Bahai Library Online

Chronology of the Bahá'í Faith

World Canada
   

Date 194-, sorted by date, ascending

date event tags firsts
1940 (In the decade)
194-
By the mid-1940s Corporal Thomas Bereford Macauley became a Bahá'í in Nigeria, the first Bahá'í in the country. - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Nigeria first Bahá’í in Nigeria
1940 (in the decade)
194-
The first Bahá'ís to reside in the Belgian Congo (Zaire) were Mr Rajah Ali Vahdat and Mme Marthe Molitor. - Travel teachers and pioneers, First; Congo, Democratic Republic of first resident Bahá’ís in Belgian Congo
1940 (in the decade)
194-
The first Egyptian Bahá'í summer school was held in the mid-1940s. Egypt; First summer and winter schools; Summer schools first Egyptian Bahá’í summer school
1940 (In the year)
194-
Eleanor Smith Adler, a new Bahá'í from Los Angeles, settled in La Paz, the first pioneer to Bolivia.

The first believer in Bolivia was Madame Yvonne de Cuellar. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb]

Bolivia; Eleanor Smith Adler; La Paz, Bolivia first pioneer to Bolivia; first believer in Bolivia
1940 (In the year)
194-
Marcia Atwater, from the United States, arrived in Santiago, Chile, as the first long-term pioneer. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] - Travel teachers and pioneers, First; Chile; Marcia Atwater; Santiago, Chile first long-term pioneer in Chile
1940 (In the year)
194-
Narayenrao Rangnath Shethji, a Bahá'í from India surnamed Vakíl, visited Nepal, the first Bahá'í to do so. Narayenrao Rangnath Shethji Vakil; Nepal first Bahá’í to visit Nepal
1940 (In the year)
194-
The publication of I, Mary Magdalen by Juliet Thompson. It was a novel with a semi-autobiographical account of her contact with 'Abdu'l-Bahá. [Collins7.2554] I, Mary Magdalen; Juliet Thompson; New York, USA; United States (USA)
1940 (In the year)
194-
A Bahá'í centre was opened in Havana, Cuba, and an organized group was formed. Cuba; Havana, Cuba; Haziratul-Quds (Bahá'í centres)
1940 (In the year)
194-
The Canadian Department of National Defence exempted Bahá'ís from combatant military duty. Canada; Exemption; Military; Military (armed forces); Recognition (legal)
1940 (In the year)
194-
The first local spiritual assembly in Brazil was established in Bahia, with the assistance of Leonora Holsapple Armstrong.
  • The second Local Spiritual Assembly was formed in Rio de Janeiro and, in 1946 the third, in São Paulo. [Biographical Profile]
  • Bahia, Brazil; Brazil; Brazil; Leonora Holsapple Armstrong; Local Spiritual Assembly, formation; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Sao Paulo, Brazil first LSA in Brazil
    1940 (In the year)
    194-
    ʿAbd-al-Mīṯāq Mīṯāqīya, ( 'Abdu'l-Missagh Missaghiyeh) a well-known Bahá'í of Tehran, built a hospital and donated it to the Bahá'í community. The hospital rapidly developed to employ highly respected physicians, and to obtain advanced equipment. It became known as one of the best medical centres in Tehran.
  • In the early 1970s a nursing school, affiliated with the hospital, was inaugurated and the hospital itself opened medical clinics in Boir Aḥmad [BW16p264; BAHAISM v. The Bahai Community in Iran by V. Rafati]
  • Abd-al-Mitaq Mitaqiya; `Abdu'l-Missagh Missaghiyeh; Iran; Tehran, Iran
    1940 (In the year)
    194-
    An institution for Bahá'í orphans in Iran was founded which served the community for many years. [BW9p251]
  • On a more general level, an achievement of the Bahá'í communities in Iran was the establishment of modern public baths in most of the major populated towns and villages throughout the country to replace the unhygienic traditional baths. Some of the baths were built and donated to the community by individual Bahá'ís and some were established through the collective financial participation of the members of the community. [BAHAISM v. The Bahai Community in Iran by V. Rafati]
  • Endowments; Iran; Orphanages; Property; Public baths (bathhouses)
    1940 (In the year)
    194-
    Ruth and Ellsworth Blackwell were the first Bahá'í pioneers to move to Haiti, where they spent more than half of the next thirty-five years. The book, White and Negro Alike. Stories of Baha'i Pioneers Ellsworth and Ruth Blackwell tells the story of the victories and the challenges they experienced in Haiti and in periods when they returned to Chicago between 1940 and 1975. It was written by Audrey Mike and published by Our Life Words.
  • See the story of Ellsworth Blackwell, NSA member, ABM, pioneer to Madagascar and to Zaire (DRC) where he passed away in 1978. [Bahaipedia]
  • - Biography; Congo, Democratic Republic of; Ellsworth Blackwell; Haiti; Madagascar; Ruth Blackwell first pioneers to settle in Haiti
    1940 (In the year)
    194-
    First believer in Honduras was Sra. Angela Ochoa Velazquez (Tegucigalpa). . [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Honduras First believer in Honduras
    1940 (In the year)
    194-
    The first pioneers to Puerto Rico were Rouhiyyah Jones and Katherine Didier. [The Beginings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Puerto Rico first pioneers to Puerto Rico
    1940 (In the Year)
    194-
    The first pioneer to Uruguay was Wilfrid Barton. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Uruguay first pioneer to Uruguay
    1940 13 Jan
    194-
    María Teressa Martín de López (Irizarry), from Puerto Rico, became a Bahá'í in the Dominican Republic while on a visit. She was the first Puerto Rican Bahá'í and the first person to become a Bahá'í in the Dominican Republic.
  • For the story of her life see BW8:631–42.
  • - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Dominican Republic first Puerto Rican Bahá’í; first declaration Dominican Republic
    1940 9 Feb
    194-
    The monuments of Navváb and the Purest Branch were dedicated at a ceremony in Haifa. [ZK293]
  • For details of the ceremony, see ZK293–6.
  • Marble* for the Monument Gardens came from Chiampo, Italy as did marble for the Archives Building, the Resting Place of Shoghi Effendi, the Seat of the Universal House of Justice, the Terraces Project, and the Houses of Worship in India and Samoa. [BWNS1223]

    *Edward Keith-Roach OBE (Born 1885 Gloucester, England— died 1954) was the British Colonial administrator during the British mandate on Palestine, who also served as the governor of Jerusalem from 1926 to 1945 (excluding a period in the 1930s when he was governor of the Galilee). He was nicknamed "Páshá of Jerusalem". He approved exemption from duties and established a policy that was continued by Israel that allowed materials for the BWC to enter duty free, such as the marble for the buildings on the Arc. [Shoghi Effendi, Uncompiled Published Letters]

  • * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Bahá'í World Centre; Ásíyih Khánum (Navváb); Bahá'í World News Service (BWNS); Chiampo, Italy; Edward Keith-Roach; Italy; Marble; Mírzá Mihdi (Purest Branch); Monument Gardens (Haifa); Mount Carmel
    1940 1 Mar
    194-
    May Bolles Maxwell (b. 14 January 1940 in Englewood, NJ) passed away in Buenos Aires. [BBD153; TG49]

    Shoghi Effendi called her "the spiritual mother of Canada" and Montreal the "mother city of Canada". [OBCC35]

  • Shoghi Effendi awarded her the honour of a 'martyr's death' and designated her as a Disciple of 'Abdu'l-Bahá. [BW8:631; MA38]
  • She was the first Bahá'í on European soil and the "mother" of both the French and the Canadian Bahá'í communities. [PP149]
  • For her "In Memoriam" and tribute written by Marion Holley see BW8p631-642.
  • Hooper Dunbar quoted Shoghi Effendi in his cable to the friends in Iran announcing her passing:
      May Maxwell, the severed teacher firebrand of the love of God and spreader of the fragrances of God Mrs Maxwell, forsook her native land and hastened to the most distant countries out of love for her Master and yearning to sound the call to the Cause of her Lord and her inspiration, until she ascended to the highest summit attaining the rank of martyrdom in the capital of the Argentine. The furthermost boundary the countenances of paradise invoke blessings upon her in the glorious apex saying, may she enjoy with healthy relish the cup that is full and brimming over with the wine of the love of God for the like of this should the travaillers travail. Inform all the friends of the announcement of this mighty victory. [A talk] given by Mr Dunbar 28:08]
  • Shoghi Effendi asked her husband, Sutherland Maxwell, to design her tomb, which was to be a 'historic centre' for 'pioneer Bahá'í activity'. [BW8:642]
  • For an account of the erection of the monument to her see PSBW83–6.
  • Haik Kevorkian's family had come to Argentina from Syria in 1937. When Mrs Maxwell arrived he contacted her by phone just before her fatal heart attack. After her passing, he devoted himself to caring for her grave. [KoB225]
  • - Biography; - Births and deaths; - Disciples of `Abdu'l-Bahá; - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Architecture; Argentina; Buenos Aires, Argentina; May Maxwell; Names and titles; William Sutherland Maxwell First Bahá'í on European soil.
    1940 Mar
    194-
    Emeric and Rosemary Sala of St. Lambert, Quebec arrived in Venezuela, the first pioneers to that country. During their eleven month stay in Caracas they made an eight-day trip by car over the Andes to visit a pioneer in Bogota, Columbia. [TG76-82] Emeric Sala; Rosemary Sala; Venezuela first pioneers to Venezuela
    1940 (In the year)
    194-
    Annual Report National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Iraq 1938-1940 Annual Report, National Spiritual Assembly; Baghdad, Iraq; Haziratul-Quds (Bahá'í centres); Iraq
    1940 Ridván
    194-
    Annual Report of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada 1939-1940

