May 8. On this date in 1976, Amelia Bowman died. An American who pioneered to Scandinavia, during a pilgrimage to Haifa she "asked about Pakistan and the Guardian explained that though Moslem - this is no doubt temporary and will be absorbed later by the Republic of India."
The following is a machine translation of Amelia Bowman's obituary posted on the webpage of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Norway (Nasjonalt Åndelig Råd for Bahá'íer i Norge)....
Amelia
Bowman died on Saturday, May 8, 1976 at Stokka Nursing Home in
Stavanger. She was 78 years old. Few American pioneers can look back on
such a long and continuous pioneer time that Amelia can. She spent 29
years as a pioneer in Europe, of which 25 years for the Bahá'í Faith
spread in Norway. But she also had a long and versatile experience in
the service of Faith before she left as a pioneer. She was born in
Montana, but as an active Bahá'í, from 1933, she came to live many other
places in the United States. For a short time she lived in Boston, and
in 1935 she was a member of the Eliot, Maine Education Committee. From
there she traveled to New Hampshire along with Martha L. Root and her
husband, Harold Bowman. In the years that followed, she supported the
teaching of the Green Acre summer school in the United States.
When
World War II broke out in Europe in 1939, Shoghi Effendi initiated his
first seven-year curriculum. It would last until 1946, because then the
war in Europe would be over. The curriculum included no less than the
entire American continent, and was, of course, a major challenge, first
and foremost for all Bahá'ís in the United States. For six years,
Amelia was a member of the National Teaching Committee, and worked full
day as assistant to the committee's secretary, Miss Charlotte Linfoot.
The
World War finally ended in Europe, and Shoghi Effendi was able to
advance the Divine Plan of Abdu'l-Bahá with his second seven-year plan:
"Baha'u'llah's battalion occupied" on this hard-tested continent , and
"landed on the shores of Europe". A total of 10 countries were covered
by this plan, and Amelia chose Sweden. She came to Stockholm in October
1947 as the 35th American pioneer in Europe. Already in the spring of
1948, she was assisted by, among others, Dorothy Baker, whom Shoghi
Effendi years later designated as one of the Cause's first hands. After
the first local spiritual council was formed in Stockholm, Amelia
traveled to Gothenburg where she allowed the conditions for the
formation of Local Spiritual Council also.
However,
some of the pioneers had found it difficult to continue their work in
post-war Europe and had traveled back to the United States. In order to
achieve the goals of the second seven-year plan, it was necessary to
move the remaining pioneers to places where they were most needed, and
Norway's first pioneers: Millie and George Clark were asked to travel to
Amsterdam. Amelia Bowman was asked to travel to Oslo. It was late
autumn 1949, and she stayed here for three years. From the first day she
had contact with Johanna Schubarth. No matter how different they were
to these two older bahamas, one felt strongly that they had something in
common; it was this great devotion to faith; This burning desire to do
the best they could to earn Bahá'u'llah. One understood as a newcomer
that one had a long way to go before one came where the two had come in
spiritual growth. In these three years in Oslo, Amelia showed what kind
of fire she was. She understood immediately that she had come to a
war-torn country in Europe to teach the Faith, and her care and
helpfulness were outstanding. Many, many were those who got their mouths
saturated at her table, and many were those who left her hospitable
home with something under her arm or in her pocket. But besides the
great consideration she showed all those she met, she realized that the
message she had to give to humans was much more important than the
material help she gave them.
Amelia had a
background as a journalist and is remembered from the earlier time as a
reference at the teaching conferences of the time. She learned with
great diligence a language, which may be called "Scandinavian", when she
had lived in Denmark, Sweden and Norway.
Her
curriculum was ready, she formed permanent groups and classes, often two
a day if it looked the same for those interested. In addition to this,
she received many assignments from the National Spiritual Council for
the United States. At the annual conferences or summer schools in Europe
at that time she was always found either as a speaker or as a reporter.
