October 21. On this date in 1964, Roy Fernie died in Honolulu, Hawaii. The only son of Evelyn Granthame-Hayes and Cyril Fernie, the owner of the C. Fernie Steamship Company, Roy Fernie was named a Knight of Bahá’u’lláh for pioneering to the Gilbert and Ellis Islands. These islands are currently the separate countries of Kiribati and Tuvalu.
Roy Fernie was born the only son of Evelyn Granthame-Hayes and Cyril Fernie, the owner of the C. Fernie Steamship Company in the Panama Canal Zone. He was born on January 20, 1922 at Ancon in the Canal Zone, but spent most of his school years in England with his grandparents.
Since
Roy was the only son, his father definitely expected him to make major
in businesses administration and take over the reins of the Steamship Company.
Accordingly, he sent him to business college in England. But Roy, from
childhood on, manifested a tremendous variety of talents, none of them
in the least related to the business world. he had an excellent ear for
harmony and learned to play both the accordion and piano by ear. He
painted, wrote science fiction stories, directed stage plays, and was a
superb actor. His abilities were so diverse they seemed to include
almost everything but business. But his greatest ambition, he often
said, was always to be a doctor.
When
World War I broke out Roy was only too glad to escape what he
considered to be the dull routine of business school and he joined the
Royal Air Force. Because of illness he was discharged from the Air
Force, but then emigrated to the United States an again entered the
Armed Services. When the war ended he became an American citizen and
lived for several years in St. Louis, Missouri.
By that time Roy's father had retired from active participation in the Steamship Agency, but he constantly kept hope that Roy would take over the business, and eventually, to please his father, Roy returned to the Canal Zone.
It was there that he first heard of the Bahá’í Faith. He was
recuperating from a severe tropical fever at his sister's home in Panama
City when he heard her mention a Bahá’í girl she had just met. It was
late in the evening, and to his sister's consternation he insisted he
must meet the "Bahá’í girl" immediately. He was so dogged in his
determination that she called the girl and practically begged her to let
Roy come over.
That same night Roy found himself in the headquarters of the National Spiritual Assembly of Central America and the Antilles. The "Bahá’í girl" was Elena Maria Marsella,
secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly. Roy's family background
was Anglican, but he himself had long since ceased to adhere to any
"organized religion". With his naturally inquisitive mind he had
investigated many faiths but had never found one that seemed sensible
or, in his words, "logical".
From
that point onward Roy's life took a very different turn. He made his
declaration in March of 1953; two months later he and Elena were
married, and in another three months the newlyweds had answered the call
of the Ten Year Crusade.
For
Roy's father this was the last straw. He disinherited his son. This was
a great shock to Roy who attached little importance to wealth, because
he genuinely wished his father to understand what he called a "new job
that was worth more then a million dollars".
After many interesting adventures the Fernies found themselves on Abaiang in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands.
From the first the Gilbertese
were fascinated with this tall, lanky American with the brilliant blue
eyes, the bubbling personality, the unfailing sense of humor. He kept
them constantly intrigued. He put on magic shows for them, played the
piano, sand with them, learned their language
and started English classes for them. Although he could not openly
teach the Faith he actually taught all the principles by example. And
before long he had a myriad opportunities to teach that way, for the
missionaries began to suspect that the Fernies were not just visiting
the Gilbert Islands to study the Flora and fauna. Soon they were hinting
that the Fernies were a "dangerous" couple who were under investigation
by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Scotland Yard. The Colonial
Government, without giving Roy and opportunity to defend himself,
accepted the accusations as true.
Day
by day the persecution grew more intense, but it served only to draw
the people themselves closer and closer to the Fernies. When finally a
Catholic priest saw the word "Bahá’í" on a letter addressed to the
"dangerous Americans" he proclaimed the Faith for them. He obtained
information about it from Australia, then wrote articles in The Star of the Gilberts
magazine which went to every island in the atoll. Meanwhile, one
Gilbertese had actually declared his acceptance of the Bahá’í Faith.
Peter became Roy's constant companion. He could read English and he
eagerly devoured every book in the Fernie library. Shoghi Effendi, in a
letter to him, told him not to teach his people yet, but to follow the
example of the Fernies.
With the
proclamation of the Faith by the Catholic priest, Roy and Peter the
first Gilbertese Bahá’í, were constantly harassed, both by the
missionaries and the heads of the Colonial Government.
But time was short for Roy. First Peter was deported to his own island in the Southern Gilberts, accused of crimes. Then Roy was accused of being a divisive influence, and he was deported to Canton Island.
He
went to Hawaii to be as near as possible to the Gilberts, hoping that
as a result of the Colonial Government's investigation in London and the
efforts of the British National Spiritual Assembly, he would be allowed
to return. He died on October 21, 1964, in Honolulu, Hawaii.
What
has always struck me about the designation of Knights of Bahá'u'lláh is
the arbitrariness with which the "virgin territories" were defined.
For example, the Cook Islands and Tonga Island, both part of the Realm of New Zealand have distinct sets of Knights, while Niue and the Chatham Islands, also part of the Realm of New Zealand, are Knightless.
Several islands off the coast of Alaska have distinct Knights, like Baranof Island , Kodiak Island, and the Aleutian Islands. Yet other Alaskan islands, like the Pribilof Islands are Knightless.
The Brazilian state of Amapá has its own Knights (for Portuguese Guiana), while the other Brazilian states are Knightless.
Crete
and Rhodes have Knights distinct from the Knights of mainland Greece,
yet other Greek islands, like Santorini and Samos, are Knightless.
Key West has its own Knight, yet the other Florida Keys are Knightless.
Tiny
islands, like Great Manan, have their own Knights. St. Thomas Island
has its own Knight, yet the remaining Leeward Islands have one set of
Knights, representing numerous politically and geographically
independent islands. Similarly, the Windward Islands have one set of
Knights, representing numerous politically and geographically
independent islands.
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