    Supplementary Report

    Annual Report, National Spiritual Assembly; Canada; United States (USA)
    1940 Ridván
    194-
    Annual Report of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Australia and New Zealand 1838-1940. Annual Report, National Spiritual Assembly; Australia; Sydney, Australia
    1940 Ridván
    194-
    Annual Report National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of India and Burma 1938-1940 Annual Report, National Spiritual Assembly
    1940 Ridván
    194-
    Annual Report National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Iran Annual Report, National Spiritual Assembly; Iran; Tehran, Iran
    1940 Ridván
    194-
    Annual Report National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Iraq 1938-1940 Annual Report, National Spiritual Assembly; Baghdad, Iraq; Iraq
    1940 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly of Bolivia was established in La Paz. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] La Paz, Bolivia; Local Spiritual Assemblies first Local Spiritual Assembly in Bolivia
    1940 10 May
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly of Argentina was established in Buenos Aires. This Assembly, and that of Bahia, Brazil were the first two Baha'i assemblies in South America. [BWNS709; The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Argentina; Bahia, Brazil; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Local Spiritual Assemblies first LSA in Argentina; the first LSA in Brazil
    1940 13 May
    194-
    American Baha'i John Stearns sailed from Los Angeles to Guayaquil, Ecuador to take up his pioneer post. He took up residence in Quito and became the first established pioneer in Ecuador. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] - Pioneers; Ecuador; Guayaquil, Ecuador; John Stearns first established pioneer to Ecuador.
    1940 14 or 15 May
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi determined to go to England; he and Rúhíyyih Khánum left Haifa for Italy via aquaplane en route to London. [PP 178]
  • For the difficulties and dangers of this journey that took them from Haifa to Heraklion on Crete and then on to Reggio and then a further 700km to Rome and another 500km to Genoa see PP178–80.
  • After the passing of his wife, Mr. Maxwell had been invited by Shoghi Effendi to come and live in Haifa. On the same day that Shoghi Effendi and Rúhíyyih Khánum left the Holy Land, Sutherland Maxwell left Montreal to meet up with them in Europe. A few days after their arrival in Italy, Rúhíyyih Khánum travelled to Genoa to meet her father who had arrived on the Italian vessel, the S.S. Rex, that had departed New York. [PP178]
  • * Shoghi Effendi, Basic timeline; * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Basic timeline, Expanded; Amatu’l-Bahá Rúḥíyyih Khánum; Genoa, Italy; Haifa, Israel; Italy; London, England; Shoghi Effendi, Travels of; United Kingdom; World War II (1939-1945)
    1940 25 May
    194-
    After having obtained a visa for Britain in Rome, Shoghi Effendi and Rúhíyyih Khánum left for England. They entered France at Menton and then travelled to Marseilles and eventually to St. Malo. A few days later the Italians enter the war against the Allies. [PP179] * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); Amatu’l-Bahá Rúḥíyyih Khánum; France; Italy; Marseilles, France; Menton, France; Rome, Italy; Shoghi Effendi, Travels of; United Kingdom; World War II (1939-1945)
    1940 2 Jun
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi, Rúhíyyih Khánum and Sutherland Maxwell left St Malo, France, for England and arrived the next morning In Southhampton. The following day St. Malo was occupied by the Nazis. Shoghi Effendi seemed acutely aware of the danger to himself and to the Faith should he fall into the hands of the Nazis because the Cause had already been banned in Germany and his inveterate enemy, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, was allied with them. [PP 179–80]
  • Their passage from St Malo to Southhampton took place on the same day as the history troop evacuation from Dunkirk was in full swing when every available vessel was involved in moving troops from France to England.
  • * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); Amatu’l-Bahá Rúḥíyyih Khánum; France; Saint-Malo, France; Shoghi Effendi, Travels of; World War II (1939-1945)
    1940 30 Jun
    194-
    George Townshend preached a sermon in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, proclaiming the Bahá'í Faith to the congregation. [GT171] * Christianity; * Interfaith dialogue; Dublin, Ireland; George Townshend; Ireland
    1940 Jul
    194-
    Gerrard Sluter, a German with Canadian citizenship and previously a pioneer in Guatemala (1939-1940) and Honduras, arrived in Colombia, the first Bahá'í to settle in the country. [BW8p1036; BW8p1036; BW9p1000; The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb]
  • He later became a Covenant-breaker and caused much difficulty to the Bahá'ís in many South American countries. In response to a query to the U.S. National Bahá'í Archives we receive the following information.
      During 1946 and 1947 he wrote copiously to the U.S. National Assembly and to the Inter-America Teaching Committee, making diffuse accusations against those bodies and against several Bahá’ís in Colombia..... The last message we found from the US National Assembly to Sluter is dated January 10, 1947; it counseled him to moderate his actions and referred to an earlier decision by the Bogota Assembly, ..,. The correspondence with Sluter in both the NSA and Inter-America Teaching Committee files ends in 1947. [email message from Edward Sevcik, Archivist, 2025 May]
  • Colombia; Covenant-breaking; Gerrard Sluter-Schlutius first Bahá’í to settle in Colombia
    1940 28 Jul
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi, Rúhíyyih Khánum and Sutherland Maxwell left England for South Africa aboard the SS Capetown Castle. It was Mr Maxwell's close friendship with the Canadian High Commissioner in London, Vincent Massey, that helped them secure the sea passage. [PP180]
  • They departed Southhampton just three days before the German High Command issued an order to the Luftwaffe to establish air superiority along the British Channel coast in preparation for the invasion of England. This resulted in the bombing and strafing of all civilian shipping out of British Channel ports.
  • Risking U-Boat attacks the ship took them to Durban where they found that all flights to Khartoum had been booked by the military.
  • They left Mr. Maxwell in Durban to await a flight to Khartoum while Shoghi Effendi and Rúhíyyih Khánum tried to make their way to Khartoum overland. The trip across Africa took them to Stanleyville, Congo; Juba in the Sudan; down the Nile to Khartoum and back to Palestine through Cairo. [PP180–1, TG159]
      They arrived in Kisangani then Stanleyville a few weeks later (July 28, 1940), stayed for a week at the Stanley Hotel and made an excursion in the virgin forest. On the way to Juba, the Guardian also stayed in the village of Nia-Nia. [bahai.org]
  • * Shoghi Effendi, Basic timeline; * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Africa; - Basic timeline, Expanded; Amatu’l-Bahá Rúḥíyyih Khánum; Amatul-Bahá Ruhiyyih Khanum, Journeys of; Congo, Democratic Republic of; Egypt; Shoghi Effendi, Travels of; South Africa; Sudan; United Kingdom; William Sutherland Maxwell; World War II (1939-1945)
    1940 Aug
    194-
    Daoud Toeg, then resident in Baghdad, made a trip to the district of Sulaymáníyyih in Kurdistán to try to determine where Bahá'u'lláh took refuge during His time there 1854 10 April - 1856 19 March. He photographed four possible sites. The story of his trip was published by Newsletter of the Haifa Spiritual Assembly and reprinted in Bahá'í News No 145 p11 and 12.
  • Also see BW16:528 for a brief account of the trip. iiiii
  • * Bahaullah (chronology); Caves; Daoud Toeg; Iraq; Kurdistan; Sar Galu Mountain (Iraq); Sulaymaniyyih, Iraq
    1940 1 Aug
    194-
    The first four people to become Bahá'ís in Costa Rica accepted the Faith after Gayle Woolson and Amelia Ford from the United States arrived in Puerto Limón on 29 March 1940.
  • The first to enrol was Raul Contreras, followed by his cousin Guido Contreras, and by José Joaquin Ulloa and then Felipe Madrigal.
  • - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Central America; Costa Rica first four Bahá’ís in Costa Rica
    1940 Sep
    194-
    William Sears, Hand of the Cause of God, became a Bahá'í in Salt Lake City, Utah. - Hands of the Cause; Salt Lake City, UT; United States (USA); Utah, USA; William Sears
    1940 20 Oct
    194-
    Ralph Laltoo, the first Trinidadian to become a Bahá'í, accepted the Faith in Halifax, Nova Scotia. - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Halifax, NS; Nova Scotia, Canada first Bahá'í from Trinidad
    1940 Dec
    194-
    Luis Carlo Nieto became the first Bahá'í in Colombia.
  • He soon left the Faith and Aura Sanchez, who became a Bahá'í in 1941, is considered the first Colombian believer.
  • - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Colombia first Bahá’í in Colombia
    1940 Dec
    194-
    Eduardo Gonzales, a university student, accepted the Faith and became the first native Bahá'í of Ecuador. He was accepted as a Bahá'í on the occasion of his 21st birthday on the 15th of October 1943. Eduardo (Les) Gonzalez performed outstanding service for the Cause both as an itinerant teacher abroad and pioneer to Spain and Venezuela. Sadly, in later years he became a Covenant-breaker and had to be ex-communicated.
  • He was not formally registered until his twenty–first birthday on 15 October 1941. [Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p4; 8; 24]
  • - First believers by background; - Indigenous people; Ecuador; Eduardo Gonzales first native Bahá’í of Ecuador
    1940 Dec
    194-
    Gerald and Vivian MacBeans, a Jamaican couple, and their niece, Miss May Johnson, became the first people to accept the Faith in Haiti. - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Haiti first Bahá'ís in Haiti
    1940 27 Dec
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi and Rúhíyyih Khánum returned Haifa. [PP181] * Shoghi Effendi, Basic timeline; * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Basic timeline, Expanded; Amatu’l-Bahá Rúḥíyyih Khánum; Haifa, Israel; Shoghi Effendi, Travels of
    1940 27 Dec
    194-
    Elizabeth Cheney, the 'spiritual mother of Paraguay', arrived in Paraguay, the first pioneer to the country. [Bahaipedia; The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb]] - Travel teachers and pioneers, First; Elizabeth Cheney; Names and titles; Paraguay first pioneer to Paraguay
    1941 (In the year)
    194-
    The publication of The Epistle to the Son of the Wolf. [ESW; Collins1.25]
  • It was a Tablet addressed to Shaykh Muhammad-Taqiy-i-Najafi, a prominent Muslim cleric who had persecuted the Bahá'ís. It was revealed around 1891 at the Mansion of Bahjí and translated by Shoghi Effendi.
  • * Bahá'u'lláh, Writings of; * Publications; * Shoghi Effendi, Basic timeline; * Translation; - Bahá'í World Centre; - Basic timeline, Expanded; Aqa Najafi (Son of the Wolf); Lawh-i-Ibn-i-Dhib (Epistle to the Son of the Wolf); Shoghi Effendi, Translations by; Shoghi Effendi, Works of
    1941 (In the year)
    194-
    Aura Sanchez became a Bahá'í in Colombia, considered the first Bahá'í of the country. She enrolled in the Faith in 1941 or 1942, sources differ, [BWIMp154; BN #577 April 1979 p19 ]

    She passed away in Bogota on the 15th of August 1986. See her obituary at BW20p838.

    - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Colombia first Bahá’í in Colombia
    1941 (In the year)
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi congratulated the Spiritual Assembly of San Jose upon formation. [Divine Springtime — Louise Coswell Recalls p59] Costa Rica; Local Spiritual Assembly, formation; San Jose, CA first local spiritual assembly in Central America
    1941 (In the year)
    194-
    Shaykh Kázim was martyred in Bunáb, Ádharbáyján. [BW18:389] - Persecution; - Persecution, Deaths; Azerbaijan; Bunab, Iran; Persecution, Adharbayjan
    1941 (In the year)
    194-
    John Ferraby, Hand of the Cause of God, heard about the Bahá'í Faith from Victor Cofman, a non-Bahá'í. John Ferraby
    1941
    194-
    'Abdu'l-Jalíl Bey Sa'ad translated The Dawn-Breakers into Arabic. His translation was published, but because of the war it had to be referred to the Publicity Section of the Egyptian government for approval. From that department it was passed to the high Muslim authorities, who determined that it was against the Muslim faith and so should be condemned. The entire publication run was gathered for destruction and upon hearing this 'Abdu'l-Jalíl interviewed all the officers concerned. He not only secured the release of the books, but obtained official permissions to distribute them in Egypt and abroad. [BW-598-599] * Publications; * Translation; - Arabic language; `Abdu’l-Jalíl Bey Sa‘d; Dawn-Breakers (book); Egypt; Nabíl-i-A‘ẓam (Nabíl-i-Zarandí); Opposition
    1941 Jan
    194-
    Nine Bahá'ís were arrested in Sangsar, Khurásán, Iran, and banished to other towns for closing their shops on Bahá'í holy days. BW18:389] * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Arrests; Holy days; Iran; Khurásán, Iran; Sangesar, Iran
    1941 11 Feb
    194-
    The passing of Margaret Stevenson, the first New Zealand Bahá'í (b. 30 November 1865, in Onehunga) in Auckland. She was buried in Hillsborough Cemetery.
          She initially heard of the Bahá'í Faith through reading an article in "The Christian Commonwealth" sent to her by her sister, Amy, who was studying music in London. Margaret, though, later admitted that she "did not think any more about it". However, in 1913 Miss Dorothea Spinney, a professional actress who performed in many parts of the world, arrived in Auckland from California and stayed at the Stevenson home in Devonport. During that visit there were many opportunities for Miss Spinney to tell the Stevenson family about the Bahá'í Cause.
          After embracing the new Faith, Margaret began to speak to others of her new found beliefs – a courageous act for a middle-class woman in the then conservative society where following a new religion was considered odd. As New Zealand's only Bahá'í, she held on steadfastly to her faith for many years. Finally, after the visit of the first Bahá'í travelling teachers to New Zealand in December 1922, a handful of individuals from Margaret's social circle also became Bahá'ís. A class was established at her home in Parnell to study the Teachings in more depth and was held there regularly for 10 years. In January 1923 the first Bahá'í Nineteen Day Feast was held at her home. Margaret held various administrative roles within the Bahá'í community and remained an active and dedicated Bahá'í until her passing. [from a post by Tricia Hague-Barrett in Facebook page "Women of Bahá"; BW9p601]

    There is evidence to indicate that Margaret Stevenson was not the first believer in New Zealand. Dr Robert Felkin arrived in New Zealand in early 1912 while Margaret Stevenson became a believer later in that same year. [BCIB119-120]

    - Biography; - Births and deaths; - In Memoriam; Dorothea Spinney; Margaret Stevenson
    1941 17 Feb
    194-
    John Henry Hyde Dunn, passed away in Sydney. [BW9:595; SBR166]
  • Shortly after his passing Shoghi Effendi appointed him to the rank of Hand of the Cause of God. (26 April, 1952) [MoCxxii]
  • For the story of his life see SBR153–68.
  • For his obituary see BW9:593–7.
  • For a biography see The Bahá'í Encyclopedia Project
  • Photo of his grave. [BW9p72]
  • See Bahá'í Chronicles.
  • - Biography; - Births and deaths; - Hands of the Cause; - In Memoriam; Australia; Hands appointed posthumously by Shoghi Effendi; Hands of the Cause, Births and deaths; John Henry Hyde Dunn; Sydney, Australia
    1941 28 Mar
    194-
    The publication of The Promised Day is Come. It was, in effect, a survey of the world in relation to the Bahá'í Faith during its first century. [AY305; PG215-217]
  • Available at the Bahá'í Reference Library.
  • - Tablets to kings and rulers; Bahá'í history; Historical overviews by Central Figures or BWC; History (general); Peace; Promised Day is Come (letter); United States (USA); World peace
    1941 6 Apr
    194-
    Germany invaded Yugoslavia, which capitulated. It was divided between Germany (North Slovenia, Banat, and Serbia south of the Danube), Italy (South of Slovenia, Dalmatia, Ljubljana, Kosovo, and west Macedonia and Montenegro), Hungary (Prekmurje and Medžimurje, a part of Vojvodina) and Bulgaria took over the rest of Macedonia. e Independent State of Croatia was established (NDH). It united Slavonia and parts of Dalmatia. Also, Bosnia and Hercegovina was established. (After Italy’s surrender in September 1943, the German occupiers took control of the region the Italians had occupied.)

    Note: The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (1918-1929) was later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1929-1941). As could be expected, the amalgamation of these states created a religiously pluralistic society. The legally recognized religions were the Catholic, Lutheran and Reformed Churches, the Orthodox Church, Islam and the Greek Orthodox Church. In May 1941, a new law was passed rendering it easier to change religion. People could fill in a form and simply submit it to the authorities, which then issued a certificate of religion. [State of Governance of Religious Communities in Former Yugoslavia and the Developments of the Bahá’í Community and Jehovah’s Witnesses Status by Aleksandra Zibelnik Badii p58]

