Dear Baha'i friends,
To supplement the message which is being addressed to each of your Communities giving its specific goals under the Five Year Plan, we now share with you a number of elucidations. Certain of the paragraphs which follow may apply to goals which have not been allotted to your community, but it will no doubt be of interest to you to read them in relation to the world-wide scope of the Plan.
Opening Localities
When choosing localities to be opened to the Faith and when
deciding which localities should have Local Spiritual Assemblies, you should
bear in mind the need to have the Baha'i community represented broadly across
the area under your jurisdiction. It is likely that some areas will show
themselves particularly receptive and numerous Baha'i communities will speedily
arise there, but while fostering such growth you should not neglect those areas
in which the Faith is as yet unrepresented.
The Development of Local Spiritual Assemblies
The institution of the Local Spiritual Assembly is of
primary importance in the firm establishment of the Faith, and we hope that you
will give particular attention to ensuring that as many as possible, and in
increasing numbers, are, in the words of the beloved Guardian,
"broad-based, securely grounded" and "efficiently
functioning."
The time has come, we believe, when increasing numbers of Local Spiritual Assemblies should assume responsibility for helping the teaching work of groups, isolated believers, and other Spiritual Assemblies in their neighbourhood. Such extension teaching goals should be assigned by the National Spiritual Assembly or one of its teaching committees, or can be spontaneously adopted by Local Spiritual Assemblies, and should be carried out within the framework of the overall teaching plans of the country. It should also be made clear that by being given such goals a Spiritual Assembly is not being given any jurisdiction over believers outside its area, still less over other Local Spiritual Assemblies, but is being called upon to collaborate with them in their work.
The Recognition of Baha'i Marriage and Holy Days
The Five Year Plan does not include specific goals for the
recognition of Baha'i marriage certificates or of Baha'i Holy Days because, in
most countries where these goals are not already won, achievement depends upon
circumstances beyond our control. Nevertheless, National Spiritual Assemblies
should bear in mind the need to increase recognition of the Faith and should be
alert to possibilities of winning these goals where they are as yet unattained.
National Incorporation Goals
There are a number of national incorporation goals of the
Nine Year Plan towards the attainment of which considerable progress has
already been made. These have not been
included as goals of the Five Year Plan although they are still pending, but of
course they should be pursued to completion.
If acquisition of a National Haziratu'l-Quds is a
responsibility assigned to you under the Five Year Plan, you should treat it as
an urgent matter in view of the world-wide condition of inflation and rising
property costs. Such a building, which must be suitable to serve as the seat of
the National Spiritual Assembly, should be purchased as economically as
possible. Preferably it should be a freehold detached building, although if
such is not obtainable, a semi-detached house or an apartment may be considered,
or even a property on a long-term lease.
A site for a future Mashriqu'l-Adhkar can be as small as 8,000 square metres in area if a larger property would be too expensive. It should, if possible, be situated within the city designated or, if this is not feasible, within 25 kilometres from the city.
A national endowment should be regarded as an investment in real estate owned by the National Spiritual Assembly. It may be anywhere in the country and can be a small, inexpensive piece of land donated by one of the friends, or else acquired out of the resources of the National Fund.
Where we have given a goal to acquire a Haziratu'l-Quds which is to serve the entire community in a certain country, it is to be a local Haziratu'l-Quds at the present time but should be of a size and quality to serve as an administrative centre and focal point for the whole community. We envisage that some of such Haziratu'l-Quds may, at a later date, be converted into National Haziratu'l-Quds, and this fact should be borne in mind when acquiring them.
In the goal for local Haziratu'l-Quds given to some communities we state that a certain number should be large enough to accommodate activities of a number of communities in the surrounding district. While not being at all in the same category as the Haziratu'l-Quds described in the last paragraph above, these particular buildings are intended to be rather more substantial structures than the average local Haziratu'l-Quds, and should be located in areas which form easily accessible, central gathering places for districts in which large numbers of Baha'is are living. In addition to serving as a local Haziratu'l-Quds for its own town or village, such a building can be used for district gatherings, for the holding of teaching institutes, conferences, deepening classes, etc., for the larger area, and could possibly accommodate the office of the district teaching committee.
In general we intend that the local Haziratu'l-Quds called for in the Plan should be very simple structures to serve as focal points and meeting places for the local communities. It is hoped that land for them can be provided by local believers and that they can be built, for the most part, by the local friends. In certain instances the National Spiritual Assembly may feel justified in giving a small amount of assistance from the National Fund.
