HE news of the tragic fate which had befallen the
heroes of Tabarsi brought immeasurable sorrow
to the heart of the Bab. Confined it His prison-castle
of Chihriq, severed from the little band of
His struggling disciples, He watched with keen anxiety the
progress of their labours and prayed with unremitting zeal
for their victory. How great was His sorrow when, in the
early days of Sha'ban in the year 1265 A.H.,
(1) He came to
learn of the trials that had beset their path, of the agony they
had suffered, of the betrayal to which an exasperated enemy
had felt compelled to resort, and of the abominable butchery
with which their career had ended.
"The Bab was heart-broken," His
amanuensis, Siyyid
Husayn-i-'Aziz, subsequently related, "at the receipt of this
unexpected intelligence. He was crushed with grief, a grief
that stilled His voice and silenced His pen. For nine days
He refused to meet any of His friends. I myself, though His
close and constant attendant, was refused admittance. Whatever
meat or drink we offered Him, He was disinclined to
touch. Tears rained continually from His eyes, and expressions
of anguish dropped unceasingly from His lips.
I could hear Him, from behind the curtain, give vent to His
feelings of sadness as He communed, in the privacy of His
cell, with His Beloved. I attempted to jot down the effusions
of His sorrow as they poured forth from His wounded heart.
Suspecting that I was attempting to preserve the lamentations
He uttered, He bade me destroy whatever I had recorded.
Nothing remains of the moans and cries with which
that heavy-laden heart sought to relieve itself of the pangs
that had seized it. For a period of five months He languished,
immersed in an ocean of despondency and sorrow."
431
With the advent of Muharram in the year
1266 A.H.,(1)
the Bab again resumed the work He had been compelled to
interrupt. The first page He wrote was dedicated to the
memory of Mulla Husayn. In the visiting Tablet revealed
in his honour, He extolled, in moving terms, the unswerving
fidelity with which he served Quddus throughout the siege
of the fort of Tabarsi. He lavished His eulogies on his magnanimous
conduct, recounted his exploits, and asserted his
undoubted reunion in the world beyond with the leader whom
he had so nobly served. He too, He wrote, would soon join
those twin immortals, each of whom had, by his life and
death, shed imperishable lustre on the Faith of God. For one
whole week the Bab continued to write His praises of Quddus,
of Mulla Husayn, and of His other companions who had
gained the crown of martyrdom at Tabarsi.
No sooner had He completed His
eulogies of those who
had immortalised their names in the defence of the fort,
than He summoned, on the day of Ashura,
(2)Mulla Adi-Guzal,
(3)
one of the believers of Maraghih, who for the last
two months had been acting as His attendant instead of
Siyyid Hasan, the brother of Siyyid Husayn-i-'Aziz. He
affectionately received him, bestowed upon him the name
Sayyah, entrusted to his care the visiting Tablets He had
revealed in memory of the martyrs of Tabarsi, and bade him
perform, on His behalf, a pilgrimage to that spot. "Arise,"
He urged him, "and with complete detachment proceed, in
the guise of a traveller, to Mazindaran, and there visit, on
My behalf, the spot which enshrines the bodies of those immortals
who, with their blood, have sealed their faith in My
Cause. As you approach the precincts of that hallowed
ground, put off your shoes and, bowing your head in reverence
to their memory, invoke their names and prayerfully
make the circuit of their shrine. Bring back to Me, as a
remembrance of your visit, a handful of that holy earth which
covers the remains of My beloved ones, Quddus and Mulla
432
Husayn. Strive to be back ere the day of Naw-Ruz, that
you may celebrate with Me that festival, the only one I
probably shall ever see again."
Faithful to the instructions he had
received, Sayyah set
out on his pilgrimage to Mazindaran. He reached his destination
on the first day of Rabi'u'l-Avval in the year 1266
A.H.,(1) and by the ninth day
of that same month,(2) the first
anniversary of the martyrdom of Mulla Husayn, he had
performed his visit and acquitted himself of the mission with
which he had been entrusted. From thence he proceeded
to Tihran.