    Balkans; Yugoslavia
    1941 8 Apr
    194-
    The passing of Urbain Joseph Ledoux (b. August 13, 1874 in Ste Hélène de Bagot, Quebec). He was buried in Saint Joseph's Cemetery Biddeford, Maine.
  • He is believed to be the third French-Canadian to become a Bahá'í outside of Canada. [OCBB94]
  • He gave an address to the National Convention at the Hotel McAlpine on the 28th of April, 1919 entitled The Oneness of the World of Humanity. [SoW Vol 10 May 17, 1919 No 4 p58] "This talk 'sounded so French-Canadian' that later francophone believers could still be moved to tears in reading its text." [OCBB94]
  • He received widespread publicity for his opening of bread lines in New York (The Stepping Stone) in 1919, and for "auctions" of the jobless to employers in New York and Boston during the Depression of 1921. He was received by President Warren Harding shortly after arriving in Washington, D.C. in September 1921. Ledoux spent a little over three months in Washington, D.C. 1921-22 campaigning for a public works program funded by a tax on companies that made excessive war profits during World War I. His tactics included setting up a hotel housing the unemployed on Pennsylvania Avenue, an auction of the jobless, speaking before the unemployment conference, calling for the arrest of international arms conference delegates. He walked around the city carrying a white umbrella, a lighted lantern and a Bible or a copy of the Sermon on the Mount saying he was like Diogenes searching for an honest man.
  • Urbain Ledoux is shown in Boston in 1921 auctioning off an unemployed man. He conducted these auctions in New York and Boston in order to garner publicity for the plight of the unemployed and to find work for the jobless. He called himself "Mr. Zero" because he said he didn't want any publicity for himself.
  • "Mr. Zero" returned to Washington in 1932 with the Bonus Expeditionary Force, leading an unauthorized march on the White House July 16, 1932 that resulted in his arrest along with two others. The march frightened President Herbert Hoover who set in motion the eviction of the bonus marchers from the city — a move that backfired on Hoover and helped to cement his reputation as someone uncaring about the plight of the nation's unemployed. Photos. [Wikipedia]
  • Find a grave.
  • His obituary in the New York Times April 10th 1941.
  • He is reported to have "rescued" 85 year-old Sarah Farmer in Portsmouth where she was being held in a sanatorium against her will. [Boston Post 4 August 1916]
  • See a story from Ephemeral New York.
  • There is a short description of Urbain LeDoux in He Loved and Served: The Story of Curtis Kelsey p 33-34.
  • - Biography; - Births and deaths; - In Memoriam; Charity and relief work; French Canadian; New York, USA; Social and economic development; Soup kitchens and breadlines; United States (USA); Urbain Ledoux (Mr Zero)
    1941 Ridván
    194-
    The first Local Spiritual Assembly in Santiago, Chile was formed, [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Local Spiritual Assembly, formation; Santiago, Chile first Local Spiritual Assembly in Santiago, Chile
    1941 13 May
    194-
    The first Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of St. Paul, Minnesota was elected. [A Saint Paul Bahá'í Community History: The Early Years] Local Spiritual Assembly, election; Minnesota, USA; Saint Paul, MN The first Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of St. Paul, Minnesota
    1941 18 May
    194-
    Yvonne Cuellar, a French woman, became a Bahá'í in Bolivia.
  • Although Marina del Prado was the first to become a Bahá'í, on 2 February 1941, she did not remain active, so Yvonne Cuellar is recognized as the first Bahá'í in Bolivia. She was called by Shoghi Effendi 'Mother of Bolivia'.
  • For the story of her life see BW19:619–22.
  • - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Bolivia first Bahá’í in Bolivia
    1941 Jun
    194-
    Eve Nicklin arrived in Peru from Jamestown, NY, the United States and became the first resident pioneer to settle in Lima. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb]
  • Hand of the Caus Ruhíyyih Khánum, in the movie, The Green Light Expedition, called her the "Mother of Peru". [FMH264]
  • Eve Nicklin; Peru first resident pioneer in Lima
    1941 20 Jun
    194-
    The passing of Howard Colby Ives (b. 11 Oct 1867, Brooklyn, New York, d. Pulaski County, Arkansas, USA). He was buried in Pinecrest Memorial Park and Garden Mausoleum, Alexander, Saline County, Arkansas. [BW9p608-613; Find a grave]
  • He and his wife Mabel spent nearly the last twenty years of his life as itinerant teachers. (Often teamed up with the Obers and the McKays) For example they came to Toronto in November of 1938 and stayed for about 10 months. During that time Mabel gave more than 150 lectures in Toronto and about 70 in Hamilton, Toronto's expansion goal. Howard, who was had had heart problems and who was rapidly losing for sight and hearing at the time, complemented her abilities by doing personal deepening with receptive souls. [TMLF62-67, SEBW139-154]

    Some of his works were:

    • The Ocean of His Utterances Unpublished study course in the Revelation of Bahá'u'lláh using the books of Bahá'u'lláh, Abdu'l‑Baha, and Shoghi Effendi, compiled and with commentary by Ives. Not yet formatted.
    • Portals to Freedom (1937) A collection of anecdotes and history of Abdu'l-Baha's travels to the United States, as told by one observer. [Collins7.1313 to 7.1320]
    • The Song Celestial (1938) A mystical book about Mr. Ives' search for God, in which a seeker asks God various questions, and God responds. [Collins7.1321-1322]
  • Also see Mother's Stories: Recollections of Abdu'l-Baha by Muriel Ives Barrow Newhall (Daughter of Howard and Mabel Ives)
  • - Biography; - In Memoriam; Brooklyn, NY; Howard Colby Ives; Little Rock, AR; Mabel Rice-Wray Ives; Toronto, ON
    1941 6 Aug
    194-
    The passing of Elizabeth Roemer Greenleaf (b. 1863) in Eliot Maine. She was buried at the Rosehill Cemetery and Mausoleum. [BW9p608]
  • She and her husband became active in the Chicago Bahá'í community after completing Kheiralla's class on the 5th of October, 1897.
  • She had a dream in which Kheiralla was represented as a white ram behaving destructively. After he returned from pilgrimage and began sowing seeds of discontent she and her husband were able to understand the meaning of the dream. [FMH50]
  • She served as secretary of the Chicago Bahá'í women's organization in 1905. After the passing of her husband she began to travel extensively to lecture about the Bahá'í Faith. She also moved to various cities that needed Bahá'ís, remaining there until the community was strong enough for her to move again. In 1924 she was elected to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada for one year. She went on pilgrimage in 1926, meeting Shoghi Effendi. He eulogized her as a "veteran and outstanding teacher" and described her qualities of "deep knowledge of the teachings, profound human sympathy, a heart which mirrored the Master's love, and a winning sweetness and friendliness." [The Greenleafs: An Eternal Reunion by Emeric Sala published in Bahá'í News, 510, pages 8-9, 23 1973-09]
  • - Biography; - In Memoriam; Eliot, ME; Elizabeth Greenleaf; Maine, USA; United States (USA)
    1941 16 Sep
    194-
    In Iran, Ridá Sháh abdicated and Muhammad-Ridá Sháh ascended to the throne. His rule was to last until 1979. [BBR482]
  • Ridá Sháh was overthrown by the British and Russians. [BBRSM173]
  • His reign can be described in three phases:
    •       The first phase, from 1941 through 1955, was a period characterized by physical danger, during which Bahá'ís were scapegoated in the interactions among the government, the clerics and the people, and experienced several bloody incidents, the culmination of which was the 1955 anti-Bahá'í campaign and its aftermaths.

            The second phase, from the late 1950s to around 1977, marked almost two decades of relative respite from physical attacks, during which Bahá'ís enjoyed more security than before, without ever being officially recognized as a religious community and while their existence as Bahá'ís was essentially ignored or denied.

            The last two years of the reign of the Shah comprised the third phase, the revival of a bloody period. [Towards a History of Iran's Bahá'í Community During the Reign of Mohammad Reza Shah, 1941-1979 by Mina Yazdani]

  • * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Other; - Shahs; - Shahs, Throne changes; History (general); Iran; Iran, History (general); Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi
    1941 15 Oct
    194-
    The first Bahá'í group was formed in Quito. [Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p5] Quito, Ecuador first Baha'i group in Quito
    1941 18 Oct
    194-
    Four members of a Bahá'í family were killed and several other family members were severely beaten in an attack on their home by an armed mob in Panbih-Chúlih, near Sárí, Iran. [BW18:389] * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Deaths; - Persecution, Mobs; Iran; Panbih-Chulih, Iran; Sari, Iran
    1941 2 Nov
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi sent two cables the the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada. The first was to announce that Thrayyá Afnán, the daughter of 'Abdul-Bahá's fifth daughter, Tubá Khnum, had married Faydí Afnan, a known Covenant-breaker and son of Siyyid 'Alí who had supported Mírzá Muhammad-'Alí.
  • The second concerned the family of Ruhi Afnán, Shoghi Effendi's younger cousin. He had also married into a family of Covenant-breakers and had failed to get the Guardian's approval for his second trip to North America and for a trip to England. Shoghi Effendi had concealed Ruhi's activities for some time prior. [BN No 149 December, 1941 p1-3]
  • In a message to Canada dated 21 May 1953 Shoghi Effendi warned of the nefarious activities of Ruhi Afnan, someone who had been corresponding with Ahmad Sohrab, had had contact with the Covenant-breakers, along with his family had sold some property that had been purchased by Bahá'u'lláh, was now claiming to be an exponent of the Faith and was misrepresenting the Teachings. [CBN No 43 August, 1953 p1] iiiii
  • see his biography at Bahaipedia.
  • - Bahá'í World Centre; Covenant-breaking; Ruhi Afnan; Thrayya Afnan
    1941 31 Nov
    194-
    Some members of the National Spiritual Assembly filed suit against Ahmad Sohrab to try to stop him from using the name Bahá'í. He had opened a Bahá'í bookshop in New York in 1939. This suit was filed in the Supreme Court of New York County. The judge granted a motion to dismiss, stating that "the plaintiffs have no right to a monopoly of the name of a religion. The defendants, who purport to be members of the same religion, have an equal right to use the name of the religion..." The judge mentioned that the complaint could be further amended and the NSA appealed but the Appellate Court affirmed the decision of the lower court.
          The National Spiritual Assembly of the United States and Canada distributed a mimeographed statement concerning the New History Society entitled The Basis of the Bahá'í Community, which explained the purpose and outcome of the lawsuit entered against the founders of the New History Society to prevent their misuse of the name "Bahá'í" on which the National Spiritual Assembly had obtained a trademark patent. [The Basis of the Bahá'í Community: A Statement Concerning the New History Society]
  • Also see United States National Spiritual Assembly vs. Mirza Ahmad Sohrab.
  • During the second World War the New History Society put forth an alleged passage from 'Abdu'l-Bahá which would justify citizens in refusing to obey their governments when drafted into the military forces. The National Spiritual Assembly was obliged to explain the true Bahá'í position to the federal authorities as set forth by the Guardian.
  • Basis of the Bahá'í Community, The (statement Concerning the New History Society); Copyright and trademarks; Covenant-breaking; Mirza Ahmad Sohrab; New History Society; New York, USA; United States (USA)
    1941 Dec
    194-
    The excommunication of Shoghi Effendi's sister, Mehrangíz Rabbáni with this message.

    "Sister Mehrangis [Mehrangiz] followed example Ruhi's sister. Justice demands announce believers her expulsion."(UD149)

  • The reason for her being declared a Covenant-breaker was that she followed the example of Ruhi's sister by marrying to one of his cousins (Feyzi) without the Guardian's consent. Mehrangiz married to Hassan Afnan, the son of Furughiyyih Khanum, a daughter of Bahá'u'lláh by his third wife Gawhar. [BN No 149 December 1941 p1]
  • - Bahá'í World Centre; Covenant-breaking; Mehrangiz Rabbani
    1942 (In the year)
    194-
    The House of the Báb in Shíráz was attacked and damaged by fire. [BBD108; BW18p389] * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Destruction; Báb, House of (Shiraz); Iran; Shíráz, Iran
    1942 – early
    194-
    The publication in Iran of The Political Confessions or Memoirs of Prince Dolgoruki (or, simply, Dolgorukov's Memoirs). The book contends that the Bábí Faith was simply an element in a plot to destabilize Iran and Islam. [22 February, 2009 Iran Press Watch]
    • See Religious Contentions in Modern Iran, 1881-1941 by Dr Mina Yazdani where she posits that "The process of Othering the Bahá'ís had at least three components; 1) religious, carried on by the traditionalist theologians; 2) institutional and formal, sanctioned by the state; and 3) political, the result of a joint and gradual process in which Azalīs, former Bahá'ís and reformist theologians all played a role. This process reached its culmination with the widespread publication of The Confessions of Dolgoruki which resulted in a fundamental paradigm shift in the anti-Bahá'í discourse. With the widespread impression of Bahá'ís as spies of foreign powers, what up to that point constituted a sporadic theme in some anti-Bahá'í polemics now became the dominant narrative of them all, including those authored by traditionalist clerics. Consequently, as Iran entered the 1940s, the process that would transform Islamic piety to political ideology was well under way."
    • In its preface, Dolgorukov's Memoirs purported to be a translation of the memoirs of Prince Dimitri Ivanovich Dolgorukov (Russian Minister in Iran from 1845-54), first published in the official organ of the Soviet Communist Party. According to the book, whose Russian "original" has never been found, Prince Dolgorukov had travelled to Iran during the 1830s, entered the ranks of the 'ulama, and instigated the Bábí-Bahá'í uprising. The book totally contradicted the well-documented life of Prince Dolgorukov, and made obvious chronological and historical mistakes in its allegations about the lives of the Báb and Bahá'u'lláh. Nevertheless, it was reprinted many times, and created a master narrative that others subsequently deployed. With its political tone, the book, on the one hand, heralded the ascendancy of politics over religion in the mindset of Iran's Shi'a clergy, and on the other, demonstrated the vast popularity that conspiracy theories enjoyed in Iran. [Iran Press Watch 1407] iiiii
    * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; Conspiracy theories; Criticism and apologetics; Iran; Vasily Alexandrovich Dolgorukov, Prince
    1942 (In the year)
    194-
    Dr Malcolm King, a Jamaican who had become a Bahá'í in the United States, introduced the Faith to his homeland. [SDSCp425 note 2]
  • He held meetings at 190 Orange Street in Kingston. By 1943, the people he had taught founded a spiritual assembly in Kingston. [The Gleaner]
  • - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Jamaica first Jamaican Baha'i
    1942 (In the year)
    194-
    In the village of Daidanaw eleven Bahá'ís were slain. Records, books and documents that had been transferred to Daidanaw from the headquarters in Mandalay and Rangoon were lost when the headquarters building was destroyed by fire. [BW11p33] - Persecution; - Persecution, Deaths; - Persecution, Destruction; Daidanaw, Myanmar; Mandalay, Myanmar; Myanmar; Persecution, Myanmar (Burma); Yangon, Myanmar
    1942 (In the year)
    194-
    The publication of Selected Writings of Bahá'u'lláh: Author of the Bahá'í Dispensation by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada. It was published by the Bahá'í Publishing Committee in Wilmette. 43p. * Publications; - Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá'u'lláh
    1942 (In the Year)
    194-
    The first Local Spiritual Assembly was formed in San Salvador, El Salvador. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America:Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] El Salvador The first Local Spiritual Assembly was formed in El Salvador.
    1942 1 Jan
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi announced the expulsion of his sister Mehrangiz. [Baha'i News #150 January 1942 p1] - Bahá'í World Centre; Covenant-breaking
    1942 16 Jan
    194-
    The passing of Carole Lombard Gable (b. 6 October 1908 in Ft Wayne, IN) near Las Vegas. She was buried at the Forst Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. She was a second generation Bahá'í, her mother, Elizabeth Peters, had been brought into the Faith my Mrs Orol Platt. Carole, at the age of 14, wrote to 'Abdu'l-Bahá to ask for His permission to pursue a career in Hollywood. His Tablet came, praying for her success. She accepted the Faith in Los Angeles in about April of 1938. Her closest Bahá'í friend was the well-known teacher, Mrs. Beulah Storrs Lewis.
  • She became an icon of cinema, the American Film Institute named her one of the greatest American female screen legends.
  • She died in a plane crash while on a bond-selling tour. [Bahá'í Chronicles; Bahá'í Teachings; Bahá'í Arts Connection; BW9p635-637]
  • Images.
  • Her biography was entitled Carole Lombard: A Bio-Bibliography by Robert D. Matzen.
  • See documentary videos on You Tube, Carole Lombard (Part 1) and Carole Lombard (Part 2).
  • - Biography; Carole Lombard; Ft Wayne, IN; Las Vegas, NV; United States (USA)
    1942 13 Feb
    194-
    Ustád Habíbu'lláh Mu'ammarí was martyred in Nayríz, Iran. [BW18:389] * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Deaths; Iran; Nayriz, Iran
    1942 (In the year)
    194-
    The publication of The Bahá'í Temple: House of Worship of a World Faith Commemorating Completion of Exterior Ornamentation 1942, by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada. * Publications; - Mashriqu'l-Adhkár (House of Worship); Chicago, IL; Dedications; Illinois, USA; Mashriqu'l-Adhkár, Wilmette
    1942 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Honduras was established in Tegucigalpa. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America:Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Honduras; Local Spiritual Assemblies; Tegucigalpa, Honduras first Local Spiritual Assembly in Honduras
    1942 Ridván
    194-
    The first local assembly in El Salvador was established in San Salvador. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America:Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Local Spiritual Assemblies; San Salvador, El Savador first LSA in El Salvador
    1942 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Cuba was established in Havana. [One Country Issue 1 Vol 17 Apr-Jun 2008; The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb]
  • A loose organization had been formed in 1940.
  • Cuba; Havana, Cuba; Local Spiritual Assembly, formation first LSA in Cuba
    1942 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Haiti was established in Port-au-Prince. Local Spiritual Assemblies; Port-au-Prince, Haiti first Local Spiritual Assembly in Haiti
    1942 Ridván
    194-
    The formation of the first Local Spiritual Assembly in Montevideo, Uruguay. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Local Spiritual Assembly, formation; Montevideo, Uruguay; Uruguay The formation of the first Local Spiritual Assembly in Montevideo, Uruguay.
    1942 Jun
    194-
    The Spiritual Assembly of San José, Costa Rica, was legally registered with the government, the first local assembly to be incorporated in Latin America. [BW11:46] Costa Rica; Local Spiritual Assemblies; San Jose, CA firstLocal Spiritual Assembly incorporated in Latin America
    1942 9 Jun - 15 Feb 1943
    194-
    John Stearns began sponsoring a radio program in Quito under the auspices of his small business, "Kandy Kitchen", which presented classical music and readings from the Bahá'í Writings. These broadcasts came over short wave (32.05 meter, 9355 Kc) Monday evenings at 8:00 PM Eastern Standard Time. The broadcasts could be heard all over South America and occasionally in Spain.