The acquisition of local endowments, which is given as a specific goal to some national communities, is intended to assist in the consolidation of local communities and to foster the spirit of unity and collaboration among the believers. A local endowment can be quite a small piece of land; it can be purchased by the Local Spiritual Assembly or is more usually the gift of one or more of the believers. If the Local Spiritual Assembly is incorporated, the endowment should be registered in its name, but if it is not, the endowment can be held by one or more of the believers on behalf of the community. For example, if one of the believers gives a small piece of land he can continue to hold it in his name, but it will be known that he does so on behalf of the Local Spiritual Assembly and that the land will in time be transferred legally to the Assembly when that is possible. In some countries land is owned by the state or the tribe and only the use of the land can be assigned; in such places the goal can be considered achieved if the Local Spiritual Assembly can obtain the use of a plot of land in its own name. In some countries, even if the land can be purchased, government regulations require that within a specific time a building must be erected on land held by religious institutions. This problem can be met in several ways: it may be possible for the Spiritual Assembly to obtain the use of, or acquire, a plot of land for agricultural purposes, thus avoiding the need to erect a building; or if the most practical course is to erect on the land a Baha'i institution such as a local Haziratu'l-Quds, the Assembly could, in its own records, demarcate a portion of the land to be the endowment, distinct from the portion on which the Haziratu'l-Quds stands.
Dawn Prayers
One of the characteristics of Baha'i society will be the
gathering of the believers each day during the hours between dawn and two hours
after sunrise to listen to the reading and chanting of the Holy Word. In many
communities at the present time, especially in rural ones, such gatherings
would fit naturally into the pattern of the friends' daily life, and where this
is the case it would do much to foster the unity of the local community and
deepen the friends' knowledge of the Teachings if such gatherings could be
organized by the Local Spiritual Assembly on a regular basis. Attendance at
these gatherings is not to be obligatory, but we hope that the friends will
more and more be drawn to take part in them. This is a goal which can be
attained gradually.
National Teaching Conferences
The holding of regular national teaching conferences has
proved to be a valuable stimulus to the work in a number of countries, as well
as a means for forging more strongly the bonds of unity among the believers.
Beyond this, many national communities are presented with a special opportunity
to hold a highly effective teaching conference at the time of the eight
Intercontinental Conferences which are being called at the midway point of the
Plan. Believers travelling to and from these Intercontinental Conferences are
likely to be eager to assist the work in the countries through which they pass.
Therefore, if you hold a national conference shortly after the Intercontinental
Conference which is nearest to you, it may well be attended by believers from
other lands who will bring with them the spirit of that Conference, and, by
augmenting the numbers attending your national conference will greatly assist its
effectiveness as a means of proclaiming the Faith and enthusing those believers
who will have been unable to attend the Intercontinental Conferences.
Youth -- Specific Periods of Service
Baha'i youth should be encouraged to think of their studies
and of their training for a trade or profession as part of their service to the
Cause of God and in the context of a lifetime that will be devoted to advancing
the interests of the Faith. At the same time, during their years of study,
youth are often able to offer specific periods of weeks or months, or even of a
year or more, during which they can devote themselves to travel teaching or to
serving the Baha'i community in other ways, such as conducting children's
classes in remote villages. They should be encouraged to offer such service,
which will in itself be admirable experience for the future, and the National
Assembly should instruct an appropriate committee to receive such offers and to
organize their implementation so as to derive the greatest possible advantage
from them. – used in Vision
External Affairs Work
A very important activity which has been pursued effectively
in all too few countries, is the undertaking by the National Spiritual Assembly
of a sustained, planned effort to foster cordial relations with prominent
people and responsible government officials and to familiarize them personally
with the basic tenets and the teachings of the Faith. Such an activity must be
carried out with wisdom and discretion, and requires the constant attention of
a responsible committee as well as periodic review by the National Spiritual
Assembly itself. Where successful it can effectively forestall opposition to
the Faith and smooth the way for many essential aspects of the development of
the Baha'i community.
Pioneer Goals
Enclosed with this letter you will receive a list of pioneer
assistance initially called for at the opening of the Plan. Any National
Spiritual Assembly which has pioneers abroad from previous plans is still
responsible for helping them to remain at their posts, or for replacing them,
if the services they have been rendering are still needed. However, if you have
any still unfilled pioneer goals from the Nine Year Plan or from the current
year, you may consider them cancelled, because such unfilled goals have been
taken into consideration in assigning the goals of the Five Year Plan. Best
results can be obtained when pioneer projects are arranged in consultation
between the sending and receiving National Spiritual Assemblies or their
appropriate committees.
With loving Baha'i greetings,
The Universal House of Justice
(Messages from the Universal House of Justice, ‘1963-1986’)