AmilImani
Why Islamists Persecute the Baha’is
June 6, 2008
This is the best of
times and the worst of times, as the saying goes. Humanity is struggling
on the one hand to free itself from the vestiges of its barbaric past
while embarking on an exhilarating new way of life. It is the same
story. The old is doggedly fighting the new on many fronts. And the new
in this case is a huge paradigm shift of ideas and beliefs that demands
total eradication of all. This has kept mankind in a quagmire of wars,
injustice and misery.
In this realm of ideas,
religions play pivotal roles and the old and the new clash, often
violently. Ideas and beliefs are our software that determines how we
behave. And the software of the past is no longer working because it is
out of phase with the needs of the time as well as infected with
destructive viruses.
Even a cursory look is
enough to show that the software of Islam, over time, is so greatly
manipulated by numberless sects, sub-sects and schools that it can
hardly be considered a unitary belief system. And people are their
ideas. Any assault on beliefs and ideas provokes the assailed to action.
This clash of beliefs
is the reason for Islamists to unleash their power against the upstart
iconoclastic Baha’i faith. In fact, the Baha’is revere Islam and respect
all other religions. Baha’i faith has many teachings in common with
Islam, so much so that some call it "Islam light,” because, while it
retains some of Islam’s principles, it also abrogates a number of
outdated and counterproductive Islamic laws and practices. Baha’is say
their faith is not a wrecking ball that aims to demolish the schoolhouse
of God called religion: a badly divided schoolhouse where everyone
claims to worship the same God, yet keep oppressing, fighting and
killing each other in the name of the same God.
Baha’is have a very
rosy and possibly unrealistic view of humanity. They say that their goal
is for every human being, irrespective of any and all considerations, to
be granted all his God-given rights and be allowed to worship his
creator the way he sees fit. They have a sort of lovey-dovey vision of
the world where everyone will live as a valued member of the larger
human family. Apparently they have hit a responsive enough cord with
some 6-7 million people of the world from every ethnic, religious and
national stratum. This vision may not convert the remaining 6-7 billion
people any time soon, but it sure beats hands down the Islamists’ idea
to force the world under their so called Ummeh with its stone-age
shariah law.
Baha’is believe that
God sends his teachers to his school, from time to time with new
lessons, to help advance the people to a higher and higher level of
humanness. Trouble is, they believe, that people cling to the old
school-work and the old teacher and doggedly resist accepting the new
teacher and his teachings. Baha’is think of God’s prophets as renovators
who come from time to time to tear down walls of separation and to bring
God’s children together in an open-air general classroom out of their
own foolishly walled-in dungeons of exclusivity and ignorance.
Below are some of the
Baha’i teachings that clash heads on with Islam’s and provoke the
Islamists to do all they can to destroy the new religion.
▪ The people of God.
Muslims believe that they are the chosen people of Allah and recognize
no other system of belief as legitimate. Baha’is believe that all people
are the chosen people of God: that there is only one God, one religion
of God, and one people of God, the entire human race.
▪ Pearls on a string.
Muslims contend that Muhammad is the seal of the Prophets; that God sent
his best and final messenger to mankind, and any other claimant is an
imposter worthy of death. Baha’is believe that God has always sent his
teachers with new and updated lessons to educate humanity and shall do
so in the future. There have been numberless divine teachers in the
course of human history who have appeared to various people. They say
that these teachers are like pearls on a string and that Baha’u’llah is
the latest, but not the last pearl.
▪ Independent thinking.
Blind imitation is anathema to Baha’is. Baha’is believe that the human
mind and the gift of reason should guide the person in making decisions
about all matters. To this end, they place a premium on education and
independent investigation of truth.
Baha’is consider the
education of women as important as that of men, since women are the
early teachers of children and can play their valuable part by being
themselves educated. By contrast, Muslims look to religious authorities
for guidance and often deprive women of education and independent
thinking.
In recognition of the
importance of independent thinking, no one is born Baha’i. Once one is
born to a Muslim, he is considered Muslim for life. If he decides to
leave Islam, he is labeled apostate and, apostates are automatically
condemned to death. By contrast, every child born in a Baha’i family is
required to make his own independent decision regarding whether or not
he wishes to be a Baha’i. Freedom to choose and independent thinking are
cherished values of the Baha’is, in stark contrast to that of the
closed-minded Islamists.
▪ Religion or science.
Baha’is believe that truth transcends all boundaries. Scientific and
religious truth emanate from the same universal source. They are like
the two sides of the same coin. To Baha’is, science and religion are as
two wings of a bird that enable humanity’s flight toward the summit of
its potential; that any religious belief that contradicts science is
superstition. Muslims believe that their religious scripture and dogma,
irrespective of their proven falsehood, are superior to that of science.
▪ Gender equality.
Muslims hold the view, expressly stated in the Qur’an, that men are
rulers over women. Baha’is reject this notion and subscribe to the
unconditional equality of rights for the two sexes. This Baha’i
principle emancipates one half of humanity from the status of
subservient domestic to that of a fully participating and
self-actualized human. It aims to put an end to the heartless
exploitation of women and demands that women be treated with all due
respect under the law.
▪ Participatory
decision-making. Islam, by its very nature, is patriarchal and
authoritarian. Baha’is believe in the value of decision making through
the practice of consultation; a process where everyone, irrespective of
any and all considerations, has a voice in making decisions. This
participatory decision-making principle abrogates a major prerogative of
Islamic clergy who have been dictating matters to their liking and
advantage. Also, at all levels of society, including the family, all
affected members have the opportunity, even the responsibility, to make
their views known without fear. Baha’i teachings clearly emphasize this
commitment to a democratic decision-making in their scripture, "The
shining spark of truth cometh forth only after the clash of differing
opinions.”
▪ World-embracing
outlook. Baha’is love their native countries, yet extend that same love
to the entire planet and its people. Baha’is believe that love has no
limit and need not have limits. One can love his country and love the
world at the same time. This love of the world is frequently used as a
pretense by the Islamists to accuse the Baha’is of Iran as traitors to
their own homeland. It is for this reason that the present mullahs
ruling Iran falsely claim that the Baha’is are agents of the Zionist
Israel and its American sponsor.
▪ Eradication of
prejudice. Prejudice of any type is alien to the Baha'i faith and
severely undermines its pivotal principle of the oneness of humanity.
Muslims are notorious when it comes to prejudice. Prejudice against
others is thoroughly exploited by the Islamists. In contrast, Baha’i
scriptures say, "…again, as to religious, racial, national and political
bias: all these prejudices strike at the very root of human life; one
and all they beget bloodshed, and the ruination of the world. So long as
these prejudices survive, there will be continuous and fearsome wars.”
▪ Abolition of
priesthood. A major point of conflict involves the abolition of the
clergy. Baha’is believe that humanity has matured enough that it no
longer needs a cast of professional clergy to serve peoples’ religious
needs. By one stroke, this Baha’i teaching puts hundreds of thousands of
mullahs and imams out of business and arouses the powerful cast of the
do-nothing clergy to fight to retain their highly privileged parasitic
positions.
It is imperative for
the free people of the world to defend freedom of conscience, including
freedom of religion, irrespective of one’s own personal belief. It is
for this reason that as a person who is not a Baha’i, I find it my
solemn duty to speak up on behalf of a peaceful people,
severely-persecuted by the savage Islamists.