    The Bahá'í Radio Hour, "Words and Music" was broadcasted every Sunday from 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM and a program called "Bahá'í Echo" three times a week Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 9:15 to 9:30 PM. [Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p5]

    Bahá'í Radio; John Stearns; Quito, Ecuador
    1942 25 Jun
    194-
    'Abdu'l-Jalíl Bey Sa'ad died in Egypt and Shoghi Effendi appointed him to the rank of Hand of the Cause of God on the day of his passing. [LoF57-59; MoCxxii; BW9:597]
    • For his obituary see BW9:597–9.
    • 'Abdu'l-Jalíl Bey Sa'ad was, for many years, the president of the National Spiritual Assembly and a judge in the Civil Courts in Egypt. Through his sustained effort the Declaration of Trust was recognized as valid and legalized in 1934.
    • He made an important contribution in translating into Arabic. Among his accomplishments were The Dawn-Breakers, Bahá'u'lláh and the New Era, Laws of Personal Status and Rules of Procedure.
    • In 1941 he employed the Declaration of Trust as an instrument to induce the Ministry of Civil Defence to grant permission to build the Hazíratu'l-Quds in Cairo. While supervising this project in the intense heat he fell ill and died suddenly after an operation.
    * Translation; - Arabic language; - Biography; - Births and deaths; - Hands of the Cause; - In Memoriam; `Abdu’l-Jalíl Bey Sa‘d; Dawn-Breakers (book); Declaration of Trust and By-laws; Egypt; Hands appointed posthumously by Shoghi Effendi; Hands of the Cause, Activities; Hands of the Cause, Births and deaths; Haziratul-Quds (Bahá'í centres); John Esslemont
    1942 Aug
    194-
    Lidia Zamenhof was killed in the gas chambers at Treblinka. [HDBF516]
  • For her obituary see BW10:533–8.
  • See also Lidia by Wendy Heller, GR, Oxford, 1985 and Lidia Zamenhof, a cosmopolitan woman and victim of the Holocaust.
  • See JPost.com 8Feb2022 for a full history of the language and of the Zamenof family. iiiii
  • Esperanto; Lidia Zamenhof; Persecution, Poland; Poland; Treblinka, Poland; World War II (1939-1945)
    1942 26 Oct
    194-
    Marion Lord Maxwell ('Miss Mac') became a Bahá'í, the first Jamaican to accept the Faith. [BW17:429]
  • For the story of her life see BW17:429–30.
  • Jamaica; Marion Lord Maxwell first Bahá'í in Jamaica
    1942 16 Nov
    194-
    Manuel Bergés Chupani, of Sánchez, Dominican Republic, became a Bahá'í, perhaps the first native Dominican person to accept the Faith. - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Dominican Republic first native Bahá'í in Dominican Republic
    1942 18 Dec
    194-
    The Assembly of Egypt, after obtaining government permission to maintain a Bahá'í cemetery, arranged for the transfer of the remains of Abu'l-Fadl and of Lua Moore Getsinger from their respective graves. The members of the National Spiritual Assembly, together with its committee who carried out the transfer, accompanied by representatives of all Bahá'í communities of Egypt, conducted a service at the Bahá'í cemetery during the reinterment. See BW9p82; 83; 87 for photos.

    After Abdu'l-Fadl passed away in early 1914 the American believers, in gratitude for the contribution he had made to the American Bahá'í community, collected a sum of money for the construction of a suitable monument for his grave. The work was interrupted with the Ascension of the Master and the money collected was reverted the National Fund. That money was now sent to the National Spiritual Assembly of Egypt. [BW9p89]

    - Apostles of Bahá'u'lláh; - Births and deaths; - In Memoriam; Cairo, Egypt; Cemeteries and graves; Egypt; Lua Getsinger; Mírzá Abu’l-Faḍl Gulpáygání
    1942 Late in the year
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi asked Sutherland Maxwell to design the superstructure of the Shrine of the Báb. [BBD210; DH140; GBF103–5] * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Architects; Architecture; Báb, Shrine of (Haifa); Haifa, Israel; Mount Carmel; William Sutherland Maxwell
    1943 (In the Year)
    194-
    The founding of the publishing house George Ronald by David Hofman using his stage name. Its first title was The Renewal of Civilization, a book he wrote as an introduction to the Baháʼí Faith. Later publications were Bahá'u'lláh, the Prince of Peace: A Portrait, Commentary on the Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, and George Townshend, A Life.

    They published intermittently until 1947 when consultations began with Shoghi Effendi and the National Spiritual Assembly of the British Isles when it became a full-time business. They published on a variety of subjects until about the mid 1960's when they concentrated on Bahá'í themes. [Bahaipedia]

  • A list of publications can be found on Bahaipedia. Please note that the list covers two pages.
  • * Publishing; Oxford, England; United Kingdom
    1943 (In the year)
    194-
    The first Local Spiritual Assembly was formed in Jamaica. [BWNS233] Bahá'í World News Service (BWNS); Jamaica; Local Spiritual Assemblies first Local Spiritual Assembly in Jamaica
    1943 (In the year)
    194-
    The publication of A Commentary on the Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Bahá written by David Hofman by a new publisher, George Ronald. They went on to publish books on business ethics, comparative religion, studies of sacred texts, Islam, poetry, music, novels, biography and philosophy as well as a number of other subjects. George Ronald is primarily a publisher of books related to the history, teachings, doctrines and personalities of the Bahá'í Faith. See the reference for a list of Bahá'í books published up to 2013. [George Ronald A Bibliographic History by Jan Jasion]
  • A current catalogue can be found at their website.
  • see George Ronald: Publishing Authentic, Accurate & Inspiring Baha'i Books Since 1943 by Sonjel Vreeland.
  • * Publications; * Publishing; - Publishing Trusts; David Hofman; Firsts, other; George Ronald Publisher; United Kingdom; Will and Testament of `Abdu'l-Bahá first book published by George Ronald.
    1943 - 1944
    194-
    Fereidoon Adamiyyat, one of the most influential and widely acknowledged Iranian historians of the 20th century, argued in his Book, Amir Kabir and Iran, considered perhaps the most influential scholarly work of history published prior to the Islamic Revolution, that British intelligence officers were behind a plot which led to the creation of the Bábí Faith. He falsely claimed that Arthur Conolly, a British intelligence officer who was executed in Bukhara in 1842, had in his Journey to the North of India through Russia, Persia and Afghanistan admitted that Mulla Husayn Bushrui, the first follower of the Báb, was an agent working for him. Adamiyyat further concluded that without the aid of foreign powers such a religious sect could not have survived for so long, thus giving further credence to the conspiracy theories of his time and culture. Although He subsequently came to accept that Conolley had never made such a claim and removed the allegations in later editions of his book, the influence of his initial claim proved to be lasting among Iranians.

    Note:Amir Kabir was the 19th century Iranian Qajar minister who ordered the execution of many members of the early Bahá'í movement. [Iran Press Watch 1407]

    Amir Kabir; Arthur Conolly; Conspiracy theories; Criticism and apologetics; Fereidoon Adamiyyat; Iran; United Kingdom
    1943 (In the year)
    194-
    Margot Vandenbroeck-Levy (Galler) became a Bahá'í in Chicago, the first native Luxembourger to accept the Faith.
  • She returned to Luxembourg in 1948.
  • Chicago, IL; Luxembourg; Margot Vandenbroeck-Levy First Bahá'í of Luxembourg
    1943 (In the year)
    194-
    The publication of Bahá'í World Faith: Selected Writings of Bahá'u'lláh and Abdu'l-Bahá by the Bahá'í Publishing Committee in Wilmette and edited by Horace Holley. [BN No 347 Jan 1960 p1] It was intended to replace the earlier compilation Bahá'í Scriptures with newer translations. Neither is considered authoritative because they were not prepared by the Bahá'í World Centre.
  • A list of translations that have been superseded can be found at this Bahá'í9 Wiki page.
  • A special centennial edition with a red leather cover inscribed with 1844-1944 in gold lettering was published as a souvenir of the Centennial celebration held in Chicago. It had a run of only 500 copies.
  • Subsequent editions were published by the Bahá'í Publishing Trust in 1956, 1966, 1969, 1971, 1976. [Collinsp21; 4.75-477]
  • The use of the phrase "Bahá'í World Faith" has been replaced by the more fitting "Bahá'í Faith". See the letter from the Universal House of Justice to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the British Isles dated 5 February 1967. [LG109#374]
  • * Publications; Bahá'í World Faith (book)
    1943 (In the year)
    194-
    In 1943 Raphael Lemkin published ​Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals for Redress (Foundations of the Laws of War) in which he first used the term "genocide,"by combining "genos" (race, people) and "cide" (to kill). He defined genocide as follows: ​
      "Generally speaking, genocide does not necessarily mean the immediate destruction of a nation, except when accomplished by mass killings of all members of a nation. It is intended rather to signify a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves. The objectives of such a plan would be the disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence of national groups, and the destruction of the personal security, liberty, health, dignity, and even the lives of the individuals belonging to such groups."

    This study was an elaboration of ideas he first proposed in 1933 in his address to the Fifth International Conference for the Unification of Penal Law (1933), which argued that attacks on racial, religious and ethnic groups should be considered international crimes. Important for the prosecution of the Nazis, it helped to establish the framework for all subsequent efforts to punish crimes against humanity.

    When Lemkin proposed a treaty against genocide to the United Nations in 1945, he defined it as follows:

      "The crime of genocide should be recognized therein as a conspiracy to exterminate national, religious or racial groups. The overt acts of such a conspiracy may consist of attacks against life, liberty or property of members of such groups merely because of their affiliation with such groups. The formulation of the crime may be as follows: "Whoever, while participating in a conspiracy to destroy a national, racial or religious group, undertakes an attack against life, liberty or property of members of such groups is guilty of the crime of genocide."
    Genocide; United Nations
    1943 (In the Year)
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Colombia was established in Bogotá. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Bogota, Colombia; Local Spiritual Assemblies first Local Spiritual Assembly in Colombia
    1943 (In the year)
    194-
    The first Bahá'í group was formed in Bogotá, Colombia, with the celebration of a Unity Feast. Bogota, Colombia; Colombia; Unity Feast first Bahá’í group in Bogotá, Colombia
    1943 8 Jan
    194-
    The exterior ornamentation of the Wilmette Temple was completed. [BW10:181; UD155–6]
  • The cost of the building was $1.3 million. [UD165]
  • - Mashriqu'l-Adhkár (House of Worship); Mashriqu'l-Adhkár, Wilmette; United States (USA); Wilmette, IL
    1943 5 Apr
    194-
    Sir Ronald Storrs visited the House of the Báb in Shiraz. [BW 11:461] Báb, House of (Shiraz); Iran; Ronald Storrs; Shíráz, Iran
    1943 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Puerto Rico was established in San Juan. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Local Spiritual Assemblies; San Juan, Puerto Rico first Local Spiritual Assembly in Puerto Rico
    1943 2 May
    194-
    The passing of Narayanrao Rangnath (Shethji) Vakil (b. Navsari, 1866) in Poona. He was the first person from the Hindu community to identify himself with the Bahá'í activities in India and the first chairman of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of India and Burma. He learned of the Faith through Mírzá Mahram Isfáhání in about 1908. [BW9p637-641]
  • For the story of his life see PH17–25.
  • - Biography; - In Memoriam; India; Mahram Isfahani; Mumbai, India; Narayenrao Rangnath Shethji Vakil; Pune, India first Hindu Bahá'í;
    1943 23 May
    194-
    Melba M. King (née Call) became a Bahá'í in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the first full-blooded Eskimo, a Yup'ik, to accept the Faith. [BW18:687–8] Albuquerque, NM; Melba M. King; New Mexico, USA first full-blooded Eskimo Bahá'í
    1943 30 May
    194-
    The dedication of the Memorial to May Ellis Maxwell, Quilmes Cemetery, Buenos Aires, Argentina. [Bahá'í News July 1943 No 169 page 3, 564/1186] Argentina; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Cemeteries and graves; May Maxwell
    1943 18 Jun
    194-
    The passing of Mabel Rice-Wray Ives (Rizwanea) (b. in St. Louis, MO in 1878) in Oklahoma, OK. She was buried in Memorial Park Cemetery. [BW9p616; Find a grave]

    She first heard of the Faith at the age of 21 in 1899 under miraculous circumstances. [Mable Ives & The Mysterious Trolley Car Ride]

    In 1903 she married Theron Canfield Rice-Wray and had three children. They lived in California from 1909 to 1914 where her marriage ended and she returned to the East.

