing, Shoghi
Effendi issued the only Proclamation of his ministry on 9 January 1951, using the form of
a cablegram significantly addressed to the "National Assemblies of the East and
West." In this historic Proclamation he proclaimed the "weighty
epoch-making decision of the formation of the first International Baháí
Council" hailing this decision to form the "first embryonic
International Institution" as the "most signifcant milestone in
the evolution of the Administrative Order of the Faith" since the ascension
of Abdul-Bahá (30 years earlier). Further extolling this event, he stated
that history would acclaim the constitution, at long last, of the International Council "the
greatest event shedding light upon the second epoch of the Formative Age of the
Baháí Dispensation potentially unsurpassed by any enterprise undertakren since the
inception of the Administrative Order . . ."The significance of this "milestone"
lay, of course in the fact that Shoghi Effendi had, in his Proclamation, established the embryonic
Universal House of Justice. It has been emphasized in the Writings that it is a universal
law that the growth and development of all beings is a gradual one and that "the
embryo possesses from the first all perfections."(pp. 312-313, BWF). This
divine and universal law applies equally to the organisms of the embryonic World
Order of Baháulláh and Shoghi Effendi has frequently used the term embryonic
in referring to the institutions of the Administrative Order and, in fact, to the Faith
itself. Therefore, the Universal House of Justice established, in its embryonic
form by Shoghi Effendi, although provisionally titled the International Baháí
Council, was a complete and whole organism with both head and body "from the
first." Consider, therefore, the significance of Shoghi Effendis
appointment of the head or President of this embryonic body the irremovable
head of an organism which, as he stated, would evolve through four successive stages in
its development towards maturity and its final efflorescence as the Universal House of
Justice. All Baháís know that, according to the Will and Testament of
Abdul-Bahá, only the Guardian of the Faith serves as the "sacred
head and the distinguished member for life of that body." It was in the light
of this undeniable fact that lay the hidden key to the recogniton of Shoghi Effendis
appointed successor. For he had named a Baháí of recognised unsurpassed service,
devotion and fidelity to the Covenant of Baháulláh since the earliest days
of Abdul-Bahá to be the head or President of this embryonic body
one whom he had summoned to take up permanent residence in Haifa but a short time
earlier to assist him in the work at the World Administrative Centre of the Faith.
Significantly, Shoghi Effendi had chosen not to assume the Presidency of this body,
himself, but at the same time had not authorized its appointed head, Mason Remey, to
activate this embryonic Institution during the remaining seven years of his life, for, to
have done, so would have caused this organism to emerge from its embryonic state into full
and active life a state that necessarily had to await his passing. Therefore,
coincident with his passing the International Baháí Council the embyonic
Universal Houise of Justice would become an actively functioning administrative
body and as Guardian and President of the UHJ are synonymous titles, Mason Remey would
then automatically accede to the Guardianship of the Faith (with not even a moments
break taking place in the continuity of the Guardianship, as intended by
Abdul-Bahá). For Shoghi Effendi to have choosen this method in appointing his
successor was indeed ingenious for, while he had made this appointment, as required, "in
his own life-time" at the same time, he had purposely veiled the appointment
in such a way that it had not become obvious to the believers. For, had they perceived the
significance of the appointment of a man, considerably older than Shoghi Effendi, as his
successor, they would have been faced with the tragic realization that this appointment
portended the death of Shoghi Effendi in the near future (his passing actually taking
place less than seven years later). Certainly, such a realisation on the part of the
believers would unquestionably have produced world-wide consternation on the part of the
believers and given rise to chaotic conditions within the Faith. It is obvious that it was
for this reason that Shoghi Effendi had chosen to appoint his successor in this indirect
manner. Tragically, as it turned out, the veil with which Shoghi Effendi had purposely
enshrouded the appointment of his successor became even more impenetrable following his
passing, for the reasons outlined earlier, with such dire consequences for the future of
the Faith.
Not finding a will and testament left by Shoghi
Effendi, which they had erroneously anticipated and blinded by their preconceived ideas,
as cited above, the Hands of the Cause, (with one notable exception) hastily concluded
that Shoghi Effendi had named no successor and thereby renounced their faith in the
divinely-conceived, sacred and immortal Will and Testament of Abdul-Bahá.
And, because of the great prestige that they enjoyed, they were able to easily persuade
the vast majority of their fellow-believers to abandon the Guardianship as well. And, then
incredibly they shamelessly established, in place of the "divinely
ordained" institutions delineated in that Holy Charter, an organisation of
their own making that was but a poor and deformed man-made substitute for the
divinely-appointed Administrative Order bequeathed to us by "the master-hand of
its perfect Architect,"Abdul-Bahá.
For in the substitute organisation they have
created:
There is no longer a Guardian the
"Centre of the Cause."
The interpretive authority of Holy Writ, vested
solely in the Guardian and vitally essential to safeguarding the Faith from future schism,
is forever lost.
The institution of the Hands of the Cause ceases
to exist, as only the Guardian can appoint Hands.
The Universal House of Justice brought into
existence in its embryonic form, by Shoghi Effendi in 1951 with its "sacred
head" appointed by him, has been supplanted by a sans-Guardian and hence
headless body which lacks the essential presence of the Guardian to provide it with the
guidance and protection to insure that no legislation is enacted that will "conflict
with the meaning"or "depart from the spirit of Baháulláhs
revealed utterances."
Such, then, are the frightful implications of a
Guardianless Faith. The World Order of Baháulláh that "Wondrous
System" extolled by Baháulláh and delineated by the infallible
Pen of Abdul-Bahá in His Will and Testament can never become a reality if the
supreme organs of that divinely-conceived Order have all been destroyed and replaced by
man-made and fallible institutions.
In sharp contrast with the corrupted man-made
administrative system established by the Hands of the Cause, the Orthodox Baháís
remain faithful to the living Guardianship of he Faith and strive to establish and
preserve the institutions of the Administrative Order, as delineated in the Will and
Testament of Abdul-Bahá. They hope and pray that those Baháís who
have been led far astray from the Covenant and persuaded to abandon the Guardianship of
the Cause of God will return to the true Faith having gained the realisation that the
indestructible and resistless Covenant of Baháulláh and its
divinely-conceived offspring, the "Child of the Covenant"
the Will and Testament of Abdul-Bahá, is immortal and that, under the living
Guardian of the Faith, all of the institutions of the Administrative Order which Shoghi so
laboriously erected with such care, in accordance with the provisions of that sacred
Document and which, "at long last," as a befitting crowning
achievement of these untiring labors, he had announced and hailed with such joy during the
closing years of his ministry, the erection "at the World Center of the
Faith," of the "machinery of its highest institutions"
and "the supreme organs of its unfolding Order," shall once again,
with the victory of the Covenant, be restored in all of their divinely-conceived glory and
perfection.

Joel Bray Marangella
Third Guardian of the Baháí Faith |
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