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Showing posts with label Bahais. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bahais. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

News Channel India: Persecution of Bahais in Iran

News: Bahai Persecution Part 1



Special reports on persecution of Bahais in Iran Part 1.

More info about the peaceful Bahai Faith:
www.bahai.org

More info about the current persecution:
news.bahai.org



News: Bahai Persecution Part 2




Special reports on persecution of Bahais in Iran Part 2.

More info about the peaceful Bahai Faith:
www.bahai.org

More info about the current persecution:
news.bahai.org

News: Bahai Persecution Part 3




Special reports on persecution of Bahais in Iran Part 3.

More info about the peaceful Bahai Faith:
www.bahai.org

More info about the current persecution:
news.bahai.org


News: Bahai Persecution Part 4





Special reports on persecution of Bahais in Iran Part 4.

More info about the peaceful Bahai Faith:
www.bahai.org

More info about the current persecution:
news.bahai.org

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Safeguard the Innocent Persecution Bahais in Iran





Humanitarian activities got Bahais imprisoned Iran Video

"Souls of Shiraz"



Lyrics, Vocals, Flute, Piano, Violin: Anke Keitel
myspace.com/ankekeitel
lastfm.de/music/Anke+Keitel
leibundseelemusic.de

Chanting: Mehdi Rezwan
Percussion: Armin Heislitz
Produced by Mike K. Downing


53 souls on the streets of Shiraz
Out to share their message of love
with youth from deprived backgrounds
breezes of confirmation floating around

All were captured and put into a cell
Their social deeds were thus ignored
into deep grounds they fell
Mis-judgement of their Baha'i belief
the cause of such grief

Confined in a prison
captured for their passion
May God burst their cage asunder
and let their souls soar

Haleh, Sasan, Raha you are the same age as me
29, 32, 33
imprisoned in a cell without a bed or a chair
without medicine, movement or a bit of fresh air

I cannot understand
how you deal with such pain
Injustice, maltreatment
where is the gain
Your souls must be so strong
to be tested like this

Confined in a prison
captured for your passion
May God burst your cage asunder
and let your souls soar.



Sunday, March 14, 2010

"The Change Will Come" Dedicated to the Bahais in Iran


This song was made by some Bahai Youth that are concerned with the trial and injustice going on at the moment in Iran against the Bahais.

Get album
http://www.amazon.de/Harmony/dp/B002M...

GENEVA — Seven imprisoned Baha'i leaders appeared in court today in Iran for a second session of their trial.

The session was once again closed, and family members were not permitted in the courtroom, the Baha'i International Community has learned.

The hearing, which lasted just over one hour, does not seem to have gone beyond procedural issues. No date was given for any future sessions.

The seven were arrested nearly two years ago and have been held in Tehran's Evin prison since that time, spending the first year there without formal charges or access to lawyers.

After several postponements, their trial officially began on 12 January, when the seven were arraigned in Branch 28 of the Revolutionary Court in Tehran.

That session was also closed to the public, but accounts in government-sponsored news media said the defendants were formally charged with espionage, propaganda activities against the Islamic order, the establishment of an illegal administration, cooperation with Israel, sending secret documents outside the country, acting against the security of the country, and corruption on earth.

All the charges have been categorically denied. The defendants are Mrs. Fariba Kamalabadi, Mr. Jamaloddin Khanjani, Mr. Afif Naeimi, Mr. Saeid Rezaie, Mrs. Mahvash Sabet, Mr. Behrouz Tavakkoli, and Mr. Vahid Tizfahm.

http://news.bahai.org/story/756


More info about the Bahai Faith:
www.bahai.org

"This love" Dedicated to the Bahais in Iran


"This Love"
Chelsea-Lyne W/ Nabil & Karim

Dedicated to The Baha'is in Iran, especially the 7 Baha'is on trial, and their families.

Listen To It @ http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?...

Lyrics (Written By N. Moghaddam, C.Heins, K.Rushdy)

Nabil:
They can take my life away
But this love will never change
They can take my rights away
But I'll grow stronger everyday

Chelsea-Lyne:
Its my right to live a life that's free
My right to simply be a citizen
Who believes in world equality
We shouldn't have to hide
Or feel the need to cower
Our beliefs shape who we are
They give us inner power
With our heads held high we shall walk on
With utmost love in our hearts we remain strong
They ask the question, we refuse.
Because it is our right to choose

They can take my life away
But this love will never change
They can take my rights away
But i'll grow stronger everyday

Karim:
In the silence of this courtroom
I closed my eyes and saw the future
Around the time that we heard from the prosecutor
And your honour I think you've already made your choice
So to the jury, please excuse me if I rejoice
Cause it was years ago, back when I decided to save
A place inside my heart where Baha'u'llah's resided
And my family all around the world will watch and pray
So I am not alone. Will I surrender?
Not today.