I have heard Aqay-i-Kalim, who received
Sayyah at the
entrance of Baha'u'llah's home in Tihran, relate the following:
"It was the depth of winter when Sayyah, returning from his
pilgrimage, came to visit Baha'u'llah. Despite the cold and
snow of a rigorous winter, he appeared attired in the garb
of a dervish, poorly clad, barefooted, and dishevelled. His
heart was set afire with the flame that pilgrimage had kindled.
No sooner had Siyyid Yahyay-i-Darabi, surnamed Vahid,
who was then a guest in the home of Baha'u'llah, been informed
of the return of Sayyah from the fort of Tabarsi,
than he, oblivious of the pomp and circumstance to which
a man of his position had been accustomed, rushed forward
and flung himself at the feet of the pilgrim. Holding his legs,
which had been covered with mud to the knees, in his arms,
he kissed them devoutly. I was amazed that day at the many
evidences of loving solicitude which Baha'u'llah evinced
towards Vahid. He showed him such favours as I had never
seen Him extend to anyone. The manner of His conversation
left no doubt in me that this same Vahid would ere long distinguish
himself by deeds no less remarkable than those which had
immortalised the defenders of the fort of Tabarsi."
Sayyah tarried a few days in that home.
He was, however,
unable to perceive, as did Vahid, the nature of that
power which lay latent in his Host. Though himself the recipient
of the utmost favour from Baha'u'llah, he failed to
apprehend the significance of the blessings that were being
showered upon him. I have heard him recount his experiences,
during his sojourn in Famagusta: "Baha'u'llah overwhelmed
433
me with His kindness. As to Vahid, notwithstanding the
eminence of his position, he invariably gave me preference
over himself whenever in the presence of his Host. On the
day of my arrival from Mazindaran, he went so far as to kiss
my feet. I was amazed at the reception accorded me in that
home. Though immersed in an ocean of bounty, I failed,
in those days, to appreciate the position then occupied by
Baha'u'llah, nor was I able to suspect, however dimly, the
nature of the Mission He was destined to perform."
Ere the departure of Sayyah from Tihran,
Baha'u'llah
entrusted him with an epistle, the text of which He had
dictated to Mirza Yahya,(1) and
sent it in his name. Shortly
after, a reply, penned in the Bab's own handwriting, in
which He commits Mirza Yahya to the care of Baha'u'llah
and urges that attention be paid to his education and training,
was received. That communication the people of the
Bayan(2) have misconstrued as
an evidence of the exaggerated
claims(3) which they have
advanced in favour of their leader.
Although the text of that reply is absolutely devoid of such
pretensions, and does not, beyond the praise it bestows upon
Baha'u'llah and the request it makes for the upbringing of
Mirza Yahya, contain any reference to his alleged position,
yet his followers have idly imagined that that letter constitutes
an assertion of the authority with which they have
invested him.(4) At this stage of my narrative, when I
have already recounted
the outstanding events that occurred in the course
434
of the year 1265 A.H.,
(1) I am
reminded that that very year
witnessed the most significant event in my own life, an event
which marked my spiritual rebirth, my deliverance from the
fetters of the past, and my acceptance of the message of this
Revelation. I seek the indulgence of the reader if I dwell
too long on the circumstances of my early life, and recount
with too great detail the events that led to my conversion.
My father belonged to the tribe of Tahiri, who led a nomadic
life in the province of Khurasan. His name was Ghulam
Ali, son of Husayn-i-'Arab. He married the daughter of
Kalb-'Ali, and by her had three sons and three daughters.
I was his second son, and was given the name of Yar-Muhammad.
I was born on the eighteenth of Safar in the year
1247 A.H.,(2) in the village of
Zarand. I was a shepherd by
profession, and was given in my early days a most rudimentary
education. I longed to devote more time to my studies,
but was unable to do so, owing to the exigencies of my situation.
I read the Qur'an with eagerness, committed several
of its passages to memory, and chanted them whilst I followed
my flock over the fields. I loved solitude, and watched
the stars at night with delight and wonder. In the quiet of
the wilderness, I recited certain prayers attributed to the
Imam Ali, the Commander of the Faithful, and, as I turned
my face towards the Qiblih,
(3) supplicated the Almighty to
guide my steps and enable me to find the Truth.
