New English  Review
 
 
Israel: World Center for  Three Great Faiths – Judaism, Christianity and 
Bahaism
by Norman Berdichevsky (May 2011)


Any mention of  Israel by the media as “The Holy Land” almost always 
entails a colossal verbiage  of trite conventional wisdom replete with 
accolades 
to the three great  monotheistic "Abrahamic religions," Judaism, 
Christianity and Islam that all  regard it as their world center. This is 
simply 
patently false, elevating  Islam’s regard for Jerusalem (not mentioned by name 
even once in the Koran  compared to more than 800 times in the Old Testament) 
and ignoring the continued  and historic presence of the Bahai faith in Haifa 
and Acre, places of pilgrimage  and universal inspiration for the world’s 
five million  Bahais. 
To call Islam’s regard for Jerusalem as the “third  holiest site after 
Mecca and Medina” is analogous to two contenders in a World  Series with the 
basement finishing team in class C minor league baseball. For  the record 
there is no evidence at all that Muhammad ever visited Jerusalem or  The Land 
of 
Israel. In Muslim tradition just before his death Mohammad was  carried to “
The Farthest Place” (Sura 17), This chapter recounts the story of a  dream 
Mohammed had where he is borne by his flying horse (al-Buraq) which had  the 
face of a woman, the body of a horse and the tail of Peacock. The narrative 
 of the Koran in Sura 17 describes it as follows: 
"Glory be to Him, who carried His servant by night  from the Holy Mosque 
(in Mecca) to the further mosque (al-masjid al-Aqsa), the  precincts of which 
we have blessed." 
Since no mosque existed at all in Jerusalem at the  time of Mohammad’s 
death, al-Aqsa can be understood metaphorically, or  as a place in heaven. Only 
later, more than fifty years after Mohammad’s death,  did the Umayyids 
claimed that the actual site of al-Aqsa was in fact  the Temple Mount. The 
Koran 
then narrates how Mohammed, having arrived at  al-Aqsa, ascended to heaven 
(al-Mi'raj "the ascension")  accompanied by the angel Gibril (Gabriel), where 
he traveled around and  spoke with Allah and other prophets including Moses 
and  Jesus. 
For Christianity, a score of sites are hallowed in  connection with the 
life of Jesus and the imagery of Christianity is deeply  attached to them and 
familiarity with their significance in the Hebrew language  such as Bethlehem 
(Beit Lehem, House of Bread), Nazareth (from the root NaTZaR  meaning watch 
or keep), Capernaum (Kfar Nahum), etc. A number of Biblical  scholars 
believe that the original text of the New Testament was written in  Hebrew and 
was then translated into Greek. Thousands of Christian churches the  world 
over bear Hebrew geographic place names from locations in the Land of  Israel 
such as Galilee, Jordan, Canaan, Jericho, Mount of Olives, (Har  ha-Zeytim), 
Shiloh, Rose of Sharon (Plain) and Lilly of the Valley (Havatzelet  
haSharon), Gethsemaneh (Gat Shmeinim, “Oil Press”), Judah, Zion, Mt. Zion, Mt.  
Sinai, Mt. Tabor, Mt. Horeb, Mt. Moriah, Gilead, Beth-EL (House of God),  
Beth-Tzidah,(“House of Fishing), Bethania (Beit Tienah “House of Figs”). Even  
the Koran explicitly recognizes God's original benificence towards the Jews 
and  and refers to the Holy Land as ....The land that Allah had decreed for 
them and  promised to Moses (5:20-5:26) 
The State of Israel’s own “hasbara” (information)  efforts aimed at 
explaining the care taken to protect all holy sites  shortsightedly often 
ignores 
the Bahais. The deep Bahai connection to the Land  of Israel and the State 
of Israel's religious diversity deserve to be much more  widely known; all 
the more so when compared to the atrocious record of  persecution and 
discrimination displayed by Iran, birthplace of the founders of  this universal 
faith, and the rest of the Muslim World as well.  
Anyone who visits Israel and fails to visit Haifa and  Acre misses out on a 
sublime spiritual, aesthetic-artistic experience of the  yearning for a 
vision of humanity as a single global family in which one creed  has succeeded 
in embracing nations, cultures, races, and classes in the heart of  that 
region which has all too often been the focus of religious hatreds, war and  
intolerance.  
Following its founders, the Bahai Faith has no  clergy, promotes the 
abandonment of all forms of prejudice, demands assurance  that women have full 
equality with men, the elimination of extreme differences  in wealth and 
poverty, the realization of universal brotherhood and education,  the 
responsibility of the individual to search for truth, the establishment of a  
world 
community of nations, the promotion of a universal neutral language,  
recognition that true religious faith is in harmony with reason and the pursuit 
 of 
scientific knowledge. 
Each one of these principles made it an anathema to  both the Shi’ite and 
Sunni religious establishments and the indigenous political  powers 
throughout the Dar-al-Islam (nations subject to Islamic rule). Born in  Iran in 
1817, 
the founder of the Bahai faith, Baháu’llah (Glory of God), like  Buddha, 
was a member of a great patrician family possessing great wealth and  
magnificent vast estates and like Jesus who followed in the path of John the  
Baptist, he embraced a vision of an earlier prophet, known as “The Bab” (The  
Gate), whose real name was Siyyid `Ali-Muhammad, 1819-1850. The wellspring of  
the Bahai faith may be regarded as the attempt at a Muslim Reformation, one 
that  failed, but gave birth to a new faith.     
 
