Archive for May, 2007

On Wanting to Explore Other Religions: Does this make me a heretic?

Richie has been thinking about his religious views. -gw
I’d like to explore other religions as well. I’m really interested in learning about the Baha’i faith. The Baha’i faith sees religious history as an evolving educational process for mankind, through God’s messengers. These messengers include Buddha, Jesus, the Hebrew prophets, etc. The religion teaches tolerance, unity, the elimination of prejudice, and peace. There is a Baha’i temple in Wilmette, not very far from the high school I used to attend. I’ve been there once on a field trip, but I’d like to go there for service sometime. Does this make me a heretic? I don’t think so.

Richie’s Bio: “I play RPGs. … Long live Suikoden and SMT!”

On Visiting a Baha’i Center with Andrea’s Religious Education Class: They were willing to talk seriously about religion

Unitarian Univeralists celebrate many world religions. -gw

Yesterday I went with Andrea’s RE class to a Baha’i Center. They were the nicest people! They fed us breakfast and led us through their typical Sunday morning services. Then they split up into groups for classes and we had a really interesting discussion. I thought it was so cool that they were willing to talk seriously about religion with us. They even seemed interested in coming to visit our church.

Rachel, 21 May 2007 @ 10:52 am, socially retarded butterfly

Photo: “This ornament … is the symbol of UUism– it represents religious freedom and the never-ending search for truth,” uploaded on December 21, 2006 by NancyTwink on flickr

On the Holding of Baha’i Devotional Meetings: From Coast to Coast

Open Mic Night at the Baha’i Center: David,”
uploaded on August 2, 2006 by neda_zali on flickr

I hosted my first devotional this morning, at the Baha’i Center. It is normally Luke and Diane’s week to host a devotional at the center, but since they were out of town, I put together some music and prayers and relied on serious moral support and evening prayers and morning prayers with Nick. But it went off just wonderfully, and had a nice showing.

It’s a time of firsts. Over on the East Coast dear Ashley hosted her first devotional meeting at her local Baha’i center. Bonita and I recently started our first weekly Baha’i devotional in our home on the West Coast.

We’ve had firesides over the years. I was DJ (”Devotional Jockey”) George for a monthly devotional meeting sponsored by our community for more than seven years. But never before have we had regular devotions for friends and neighbors in our own home until Myong brought it to mind.

The holding of devotional meetings is a Baha’i “core activity”, after all. We’re glad to be participating in this fundamental activity along with Baha’is in a multitude of other localities across the planet, feeling at one with the world.

Uploaded on May 21, 2007 by figurita_nl on flickr

Just like days of old, when I would draw together songs for interspersing with the spontaneous devotions of participants at Wright Park, I am once again putting together a CD song list for our home devotions. Given Myong’s 12 years of teaching piano in Korea, my selections of late have been a lot of solo piano pieces by the likes of Listz, Chopin, Debussy, Rachmaninoff, and Beethoven, something of a departure from the roots music, black, white and brown, offered at the community devotions. I’m growing quite fond of Listz.

I can’t describe how thrilling it is to hear Myong say Baha’i prayers, whether in English or Korean. I just wish we had a piano so Myong could play the songs in between live and in person. That song she played at our First Day of Ridvan Holy Day celebration was a delightful surprise. -gw

On Wearing Korean Traditional Clothing: Scoring big points with Buddhist nuns, senior citizens, and the Baha’is

Traditional Korean dress, uploaded on June 1, 2006 by stewils on flickr
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Our family has special interest in things Korean since we have been getting to know our neighbor Myong who has been studying the Faith with us. From Korea comes this blog entry from Lex. -gw

Today was the Baha’i Northern National Conference, any Baha’i who had the day off and wanted to hear all about last year’s statistics and the growth of the Baha’i community in Korea could go. This year there were two conferences - one for the folks who live north of Daejeon and one for the people who live to the south.

I like these kinds of meetings. You get to hear the wrap up of the last year and receive a copy of all of the financial transactions and find out who moved into the country and out of the country and how many Baha’is died and were born, and who went on pilgrimage. It’s an event worthy of getting dressed up for.

Korean culture has existed for thousands of years, as has Korean weather. So naturally, you would think that the best clothes to wear here would be the ones that have proven to be effective over the last 30 hundred years, right? Korean traditional clothing is beautiful and modest and made to suit the weather here. I love seeing old people wearing it around, not just for weddings. But that’s it, ONLY old people wear it, and that’s really a shame. I would love more people alive in Korea today to take stock of traditional Korean things that are really good and to not toss them aside just for the sake of modernity.

I am trying to live by the motto: Be the change you want to see. So, today I wore a blue linen dress and a traditional bamboo-cloth overshirt. First of all, this is the coolest overshirt in the whole world because it is big and boxy and stiff and has big sleeves and it is off-white and somewhat transparent, which makes it extremely cool. The rough weave of the fibers make any slight breeze intensified in the heat and it circulates air on hot days perfectly. And you know how I made all those cool pins, well I put 3 blue pins on the overshirt to make it look uber-fashionable and left the house not knowing what people would think. Like I said, Ive only seen people over the age of 65 wear stuff like this outside, and culturally, I had no idea how people would react to seeing an American in a traditional over shirt.