My father oftentimes took me with him to
Qum, where
I became acquainted with the teachings of Islam and the
ways and manners of its leaders. He was a devout follower
of that Faith, and was closely associated with the ecclesiastical
leaders who congregated in that city. I watched him as he
prayed at the Masjid-i-Imam-Hasan and performed, with
scrupulous care and extreme piety, all the rites and ceremonies
prescribed by his Faith. I heard the preaching of several
eminent mujtahids who had arrived from Najaf, attended
their lectures, and listened to their disputations. Gradually
I came to perceive their insincerity and to loathe the baseness
of their character. Eager as I was to ascertain the trustworthiness
of the creeds and dogmas which they strove to
impose upon me, I could neither find the time nor obtain the
435
facilities with which to satisfy my desire. I was often rebuked
by my father for my temerity and restlessness. "I fear,"
he often remarked, "that your aversion to these mujtahids
may some day involve you in great difficulties and bring
upon you reproach and shame."
I was in the village of Rubat-Karim, on a
visit to my
maternal uncle, when, on the twelfth day after Naw-Ruz,
in the year 1263 A.H.,(1) I
accidentally overheard, in the masjid
of that village, a conversation between two men which first
made me acquainted with the Revelation of the Bab. "Have
you heard," one of them remarked, "that the Siyyid-i-Bab
has been conducted to the village of Kinar-Gird and is on his
way to Tihran?" Finding his friend ignorant of that episode,
he proceeded to relate the whole story of the Bab, giving a
detailed account of the circumstances attending His Declaration,
of His arrest in Shiraz, His departure for Isfahan, the
reception which both the Imam-Jum'ih and Manuchihr
Khan had extended to Him, the prodigies and wonders He
had manifested, and the verdict that the ulamas of Isfahan
had pronounced against Him. Every detail of that story
excited my curiosity and stirred in me a keen admiration for
a Man who could throw such a spell over His countrymen.
His light seemed to have flooded my soul; I felt as if I were
already a convert to His Cause.
From Rubat-Karim I returned to Zarand.
My father
remarked Upon my restlessness, and expressed his surprise
at my behaviour. I had lost my appetite and sleep, and was
determined to conceal the secret of my inner agitation from
my father, lest its disclosure might interfere with the eventual
realisation of my hopes. I remained in that state until a
certain Siyyid Husayn-i-Zavari'i arrived at Zarand and was
able to enlighten me on a subject which had become the
ruling passion of my life. Our acquaintance speedily ripened
into a friendship which encouraged me to share with him the
longings of my heart. To my great surprise, I found him
already enthralled by the secret of the theme which I had
begun to disclose to him. "One of my cousins," he proceeded
to relate, "Siyyid Isma'il-i-Zavari'i by name, convinced me
of the truth of the Message proclaimed by the Siyyid-i-Bab.
436
He informed me that he had several times met the Siyyid-i-Bab
in the house of the Imam-Jum'ih of Isfahan, and had
seen Him actually reveal, in the presence of His host, a commentary
on the Surih of Va'l-'Asr.
(1)
The rapidity of the Bab's
composition, and the force and originality of His style, had
excited his surprise and admiration. He was amazed to
find that, whilst revealing His commentary, and without
lessening the speed of His writing, He was able to answer
whatever questions those who were present were moved to
ask Him. The fearlessness with which my cousin arose
to preach the Message aroused the hostility of the
kad-khudas(2)
and siyyids of Zavarih, who compelled him to return
to Isfahan, where he had of late been residing. I too, unable
to remain in Zavarih, departed for Kashan, in which town I
spent the winter and met Haji Mirza Jani, of whom my
cousin had spoken, and who gave me a treatise written by
the Bab, entitled `Risaliy-i-'Adliyyih,' urging me to read it
carefully and return it to him after a few days. I was so
charmed by the theme and language of that treatise that
I proceeded immediately to transcribe the whole text. When
I returned it to its owner, he, to my profound regret, informed
me that I had just missed the opportunity of meeting its
Author. `The Siyyid-i-Bab Himself,' he said, `arrived on the
eve of the day of Naw-Ruz and spent three nights as a Guest
in my home. He is now on His way to Tihran, and if you
start immediately, you will certainly overtake Him.' Straightway
I arose and departed, walking all the way from Kashan
to a fortress in the neighbourhood of Kinar-Gird. I was
resting under the shadow of its walls when a pleasant-looking
man emerged from that fortress and asked me who I was
and whither I was going. `I am a poor siyyid,' I replied, `a
wayfarer and stranger to this place.' He took me to his
home and invited me to spend the night as his guest. In
the course of his conversation with me, he said: `I suspect
you to be a follower of the Siyyid who was staying for a few
days in this fortress, from whence He was transferred to the
village of Kulayn, and who, three days ago, left for Adhirbayjan.
