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Bahaismiran

A memoir by a Baha’ism proselytizer, Habib Moa’yyed

Habib Moayyed is one of the known proselytizers of Baha’ism narrates a memoir and writes about violent confrontation of Abdul Baha with his addressees. While Abdul Baha had earlier selected the strategy of accepting tyranny for the Baha’is. Anyway, this extent of distance between slogan and action by so-called divine leaders has no concept but […]

Habib Moayyed is one of the known proselytizers of Baha’ism narrates a memoir and writes about violent confrontation of Abdul Baha with his addressees. While Abdul Baha had earlier selected the strategy of accepting tyranny for the Baha’is. Anyway, this extent of distance between slogan and action by so-called divine leaders has no concept but demagogy and null advertisement!

Habib Moa’yyed writes narrated by Abdul Baha: He said after he told his words: O’ Effendi (addressing Abdul Baha), it is good for you to lower your note and make peace. I said: peace? How good; ok, nothing is better than this, but how: He said: He means money. He wants money. It is good. Don’t stint and pay money. I said (Abdul Baha): Ok, sit down to bring you money. Sa’duddin Ramadan got happy and though I would go and bring a sack of sterling… He stood up to wear his shoes, I slapped him hard. I want to slap him again, he escaped…[۱]

 

 

Yes, Abdul Baha was slapping people while he had selected the strategy of tolerating tyranny for the Baha’is: “…If a tyrant tyrannized you and attacked you like a wild wolf, the divine disciples must be surrendered like sheep; so they mustn’t resist but they must counteract sword by nectar and milk. They must tolerate wounds in their livers and kiss the killer’s hand and must be killed in the divine path and ask forgiveness for the tyrant.[2]

 

What a null advertisement and demagogy!

[۱] Habib Moa’yyed, Habib’s memoirs, Bija: The national institute of the faith press, 118 Badi’a, pp. 416-417.

[۲] Abbas Effendi, Makatib, Egypt: attempted by Farajullah Zakiul Kurdi, 1921 A.D., 1st edition, Vol. 3, pp. 123-124.

Bahaism in Iran
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