I am getting to recognise some of the people in my neighborhood, and one of the first people I ran in to on my walk to the subway station was one of my favorite grandmas. I think she might even be a great grandma. She’s very old. When I saw her face light up with joy, I figured that I was safe. Most people on the subway under 50 pretended not to notice me, like usual, but everyone over 50 definitely took notice and 5 people even came up to talk to me, and one very old man even pinched my cheeks in a super-cute grandfatherly way. The Buddhist nuns were also quick to beam huge smiles at me, and in a land of very few huge smiles, I was really happy to see that.

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However, no one loved to see me wearing traditional clothes more than the Korean Baha’is.

That’s me, over here in Seoul, wooing religionists and old ladies like usual.

Lex, “Scoring big points with Buddhist nuns, senior citizens and The Baha’is,” Hello to you: the person reading this! I like you

{Re-posted with permission}

On "Barnabas Quotidianus": Baha’i Bloggers Gather in England for "5 Keys" Presentation

More on blogging… Great post on Barney’s blog on Thane Terrill’s visit on behalf of the Baha’i Internet Agency with Baha’i bloggers in England with lots of pics.
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Let me also note that I finally got the spelling right on the link to his blog on my side bar: It’s Barnabas Quotidianus, “the Daily Barnabas,” always a fount of inspiration.
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Luke speaks of the “other” Barnabas as a “good man” (11:24). That description fits the Baha’i Barnabas as well. -gw
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Photo: Detail, St Barnabas Church, Jericho, Oxford, uploaded on February 7, 2007 by Oxfordshire Church Illustrations on flickr

On the World As an Internet Cafe: Guidance for Baha’is

Below is the letter that a few short months ago caused Baha’i bloggers hunched over computer keyboards from Baltimore to Beijing to experience mysterious bouts of bodily tingling, especially in the tips of their fingers. -gw
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Cyberness Cafe 4,” uploaded on February 11, 2007 by Junior Productions on flickr
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Japanese internet cafe, uploaded on February 11, 2007 by Hapax Legomenon on flickr

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Indian internet cafe, uploaded on August 17, 2005 by Marc Shandro on flickr
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Taiwanese internet cafe, uploaded on November 14, 2004 by jared on flickr
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11 December 2007
Transmitted by email

To selected National Spiritual Assemblies
Dear Bahá’í Friends,
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With the emergence of the Internet as a primary information resource for growing numbers of people worldwide, and more recently as a means of facilitating social networking and novel
forms of collaboration, new ways of sharing Bahá’í precepts, perspectives and experiences with a range of audiences have become possible. It has become evident that to take full advantage of these opportunities a concerted thrust to foster individual initiative on the Internet is necessary.
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In a recent communication to the Bahá’í Internet Agency, the International Teaching Centre ndicates that
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the essential aim of this new thrust would be to produce a groundswell of information about the Faith on the Internet through the flourishing of Web sites, blogs, podcasts, and other appropriate formats, in a range of key languages.Although this focus will undoubtedly incorporate developments under the auspices of Bahá’í institutions, including the establishment of a much greater number of national Web sites, the major and most dynamic thrust is envisaged through the stimulation and support of individual initiatives, particularly amongst the youth. This will necessitate an orientation that fosters creativity and a spirit of enterprise within a broad set of guidelines and recognizes that learning through mistakes will be an inevitable part of the process.

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The Teaching Centre also notes that an increased presence of the Faith on the Internet can serve “as both an effective form of defence and a means of exploiting opportunities afforded by growing media exposure.”
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Toward this end of generating an expanding range of quality content about the Faith, we have attached background material and suggestions about new modalities of Internet participation such as blogging and podcasting. This information can be freely shared with the members of your communities. We especially encourage you to cultivate the involvement of youth in this arena of action. Sessions or workshops at youth conferences might well offer useful venues to create awareness and capacity in this regard. To promote learning about promising approaches, we hope to establish an ongoing exchange with you concerning innovative ideas carried out by individuals that increase the visibility of the Faith on the Internet or draw inquirers into Bahá’í community activity.
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Internet initiatives should of course be carried out within the framework of institutional guidance and in light of cardinal Bahá’í principles such as moderation, courtesy, probity, fairness, dignity and wisdom. Individual and institutional undertakings on the Internet are complementary in nature—activities to be pursued in consonance with the overall objectives of the current global Plan. In this respect, the International Teaching Centre emphasizes that “the presentation of the Faith on the Internet, and through other media, will undoubtedly prove an important area of experience and learning in advancing the process of entry by troops—the singular aim of the Five Year Plan.”
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With loving greetings,
Bahá’í Internet Agency
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“My Hmong girls at the internet café,”
uploaded on May 14, 2007
by kekekekekekeke on flickr

On a Blog of Extraordinary Quality, "Baha’i Epistolary": The astonishments of life as a Bahá’í

Flamenco dancer, uploaded on September 24, 2006 by 45street on flickr

A Baha’i blog of the most extraordinary quality is Ismael Velasco’s Baha’i Epistolary, which he describes as reflections written in the midst of conversation about the astonishments of life as a Bahá’í.” Every word on its pages glisten with wonder, deep personal insights, and devotion to the Cause of Baha’u'llah.

