September 2. On this date in 1912, during his tour of North America, 'Abdu'l-Bahá gave a talk in the Montreal home of William Sutherland Maxwell, (later named a Hand of the Cause by Shoghi Effendi in 1951) and May Maxwell, the parents of Mary Maxwell, the future Amatu'l-Bahá Rúhíyyih Khánum,
wife of Shoghi Effendi. 'Abdu'l-Bahá presented his views on native
cultures, Africans, indigenous North Americans and pre-Columbian
America.
Amatu'l-Bahá Rúhíyyih Khánum described the importance of this Shrine with the following words:
Things arise in historic perspective as time goes by. This is the only private home in Canada where 'Abdu’l-Bahá stayed. After His visit, it was always considered blessed by having been used by Him. For future generations, it will eventually grow in importance and sacredness, because He, the Centre of the Covenant, the Greatest Mystery of God, stayed here.
It was at this home that 'Abdu'l-Bahá gave his talk discussing his views on native cultures, Africans, indigenous North Americans and pre-Columbian America:
Nature is the material world. When we look upon it, we see that it is dark and imperfect. For instance, if we allow a piece of land to remain in its natural condition, we will find it covered with thorns and thistles; useless weeds and wild vegetation will flourish upon it, and it will become like a jungle. The trees will be fruitless, lacking beauty and symmetry; wild animals, noxious insects and reptiles will abound in its dark recesses. This is the incompleteness and imperfection of the world of nature. To change these conditions, we must clear the ground and cultivate it so that flowers may grow instead of thorns and weeds—that is to say, we must illumine the dark world of nature. In their primal natural state, the forests are dim, gloomy, impenetrable. Man opens them to the light, clears away the tangled underbrush and plants fruitful trees. Soon the wild woodlands and jungle are changed into productive orchards and beautiful gardens; order has replaced chaos; the dark realm of nature has become illumined and brightened by cultivation.
Nature is the material world. When we look upon it, we see that it is dark and imperfect. For instance, if we allow a piece of land to remain in its natural condition, we will find it covered with thorns and thistles; useless weeds and wild vegetation will flourish upon it, and it will become like a jungle. The trees will be fruitless, lacking beauty and symmetry; wild animals, noxious insects and reptiles will abound in its dark recesses. This is the incompleteness and imperfection of the world of nature. To change these conditions, we must clear the ground and cultivate it so that flowers may grow instead of thorns and weeds—that is to say, we must illumine the dark world of nature. In their primal natural state, the forests are dim, gloomy, impenetrable. Man opens them to the light, clears away the tangled underbrush and plants fruitful trees. Soon the wild woodlands and jungle are changed into productive orchards and beautiful gardens; order has replaced chaos; the dark realm of nature has become illumined and brightened by cultivation.
If
man himself is left in his natural state, he will become lower than the
animal and continue to grow more ignorant and imperfect. The
savage tribes of central Africa are evidences of this. Left in their
natural condition, they have sunk to the lowest depths and degrees of
barbarism, dimly groping in a world of mental and moral obscurity. If we
wish to illumine this dark plane of human existence, we must bring man
forth from the hopeless captivity of nature, educate him and show him
the pathway of light and knowledge, until, uplifted from his condition
of ignorance, he becomes wise and knowing; no longer savage and
revengeful, he becomes civilized and kind; once evil and sinister, he is
endowed with the attributes of heaven. But left in his natural
condition without education and training, it is certain that he will
become more depraved and vicious than the animal, even to the extreme
degree witnessed among African tribes who practice cannibalism. It is
evident, therefore, that the world of nature is incomplete, imperfect
until awakened and illumined by the light and stimulus of education.
In
these days there are new schools of philosophy blindly claiming that
the world of nature is perfect. If this is true, why are children
trained and educated in schools, and what is the need of extended
courses in sciences, arts and letters in colleges and universities? What
would be the result if humanity were left in its natural condition
without education or training? All scientific discoveries and
attainments are the outcomes of knowledge and education. The telegraph,
phonograph, telephone were latent and potential in the world of nature
but would never have come forth into the realm of visibility unless man
through education had penetrated and discovered the laws which control
them. All the marvelous developments and miracles of what we call
civilization would have remained hidden, unknown and, so to speak,
nonexistent, if man had remained in his natural condition, deprived of
the bounties, blessings and benefits of education and mental culture.
The intrinsic difference between the ignorant man and the astute
philosopher is that the former has not been lifted out of his natural
condition, while the latter has undergone systematic training and
education in schools and colleges until his mind has awakened and
unfolded to higher realms of thought and perception; otherwise, both are
human and natural.
God
has sent forth the Prophets for the purpose of quickening the soul of
man into higher and divine recognitions. He has revealed the heavenly
Books for this great purpose. For this the breaths of the Holy Spirit
have been wafted through the gardens of human hearts, the doors of the
divine Kingdom opened to mankind and the invisible inspirations sent
forth from on high. This divine and ideal power has been bestowed upon
man in order that he may purify himself from the imperfections of nature
and uplift his soul to the realm of might and power. God has purposed
that the darkness of the world of nature shall be dispelled and the
imperfect attributes of the natal self be effaced in the effulgent
reflection of the Sun of Truth. The mission of the Prophets of God has
been to train the souls of humanity and free them from the thralldom of
natural instincts and physical tendencies. They are like unto Gardeners,
and the world of humanity is the field of Their cultivation, the
wilderness and untrained jungle growth wherein They proceed to labor.