    In 1919 she met Howard Colby Ives and they married in 1920 and she became known to many who loved her as "Rizwanea". For nearly twenty years they traveled and taught the Faith often teaming with Grace and Harlan Ober as well as Doris and Willard McKay in both business and the teaching work. It was their entire life. They traveled through the New England states, through Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, New York and many many more in Canada as well-always teaching, always leaving an established Assembly behind them." For example they came to Toronto in November of 1938 and stayed for about 10 months. During that time Mabel gave more than 150 lectures in Toronto and about 70 in Hamilton, Toronto's expansion goal. Howard, who was had had heart problems and who was rapidly losing for sight and hearing at the time, complemented her abilities by doing personal deepening with receptive souls. [TMLF62-67, SEBW139-154]

    See the story of how Mabel resolved the situation when she could no longer tolerate the itinerate lifestyle in the story When Mable Ives Could Endure No More, She Prayed .

    See the tribute paid to her in the Canadian Bahá'í News No 202 November 1966 p4.

    - Biography; - In Memoriam; Mabel Rice-Wray Ives; Oklahoma, USA; St. Louis, MO
    1943 16 Aug
    194-
    The passing of Sydney Sprague (b. Oshkosh WI in 1875) in Los Angeles. He was buried in Inglewood Cemetery. His grave is beside that of Tom Collins, husband of Amelia Collins, and lies just across the road from the grave of Thornton Chase, "First Bahá'í of America." [BW9p633-635]
    • During a pilgrimage in late 1904 'Abdu'l-Bahá suggested he visit the Bahá'ís of the East. He toured India and Burma from December 1904 until the summer of 1905 becoming the first Western Bahá'í of go to the far Orient fulfilling Bahá'u'lláh's prophecy the "The East and West shall embrace as lovers". [YBIB6] iiiii
    • See YBIB55-60 For the story of Kai Khosroe, the Zoroastrian Bahá'í from Bombay who gave his life while nursing Sprague in Lahore when he was deathly ill with typhoid fever.
    • In 1908 he became a resident of Tehran, first teaching in the Bahá'í school and, when he returned the following year, he became principal.
    • He married a niece of 'Abdul'-Bahá and became a brother-in-law of Ameen Fareed. When Fareed was expelled from the Faith in 1914 Sprague and his wife as well as his father-in-law followed. Fareed's father was Mírzá Asadu'lláh-i-Isfahání, the emissary who had taken the remains of the Báb from Iran to the Holy Land [Efforts to preserve the remains of the Bab]. Sprague applied to be reinstated in 1931 (or 1937) and was finally accepted in 1941, two years before his passing. [BW9p633-635]
      • He married Farahangiz Khanum on the 20th of July, 1910, a day selected by 'Abdu'l-Bahá so that Stanwood Cobb could attend. The Bahá'í wedding was performed by 'Abdu'l-Bahá and the legal ceremony was conducted by a mullá four days later. [BN Vol 1 No 12 October 1910 p 7]
    • He made a teaching trip to South America and died soon after his return to the United States. [AB409]
    • He was the author of The Story of the Bahai Movement published in London in 1907 and A Year with the Bahá'ís of India and Burma in May of 1908. [YBIBxi] iiiii
    - Biography; - In Memoriam; Ameen Fareed (Amin Farid); Covenant-breaking; India; Kai Khosroe; Lahore, India; Los Angeles, CA; Mírzá Asadullah-i-Isfahani; Myanmar; Pakistan; Sydney Sprague; Travel teaching; United States (USA) first Western Bahá'í to visit the Bahá'í communities on the Indian sub-continent. first Occidental Bahá'í for whom an Oriental Bahá'í had sacrificed his life.
    1943 4 Sep
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Alaska was established at Anchorage. Alaska, USA; Anchorage, AK; Local Spiritual Assemblies; United States (USA) first Local Spiritual Assembly in Alaska
    1943 22 Dec
    194-
    The passing of Disciple of Àbdu'l-Bahá Alma Knobloch (b. 1864 Bautzen; Germany d. 23 December 1943 Cabin John MD). She was interred in the family plot in Prospect Hill Cemetery in Washington, DC.
  • Her association with the Faith began in 1903. She first heard about it from her sister Pauline who taught both Alma and Pocahontas Pope, her seamstress, who became the first African American believer in the Washington area. [AWD24, 67]
  • At the request of 'Abdu'l-Bahá she went to Germany too help Dr Fisher departing in July of 1907 and settled in Stuttgart. Assemblies were formed in Stuttgart, Esslingen, Zuffenhausen, Leipzig, and Gera. She stayed in Germany for 13 years.
  • During this time, in 1908, Alma and Fanny went on a pilgrimage to meet 'Abdu'l-Bahá and they developed a lasting friendship with the women of the Holy Family.
  • She elected to remain in Germany when the war broke out in 1914 and gave up her American citizenship so that she would be free to travel around the country in the service of the Faith.
  • She returned to the United States after the tragic death of her brother-in-law, Joseph Hannen. [Find a grave; BW9p641-643] (Note: The picture in Bahá'í World is not Alma but rather that of her sister, Fanny.)
  • See her biography Alma Sedonia Knobloch by Jennifer Redson Wiebers.
  • - Biography; - In Memoriam; Alma Knobloch; Washington, DC, USA
    1944 (In the year)
    194-
    In Iran a Central Women's Progress Committee was formed to organize women's activities throughout the country. Some of the fundamental tasks accomplished by this committee and its supportive bodies in various localities included holding the first convention of Anjoman-e Tarraqī-e Neswān (Society for the Advancement of Women) in 1947 in Tehran following which local and regional conferences, educational gatherings, and regular classes for illiterate women were conducted. As a result of continued effort and educational training, particularly during the Four Year Plan (1946-1950) the Bahá'í Persian women were enabled to acquire sufficient self-confidence and social recognition to fill elective and appointive offices in the community. [BW11p563; BW12p65; BAHAISM v. The Bahai Community in Iran by V. Rafati] Central Womens Progress Committee (Iran); Iran; Social and economic development; Society for the Advancement of Women, Iran; Women
    1944 (In the year)
    194-
    Gerardo Vega, of Costa Rica, was the first Latin-American native to pioneer when he began work in Panama. [BN No 171 November 1944 p4-5] - Pioneers; Costa Rica; Gerardo Vega; Panama Gerardo Vega, of Costa Rica, was the first Latin-American native to pioneer when he began work in Panama.
    1944 (In the year)
    194-
    Hand of the Cause Collis Featherstone and his wife, Madge, were introduced to the Bahá'í Faith by Bertha and Joe Dobbins in Adelaide, Australia. They became Bahá'ís later in the year. Adelaide, Australia; Australia; Bertha Dobbins; Collis Featherstone; Joe Dobbins; Madge Featherstone
    1944 (In the year)
    194-
    A Bahá'í committee in Tihrán identified the House of Bahá'u'lláh in the city and purchased it. House of Bahá'u'lláh (Tihran); Iran; Purchases and exchanges; Tehran, Iran
    1944 (In the year)
    194-
    The National Spiritual Assembly of Australia was incorporated. Australia; National Spiritual Assembly, incorporation
    1944 (In the year)
    194-
    The first Bahá'ís arrived in the Mariana Islands.
  • Joseph F. Peter and Joseph Tierno, United States servicemen, were based on Saipan, 1944–5.
  • Joseph F. Peter; Joseph Tierno; Saipan, Mariana Islands first Bahá’ís in Mariana Islands
    1944 (In the Year)
    194-
    The publication of The Divine Art of Living: Selections from the Writings of Bahá'u'lláh, the Báb, and 'Abdu'l-Bahá by the Chicago Publishing Committee. It was compiled by Mabel Hyde Paine. The book saw four revisions and up until 2006 and is still being reprinted. [Collins4.114 - 4.117]
  • In 1977 the study guide, Seven Round Table Discussions Based on The Divine Art of Living by Marian Crist Lippitt was published by the Bahá'í Publishing Trust in Wilmette, IL. [Collins7.1407 - 7.1410]
  • The book was transcribed by Mary Francis Baral and published by the Bahá'í Service for the Blind in Los Angeles in 1962. [Collins8.55]
  • The title was borrowed from a previous compilation by Mary M. Rabb that appeared in the Star of the West and then published bound in leather. It was also serialized in World Order in the early 1940's.
  • Chicago, IL; Divine Art of Living (book); Mabel Hyde Paine; Marian Crist Lippitt; Mary Francis Baral
    1944 (In the year)
    194-
    As early as 1944 Mr. Rajab–Ali Vahdat, an agronomist of Iranian origin was the first Bahá'í to settle in what is now called the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the company of his wife of Belgian nationality. They settled in the city of Kabongo, then in the city of Kamina in what is now Upper Katanga. [bahai.org] Kabongo, Democratic Republic of Congo; Kamina, Democratic Republic of Congo; Rajab-`Alí Vahdat first pioneer to settle in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
    1944 Jan
    194-
    A Memorial to Keith Ransom-Kehler was erected in Isfahan to commemorate her work in Iran. She was the second American Bahá'í to die in Iran while serving the Cause.

    See picture. [BN No 169 Jul 1944 p8]

    - In Memoriam; Iran; Isfahan, Iran; Keith Ransom-Kehler
    1944 22 Jan
    194-
    Prior to mailing the manuscript to Horace Holley, Shoghi Effendi made the last corrections of the last installment of God Passes By. At that time the book had the working title of "Prospect and Retrospect". This marked the culmination of approximately two years of almost continuous work. [PP222]

    See Ruhiyyih Khanum's account of Shoghi Effendi's writing of taken from The Priceless Pearl on Blogspot 7 April 2025.

    - Bahá'í World Centre; God Passes By (book)
    1944 21 Mar
    194-
    On the occasion of the Centenary of the Declaration of the Báb, the Guardian provided two gifts to the Bahá'í world. To the Western believers it was God Passes By, and to the friends in the East, The Tablet of Naw-Rúz 101. Both dealt with the history of the Cause in the course of the century, a history of persecution and oppression, a history of suffering and victory, a history of joy and love, a history of the growth of the Cause of God, of its rise and of its descent into a wave-tossed sea of happenings, of its evolution from an embryonic state to its triumphant march towards its culminating point determining the destiny of man.

    The Tablet of Naw-Rúz 101 has been named Lawh-i-Qarn (Tablet of the Centennial). It was unveiled in a solemn pilgrimage ceremony at the House of the Báb in the presence of the 91 delegates exactly one hundred years after the visit of Mullá Husayn.

    A partial English translation of this Persian document can be found in Tablet of the Centennial by Shoghi Effendi translated by Khazeh Fananapazir. This paper also makes reference to the article below.

    Dr 'Alí Muhammad Varqa's article, Le Style persan du Gardien, was presented at the Association for Bahá'í Studies 9th Annual Conference in Ottawa in 1984 and can be found in the book of the proceedings of that conference, The Vision of Shoghi Effendi p209. In his paper he quotes from a number of Tablets to describe the style of Shoghi Effendi's writing in Persian, one of them is the Tablet of the Centennial.

    On 28 November 2023 the Universal House of Justice, in a message to the Bahá'ís of the world, provided a review of the previous 100 years of the Formative Age.

    Centenaries; Historical overviews by Central Figures or BWC; Iran; Lawh-i-Qarn (Tablet of the Centennial); Shíráz, Iran; Shoghi Effendi, Writings of
    1944 Apr
    194-
    The first Bahá'í shortwave radio broadcast was beamed from New York towards South America. [BW9:44–5]
  • VV76 says this was 1943.
  • Bahá'í Radio; Firsts, other; New York, USA; United States (USA) first Bahá’í shortwave radio broadcast
    1944 20 Apr
    194-
    The end of the first Seven Year Plan. Some of the accomplishments of the plan were:
  • Local Spiritual Assemblies were established in every province of Canada, in every state in the United States and in 14 republics in Latin America.
  • Seven National Spiritual Assemblies were established during this approximate period.
  • The exterior of the House of Worship in Wilmette was completed.
  • In North America, 136 LSAs, 197 groups and 1,300 localities were established. [The Spiritual Conquest of the Planet (Supplement) p2]
  • Localities where Bahá'ís reside; Seven Year Plan
    1944 Ridván
    194-
    The Bahá'ís of the British Isles launched a Six Year Plan, the British Six Year Plan (1944-1950). [Ruhi 8.2 p46]
  • The homefront goals were to:
    • To raise to nineteen the number of Local Spiritual Assemblies
    • To double the membership of the community
    • To settle pioneers in Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Eire
  • * Teaching Plans; British Isles; British Six Year Plan; United Kingdom
    1944 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Jamaica was established in Kingston. Kingston, ON; Local Spiritual Assemblies first Local Spiritual Assembly in Jamaica
    1944 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Peru was established in Lima. [Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p10; The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Lima, Peru; Local Spiritual Assemblies first Local Spiritual Assembly in Peru
    1944 Ridván
    194-
    The first Local Spiritual Assembly was formed in Paraguay. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Local Spiritual Assembly, formation; Paraguay First Local Spiritual Assembly in Paraguay
    1944 Ridván
    194-
    The thirty-sixth National Convention was held in Wilmette and hosted representatives of the Bahá'í communities of Central and South America.

