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Bahá`í/Inscription at sacred flame-Haifa

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Question
Dear Mr. Glaysher,

I visited the Haifa gardens over 10 years ago.  While amazingly beautiful, I was disturbed by a few incidences I experienced.  One is the strange verse-inscription that flanks the entryway to the sacred flame.  I have been searching and searching the internet for that verse, which is a kind of story, but to no avail.  Official sites don't seem to have it either and any responses I have received on the internet have not been fruitful.  MOst people seem to have no idea what I am talking about, but I saw it and read it over, and over, because I was quite surprised by what it said.  Unfortunately, pictures were not allowed and I suppose that is why I cannot find any pics now online either.  Any help you might give tracking this down, would be very much appreciated.  JN

Answer
Dear JN,

Thank you for your question.

I must say it's rather a cryptic question. Are you referring to the Shrine of the Bab? Apparently not the grave of Bahiyyih Khanum or Baha'u'llah. I don't believe there is a "sacred flame" or eternal fire in the the Shrine of the Bab. At least I can't recall ever having read that there was one. It's usually described in other terms.

Since you've been there, and I haven't, I'll have to ask you for further information. Exactly what does the inscription say that concerns you so much? What other incidences "disturbed" you as well?

Best wishes,

Frederick Glaysher

Bahá`í

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Frederick Glaysher

Expertise

I've been a member of the Reform Bahai Faith since 1976, have published in the Bahai journal World Order, and served in several Bahai communities throughout the United States. Having read extensively in the Bahai writings for over thirty years and having had university coursework in religious studies and theology, I can confidently address issues of cultural, historical, and spiritual importance to Bahais and other interested people of various religious and secular outlook.

Experience

As a member of the Reform Bahai Faith and one of the founders of the Usenet discussion group talk.religion.bahai, I have been intimately involved in the issues of free speech and conscience within the Bahai Faith since 1996, if not longer. http://www.fglaysher.com/bahaicensorship

Organizations
Reform Bahai Faith http://www.reformbahai.org

Publications
I am also the editor or author of two books on the Bahai teachings. The Universal Principles of the Reform Bahai Faith. Baha'u'llah & Abdu'l-Baha. With a new Introduction and the original 1912 Foreword. Hardcover: ISBN: 9780967042138 148 pages. Reform Bahai Press, 2008. Letters from the American Desert: Signposts of a Journey, A Vision. ISBN: 9780967042114. Preface. 172 pages. 2008. In Letters from the American Desert, Glaysher reflects on the cultural, political, and religious history of Western and non-Western civilizations, pondering the dilemmas of postmodernity, in a compelling struggle for spiritual knowledge and truth. Fully cognizant of the relativism and nihilism of modern life, Glaysher finds a deeper meaning and purpose for the individual and the world community in the writings and global vision of Baha’u’llah, as expressed in the Reform Bahai Faith. Confronting the antinomies of the soul, grounded in the dialectic, Glaysher explores a path beyond the postmodern desert. Alluding to Martin Luther and W. B. Yeats at All Souls Chapel, Glaysher calls Reform Bahais and others to consider the universal, moderate form of the Bahai Teachings as interpreted by Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’u’llah’s son, who had spoken throughout the West in Europe, England, and the United States from 1911 to 1913. Abdu’l-Baha’s message of the oneness of God, all religions, and humankind holds out a new hope and vision for a world in spiritual and global crisis. Far from a theocracy, the Reform Bahai Faith envisions a modest separation of church and state as the will of God, in harmony and balance with universal peace, in a global age of pluralism, where religious belief is a distinctive mark of the individual, not collective, communal identity. Printed books and eBooks available via links at http://www.fglaysher.com/order_books.html

Education/Credentials
MA, University of Michigan, English, 1981 BGS, University of Michigan, English, Biblical Studies, Islam, 1980 Ten years teaching, at the university and college level, English, Rhetoric, American literature, non-Western literature, World Religions, and other courses.

Awards and Honors
A Fulbright-Hays scholar to China in 1994, I studied at Beijing University, the Buddhist Mogao Caves on the old Silk Road, and elsewhere in China, including Hong Kong and the Academia Sinica in Taiwan. While a National Endowment for the Humanities scholar in 1995 on India, I further explored the conflicts between the traditional regional civilizations of Islamic and Hindu cultures and modernity. I have been an outspoken advocate of the United Nations and was an accredited participant at the UN Millennium Forum (2000).

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