I esteem myself as one of His adherents. My name is
Haji Zaynu'l-'Abidin. I intended not to separate myself
437
from Him, but He bade me remain in this place and convey
to any of His friends whom I might meet His loving greetings,
and dissuade them from following Him. "Tell them," He
instructed me, "to consecrate their lives to the service of My
Cause, that haply the barriers that hinder the progress of
this Faith may be removed, so that My followers may, with
safety and freedom, worship their God and observe the precepts
of their Faith." I immediately abandoned my project
and, instead of returning to Qum, decided to come to this
place.'"
The story which this Siyyid Husayn-i-Zavari'i related to
me served to allay my agitation. He shared with me the copy
of the "Risaliy-i-'Adliyyih" he had brought with him, the
reading of which imparted strength and refreshment to my
soul. In those days I was a pupil of a siyyid who taught me
the Qur'an and whose incapacity to enlighten me on the
tenets of his Faith became more and more evident in my
eyes. Siyyid Husayn, whom I asked for further information
about the Cause, advised me to meet Siyyid Isma'il-i-Zavari'i,
whose invariable practice it was to visit, every spring, the
shrines of the
imam-zadihs(1) of Qum. I induced my father,
who was reluctant to separate himself from me, to send me
to that city with the object of perfecting my knowledge of
the Arabic language. I was careful to conceal from him my
real purpose, fearing that its disclosure might involve him
in embarrassments with the
Qadi(2) and the ulamas of Zarand
and prevent me from achieving my end.
While I was in Qum, my mother, my
sister, and my
brother came to visit me in connection with the festival of
Naw-Ruz, and stayed with me for about a month. In the
course of their visit, I was able to enlighten my mother and
my sister about the new Revelation, and succeeded in kindling
in their hearts the love of its Author. A few days after their
return to Zarand, Siyyid Isma'il, whom I impatiently awaited,
arrived, and was able, in the course of his discussions with
me, to set forth in detail all that was required to win me over
completely to the Cause. He laid stress on the continuity of
Divine Revelation, asserted the fundamental oneness of the
Prophets of the past, and explained their close relationship
438
to the Mission of the Bab. He also disclosed the nature of
the work accomplished by Shaykh Ahmad-i-Ahsa'i and Siyyid
Kazim-i-Rashti, neither of whom I had previously heard.
I asked as to the duty incumbent at the present time upon
every loyal adherent of the Faith. "The injunction of the
Bab," he replied, "is that all those have accepted His
Message should proceed to Mazindaran and their assistance
to Quddus, who is now hemmed in by the forces of
an unrelenting foe." I expressed my eagerness to join him,
as he himself was intending to journey to the fort of Tabarsi.
He advised me, however, to remain in Qum together with a
certain Mirza Fathu'llah-i-Hakkak, a lad of my age whom he
had recently guided to the Cause, until the receipt of his
message from Tihran.
I waited in vain for that message, and,
finding that no
word came from him, decided to leave for the capital. My
friend Mirza Fathu'llah subsequently followed me. He was
eventually arrested and shared the fate of those who were
put to death in the year 1268 A.H.
(1) as a result of the attempt
on the life or the Shah. Arriving in Tihran, I proceeded directly
to the Masjid-i-Shah, which was opposite a madrisih,
(2)
at the entrance of which I, later on, unexpectedly encountered
Siyyid Isma'il-i-Zavari'i, who hastened to inform me that
he had just written me the letter and was on the point of
despatching it to Qum.