    Those elected to serve the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada were: George O. Latimer (Chairman), Allen B. McDaniel (Vice), Horace Holley (Secretary), Louis G. Gregory (Recording Secretary), Roy C. Wilhelm (Treasurer), Dorothy Baker. Amelia E. Collins, Philip G. Sprague, Leroy Ioas. The Assembly appointed Siegfried Schopflocher to serve as the Treasurer of the Canadian Bahá'í Fund. [BN No 169 July 1944 p2; BN No285 Nov 1954 p3-4]

  • Prior to 1944 delegates to the National Convention were chosen from local communities by proportional representation. [BN No 16 March 1927 p1 refers] After this point delegates no longer represented Local Assemblies but were chosen on a provincial (or state) basis. [MA70-71; OBCC157, 174n2]
  • In 1944 there were 35 delegates to the National Convention. iiiii
  • Allen B. McDaniel; Amelia Collins; Canada; Conventions, National; Dorothy Baker; George Orr Latimer; Horace Holley; Leroy Ioas; Louis G. Gregory; North America; Philip G. Sprague; Roy C. Wilhelm; Siegfried Schopflocher; United States (USA)
    1944 May
    194-
    The British at their national convention, decided to ask the Guardian for their own Six Year Plan. [UDXVI]
  • He responded immediately by setting them the task of forming 19 assemblies spread over England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Eire. [UD173]
  • Shoghi Effendi described this as 'their first collective enterprise'. [UDXVI, 173–4]
  • See also BBRSM158, 185.
  • - Teaching Plans, National; British Isles; Conventions, National; Firsts, other; Ireland; Local Spiritual Assemblies; United Kingdom first British collective enterprise
    1944 May
    194-
    The first All-American Bahá'í Convention was held. Those elected to the National Spiritual Assembly were: George 0. Latimer, (Chair), Allen McDaniel, (Vice), Horace Holley, (Sec'y), Louis Gregory, (Recording Sec'y), Roy Wilhelm, (Treas), Dorothy Baker, Amelia Collins, Philip Sprague, and Leroy Ioas. [BW No 169 September 1944 p6]
  • For the first time the delegates had been selected at state and provincial conventions by votes from all believers rather than by communities with local assemblies. [BW9:44; PP390]
  • Hilda Yen Male (Hilda Yen) asked to attend the 1944 Baháʼí Annual convention as an observer. She was moved by the spontaneous gestures of welcome and care shown between individuals society normally kept apart as the material demonstration of the ideals of a worldwide unity across all humanity. She requested to enroll as a Baháʼí. She then asked to address the convention as a Baháʼí: "Fellow Baha'is, this is more than a pleasure. It is a miracle that I am participating with you in discussing such important matters. I contacted two denominations and a parliament of religions before I met Julia Goldman, Baha'i, who sowed this seed in my heart. While convalescent from a flying crash, my life was given me for service to God. Julia took me under her wing. I saw God vaguely; then more clearly, through the Baha'i Faith. Then came the battle of Hongkong(sic) where all shared in a common danger and hunger - forced to live the oneness of mankind. At length I secured a priority to fly to America and how do I rejoice to be in this free country! Conferring with Americans I have found this country the best to execute the message of peace. I have been blessed in meeting other Baha'is. I have been deeply impressed by the love and affection among Baha'is. China is well prepared by its sages for the Baha'i Faith. …" [BW No 169 September 1944 p6]
  • Conventions, District; Conventions, National; First conventions; Hilda Yen; North America; United States (USA) first All-American Bahá’í Convention
    1944 2 May
    194-
    The German government held a public trial of some of the jailed Bahá'í leaders in Darmstadt. Dr. Hermann Grossmann was allowed to testify as a witness for the defense about the non-political nature of the Bahá'í Faith and the attitude of the trial had been pre-ordained. The government found the Bahá'ís guilty, levied large fines and banned all Bahá'í institutions ordering that they be immediately disbanded. [Bahá'í Teachings; German Bahá'í website archives] Darmstadt, Germany; Germany; Hermann Grossmann; Persecution, Germany
    1944 12 May
    194-
    Bahá'ís were persecuted at Ábádih, Iran. The Bahá'í centre was attacked by a mob of four thousand, the building was looted and destroyed and several Bahá'ís badly beaten. [BW18p389]
  • For Western accounts see BBR479.
  • * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Destruction; - Persecution, Mobs; Ábádih, Iran; Haziratul-Quds (Bahá'í centres); Iran
    1944 19–25 May
    194-
    An international celebration of the Centenary of the founding of the Faith was held at the House of Worship in Wilmette.
  • For a description of this event see BW10:158–61.
  • For the programme see BW10:162–70.
  • For a list of the countries participating in the conference see BW10:168.
  • Centenaries; Mashriqu'l-Adhkár, Wilmette; United States (USA); Wilmette, IL
    1944 22 May
    194-
    Centenary of the Declaration of the Báb.

  • For a survey of the growth and development of the Bahá'í Faith in the hundred years since its inception see BW10:142–9.
  • Celebrations were held in many parts of the world:
  • Britain [BW10:188–201]
      Sir Ronald Storrs delivered an address at the opening of the Bahá'í Centenary Exhibition in London. These are extracts from that speech: "My first glimpse of 'Abbás Effendi was in the summer of 1909, when I drove round the Bay of Acre in an Arab cab, visited him in the barracks and marveled at his serenity and cheerfulness after 42 years of exile and imprisonment. I kept touch with him through my confidential agent, Husayn Bey Ruhi, son of a Tabriz martyr. [BW10p189-195]
  • India [BW10:202–8]
  • Egypt [BW10:208–17]
  • Iraq [BW10:217–22]
  • Australia [BW 10:222–8]
  • Latin America [BW10:228–33]
  • The end of the celebrations marking this occasion signal the end of the First Epoch of the Formative Age. [BBD79; CF5; PP390]
  • See the publication The Bahá'í Centenary 1844-1944.
  • - Worldwide; Báb, Declaration of; Centenaries; Cycles, Eras, Ages and Epochs; Formative Age
    1944 22–23 May
    194-
    The Centenary of the Declaration of the Báb was celebrated at the House of the Báb in Shíráz. [BW10:181]
  • Ninety delegates to the national convention and members of the National Spiritual Assembly of Iran assembled discreetly for the occasion.
  • For details of this event and the caution with which the arrangements for it were made see BW10:181–3.
  • The Guardian sent the Persian Bahá'ís a lengthy letter detailing how the observance and the week-long festivities to follow are to be made. [BW10:183]
  • For details of the events see BW10:183–8.
  • Báb, Declaration of; Báb, House of (Shiraz); Centenaries; Conventions, National; Iran; NSA; Shíráz, Iran
    1944 22–23 May
    194-
    The Centenary of the Declaration of the Báb was commemorated in the Holy Land. [BW10:150]
  • For a description of this event by Rúhíyyih Khánum see BW10:150–7.
  • For press accounts see BW10:156–7.
  • Báb, Declaration of; Centenaries; Haifa, Israel
    1944 23 May
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi unveiled the model of the Shrine of the Báb at the centenary celebration of the Declaration of the Báb in Haifa. [BBD210; BW10:154, 157; DH140; GBF104; PP239–40; UD166]
  • BW10:157 suggests this was 24 May.
  • * Shoghi Effendi, Basic timeline; * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Bahá'í World Centre; - Basic timeline, Expanded; Báb, Declaration of; Báb, Shrine of (Haifa); Centenaries; Haifa, Israel; Mount Carmel; Scale models; Shoghi Effendi, Works of
    1944 8 Aug
    194-
    Three Bahá'ís were murdered in Sháhrúd, Iran, after three weeks of anti-Bahá'í agitation. Many Bahá'í houses were attacked and looted. [BW18:389]
  • The murderers confessed, were put on trial and were acquitted. [BW18:389, Towards a History of Iran's Baha'i Community During the Reign of Mohammad Reza Shah, 1941-1979 by Mina Yazdani.]
  • * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Court cases; - Persecution, Deaths; - Persecution, Other; Court cases; Human rights; Iran; Shahrud, Iran
    1944 after Aug
    194-
    Following the murder of Bahá'ís at Sháhrúd, Iran, and the widespread publicity on the outcome of the trial, there was an upsurge in persecution of Bahá'ís throughout Iran. [BW18p389]
  • At Ábádih Bahá'ís were beaten and their houses were sacked. [BW18:389]
  • The Bahá'í centre at Bandar Jaz was attacked. [BW18:389]
  • Two Bahá'ís were knifed at Bandar Sháh. The attackers were set free and attacked a further three Bahá'ís, leaving one an invalid. [BW18:390]
  • Bahá'ís, including women and children, were attacked and beaten at Bushrúyih, their homes and shops looted and burned and the Bahá'í cemetery desecrated. [BW18:390]
  • Bahá'í houses were attacked and looted at Fárán, Káshán and Ná'in. [BW13:390]
  • Bahá'í houses were set on fire in Gulpáygán and Zábul. [BW18:390]
  • Bahá'ís were driven from town in Bujnúrd, Gunábád and Tabas. [BW18:390]
  • The Bahá'í cemetery at Mahmúdábád was desecrated.
  • Bahá'ís were beaten at Miyán-du-áb, Rafsanján, Sangsar and Sírján. [BW18:390]
  • Bahá'ís were stoned at Qasr-i-Shírín. [BW18:390]
  • * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Destruction; - Persecution, Other; Ábádih, Iran; Bandar-Jaz, Iran; Bandar Shah, Iran; Bujnurd, Iran; Bushrúyih, Iran; Faran, Iran; Gulpaygan, Iran; Gunabad, Iran; Iran; Kashan, Iran; Mahmudabad, Iran; Miyan-du-ab, Iran; Nain, Iran; Qasr-i-Shirin, Iran; Rafsanjan, Iran; Sangesar, Iran; Sirjan, Iran; Tabas, Iran; Zabul, Iran
    1944 Nov
    194-
    The Local Spiritual Assembly of Bogotá, Colombia, was disbanded.
  • It was not reformed until April 1946.
  • Bogota, Colombia; Colombia; Local Spiritual Assemblies
    1944 Nov
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi sent the cable below to the Bahá'í world: "Monib Shahid, grandson of both `Abdu'l-Bahá and the King of Martyrs, married according to the Moslem rites the daughter of a political exile who is nephew of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. This treacherous act of alliance with enemies of the Faith merits condemnation of entire Bahá'í world." [Bahá'í News, December, 1944 No. 172] Covenant-breaking; Haifa, Israel; Munib Shahid
    1944 7 Nov
    194-
    The passing of John Stearns, pioneer to Quito while in Lima, Peru for medical treatment. He was buried in the British Cemetary. [BW10p539-540; Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p11] - Biography; - In Memoriam; John Stearns; Lima, Peru; Peru
    1944 Nov (mid)
    194-
    The publication of God Passes By, a survey of the history of the first century of the Bábí and Bahá'í Faiths by Shoghi Effendi. [BBRSM137; CB308; PG217-218; GPBXI; Collins5.62]
  • Shoghi Effendi intended the book to be a gift to the Bahá'ís of the West on the occasion of the hundredth anniversary of the Declaration of the Báb but conditions in the United States delayed its publication. [GT79–80; PP224]
  • For information on how Shoghi Effendi wrote the book, "the only true book we have from his pen", see GBF95–6 and PP222–4.
  • Shoghi Effendi also wrote a shorter version of the same theme as God Passes By in Persian. [PP420]
  • See A User's Guide to God Passes By on Bahá'í Blog.
  • See Shoghi Effendi: The Range and Power of His Pen by 'Ali Nakhjavani p113 for information on the writing of God Passes By.
  • * Publications; * Shoghi Effendi, Basic timeline; * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Bahá'í World Centre; - Basic timeline, Expanded; Gifts; God Passes By (book); Historical overviews by Central Figures or BWC; Shoghi Effendi, Works of; Shoghi Effendi, Writings of
    1945 (In the year)
    194-
    The Persian Bahá'í community published several periodicals. One of the most popular, aiming at the educational and intellectual training of Bahai youth, was named Āhang-e badīʿ. It was established in Iran in 1945 as a publication of the Tehran Bahá'í Youth Committee and then became a national magazine which gained the support of 1,200 subscribers in the early 1950s. Suspended for five years (1955-60) due to intensified restrictions by the government, Āhang-e badīʿ was published for more than three decades until it was stopped by the onset of the Islamic régime. [BW12p292; BW16p263; BW12p570; BAHAISM v. The Bahai Community in Iran by V. Rafati] Ahang-e badi; Iran
    1945 (In the year)
    194-
    Bahá'ís throughout Iran were dismissed from National Teacher Training Colleges by the National Board of Education. [BW18p390] * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Education; Iran
    1945 (In the year)
    194-
    The World Forestry Charter Gathering was founded in Britain by Richard St Barbe Baker. [VV106; WH75] Environment; Richard St. Barbe Baker; United Kingdom
    1945 (In the year)
    194-
    See BBRSM166–7 for a chart showing the distribution of the Bahá'í Assemblies and localities in this year. - Worldwide; Localities where Bahá'ís reside; Statistics
    1945 (In the year)
    194-
    Marzieh Gail and her father, 'Ali Kuli Khan made a provisional translation of the Long Healing Prayer that was hand-typed and distributed informally among the friends. [The Long Healing Prayer of Bahá'u'lláh: The Metaphysics of Unity 12.56]
  • See Long Healing Prayer: an early provisional translation by Bahá'u'lláh translated by Ali Kuli Khan and Marzieh Gail.
  • `Alí Kulí Khán; Healing prayer, Long; Marzieh Gail
    13 Mar
    194-
    The murder of Siyyid Mustafá Rúmí (b. Baghdad 1846 d. Mandalay Region, Myammar). He became a Baha'i in 1875 through the teaching of Jamal Effendi. He was nearly 99 years old at the time of his death. [Find a grave]
  • He was born of a noble family from Iraq who had settled in Madras, India where he encounter Jamal Effendi. Together they journeyed to Burma in 1878 and he married and settle in Rangoon. In 1899 he and some others carried the marble casket made by the Bahá'ís of Mandalay to the Holy Land for the Holy Remains of the Báb. After the loss of his wife and his business interests in 1910 he was free to devote his full time to the Faith. He was instrumental in establishing a new centre in Daidanaw in the township of Kungyangoon.
  • Among his many services for the Faith he translated the Writing to Urdu and to Burmese.
  • Shoghi Effendi in a cable dated 10 November, 1945, written on his behalf, described the condition of the Burmese Bahá'ís at the end of World War II. The cable stated:
      . . . the Burmese Bahá'ís . . . have lost almost everything, including Bahá'í institutions destroyed and, above all, their wonderful pioneer-teacher, Siyyid Mustafa Roumi, was cruelly murdered by Burmese villagers together with a number of other Bahá'ís. But they have gathered in their ruined village, and with the utmost faith and devotion are seeking to rebuild their Baha' institutions; they have already started their school and elected their Assembly. Such evidences of the deep attachment of Bahá'ís to their religion are, indeed, inspiring! . . .
  • The Guardian announced his elevation to the rank of Hand of the Cause of God on the 14th of July, 1945 and made a donation for the construction of his tomb. [MoCxxi, BW10p517-520i]
  • For his obituary see BW10:517–20.
  • For Shoghi Effendi's tribute see BW10:519–20 and DND216-217.
  • Picture of his resting place.
  • See Lights of Fortitude p123-128,
  • See Bahá'í Chronicles.
  • See his biography, Siyyid Mustafa Rumi: Hand of the Cause of God, Apostle of Bahá'u'lláh by Iran Furutan-Ali Muhajir.
  • - Biography; - In Memoriam; Daidanaw, Myanmar; Hands appointed posthumously by Shoghi Effendi; Jamal Effendi; Myanmar; Siyyid Muṣṭafá Rúmí; Thingangyun, Myanmar
    1945 15 Apr
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi sent the following cable to the Bahá'í world: "My faithless brother Husayn, after long period of dishonourable conduct, has abandoned the Master's home to consort with his sister and other Covenant-breakers". [Bahá'í News, No. 174, p.2; This Decisive Hour #141] Covenant-breaking; Haifa, Israel; Husayn Ali Rabbani
    1945 Ridván
    194-
    Formation of first Local Assembly: Guatemala City, [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Guatemala; Guatemala City; Local Spiritual Assembly, formation Formation of first Local Assembly: Guatemala City
    1945 Ridván
    194-
    The first Local Spiritual Assembly was established in Punta Arenas, Chile. See the interesting story of how this goal was achieved. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Artemus Lamb; Chile; Local Spiritual Assembly, formation; Punta Arenas, Chile First Local Spiritual Assembly established in Punta Arenas, Chile
    1945 (Ridván)
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Ecuador was established in Guayaquil. The founding members were: Eduardo Gonzalez Lopez, Luis Guillermo Molina DeFranc, Emilio Minervini, Jorge Sarco, Jorge Jalón Fer, Juan Luis Aguirre Tarpeau, Mme. Marie Constantine Claudet de Thomas, Else Jorgensen, and Lauro Sánchez. [Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p17, 84] Ecuador; Guayaquil, Ecuador; Local Spiritual Assemblies firstLocal Spiritual Assembly in Ecuador
    1945 (Ridván)
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in the Dominican Republic was established in Santo Domingo then called Ciudad Trujillo (Ciudad Trujillo was the official name given to the city of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on 8 January 1936, in honour of President Rafael Leónidas Trujillo Molina. On 21 November 1961, almost six months after Trujillo's assassination, the city was renamed Santo Domingo, as it had been called since its founding in 1496).

