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About this document:
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Abstract: Status of the Arc Project (Baha'i World Center), 1987.
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Classified in collection
UHJ Letters.
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Posted with "open copyright" permission.
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Arc Project:
1987 Open Letter
by Universal House of Justice
1987-08-31
To the Followers of Bahá'u'lláh throughout the world1 2 3
Beloved Friends,
Nigh on one hundred years ago, Bahá'u'lláh walked on God's Holy Mountain
and revealed the Tablet of Carmel, the Charter of the World Centre of His
Faith, calling into being the metropolis of the Kingdom of God on Earth.
Through decades of oppression and expansion, persecution and emancipation,
His followers have successfully laboured to carry His message to the
remotest regions of the earth, to erect the structure of His
Administrative Order, and to proclaim to mankind the divinely-prescribed
cure for all its ills. In the past eight years the agonies suffered by His
lovers in Iran have awakened the interest of a slumbering world and have
brought His Faith to the centre of human attention.
On this same Mount Carmel 'Abdu'l-Bahá, with infinite pains, raised the
Mausoleum of the Bab on the spot chosen by His Father, and laid to rest
within its heart the sacred remains of the Prophet Herald of the Faith,
establishing a Spiritual Centre of immeasurable significance. In
accordance with the same divine command, Shoghi Effendi embellished the
Shrine with an exquisite shell and then, under its protecting wing, began
the construction of the Administrative Centre of the Faith, to comprise
five buildings in a harmonious style of architecture, standing on a
far-flung Arc centering on the Monuments of the Greatest Holy Leaf, her
Mother and Brother. The first of these five buildings, the International
Archives, was completed in the beloved Guardian's lifetime. The second,
the Seat of the Universal House of Justice, now stands at the apex of the
Arc. Plans for the remaining three were prepared in fulfilment of a goal
of the Seven Year Plan, and are now being detailed.
As indicated in our letter of 30 April 1987, the way is now open for the
Bahá'í world to erect the remaining buildings of its Administrative
Centre, and we must without delay stride forward resolutely on this
path.
Five closely related projects demand our attention: the erection of the
three remaining buildings on the Arc and, added now to these, the
construction of the terraces of the Shrine of the Bab and the extension of
the International Archives Building. A brief description of each of these
will convey an impression of their significance for the Faith.
Message to the Bahá'í
World Page: 2
- The Terraces of the Shrine of the Bab. In His plans
for the development of Mount Carmel, 'Abdu'l-Bahá envisaged nineteen
monumental terraces from the foot of the mountain to its crest, nine
leading to the terrace on which the Shrine of the Bab itself stands, and
nine above it. These plans were often referred to by Shoghi Effendi, and
he completed in preliminary form the nine terraces constituting the
approach to the Shrine from the central avenue of the former German
Templar Colony.
- The International Teaching Centre will be the seat of that
institution which is specifically invested with the twin functions of the
protection and propagation of the Cause of God. The institution itself,
referred to by the beloved Guardian in his writings, was established in
June 1973, bringing to fruition the work of the Hands of the Cause of God
residing in the Holy Land and providing for the extension into the future
of functions with which that body had been endowed.
- The Centre for the Study of the Texts. This building will be the
seat of an institution of Bahá'í scholars, the efflorescence of the
present Research Department of the World Centre, which will assist the
Universal House of Justice in consulting the Sacred Writings, and will
prepare translations of and commentaries on the authoritative texts of the
Faith.
- The International Archives Building. We have decided to
construct, westwards, an extension to the basement of the present Archives
Building to provide accommodation for the central office of the
ever-growing Archives at the World Centre. This institution is charged
with responsibility for the preservation of the Sacred Texts and Relics
and the his- toric documents of the Cause of God.
- The International Bahá'í Library. This Library is the central
depository of all literature published on the Faith, and is an essential
source of information for the institutions of the World Centre on all
subjects relating to the Cause of God and the conditions of mankind. In
future decades its functions must grow, it will serve as an active centre
for knowledge in all fields, and it will become the kernel of great
institutions of scientific investigation and discovery.
It is impossible at this stage to give an accurate estimate of the cost of
these projects. All that we can now say is that in the immediate future
two objectives have to be met: to accumulate rapidly a reserve of fifty
million dollars on which plans for the construction can realistically
begin to be implemented, and to provide an income of between twenty and
twenty-five million dollars for the Bahá'í International Fund for each of
the next ten years. As the work proceeds, contracts are signed and costs
can be accurately determined, further information will be announced.
The great work of constructing the terraces, landscaping their
surroundings, and erecting the remaining buildings of the Arc will bring
into being a vastly augmented World Centre structure which will be capable
of meeting the challenges of coming centuries and of the tremendous growth
of the Bahá'í community which the beloved Guardian has told us to expect.
Already we see the
Message to the Baha'
World Page: 3
effect of the spiritual energies which the completion of the Seat of the
Universal House of Justice has released, and the new impulse this has
given to the advancement of the Faith. Who can gauge what transformations
will be effected as a result of the completion of each successive stage of
this great enterprise? The Faith advances, not at a uniform rate of
growth, but in vast surges, precipitated by the alternation of crisis and
victory. In a passage written on 18 July 1953, in the early months of the
Ten Year Crusade, Shoghi Effendi, referring to the vital need to ensure
through the teaching work a "steady flow" of "fresh recruits to the slowly
yet steadily advancing army of the Lord of Hosts", stated that this flow
would "presage and hasten the advent of the day which, as prophesied by
'Abdu'l-Bahá, will witness the entry by troops of peoples of divers
nations and races into the Bahá'í world". This day the Bahá'í world has
already seen in Africa, the Pacific, in Asia and in Latin America, and
this process of entry by troops must, in the present plan, be augmented
and spread to other countries for, as the Guardian stated in this same
letter, it "will be the prelude to that long-awaited hour when a mass
conversion on the part of these same nations and races, and as a direct
result of a chain of events, momentous and possibly catastrophic in
nature, and which cannot as yet be even dimly visualized, will suddenly
revolutionize the fortunes of the Faith, derange the equilibrium of the
world, and reinforce a thousandfold the numerical strength as well as the
material power and the spiritual authority of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh".
This is the time for which we must now prepare ourselves; this is the hour
whose coming it is our task to hasten.
At this climacteric of human history, we are called upon to rise up in
sacrificial endeavour, our eyes on the awe-inspiring responsibilities
which such developments will place upon Bahá'í institutions and individual
believers in every land, and our hearts filled with unshakeable confidence
in the guiding Hand of the Founder of our Faith. That our Beloved Lord
will arouse His followers in every land to a mighty united effort is our
ardent prayer at the Sacred Threshold.
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