We were preparing ourselves to leave for
Mazindaran,
when the news reached us that the defenders of the fort of
Tabarsi had been treacherously slaughtered and that the
fort itself had been levelled with the ground. We were filled
with distress at the receipt of the appalling news, and mourned
the tragic fate of those who had so heroically defended their
beloved Cause. One day I unexpectedly came across my
maternal uncle, Naw-Ruz-'Ali, who had come on purpose to
fetch me. I informed Siyyid Isma'il, who advised me to leave
for Zarand and not to arouse further hostility on the part
of those who insisted upon my return.
On my arrival at my native village, I was
able to win
over my brother to the Cause, which my mother and my
sister had already embraced. I also succeeded in inducing
my father to allow me to leave again for Tihran. I took up
my residence in the same madrisih where I had been accommodated
on my previous visit, and there met a certain
Mulla Abdu'l-Karim, whom, I subsequently learned, Baha'u'llah
had named Mirza Ahmad. He affectionately received
me and told me that Siyyid Isma'il had entrusted me to his
care and wished me to remain in his company until the
former's return to Tihran. The days of my companionship
with Mirza Ahmad will never be forgotten. I found him
440
the very incarnation of love and kindness. The words with
which he inspired me and animated my faith are indelibly
graven upon my heart.
Through him I was introduced to the
disciples of the
Bab, with whom I associated and from whom I obtained
fuller information regarding the teachings of the Faith.
Mirza Ahmad was in those days earning his livelihood as a
scribe, and devoted his evenings to copying the Persian
Bayan and other writings of the Bab. The copies which he
so devotedly prepared were given by him as gifts to his fellow-disciples.
I myself was several times the bearer of such
gifts from him to the wife of Mulla Mihdiy-i-Kandi, who had
forsaken his infant son and hastened to join the occupants
of the fort of Tabarsi.
During those days I was informed that
Tahirih, who,
ever since the dispersal of the gathering at Badasht, had been
living in Nur, had arrived at Tihran and was confined in the
house of Mahmud Khan-i-Kalantar, where, although a prisoner,
she was treated with consideration and courtesy.
One day Mirza Ahmad conducted me to
the house of
Baha'u'llah, whose wife, the Varaqatu'l-'Ulya,
(1) the mother
of the Most Great Branch,(2)
had already healed my eyes with
an ointment which she herself had prepared and sent to me
441
by this same Mirza Ahmad. The first one I met in that
house was that same beloved Son of hers, who was then a
child of six. He smiled His welcome to me as He was standing
at the door of the room which Baha'u'llah occupied. I
passed that door, and was ushered into the presence of Mirza
Yahya, utterly unaware of the station of the Occupant of
the room I had left behind me. When brought face to face
with Mirza Yahya, I was startled, immediately I observed
his features and noted his conversation, at his utter unworthiness
of the position that had been claimed for him.
On another occasion, when I visited that
same house, I
on the point of entering the room that Mirza Yahya
occupied, when Aqay-i-Kalim, whom I had previously met,
approached and requested me, since Isfandiyar, their servant,
had gone to market and had not yet returned, to conduct
"Aqa"(1) to the Madrisiy-i-Mirza-Salih in his stead and
then return to this place. I gladly consented, and as I was
preparing to leave, I saw the Most Great Branch, a child of
exquisite beauty, wearing the
kulah(2) and cloaked in the
jubbiy-i-hizari'i,(3) emerge
from the room which His Father
occupied, and descend the steps leading to the gate of the
house. I advanced and stretched forth my arms to carry
Him. "We shall walk together," He said, as He took hold of
my hand and led me out of the house. We chatted together
as we walked hand in hand in the direction of the madrisih
known in those days by the name of Pa-Minar. As we reached
His classroom, He turned to me and said: "Come again this
afternoon and take me back to my home, for Isfandiyar is
unable to fetch me. My Father will need him to-day." I
gladly acquiesced, and returned immediately to the house
of Baha'u'llah. There again I met Mirza Yahya, who delivered
into my hands a letter which he asked me to take to the
Madrisiy-i-Sadr and hand to Baha'u'llah, whom I was
told I would find in the room occupied by Mulla Baqir-i-Bastami.
