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Foreword
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Whenever one thinks of Canada one thinks of cultivation.
Out of her virgin forests, her wildernesses, her barren
North lands and lakes, has already been wrung a great
and promising nation. The darkness of nature, as the
Master said, has given way to cultivation and out of imperfection
has arisen the splendour of government, industry,
trade, settlement, and the arts and sciences of human
life. But spiritually the land is still dark, promising,
but dark. Primarily the measure of spirituality radiated
by your national body will be the measure of Bahá’u’lláh’s
light directly available for Canada. For He created the concept
of your institution. You exist because of the functions
He desired you to perform, and your fundamental function
is to be the spiritual heart of Canada.
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On April 30, 1949, barely twelve months after the new National
Spiritual Assembly had come into existence, it was formally
incorporated by special Act of Parliament, an event twice hailed
by Shoghi Effendi in the documents published here as “a magnificent
victory unique in the annals of East and West”. In retrospect,
the achievement provided a dramatic illustration of the immense
potentialities with which, as the Guardian repeatedly reminded
Canadian believers, Providence has endowed their community and
their country. Today, as Canadian Bahá’ís contemplate the results
of fifty years of struggle and sacrifice they begin to catch a glimmer
of the dazzling panorama that lay open to the eyes of Shoghi
Effendi as he penned the words of appeal, advice, and encouragement
that constitute the heart of this book: Local Spiritual Assemblies
established in the most remote corners of a vast land—the
second largest on the face of the planet; an enviable record of
work carried out quietly but with great effect by succeeding generations
of Canadian pioneers and travel teachers in every part of
the world; an outpouring of funds that has nourished the activities
of the Cause at its World Centre and throughout the globe and that
truly merits the term sacrificial; the impetus given to the international
community’s proclamation of Bahá’u’lláh’s message by Canadian
Bahá’í creativity in the arts and the media; and the growing
involvement in the work of the Faith on the part of believers from
Canada’s many ethnic and cultural backgrounds, a hope which is
the unflagging theme of so many of Shoghi Effendi’s letters.
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