When Dr. Ralph Bunch was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1950 for his
work on ceasefire agreements in the Middle East, on that occasion, she
represented both the National Spiritual of the Bahá'í in the United States and the International Bahá'í
recognized by the United Nations. She personally handed him the
thank-you addresses, which Dr. Burch appreciated. Despite his many
assignments, Amelia also had time to do outreach activities. She visited
housewives, the Esperanto League and the International Friendly. From
the latter institution, we got three contacts stitching all declared
themselves as Baha'is.
In
1951, Shoghi Effendi announced that the time had come to initiate
extended education. Until now, the teaching work had been dropped to the
capitals of the different countries, but hereafter the teaching went
over to the regional level. In the summer of 1952, Amelia traveled to
Bergen to form a local spiritual council there. There were eventually
many and great changes to her, and she was happy the day she received a
pilgrimage to Haifa. The conversations she had there with Shoghi Effendi
and Ruhyyih Khanum became part of her and she often reprimanded them
for us. She had laid both the first and the second seven-year curriculum
behind her, and inspired by her stay in Haifa in the spring of 1953 she
could embark on the goals of the 10-year chorus. She continued her work
in Bergen, where she formed the Local Spiritual Council in 1955. The
following year, the first regional spiritual council for
Scandinavia-Finland was formed, and she was elected as a member of this
council. But even though it required a lot from her to be a member of
committees and councils, Amelia never forgot her work as a pioneer. From
Bergen, she therefore traveled to Stavanger to form the Local Spiritual
Council there.
Large dark clouds were, however, in the uprising of the Bahá'í
?? in the sky of the era, clouds that would prove to be swept away only
by the most burning souls. Amelia was one of those souls. The cruel
persecutions that, on the part of the opponents, were directed at Baha'i
in Persia finally took place, but not without their deep traces. These
persecutions, along with attacks by the pacts, shortened the life of
Shoghi Effendi and the following year, Bahá ?? i-Faith and friends all
over the world without the protector they loved so deeply. In the
critical time following Shoghi Effendi's death, it became necessary to
send the most experienced pioneers to the countries most severely
affected by his demise. Again, the election fell on Amelia, and she was
asked to travel to France, where she worked for two years for the
implementation of the national curriculum. When the National Spiritual
Council of France was formed in 1958, she became a member of the
National Education Committee there. It was not only this willing by
Amelia that made her send from place to place; It was also this that she
always completed her assignments, wherever she was sent.
In
1959, she was asked to return to Stavanger, where she with assistance,
among other things. by Modesta Hvide, Norway's first helper council
member, was able to form Local Spiritual Council the following year.
With the help of pioneers, both from Norway, Persia and the United
States, in 1962 she had the pleasure of seeing the 4th local spiritual
council formed in Norway, namely in Hetland, a neighboring municipality
to Stavanger. At the first national convention that year, Amelia was
elected as a member of the first National Spiritual Council for Norway.
She was a member of the National Spiritual Council and various
committees for a number of years, but she continued her pioneering
business without delay. When it needed a bahá ?? in Svolvær she traveled
there to fill an empty space, although the climate up there certainly
did not fit for her dentistry. For physically strong, Amelia was never,
and long journeys were always strenuous for her. By Reid 1963, she again
traveled to Haifa, this time as a member of the National Spiritual
Council of Norway, and to participate in the election of the First
Universal Justice House. She had so often told about her stay there 10
years earlier, and even though Shoghi Effendi had passed away, this
visit by the holy tombs also meant very much to her. The World Congress
in London immediately afterwards, marking the 100th anniversary of
Baha'ah's prophetic mission, also became an event she was delighted to
have experienced.
It turned out that the
climate in Stavanger was good for her, and she settled there. She often
visited Kristiansand and other cities in Sørlandet to teach the faith,
she always returned to Stavanger. Her home was open, and everyone, to
the resident as to her visiting friends, as well as the Baha'is as
others. It was touching to see her concern for other people, her
compassion for those who were hurting. Wherever she came, wherever she
settled, she was always so, just, yet gentle in her judgment, cautious
in her speech, always giving a helping hand to those who needed it.
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