Bahá'u'lláh
(The Glory of God)
12 November, 1817 - 29 May, 1892
Mírzá-Husayn-Alí,
surnamed Bahá'u'lláh (the Glory of God), a native of Mázindarán,
Whose advent the Báb had foretold, was assailed by those same forces
of ignorance and fanaticism, was imprisoned in Tihrán, was banished,
in 1852, from His native land to Baghdád, and thence to the prison city
of 'Akká, where He remained incarcerated for no less that twenty-four
years, and in whose neighborhood He passed away in 1892. In the course of His
banishment, and particularly in Adrianople and in 'Akká, He formulated
the laws and ordinances of His Dispensation, expounded, in over a hundred volumes
the principles of His Faith, proclaimed His Message to the Kings and Rulers
of both the East and the West, both Christian and Muslim, addressed the Pope,
the Caliph of Islám, the Chief Magistrates of the Republic of the American
continent, the entire Christian sacerdotal order, the leaders of Shí'ih
and Sunní Islám, and the high priest of the Zoroastrian religion.
In these writings, He proclaimed His Revelation, summoned those whom He addressed
to heed His call and espouse His Faith, warned them of the consequences of their
refusal, and denounced, in some cases, their arrogance and tyranny.
Shoghi Effendi, Guidance For Today and Tomorrow, Bahá'í Publishing Trust, London, UK, 1973, Pages 5-6.
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