The Shrine of the Báb on Mount Carmel, Haifa,  Israel  
  
____________________________________
 

Messianic expectations have periodically gained mass  followings in the 
history of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. A wave of  enthusiasm swept Persia 
in the early 19th century notably among many  in the religiously educated 
class of Shi`ah Muslim society envisioning the  fulfillment of prophecies in 
the Koran and the Islamic traditions was at hand.  One such ardent seeker 
announced that, he was the Bab, on the night of 22-23 May  1844 proclaiming 
that he was the Bearer of a Divine Revelation and the harbinger  of a divine 
messenger – a prophet destined not simply to transform Islam but to  establish 
a new direction and priorities for all of  humankind. 
As might be expected, opposition was immediate and  both the Islamic clergy 
and state authorities regarded such preaching as heresy,  resulting in the 
martyrdom of the Báb and the massacre of 20,000 of his leading  disciples 
and followers. Such has been the fate of countless other End-of-Days  prophets 
and attempts at reform within Islam. The virtual extinction of the new  
religious system was certain to follow yet a successor movement emerged, the  
Bahá'í Faith, that has since diffused throughout the  world. 
Its great ethical standards, reminiscent of Judaism  without a meticulous 
devotion to The Law or ethnic claims, the sublime charity  of Christianity 
without the doctrines of miraculous virgin birth and  resurrection and the 
divine appeal of a triumphant Islam without coercion and  blind obedience 
established its claim to represent a new and independent world  religion. 
For the Bahais, religious truth is held to be  progressive and that God has 
educated mankind through a series of prophets who  have appeared to guide 
its destiny and progress, Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha,  Jesus, Mohammad and Ba’
háu’lláh. 
The successor to the Báb was Bahá'u'lláh (Mirza  Husayn-`Ali, 1817-1892). 
It is to him that the worldwide Bahá'í community looks  as the source of its 
spiritual and social teachings, the authority for the laws  and institutions 
that form its community and his exile in the Land of Israel  that has made 
that country the true ‘Holy Land’ of a Third Universal Religion to  which 
millions of Bahá'ís around the world daily direct their thoughts when they  
turn to God in prayer. 
The Báb was arrested, beaten, imprisoned and executed  in the public square 
in the Persian city of Tabriz on July 9, 1850. His earthly  remains now 
rest in The Shrine of the Báb, the golden domed temple midway up the  slope of 
Mount Carmel, Haifa. In a rare display of cooperation, the Ottoman  Sultan 
Abdu’l-‘Aziz and Persian Shah Nasir’i d-Din Shah agreed to banish  Ba’háu’
lláh and keep a close watch on his activities. Both Muslim rulers were  aware 
of the outrage the massacres had provoked in Europe and wanted to avoid  
further criticism of Islamist intolerance and mob driven persecution and  
massacres against any heresy. 
>From 1853, Ba’háu’lláh and a small band of devoted  followers endured a 
series of banishments with stays of varying lengths in  Baghdad, 
Constantinople and Adrianople and finally on August 31, 1868 arrived at  Haifa 
and then 
transferred to Acre, then a remote desolate outpost of the  Ottoman Empire 
where they were imprisoned in a citadel that had been a Crusader  fortress. 
Although held in close confinement, Ba’háu’lláh was allowed to  occasionally 
make visits to Haifa and on the last such visit in 1891, less than  a year 
before his death, he delegated the precise spot on Mt. Carmel where the  
remains of the Báb should be interred and mausoleum erected. This beautiful  
temple and the tomb of Ba’háu’lláh are the world center and point of 
pilgrimage  for the world’s Bahai community. 
Ba’háu’lláh’s grandson known as Shoghi Effendi  Rabbani (who remained a 
resident of Haifa until his death in 1957) helped both  his father, 'Abdu'l 
Baha, known as Abbas Effendi, and his grandfather turn the  Bahai presence in 
the twin cities of Haifa and Acre into world pilgrimage sites  that welcome 
many thousands of pilgrims annually who come in small discrete  groups of a 
hundred or so for two weeks and are encouraged to visit the holy  sites of 
the other three great monotheistic religions to honor their prophets  and 
civilizations. 
The Archives building, the Universal House of Justice  and stunning gardens 
provide a charming, graceful setting and are set off by the  beautiful 
Italian Chiampo marble stone of the magnificent golden dome shrine  (built over 
five years 1948-53) surrounded by a colonnade formed of rose Raveno  granite 
with Corinthian columns. The spectacular golden dome was made in Holland  
by a process of fire glazing 12,000 fish scale tiles over gold leaf (recently 
 renovated). The Shrine of the Báb, is a U.N. recognized World Heritage 
Site. It  is the mausoleum containing the mortal remains of the Báb (smuggled 
out of  Persia), buried in the central chamber of a square nine room 
building. Two  adjacent rooms look on to the central shrine through arches. 
White 
marble tombs  mark the graves of Ba’háu’lláh’s immediate family. 
Another focus of pilgrimage is a house in Haifa on  HaParsim Street (Steet 
of the Persians) where 'Abdu'l-Baha resided from 1910  until his death. Here 