They cause the crooked branches to become straightened, the fruitless
trees to become fruitful, and gradually transform this great wild,
uncultivated field into a beautiful orchard producing wonderful
abundance and outcome.
If the
world of nature were perfect and complete in itself, there would be no
need of such training and cultivation in the human world—no need of
teachers, schools and universities, arts and crafts. The revelations of
the Prophets of God would not have been necessary, and the heavenly
Books would have been superfluous. If the world of nature were perfect
and sufficient for mankind, we would have no need of God and our belief
in Him. Therefore, the bestowal of all these great helps and accessories
to the attainment of divine life is because the world of nature is
incomplete and imperfect. Consider
this Canadian country during the early history of Montreal when the
land was in its wild, uncultivated and natural condition. The soil was
unproductive, rocky and almost uninhabitable—vast forests stretching in
every direction. What invisible power caused this great metropolis to
spring up amid such savage and forbidding conditions? It was the human
mind. Therefore, nature and the effect of nature’s laws were imperfect.
The mind of man remedied and removed this imperfect condition, until now
we behold a great city instead of a savage unbroken wilderness. Before
the coming of Columbus America itself was a wild, uncultivated expanse
of primeval forest, mountains and rivers—a very world of nature. Now it
has become the world of man. It was dark, forbidding and savage; now it
has become illumined with a great civilization and prosperity. Instead
of forests, we behold productive farms, beautiful gardens and prolific
orchards. Instead of thorns and useless vegetation, we find flowers,
domestic animals and fields awaiting harvest. If the world of nature
were perfect, the condition of this great country would have been left
unchanged.
If
a child is left in its natural state and deprived of education, there
is no doubt that it will grow up in ignorance and illiteracy, its mental
faculties dulled and dimmed; in fact, it will become like an animal.
This is evident among the savages of central Africa, who are scarcely
higher than the beast in mental development.
The
conclusion is irresistible that the splendors of the Sun of Truth, the
Word of God, have been the source and cause of human upbuilding and
civilization. The world of nature is the kingdom of the animal. In its
natural condition and plane of limitation the animal is perfect. The
ferocious beasts of prey have been completely subject to the laws of
nature in their development. They are without education or training;
they have no power of abstract reasoning and intellectual ideals; they
have no touch with the spiritual world and are without conception of God
or the Holy Spirit. The animal can neither recognize nor apprehend the
spiritual power of man and makes no distinction between man and itself,
for the reason that its susceptibilities are limited to the plane of the
senses. It lives under the bondage of nature and nature’s laws. All the
animals are materialists. They are deniers of God and without
realization of a transcendent power in the universe. They have no
knowledge of the divine Prophets and Holy Books—mere captives of nature
and the sense world. In reality they are like the great philosophers of
this day who are not in touch with God and the Holy Spirit—deniers of
the Prophets, ignorant of spiritual susceptibilities, deprived of the
heavenly bounties and without belief in the supernatural power. The
animal lives this kind of life blissfully and untroubled, whereas the
material philosophers labor and study for ten or twenty years in schools
and colleges, denying God, the Holy Spirit and divine inspirations. The
animal is even a greater philosopher, for it attains the ability to do
this without labor and study. For instance, the cow denies God and the
Holy Spirit, knows nothing of divine inspirations, heavenly bounties or
spiritual emotions and is a stranger to the world of hearts. Like the
philosophers, the cow is a captive of nature and knows nothing beyond
the range of the senses. The philosophers, however, glory in this,
saying, “We are not captives of superstitions; we have implicit faith in
the impressions of the senses and know nothing beyond the realm of
nature, which contains and covers everything.” But the cow, without
study or proficiency in the sciences, modestly and quietly views life
from the same standpoint, living in harmony with nature’s laws in the
utmost dignity and nobility.
This
is not the glory of man. The glory of man is in the knowledge of God,
spiritual susceptibilities, attainment to transcendent powers and the
bounties of the Holy Spirit. The glory of man is in being informed of
the teachings of God. This is the glory of humanity. Ignorance is not
glory but darkness. Can these souls who are steeped in the lower strata
of ignorance become informed of the mysteries of God and the realities
of existence while Jesus Christ was without knowledge of them? Is the
intellect of these people greater than the intellect of Christ? Christ
was heavenly, divine and belonged to the world of the Kingdom. He was
the embodiment of spiritual knowledge. His intellect was superior to
these philosophers, His comprehension deeper, His perception keener, His
knowledge more perfect. How is it that He overlooked and denied Himself
everything in this world? He attached little importance to this
material life, denying Himself rest and composure, accepting trials and
voluntarily suffering vicissitudes because He was endowed with spiritual
susceptibilities and the power of the Holy Spirit. He beheld the
splendors of the divine Kingdom, embodied the bounties of God and
possessed ideal powers. He was illumined with love and mercy, and so,
likewise, were all the Prophets of God.
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