This dear soul is not afraid to approach any subject. He has, for, example, focused on these issues of great import involving the Baha’i communuity: culture, due process, growth, the institute process, intimacy, mass teaching, Native Americans, non-core activities, prejudice, racism, and Ruhi. He also addresses the social-political issues of political activism and homosexuality. Under the heading of spirituality, he addresses failure, grace, martyrdom, and vulnerability.

Canaries, Uploaded on October 13, 2006 by oscarromulus on flickr
Baha’i Epistolary deserves readership from thoughtful souls in all parts of the world. I love, too, that this blog comes to us from the Canary Islands, evoking both a lovely image and metaphor. Here is Ismael’s “About Me” and his blog description. -gw

Ismael Velasco
Tenerife, Canary Islands,
What can I say? I’m a Mexican cosmopolite, an aspiring Bahá’í, a writer, poet, essayist; tentative Bahá’í scholar in the areas of history and scripture principally; a social and economic development professional specializing in social exclusion, action research and participatory democracy/user involvement; a social entrepreneur; a budding arts producer; professional translator; a guitar dabbler and former hot-dog seller (best in the island). I have two stunning daughters, aged 7 and 10 at the time of writing (Ana-Sofía and Lucía respectively). I love music, of all kinds, but my heart snapped when I encountered flamenco as lived by the gyspsies of Spain, and am determined to dance it well enough for a passing gypsy to laugh only a little when I torture a bulería. Without prayer, I would not survive. No exaggeration. I think life is beautiful, and very, very hard. My heart is prey to love, perhaps to excess, and the figure of Bahá’u'lláh fills me with longing, and makes a great, soul deep love well up in me toward the Universal House of Justice. I have no clue whatsoever about how I’ll make good before I go. Wish me luck.

Bahá’í Epistolary:
These are reflections written in the midst of conversation about the astonishments of life as a Bahá’í. A collection of efforts to hear and answer beyond words the questions and responses of another soul - a vulnerable yet sincere epistolary seeking truth, hoping to resonate in this space with other yearnings and astonishments amidst our ever diverse and ever approximate responses to the immensity of life itself. It is humbly dedicated to the Universal House of Justice. - Ismael Velasco

On Free-Range Baha’i Parsley: Another Random Blog Mention

While the subject covered here is serious, racial profiling, Manish’s post is tagged “humor.” -gw

I dunno about you, but I’m ordering Hindu vegetarian from now on. Or kosher. Or free-range Baha’i parsley.

Manish, “No halal soup for you,” Ultrabrown

“Cucumber or parsley,” uploaded on December 21, 2005 by Wesley Chu on flickr

On the Noise and Distraction of This World: Taraz’s Video Reflection

Assist me, by Thy strengthening grace, O my Lord, to do what Thou didst will, and withhold not from me the things Thou dost possess. So enravish me with the wonders of Thine utterances that the noise and distraction of this world may be powerless to deter me from turning unto Thee, and may fail to shake my constancy in Thy Cause, or to distract my gaze from the horizon of Thy grace. Aid me, then, O my God, to do what pleaseth Thee, and to carry out Thy will. Write down for me, moreover, the good of this world and of the world which is to come, and ordain 115 for me a seat of truth in Thy presence. Potent art Thou to do what Thou willest, and to rule as Thou pleasest. No God is there but Thee, the Inaccessible, the All-Glorious, the Most Great.

Baha’u'llah, “LXIX: “Glorified art Thou, O Lord my God! My tongue,…” Prayers and Meditations by Bahá’u’lláh, pp. 114-115.

Taraz’u'llah gave Flitzy Phoebie the scoop on [click here to play] his new video “trailer” experimentation, but I can’t resist jumping on the bandwagon. Note: loading may take a minute or two. -gw

On Preternaturally Unperturbable Faiths: Bahai and Amish

“Amish School,” uploaded on November 10, 2006 by cindy47452 on flickr


How is this for a descriptive phrase for Baha’is: “preternaturally unperturbable”? What a lovely
complement, and certainly something to aspire to, as in, to be “radiantly acquiescent”! -gw


The atheist seems to suffer from the curse of all humanists: namely the lack of any gift of discernment between religions (or cultures for that matter.) That Hitchens, et al. would lump preternaturally unperturbable faiths such as the Baha’i or the Amish in the same category as radical Islam suggests a seemingly deliberate effort to make their point by obfuscation rather than argumentation.

Walter, “The atheists are coming!! The atheists are coming!!” Matters of Manner and Type
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“Leaves of One Tree Baha’i School,” Flitzy Phoebie