he received pilgrims and visitors including General  Allenby, and Sir 
Herbert Samuel, the First High Commissioner for the British  Mandate. In old 
Acre, the most important site of Bahai pilgrimage is the  Citadel, the barracks 
used as a prison where Ba’háu’lláh 's cell is located. It is located next 
to the  cells where members of the Jewish dissident underground groups, the 
Irgun and  Lehi (Stern Gang) were imprisoned before their executions by the 
British in  1946-47. The prison cells are now a museum. In 1896, four years 
after the death  of his father Ba’háu’lláh, 'Abdul Baha was allowed to rent 
more comfortable  quarters outside of the Citadel and it was from there that 
he and his family  were allowed to receive visitors. A short distance 
outside of Acre, is a complex  of buildings and surrounding gardens at 'Bahji' 
(from the Arabic al-Bahja,  "Place of Delight"), that are frequently compared 
to Versailles. It is here that  Shogi Effendi resided when not in Haifa and 
provided the landscaping. Many  important Bahai documents are stored here 
including letters from Queen Marie of  Romania telling of her embracing of the 
Bahai faith.  
Aware of the significance of “The Holy Land,” the  preaching of the new 
faith is forbidden there to avoid any conflict or  confrontation with the 
authorities or the pilgrims of other faiths.  Nevertheless, the choice of these 
two cities and the reverence of Bahais for  these sites and the cooperation 
with the State of Israel has exposed them to  additional hatred and the 
mindlessly repeated obsessive charge of ‘Zionism’ by  many in the Muslim world. 
Even before the fall of the Shah, extreme pressure and  persecution had led 
many in the Bahai community in Persia to emigrate or seek  anonymity in the 
big cities. 
Lidja Zamenhof, the daughter of the founder of  Esperanto, Ludwig Lazar 
Zamenhof, was an accomplished Esperantist who eventually  embraced Bahai'ism, 
yet she perished as a Jew along with the rest of the  Zamenhof family in the 
Holocaust. Earlier, before the war, in 1932, she visited  Palestine where 
she was more impressed by the message of beauty and high ethical  and moral 
ideals of the new faith than in the pioneering efforts of the Zionist  
settlers. 
Numerous reports of the United Nations, European  Union, United States and 
Amnesty International as well as peer-reviewed academic  literature have 
stated that the members of the Bahai community in Iran have been  subjected to 
numerous oppressive measures, unwarranted arrests, false  imprisonment, 
beatings, torture, unjustified executions, confiscation and  destruction of 
property owned by individuals and the Bahai community, denial of  employment, 
denial of government benefits, denial of civil rights and liberties,  and 
denial of access to higher education. Under the rule of the last two Shahs,  
the 
condition of the Bahais was much better but still regarded as one of severe 
 discrimination. When the last Shah was confident and eager to impress the 
West  with reforms that benefitted women, Jews and the Bahais, he was 
regarded as a  modern progressive leader but during times of uncertainty and in 
the last years  of his reign in order to appease religious extremists among 
the mullahs, he  adopted measures to quell unrest by returning to traditional 
oppression and  discrimination against all these minorities.  
Today, persecution of the Bahai community is rife  throughout almost the 
entire Muslin community of 57 nations that have a majority  Muslim population. 
Currently, seven prominent Bahais are in prison in Iran. They  are in 
cramped cells with poor sanitation alongside common criminals, and were  each 
given 20 years in prison. This was reduced to only 10 years to show how  
liberal and tolerant the Ahmadinejad regime is and then the original 20 year  
sentence was reinstated six months later in March 2011. As might be expected,  
they were charged with spying for foreigners, spreading corruption, 
undermining  Islam and cooperating with Israel. 
Nine major  Houses of Worship have been constructed to maximize the 
geographic dispersal of  the Bahai faith. The Bahai community in the United 
States 
steers clear of  any involvement in politics except to lobby for the release 
of family members  currently imprisoned in Iran. They welcome those who are 
interested in the faith  but did not actively proselytize until the 1960s 
and 1970s when many young  people, especially in the United States found the 
Bahai faith offered them a  message they found inspiring in a time of great 
social change and ferment. More  than ten thousand Bahai refugees arrived 
from Iran in the 1970s after the 1979  Islamic Revolution. There are estimates 
of between 150,000 and 200,000 Bahais in  the U.S. with most located in 
California, especially Los Angeles. A campaign to  attract African-Americans 
had some success in the 1970s, notably in South  Carolina. In addition to the 
Haifa and Wilmette, Illinois Houses of Worship,  seven other such 
magnificent temples have been built to demonstrate the  geographic dispersion 
of the 
Bahai faith. They are located in Frankfurt, Sydney,  Panama City, Kempala 
(Uganda), Delhi, Santiago (Chile), and Tiapapata Samoa.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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