He asked me to bring back the reply immediately.
I fulfilled the commission and returned to the madrisih in
time to conduct the Most Great Branch to His home.
One day Mirza Ahmad invited me to meet
Haji Mirza
442
Siyyid Ali, the Bab's maternal uncle, who had recently returned
from Chihriq and was staying in the home of Muhammad
Big-i-Chaparchi, in the neighbourhood of the gate
of Shimiran. I was struck, when I gazed at his face, with the
nobility of his features and the serenity of his countenance.
My subsequent visits to him served to heighten my admiration
for the sweetness of his temper, his mystical piety and
strength of character. I well remember how on one occasion
Aqay-i-Kalim urged him, at a certain gathering, to leave
Tihran, which was then in a state of great ferment, and
escape its dangerous atmosphere. "Why fear for my safety?"
he confidently replied. "Would that I too could share in the
banquet which the hand of Providence is spreading for His
chosen ones!"
Shortly after, the stirrers-up of mischief
were able to kindle
a grave turmoil in that city. Its immediate cause was the
action of a certain siyyid from Kashan, who was living in the
Madrisiy-i-Daru'sh-Shafa' and whom the well-known Siyyid
Muhammad had taken into his confidence and claimed to
have converted to the Bab's teachings. Mirza Muhammad-Husayn-i-Kirmani,
who lodged in that same madrisih and
who was a well-known lecturer on the metaphysical doctrines
of Islam, attempted several times to induce Siyyid Muhammad,
443
who was one of his pupils, to break off his acquaintance
with that siyyid, whom he believed to be unreliable, and to
refuse him admittance to the gathering of the believers.
Siyyid Muhammad refused, however, to be admonished by
this warning, and continued to associate with him until the
beginning of the month of Rabi'u'th-Thani in the year 1266
A.H.,(1) at which time the
treacherous siyyid went to a certain
Siyyid Husayn, one of the ulamas of Kashan, and delivered
into his hands the names and addresses of about fifty of the
believers who were then residing in Tihran. That same list
was immediately submitted by Siyyid Husayn to Mahmud
Khan-i-Kalantar, who ordered that all of them be arrested.
Fourteen of them were seized and brought before the authorities.
One the day they were captured, I
happened to be with
my brother and my maternal uncle, who had arrived from
Zarand and had lodged in a caravanersai outside the gate
of Naw. The next morning they departed for Zarand, and
444
as I returned to the Madrisiy-i-Daru'sh-Shafa', I discovered
in my room a package upon which was placed a letter addressed
to me by Mirza Ahmad. That letter informed me
that the treacherous siyyid had at last denounced us and had
raised a violent commotion in the capital. "The package
which I have left in this room," he wrote, "contains all the
sacred writings that are in my possession. If you ever reach
this place in safety, take them to the caravanserai of Haji
Nad-'Ali, where you will find in one of its rooms a man bearing
that name, a native of Qazvin, to whom you will deliver the
package together with the letter which accompanies it. From
thence you will proceed immediately to the Masjid-i-Shah,
where I hope to be able to meet you." Following his directions,
I delivered the package to the Haji and succeeded in
reaching the masjid, where I met Mirza Ahmad and heard
him relate how he had been assailed and had sought refuge
in the masjid, in the precincts of which he was immune from
further attack.
In the meantime, Baha'u'llah had sent
from the Madrisiyi-Sadr
a message to Mirza Ahmad informing him of the
designs of the Amir-Nizam, who had, already on three different
occasions, demanded his arrest from the Imam-Jum'ih.
He was also warned that the Amir, ignoring the right of asylum
with which the masjid had been invested, intended to
arrest those who had sought refuge in that sanctuary. Mirza
Ahmad was urged to leave in disguise for Qum, and was
charged to direct me to return to my home in Zarand.