    There were nine indigenous believers in the city. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb]

    Local Spiritual Assemblies; Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic first Local Spiritual Assembly in Dominican Republic
    1945 (In the Year)
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly of Venezuela was established in Caracas. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] Caracas, Venezuela; Local Spiritual Assemblies first Local Spiritual Assembly in Venezuela
    1945 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Panama was established Panama City. [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances] Local Spiritual Assemblies; Panama City, Panama first Local Spiritual Assembly in Panama
    1945 Ridván
    194-
    The election for the National Spiritual Assembly was held by postal ballot. The tellers completed their work in the Temple Foundation Hall. Those selected as members of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada were: Horace Holley, Dorothy Baker, Philip Sprague, George Latimer, Amelia Collins, Louis Gregory, Leroy Ioas, Allen McDaniel, Roy C. Wilhelm. [BN No175 Jun 1945 p3]

    The inability, under restrictions imposed by the war, to hold Convention sessions this year challenged the National Spiritual Assembly to maintain the important functions of the annual meeting through other means. Steps were therefore taken to provide for Voting by mail, with a committee of tellers to serve in the customary way, to conduct a public meeting or Bahá'í Congress in Foundation Hall during the Riḍván Period, and to provide the delegates with subjects for written suggestions and views. [BN No 174 April-May 145 p2]

  • For the first time in the history of this Assembly, a postal by-election was held to fill a vacancy caused by the fact that Mr Wilhelm could no longer attend meetings. Elsie Austin was elected as of the 16th of March and attended one meeting before dissolution. [BN No 182 April 1946 p1]
  • Allen B. McDaniel; Amelia Collins; Conventions, National; Dorothy Baker; George Orr Latimer; Horace Holley; Leroy Ioas; Louis G. Gregory; National Spiritual Assembly, election of; Philip G. Sprague; Roy C. Wilhelm; United States (USA); Wilmette, IL
    1945 25 Apr
    194-
    The United Nations convened in San Francisco.
  • For the Bahá'í response see BW17:81.
  • San Francisco, CA; United Nations
    1945 8 May
    194-
    The war in Europe ended.
  • For Shoghi Effendi's response see MA80–1, PP185 and UD175.
  • For the war's effect on the Bahá'í community worldwide see BW17:80.
  • See CF36 for Shoghi Effendi's opinion of the significance of the role of the United States in the war.
  • - Europe; History (general); War (general); World War II (1939-1945)
    1945 Jun
    194-
    The 20 Bahá'ís in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, were a sufficient number for the local spiritual assembly to gain legal recognition for the Bahá'í Faith as a religion.
  • It was registered as a cultural, religious and social organization on 5 August 1946.
  • Haiti; Local Spiritual Assemblies; Port-au-Prince, Haiti
    1945 Aug
    194-
    Marguerite Wellby Preston, an English Bahá'í married to a Kenyan tea grower, settled in Sotik, Kenya, becoming the first Bahá'í in the country. [UD484]
  • Until the 1950s she was the only Bahá'í in East Africa. [UD484]
  • Kenya; Marguerite Preston; Sotik, Kenya first Bahá’í in Kenya
    1945 1 Aug
    194-
    Initially founded as a hostel for Bahá'í children with sixteen children, what was the New Era High School and Senior Secondary had grown to become a leading international co-educational institution with many hundreds of students.
  • Founded as a separate institution in 1987, the New Era Development Institute had its beginnings as a service project for students in the 1970s and 1980s when the school set up programmes to assist the poor and underdeveloped villages in the region. [New Era High School and Senior Secondary website, Wikipedia, BBD171; BBRSM153]
  • For the history of the school see BW16:320–6.
  • - Bahá'í inspired schools; India; Maharashtra, India; New Era Development Institute (NEDI), India; New Era High School (NEHS), Panchgani, India; Panchgani, India; Social and economic development
    1945 14 Aug
    194-
    The German Bahá'ís, 80 per cent of whom lived in the American sector of occupied Germany, obtained permission to re-organize. [BBRSM185]
  • A US soldier stationed in occupied post-war Germany, John Eichenauer, helped during the first days of the reconvening of the community. The American Bahá'ís sent money, food and literature, and aided them in rebuilding the administrative structures. [BWNS390]
  • Brief mention of this event is made in this film on Vimeo.
  • - Persecution; - Persecution, Other; Bahá'í World News Service (BWNS); Germany; John Eichenauer; Persecution, Germany; World War II (1939-1945)
    1945 2 Sep
    194-
    The war in Japan ended. History (general); Japan; War (general); World War II (1939-1945)
    1945 20 Oct
    194-
    Emeric and Rosemary Sala of St. Lambert, Quebec departed on a four month tour of Central and South America. They visited 19 republics and Mr Sala gave seventy-nine talks. They visited many pioneers and paid homage at the grave of May Maxwell at Quilmes, about one hour from Buenos Aires. [TG93-101] Canada; Central America; Emeric Sala; Latin America; Quebec, Canada; Rosemary Sala; St. Lambert, QC
    1945 24 Oct
    194-
    The United Nations was formally established. There were Bahá'í representatives in San Francisco in 1946 for the signing of the Charter. [BWNS1772]
  • For the relationship of the Bahá'í Faith to the United Nations see BW16:327–52.
  • See SDC64-65 for 'Abdu'l-Bahá's prophetic statement, written in 1875, "True civilization will unfurl its banner...".
  • The temporary headquarters for the United Nations was established in Lake Success, NY in a warehouse formerly occupied by the Sperry Gyroscope Company. (1946-1952).
  • See the United Nations Charter.
  • Bahá'í International Community (BIC); California, USA; Collective security; History (general); Peace; Prophecies; San Francisco, CA; Secret of Divine Civilization (book); United Nations; United States (USA); War (general); World War II (1939-1945)
    1945 Dec 15
    194-
    The passing of Emogene Hoagg (Henrietta Emogene Martin Hoagg) [BW10p520] - Biography; - In Memoriam; Emogene Hoagg
    1946 - 1963
    194-
    The end of the First Epoch and the beginning of The Second Epoch of the Formative Age. [Message from the Universal House of Justice dated 5 February 1986; Mess63-86 p710-716]
  • See the attachment for the above-referenced message entitled The Epochs of the Formative Age prepared by the Research Department of the Universal House of Justice.
  • It began with the launching of the second Seven Year Plan and the adoption of similar plans by other national communities throughout the Bahá'i world and ended with the conclusion of the Ten Year Crusade and the election of the Universal House of Justice. [Mess86-01p815]
  • Cycles, Eras, Ages and Epochs; Formative Age
    1946 (In the year)
    194-
    In the second Seven Year Plan from 1946 to 1952, the American Bahá'í community was given the responsibility of working for the establishment of bahá'í communities in several european countries. A European Teaching Committee, which was responsible to the North American National Spiritual Assembly, was set up in Geneva in 1946. Its task was to coordinate the pioneer activities in ten European goal countries; Denmark, Norway, Sweden, The Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Italy, Spain and Portugal. [SBBR14p239]
  • The Committee was chaired by Edna True. [SBBR14p241]
  • Of the pioneers that arrived during this period, Dagmar Dole (stayed 1947 to 1951)) and Eleanor Hollibaugh (stayed May 1947 to October 1948 and March 1950 to October 1950) had the most influence on the growth of the community. [SBBR14p239-243]
  • As of 1946 Geresina Campani of Florence was the only known Bahá'í in Italy. In her letter, published in part in Bahá'í News she wrote of the hardship due to the devastation caused by the Allied bombing. [SYH232]
  • Belgium; Denmark; Edna True; European Teaching Committee; Geneva, Switzerland; Geresina Campani; Italy; Luxembourg; Netherlands; Norway; Portugal; Spain; Sweden; Switzerland
    1946 (In the year)
    194-
    The restoration of the House of Bahá'u'lláh in Tihrán was completed. - Restoration and renovation; House of Bahá'u'lláh (Tihran); Iran; Tehran, Iran
    1946 (In the year)
    194-
    The first issue of the News Exchange was published by the International Bahá'í Bureau in Geneva. The last issue was published in December of 1956. It was published in English, French and German. [CBN No 89 June 1957 p5] * Publications; - Newsletters; Anne Lynch; Bahá'í International Community (BIC); Geneva, Switzerland; International Bahá'í Bureau; News Exchange; Switzerland
    1946 (In the year)
    194-
    The publication of Abdul Baha's Questioned Will and Testament by Ruth White. The book contains the report of Dr C Ainsworth Mitchell, the handwriting expert for the British Museum. Beverly Hills, CA; California, USA; Covenant-breaking; Ruth White; Will and Testament of `Abdu'l-Bahá
    1946 (In the year)
    194-
    The first Bahá'í summer school in Argentina was held in Ezeiza. [BW11:45] Argentina; Ezeiza, Argentina; First summer and winter schools; Summer schools first Bahá’í summer school in Argentina
    1946 (In the year)
    194-
    An Egyptian Bahá'í, a Dr Ahmad, moved to Edinburgh in order to study medicine and to fulfill one of the goals of the Six Year Plan, He invited travel teacher to speak in Edinburgh and was soon joined by Jean Court from Canada. He returned to Egypt prior to the formation of the local spiritual assembly two years later. [from The Bahá'í Community in Edinburgh, 1946-1950 by Ismail Valesco in SBBH Vol 14 p275] Ahman, Dr.; Edinburgh, Scotland; Jean Court; Scotland
    1946 (In the year)
    194-
    First Local Spiritual Assembly in Honduras was formed in Managua. . [The Beginnings of the Bahá'í Faith in Latin America: Some Remembrances by Artemus Lamb] - First believers; Managua, Nicaragua First Local Spiritual Assembly in Honduras was formed in Managua
    1946 Jan-Feb
    194-
    Canadian Elizabeth Greenleaf went on pilgrimage in Haifa. [SETPE1p114] Elizabeth Greenleaf; Haifa, Israel; Pilgrims
    1946 20 - 25 Jan
    194-
    The first teaching conference in Latin America was held in Panama City on the instructions of Shoghi Effendi.
  • Twenty–five delegates from ten South American countries attended. [BW10p707, Historical Background of the Panama Temple by Ruth Pringle]
  • - Conferences, International; Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Teaching; Latin America; Panama; Teaching first teaching conference in Latin America
    1946 11 Apr
    194-
    Shoghi Effendi instructed Sutherland Maxwell to set plans in motion for the first stages of the building of the superstructure of the Shrine of the Báb. [GBF104–5] * Shoghi Effendi, Basic timeline; * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); - Bahá'í World Centre; - Basic timeline, Expanded; Báb, Shrine of (Haifa); Haifa, Israel; Mount Carmel; William Sutherland Maxwell
    1946 Ridván
    194-
    India and Burma launched a Four and One-Half Year Plan, Indian 4½ Year Plan. (1946-1951) [Ruhi 8.2 p46; BW11p32; DND141-143; The Spiritual Conquest of the Planet (Supplement) p2]
  • The goals were:
      - To increase the number of Local Assemblies from 21 to 63
      - To give special attention to areas marked by sharp cultural and political divisions
    As the plan unfolded, the National Assembly added the following additional goals:
      - To publish the Esslemont book - 'Bahá'u'lláh and the New Era' in eighteen new languages
      - To acquire a National Hazíratu'l-Quds in New Delhi
      - To carry the Bahá'í message to Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Thailand
  • * Teaching Plans; - Teaching Plans, National; India; India, Pakistan and Burma Four and a Half Year Teaching Plan; Myanmar; Pakistan
    1946 Ridván
    194-
    The Second Seven Year Plan of the United States and Canada (1946-1953) was launched. [BBR180; BBRSM158, 185; MA87-89, MA89]
  • For details of the plan see BW16:81–2.
      Objectives:
    • Consolidate victories won;
    • Complete interior ornamentation;
    • Form 3 NSAs in Canada, Central and South America;
    • Support spread of Faith into Europe;
    • Supplemental goals to support Africa. [The Spiritual Conquest of the Planet (Supplement)p2]
  • This marked the end of the First Epoch and the beginning of the Second Epoch of the Formative Age. [CB316; CF5–6]
  • The Second Epoch was marked by the global spread of the Faith and concluded with the election of the Universal House of Justice.
  • * Teaching Plans; - Teaching Plans, National; Canada; Cycles, Eras, Ages and Epochs; Formative Age; Second Seven Year Plan, US and CA (1946-1953); United States (USA)
    1946 Ridván
    194-
    The first local spiritual assembly in Brazil was established in Rio de Janeiro. Local Spiritual Assemblies; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil first Local Spiritual Assembly in Brazil
    1946 Ridván
    194-
    The National Spiritual Assembly of Germany and Austria was re-established. [BN No 187 September 1946 p8-9]
  • It was elected for the first time since 1937. Those elected were: Fred Kohler, Dr Adelheid Jäger, De Hermann Grossmann, Martha Brauns-Forel, Erwin Knorr, Paul Golfer, Edith Horn, Martel Weiss, Hede Schubert. [The German Baha'i Community under National Socialism p18]
  • Three American servicemen, Bruce Davison, John Eichenauer, and Capt Henry Jarvis rendered service to the stricken community. See the article The Baha'i Faith: Banned by the Nazis and the Communists by Caroline Fowler on Bahá'í Teachings.org.
  • It would appear that there was no Austrian representation at this National Convention nor at the National Convention the following year. [BW11p30]
  • See The German Baha'i Community under National Socialism p21-26 for the persecution of the Bahá'í community before and during the war.
  • Austria; Germany; National Spiritual Assembly, formation
    1946 Jun
    194-
    Rita Marshall, the first person native to St Vincent in the Caribbean to become a Bahá'í, accepted the Faith while in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
  • Her husband, Ernest Marshall, became a Bahá'í in November 1946.
  • - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Canada; Halifax, NS; Nova Scotia, Canada; St. Vincent, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines first Bahá'í of St Vincent
    1946 21 Jun
    194-
    The Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) is the principal global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of women. It was established as a functional commission of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) on this day in 1946. UN Document E/90] Commission on the Status of Women (CSW); New York, USA; New York, USA; United Nations
    1946 (In the year 1946 or 1947)
    194-
    While visiting in Famagusta (Gazimağusa) Rúḥíyyih Khánum is quoted as saying: "Shoghi Effendi was working very intensely in Haifa and people were knocking on his door all the time to ask questions; because of that, during his unofficial travels to rest (holidays), he was traveling around quietly (incognito), and without contacting the believers. We came to Cyprus together for two or three weeks in one of the years 1946 or 1947 – if I look (in my diary) I can find the year. We went to Nicosia, and then we got a car and went to Famagusta, Larnaca and then again Nicosia. I can't remember whether we went to Limassol. Afterwards we went to St. Hilarion. There weren't good hotels in the Troodos area then, and because of that we stayed in a small house for a while. This is all I can say about this visit." [Notes of the Visit to Famagusta of Amatu'l-Bahá Rúḥíyyih Khánum in the home of Erol & Şafak Olkar Notes taken by: Erol Olkar. The English translation of the original Turkish language handwritten manuscript of Erol Olkar was by Deniz Oraç.] Amatul-Bahá Ruhiyyih Khanum, Journeys of; Cyprus; Famagusta, Cyprus; Larnaca, Cyprus; Nicosia, Cyprus; Shoghi Effendi, Travels of; St. Hilarion, Cyprus
    1946 20 Jul
    194-
    The National Spiritual Assembly of the United States enquired of the Guardian whether the existence of the United Nations in its present form changed the attitude of the Baha'is toward military duties which might require the taking of human life. The Guardian's reply, written by his secretary, was:

