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Archival Collection of Talks on Various Bahá'í Subjects

Association for Baha'i Studies : 6th Annual Conference

May 29 – May 31, 1981
6th Annual Conference, University of Ottawa, ON
Attendance: 325

Keynote Address on Marriage to the Sixth Annual Conference

Dr. Hossain Danesh introduces 'Amatu'l-Bahá Rúhíyyih Khánum who was the keynote speaker for the 6th Annual ABS Conference. Rúhíyyih Khánum addresses the problem of divorce in the Bahá'í Community. She stated that marriage is not a Bahá'í law, and gives the examples of the Greatest Holy Leaf, Martha Root and Agnes Alexander as Bahá'ís who never married. Marriage is the proper place to express the sex impulse. In marriage we should teach our children to pray and restrict the number of activities children participate in outside the home.

Healthy Communication in Marriage

Three questions are posed and addressed: "What is healthy? What is marriage? And what is it we are trying to communicate. Danesh reviews the various phases through which positive marital communication is integrated. He emphasizes shared purposes, spiritualization and encouragement as elements in a healthy marital relationship.

John the Baptist

McClean attempts a comparison of John the Baptist across three religious traditions: Christianity, Islam and the Bahá'í Faith. Makes the case that while nothing in the Bahá'í writings supports a claim for John the Baptist as an independent Manifestation of God; nevertheless McClean argues that John occupies a station immediately below that of Manifestation. He uses unpublished quotations of Bahá’ulláh to support his thesis and quotes from both the Bible and the Qur'an.

Mishkín-Qalam ("musk-scented pen")

His Calligraphy and Humour

Mishkín-Qalam—also known as Aqá Husayn-i-Isfahání—was an outstanding calligrapher and an Apostle of Bahá'u'lláh.

When Bahá'u'lláh was exiled to 'Akka, Mishkín-Qalam was separated from Him and was sent to Cyprus with the faithless half-brother of Bahá'u'lláh, Mírzá Yahyá. As soon as Mishkín-Qalam was released from prison on Cyprus he hastened to 'Akka to be near Bahá'u'lláh. After the passing of Bahá'u'lláh he became 'Abdu'l-Bahá's devoted servant.

He lived nearly 100 years, passing away in 1912.

Myths, Models and Mysticism

Shoghi Effendi wrote that “[T]he core of religious faith is that mystic feeling which unites Man with God.”

Both Bahá'u'lláh and 'Abdu'l-Bahá rejected the traditional mystical doctrines of the Sufis which are more or less identical with the doctrines of the Hindu and Indian schools of mysticism.

View of Man in Development Thinking

In many academic fields the scholarship is divorced from problems on the ground. Bahá'í scholarship should be rooted in the everyday problems of humanity. 'Abdu'l-Bahá said 'ye are the physicians of mankind'.

Bahá'ís have a vision for human transformation; it focuses on latent human qualities. At the heart of all relationship is our love for Bahá'u'lláh. We love Him by loving our fellow humans.

Queen Marie

The life of Queen Marie, the first royal to embrace the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh is summarized in this audio that originally accompanied a slide program.

Marriage Breakdown in North American Society - Psychological Aspects

Marriage Breakdown in North American Society

"Divorce is one of most powerful stresses of the life." It compares closely to the actual death of a spouse. Furturemore it is been shown that that stresses of this type contribute to developent of serious medical conditions and long-term psyco-social disorders.

The family has become isolated from its traditional purposes. We now have the categories of nuclear family; long-time family; marriage without children; children without marriage and communal living. Meanwhile the divorce rate continues on the increase.
 

Applications of Positive Psychotherapy for Marriage and Family Therapy

Dr. Pesechkian is assisted by his wife and son in this presentation.

A unique tool he employs in his work is the use of traditional oriental wisdom stories that allow the patient to see his problem objectively. He also uses religion as it provides behavioral norms that govern interpersonal relationships. Finally, he illustrates a five-stage strategy for treatment using positive psychotherapy.

Marriage and the Nuclear Family

A Baha’i Perspective

Dr. Khavari relates that marriage and family are now in a critical condition being attacked both inwardly and outwardly. 'Abdu'l-Baha pointed out that marriage was a divine insitution.

Khavari reviews the purpose of marriage; explains what a sound basis for family formation should be; and points out the proper attitudes about marriage. Dating and courtship are covered. He reviews two forms of healthy communication in a family: 1. man-wife; and 2. group.

Finally he gives a prescription for family well-being.

Adaptive Response to Stress in Family Life

“The current level of life stress is not a novel phenomenon. In fact, the word stress was first used in the fifteenth century” Since the turn of the twentieth century, however, social consciousness of life stress has risen dramatically, particularly in the Western world, and stress and anxiety have become common terms.

Stress was originally defined in reference to human biology. In this talk stress includes artifical and spiritual realities. A broader meaning of stress is suffering.

The Poetry of Loving: Family Therapy and the Bahá'í Faith

Poetry of Loving: Family Therapy and the Bahá'í Faith

Dr. Bruwer begins by quoting ‘Abdu’l-Baha: “The family is as a nation in minature.” Enlarging on the basic family unit humanity has successively gone through tribal, city, community, and nation organization. Man cannot live alone; he needs others for emotional support and the necessities of life.

The Family: A Refuge and a Workshop

Dr. Jane Faily

Jane Faily starts by saying that as the “all human institutions are in disorder”; so too is Bahá’í marriage.  We live in one of the most trying times in history.

Ms. Faily then explores the traditional roles of men and women in marriage and society. In the past there was stability and harmony in marriage; that order rested on the dominance of men and the compliance of women. That has disappeared. “We are in an awkward age.” The harmony has vanished. We need to recreate the institution of marriage based on Bahá’í teachings.

Jane Faily starts by saying that as the “all human institutions are in disorder”; so too is Bahá’í marriage.  We live in one of the most trying times in history.

Ms. Faily then explores the traditional roles of men and women in marriage and society. In the past there was stability and harmony in marriage; that order rested on the dominance of men and the compliance of women. That has disappeared. “We are in an awkward age.” The harmony has vanished. We need to recreate the institution of marriage based on Bahá’í teachings.

Relevance of Baha’i Principles to Contemporary Marital Therapy

Dr. Frank Handel had been a panel speaker earlier in the day in Ottawa, Ontario, on the subject of Healing Sexuality in Marriage. He changed this talk to be on “Gaining Perspective on the Issues of Marriage and Family with a concern with Individual Behavior”.

Baha’u’llah has chosen His words with perfect care, that in psychiatry, communications that can lead to knowledge, with the Word of God as a stimulus. 

Address to the International Baha’i Conference on Marriage and Family

Mr. Douglas Martin introduces Hand of the cause of God 'Amatu'l-Bahá Rúhíyyih Khánum. Rúhíyyih Khánum warned against an elitist attitude that some literate Bahá'ís may hold against teaching illiterate people. She emphasized the importance of teaching illiterate indigenous peoples. Unlike her educated audience she holds that in her experience those village people who lack formal education seem to more easily embrace the truth of Bahá'u'lláh Teachings. They have capacity just as educated people have capacity. Some spiritual giants have come into the Cause from very humble origins.

Lifelong Integrated Education for the Family

Dr. Danesh introduced Ms. Nomura who has been married for 35 years.

Breakdown of the family is a global phenomenon and thus a serious problem for humanity. Divorce is rampant as is drug addiction. The richer Japan has become the more problems develop. Education can address some of these problems.