Beloved friends,
The flames of enthusiasm which ignited the hearts of the
followers and lovers of the Most Great Name in Helsinki, in Anchorage and in
Paris are now being kindled in a city which occupies a central and envied
position at the very crossroads of the vast African mainland and are destined
to illumine its horizons. This Conference marking the imminent approach of the
midway point of the Five Year Plan which coincides with the anniversary of the
birth of the Blessed Báb, will no doubt go down in Bahá'í history as a further
landmark in the irresistible march of events which have characterized the
impact of the Faith of God upon that continent.
We recall that in addition to Quddus the only other
companion of the Báb on His pilgrimage to Mecca was an Ethiopian, and that he
and his wife were intimately associated with Him and His household in Shiraz. During
the Ministry of Bahá'u'lláh a few of His stalwart disciples reached the
north-eastern shores of Africa, and under His direct guidance, announced the
glad tidings of the New Day to the people of the Nile, thus opening to the
Faith two countries of the African mainland. Soon afterwards, His blessed
person approached those shores in the course of His exile to the Holy Land. Still
later He voiced His significant utterance in which He compared the coloured
people to "the black pupil of the eye," through which "the light
of the spirit shineth forth." Just over six years after His ascension, the
first member of the black race to embrace His Cause in the West, who was
destined to become a disciple of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, a herald of the Kingdom, and the
door through which numberless members of his race were to enter that Kingdom,
came on pilgrimage to the Holy Land with the first group of Western friends who
arrived in 'Akká to visit the Centre of the Covenant. This was followed by a
steady extension of the teaching work among the black people of North America,
and the opening to the Faith, by the end of the Heroic Age, of two more countries
in Africa, under the watchful care of the Master, Whose three visits to Egypt
have blessed the soil of that Continent. Prior to the conclusion of the first
Bahá'í century the number of countries opened to the Faith had been raised to seven,
and the teaching work among the black race in North America had entered a new
phase of development through the continuous guidance flowing from the pen of
Shoghi Effendi, who himself traversed the African continent twice from south to
north, and who, in the course of his ministry, elevated two members of the
black race to the rank of Hand of the Cause, appointed three more believers
residing in Africa to that high office, and there raised up four National
Spiritual Assemblies.