They can take my life away
But this love will never change
They can take my rights away
But i'll grow stronger everyday

Its my right to an education,
My right to the living I'm making
And yet they keep taking away from me
My material possessions have be ruined and put to pieces
My spirit remains a whole, my attachment thus decreases
Still in this day though times have changed,
They haven't changed enough
The friends must hide, obey,
Pray to avoid themselves handcuffed
Battle's changed but sacrifice remains the same
This is my devotion that ignites my inner flame

They can take my life away
But this love will never change
They can take my rights away
But i'll grow stronger everyday


More info about the Bahai Faith:
www.bahai.org

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Bahais offer decision-making model at UN

16 February 2010
http://news.bahai.org/sites/news.bahai.org/files/imagecache/slideshow/sites/news.bahai.org/files/images/757_00.JPG

— A new model of decision-making among peoples of different cultures would contribute to integration "at this time of transition to a new social order," according to a new Baha'i statement.

The statement was prepared for the 48th United Nations Commission for Social Development, which concluded on 12 February. The commission is the chief UN body charged with following up on the World Summit on Social Development held in 1995 in Copenhagen, where world leaders outlined principles that would characterize a new "society for all." These principles included respect for diversity and participation of all people.

The Baha'i International Community said in its statement that it was offering its experience in the method of consultation used by Baha'i communities around the world – a key component in creating unity among people.

The consultative process, the Baha'i statement said, rests on the understanding that all human beings are essentially noble – "they possess reason and conscience as well as capacities for inquiry, understanding, compassion, and service to the common good."

Mr. Ming H. Chong of Singapore, a delegate to the commission who presented a summary of the Baha'i statement, said afterward that understanding the nobility of all humans prevents people from dismissing others as needy rather than being in charge of their own development.

"If you start with (this) understanding, then you have a different perspective, one that avoids labels like 'marginalized' and 'poor,'" he said. He explained that he was a child of immigrants to Singapore and had learned that such labels create the wrong impression of entire groups of people.

"Language shapes the way we think," he said. "It creates mental pictures of how we see the world. Some of these mental pictures are not always positive – those that dehumanize migrants, for example."

The Baha'i statement to the UN commission suggested that the human body can serve as a model for comparing the integration of the world's cultures and peoples. "Within this organism, millions of cells, with extraordinary diversity of form and function, collaborate to make human existence possible. Every least cell has its part to play in maintaining a healthy body," the statement said.

This image can be used to envision the world's peoples as one human family and understand how each culture plays a part in the functioning of the whole, Mr. Chong explained.

In consultation as practiced in Baha'i communities, great value is placed on the diversity of perspectives and contributions that individuals bring to the discussion.

"Actively soliciting views from those traditionally excluded from decision-making not only increases the pool of intellectual resources but also fosters the trust, inclusion, and mutual commitment needed for collective action," the Baha'i statement said.

A key feature of Baha'i consultation is that ideas belong to the group rather than to individuals.

"Detachment from one's positions and opinions regarding the matter under discussion is imperative – once an idea has been shared, it is no longer associated with the individual who expressed it, but becomes a resource for the group to adopt, modify, or discard," the statement said.

A diversity of opinions, however, is not sufficient – it "does not provide communities with a means to bridge differences or to resolve social tensions," it continued.

"In consultation, the value of diversity is inextricably linked to the goal of unity. This is not an idealized unity, but one that acknowledges differences and strives to transcend them through a process of principled deliberation," the statement said. "It is unity in diversity."

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Religious Leaders met at Bahai gardens


60 Religious Leaders to Meet at Elijah Interfaith Convention at the Bahai Gardens and Shrine in Haifa, Israel.



Priests and a Buddhist religious leader take their shoes off before entering a shrine during the Elijah Interfaith Convention in Bahai Gardens and Shrine in Haifa, northern Israel, Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2009. About 50 religious leaders representing Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, and Sikhism visited the Bahai center as part of a 5-day conference where the results of a survey showing how members of different religions view their religious leadership will be released.



(IsraelNN.com) About 60 religious leaders are scheduled to meet Tuesday in the Bahai gardens in Haifa as part of the fourth biennial assembly of the World Council of Religious Leaders which is taking part in the northern port city. The theme of this year's assembly is "the future of religious leadership".

Speakers who have confirmed their appearance at the event include former Sephardic Chief Rabbi Eliyahu Bakshi-Doron and the current Latin Patriarch Fouad Twal.


Saturday, February 6, 2010

Rainn Wilson and Oprah Winfrey



Rainn Wilson talks about the Bahai Faith with Oprah Winfrey
Part 1 to 7






Rainn was raised in the Baha'i faith, and his spirituality is the basis of his website http://www.SoulPancake.com. The website's goal is to inspire people to talk about life's big questions and explore their own spirituality and creativity through art, music, photography, social networking, thoughtful discussion and more.

Actor Rainn Wilson, best known for his Emmy-nominated role as Dwight Schrute on the NBC sitcom The Office, has built a successful career in Hollywood on both the big and small screens. Rainn grew up in Washington and Illinois, graduated from Tufts University and attended the graduate acting program at New York University.
What do Baha'is believe?

Bahá'ís believe that there is one God, that all humanity is one family, and that there is a fundamental unity underlying religion. They recognize that the coming of Bahá'u'lláh has opened the age for the establishment of world peace, when, as anticipated in the sacred scriptures of the past, all humanity will achieve its spiritual and social maturity, and live as one united family in a just, global society.
For more information about the Bahá'í Faith please visit, http://www.Bahai.org



Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Part 6

Part 7