Tuesday, November 15, 2005

God Goes to School

Check out this article in today's Boston Globe about the rising popularity of "religious" clubs at schools. This looks like an interesting development especially the comments by school administrators that they see these clubs as supporting development of character. It reminds me of a Baha'i World News Service article about an initiative in Australia that the Baha'i community is seeing making an impact on children of all faiths in the public school system.
You can read the story here.

Race Unity a Global Challenge

There's a really great article in the Christian Science Monitor about how the recent riots in France may represent an opportunity for the French to reconsider their efforts at a "color-blind" approach to dealing with the challenge of maintaining what the Baha'i Writings refer to as "unity in diversity". I wanted to include a quote from the Baha'i Writings that I believe bear on the issues raised in the article:

"To discriminate against any race, on the ground of its being socially backward, politically immature, and numerically in a minority, is a flagrant violation of the spirit that animates the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh. The consciousness of any division or cleavage in its ranks is alien to its very purpose, principles, and ideals. Once its members have fully recognized the claim of its Author, and, by identifying themselves with its Administrative Order, accepted unreservedly the principles and laws embodied in its teachings, every differentiation of class, creed, or color must automatically be obliterated, and never be allowed, under any pretext, and however great the pressure of events or of public opinion, to reassert itself. If any discrimination is at all to be tolerated, it should be a discrimination not against, but rather in favor of the minority, be it racial or otherwise. Unlike the nations and peoples of the earth, be they of the East or of the West, democratic or authoritarian, communist or capitalist, whether belonging to the Old World or the New, who either ignore, trample upon, or extirpate, the racial, religious, or political minorities within the sphere of their jurisdiction, every organized community enlisted under the banner of Bahá'u'lláh should feel it to be its first and inescapable obligation to nurture, encourage, and safeguard every minority belonging to any faith, race, class, or nation within it. So great and vital is this principle that in such circumstances, as when an equal number of ballots have been cast in an election, or where the qualifications for any office are balanced as between the various races, faiths or nationalities within the community, priority should unhesitatingly be accorded the party representing the minority, and this for no other reason except to stimulate and encourage it, and afford it an opportunity to further the interests of the community. In the light of this principle, and bearing in mind the extreme desirability of having the minority elements participate and share responsibility in the conduct of Bahá'í activity, it should be the duty of every Bahá'í community so to arrange its affairs that in cases where individuals belonging to the divers minority elements within it are already qualified and fulfill the necessary requirements, Bahá'í representative institutions, be they Assemblies, conventions, conferences, or committees, may have represented on them as many of these divers elements, racial or otherwise, as possible. The adoption of such a course, and faithful adherence to it, would not only be a source of inspiration and encouragement to those elements that are numerically small and inadequately represented, but would demonstrate to the world at large the universality and representative character of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh, and the freedom of His followers from the taint of those prejudices which have already wrought such havoc in the domestic affairs, as well as the foreign relationships, of the nations."
(Shoghi Effendi, The Advent of Divine Justice, p. 34)

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Religious Fanaticism: A World Devouring Fire

This is an excellent essay on the psychological, social and theological foundation for the rise in religious motivated terrorism. It is interesting to note how religious fanaticism and hatred, nationalism, racial prejudice and economic inequality the transformation of which are all key areas of focus for the mission of the Baha'i Faith are interconnected. The current civil unrest in France is but one of many recent examples of how the current world (dis)order has demonstrated itself incapaple of resolving these long-standing threats to humanity. How long will it take our bewildered statesmen in whose hands are placed the lives the citizens of the world to recognize that humanity is one and that beyond all diversity of cultural expression and human interpretation that religion is also one? How long will it take them to exert the political will to create a social order which reflects this reality? How long will my fellow citizens of the world continue to cling to antiquated beliefs that have proven themselves at best the expressions of earlier, less mature stages of human consciousness and at worst completely irrelevant to the needs of the this age?

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Race in the Workplace

Here is another article about the newly published research into the more "subtle" forms of racism and there very real impact on minorities. It is in the Christian Science Monitor and was a link from Sojourners Magazine, which if you don't read I highly recommend. There's another article from the New York Times about how genetics is undermining persisting notions about "race", you can read it here. The author's family history sounds similar to my own in many ways. I think that we are only beginning to understand the implications of people finally recognizing the notion of biologically distinct races of people as what it is: something people made up in order to justify the oppression and exploitation of other people. Period. There can be no racism without "race". People who are serious about racism must confront the fiction of "race" head on. This clinging to the belief that there really are different "races" of human beings is one of the greatest obstacles to eliminating racism. How do you recognize the oneness or humanity without sacrificing a commitment to diversity? That's for a future post.