      ...the Bahá'ís should continue to apply, under all circumstances, for exemption from any military duty that necessitates the taking of life. There is no justification for any change of attitude on our part at the present time.

    The Universal House of Justice amplified this later statement:

      There is no objection in a Bahá'í enlisting voluntarily in the armed forces of a country in order to obtain a training in some trade or profession, provided that he can do so without making himself liable to undertake combatant service. [BW17:384–5]
    Military; Military (armed forces); United States (USA); War (general); Weapons
    1946 22 Jul
    194-
    The passing of John David Bosch (named "Núraní by 'Abdu'l-Bahá) at his home near Geyserville, California (b. August 1, 1855 at Neu-St Johann, Canton Gall, Switzerland) He had become a Bahá'í in 1905. His teachers being Mrs Beckwith, Mrs Goodall, Mrs Cooper and Thornton Chase. He was buried in the Olive Hill Cemetery, Geyserville. [BW11p488]
  • He and Louise Stapfer married on the 19th of January 1914 in San Francisco. 'Abdu'l-Bahá sent a Tablet. [WmSh21]
  • He, along with George Latimer and Leroy Ioas, were appointed by the National Spiritual Assembly to find a location to establish a "Western Green Acre". John donated his 35 acre estate.
  • For a pen portrait and biography of John and Louise Bosch see Other People Other Places by Marzieh Gail pages 182-194 or Bahá'í News page 705.
  • For pictures of John and Louise Bosch see the Bosch Bahá'í School site.
  • For Shoghi Effendi's tribute to him see MA106. See When the Moon Set Over Haifa by Angelina Diliberto Allen pages 11-52 for an account of the Bosch's time in Haifa during the passing of 'Abdu'l-Bahá.
  • - Bahá'í schools (conference centres); - Biography; - In Memoriam; Bosch Bahá'í School; California, USA; Geyserville, CA; John Bosch; Louise Bosch; United States (USA)
    1946 5 Aug
    194-
    The Bahá'í Faith was registered as a cultural, religious and social organization in Haiti. Haiti; Recognition (legal)
    1946 11 Aug
    194-
    The passing of Orcella Rexford (b. Louise Cutts-Powell, 12 Jun 1887 in Tracey, Minnesota) in Los Angeles. She was buried near the grave of Thornton Chase in the Inglewood Park Cemetery. [BW11p495-498; Find a grave]
  • Orcella first heard of the Bahá'í Faith from Mrs. Myrta Sandoz of Cleveland, Ohio, and was later confirmed by Dr. Edward Getsinger in Boston, Mass. She became a believer in 1918-1919. [BW11p495]
  • For a brief biography see Bahá'í Chronicles.
  • For a more extensive biography see Bahaipedia.
  • See her article, Alaska, Our New Frontier. [BW9p918-922]
  • - Biography; - Births and deaths; - In Memoriam; Cemeteries and graves; Los Angeles, CA; Orcella Rexford; Thornton Chase; United States (USA)
    1946 14 Sep
    194-
    The first native Ecuadorian woman to accept the Faith was Judith Franco. [Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p21] Ecuador; Judith Franco; Quito, Ecuador first Ecuadorian woman to accept the Faith
    1946 Oct 11
    194-
    The Bahá'ís of Iran launched a Forty-five Month Plan, the Persian 45 Month Plan ( 11 October 1946 to 9 July 1950, The Centenary of the Martyrdom of the Báb). Every province had specific assignments. [BBRSM158; CB316] The objectives of the plan included;

    1. Consolidation of all local Bahá'í communities.

    2. Reestablishment of 62 dissolved Assemblies. (93 LSAs formed)

    3. Formation of 22 groups. (37 established)

    4. Creation of 13 new centres. (24 localities established)

    5. Development of Assemblies from groups in three adjoining countries, namely in Kabul, Afghanistan, Mecca, Arabia and Bahrein Island, Persian Gulf.

    6. The formation of groups in four localities on the Arabian Peninsula.

    7. The sending pioneers to India and 'Iráq to assist in the formation of new groups.

    The Bahá'ís of Tehran were called upon to send out 50 families into the pioneer field. (160 arose) Every individual Bahá'í was included in the operation of the Plan-as a volunteer, by deputizing a pioneer, by contributing funds, by circuit teaching or by providing hospitality to students whose parents had become pioneers. [BW4p34-35; BW11p34-36]

  • Concurrent with the Forty-Five Month Plan the Bahá'ís of Iran made a concerted effort to remove Bahá'í women from the traditional shackles of a lack of education and an inability to participate in public affairs. Women's conferences were held, educational opportunities were created, equality of opportunity, right and privilege was declared to be an essential. [BW11p36].
  • * Teaching Plans; - Teaching Plans, National; India; Iran; Myanmar; Pakistan; Social and economic development; Women
    1946 Oct
    194-
    The Persian Women's Four Year Plan (1946-1950) was launched. Some goals were to:
      -Hold literacy classes for girls and adult women
      -Hold regional conventions semi-annually for Bahá'í women
      -Hold a national convention annually with the participation of representatives of regional committees
      -Issue a periodical covering topics of both Bahá'í and general history, science, literature, health, hygiene, housekeeping and care of children
    * Teaching Plans; Iran
    1946 22 Nov
    194-
    Amelia Collins was appointed a Hand of the Cause of God by Shoghi Effendi. [PP258; PSBW878]
  • He dId not make this appointment public until 24 December 1951 when he announced the first contingent of the Hands. [MoCxxiii]
  • - Hands of the Cause; - In Memoriam; Amelia Collins; Hands of the Cause, Appointments; Hands of the Cause, First Contingent
    1946 13 Dec
    194-
    The passing of Muhammad Taqí Isfahání. He had been born in Persia and was horrified by the behaviour of Mullá Muhammad Báqir (The Wolf) and Imám-Jum'íh who had killed the two brothers Muhammad Husayn and Muhammad Hasan so he left for Egypt and encountered many believers on his way. He passed through Akka and met both Bahá'u'lláh and 'Abdu'-Bahá.
  • His name is closely associated with the early progress of the Faith in Egypt. His house was the centre of activity and was were both Mírzá Abu'l-Fadl and Lua Getsinger spent their last days. He received 'Abdu'l-Bahá during His visit to Egypt. He was the chief member of the Publishing Committee and helped to translate many books into Arabic such as the Iqán and Some Answered Questions.
  • The Guardian announced his elevation to the rank of Hand of the Cause of God two days after his passing and donated a sum of money to be used for his tomb. He is buried in the Bahá'í Cemetery. [MoCxxii, BW11p500-502]
  • * Translation; - Biography; - Births and deaths; - Hands of the Cause; - In Memoriam; Egypt; Hands appointed posthumously by Shoghi Effendi; Hands of the Cause, Activities; Hands of the Cause, Appointments; Hands of the Cause, Births and deaths; Lua Getsinger; Mírzá Abu’l-Faḍl Gulpáygání; Muhammad Taqí Isfahání
    1946 23 Dec
    194-
    Virginia Orbison, from the United States, left Brazil for a pioneer post in Madrid.
  • The airplane she traveled in was named 'O bandeirante' ('The Pioneer').
  • Madrid, Spain; Virginia Orbison
    1947 (In the year)
    194-
    The first Chilean Teaching Conference was held in Santiago. - First conferences; Chile; Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Teaching; Santiago, Chile; Teaching first Teaching Conference in Chile
    1947 (In the year)
    194-
    Gladys Anderson Weeden arrived at the World Centre to assist Shoghi Effendi, and took responsibility for liaising with government and other officials. [BW18:694]
  • She married Ben Weeden on 20 March 1948 in Jerusalem; he assisted with building projects at the World Centre. [BW15:478; BW18:694]
  • - Bahá'í World Centre; Ben Weeden; Gladys Anderson Weeden
    1947 (In the year)
    194-
    The Hazíratu'l-Quds of Tihrán was completed. [BW11:588] Haziratul-Quds (Bahá'í centres); Iran; Tehran, Iran
    1947 (In the year)
    194-
    The Australian-New Zealand teaching plan, the Australian Six Year Plan (1947–53), comprising internal goals only, was launched. [BBRSM158; LGANZ97; The Spiritual Conquest of the Planet (Supplement) p2]

    The homefront goals were:
      - To establish two new Spiritual Assemblies in Australia
      - To establish nineteen groups in Australasia

    * Teaching Plans; Australia; Australia-New Zealand Six Year Plan; New Zealand
    1947 (In the year)
    194-
    The first summer school in Chile took place in Loncoche on property donated by Mrs Fabienne Guillon. Chile; Fabienne Guillon; Loncoche, Chile first summer school in Chile

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