Meanwhile, my relations, who had
recognised me in the
Masjid-i-Shah, pressed me to leave for Zarand, pleading
that my father, who had been misinformed of my arrest and
impending execution, was in grave distress, and that it was
my duty to hasten and relieve him of his anxieties. Acting
on the advice of Mirza Ahmad, who counselled me to seize
this God-sent opportunity, I left for Zarand and celebrate
the Feast of Naw-Ruz with my family, a Feast that was doubly
blessed inasmuch as it coincided with the fifth day of Jamadiyu'l-Avval
in the year 1266 A.H.,(1) the
anniversary of the
day on which the Bab had declared His Mission. The Naw-Ruz
of that year has been mentioned in the "Kitab-i-Panj-Sha'n,"
445
one of the last works of the Bab. "The sixth Naw-Ruz,"
He wrote in that Book, "after the Declaration of the
Point of the Bayan,(1) has
fallen on the fifth day of Jamadiyu'l-Avval,
in the seventh lunar year after that same Declaration."
In that same passage, the Bab alludes to the fact that the
Naw-Ruz of that year would be the last He was destined to
celebrate on this earth.
In the midst of the festivities which my
relatives celebrated
in Zarand, my heart was set upon Tihran, and my
thoughts centred round the fate which might have befallen my
fellow-disciples in that agitated city. I longed to hear of
their safety. Though in the house of my father, and surrounded
with the solicitude of my parents, I felt oppressed
by the thought of being severed from that little band, whose
perils I could well imagine and whose afflictions I longed to
share. The terrible suspense under which I lived, while
confined in my home, was unexpectedly relieved by the
arrival of Sadiq-i-Tabrizi, who came from Tihran and was
received in the house of my father. Though delivering me
from the uncertainties which had been weighing so heavily
upon me, he, to my profound horror, unfolded to my ears a
tale of such terrifying cruelty that the anxieties of suspense
paled before the ghastly light which that lurid story cast
upon my heart.
The circumstances of the martyrdom of
my arrested
brethren in Tihran--for such was their fate--I now proceed
to relate. The fourteen disciples of the Bab, who had been
captured, remained incarcerated in the house of Mahmud
Khan-i-Kalantar from the first to the twenty-second day of
the month of Rabi'u'th-Thani.
(2) Tahirih was also confined
on the upper floor of that same house. Every kind of ill
treatment was inflicted upon them. Their persecutors sought,
by every device, to induce them to supply the information
they required, but failed to obtain a satisfactory answer.
Among the captives was a certain Muhammad-Husayn-i-Maraghiyi,
who obstinately refused to utter a single word
despite the severe pressure that was brought to bear upon
him. They tortured him, they resorted to every possible
measure in order to extort from him any hint that could
446
serve their purpose, but failed to achieve their end. Such
was his unswerving obstinacy that his oppressors thought him
to be dumb. They asked Haji Mulla Isma'il, who had converted
him to his Faith, whether or not he could talk. "He
is mute, but not dumb," he replied; "he is fluent of speech
and is free from any impediment." He had no sooner called
him by his name than the victim answered, assuring him of
his readiness to abide by his will.
Convinced of their powerlessness to
bend their will, they
referred the matter to Mahmud Khan, who, in his turn, submitted
their case to the Amir-Nizam, Mirza Taqi Khan,
(1)
the Grand Vazir of Nasiri'd-Din Shah. The sovereign in
those days refrained from direct interference in matters
pertaining to the affairs of the persecuted community, and
was often ignorant of the decisions that were being made
with regard to its members. His Grand Vazir was invested
with plenary powers to deal with them as he saw fit. No
one questioned his decisions, nor dared disapprove of the
manner in which he exercised his authority. He immediately
issued a peremptory order threatening with execution whoever
among these fourteen prisoners was unwilling to recant
his faith. Seven were compelled to yield to the pressure that
was brought to bear upon them, and were immediately released.
The remaining seven constitute the Seven Martyrs
of Tihran:
1. Haji Mirza Siyyid Ali, surnamed
Khal-i-A'zam,(2) the
Bab's maternal uncle, and one of the leading merchants of
Shiraz. It was this same uncle into whose custody the Bab,
after the death of His father, was entrusted, and who, on
his Nephew's return from His pilgrimage to Hijaz and His
arrest by Husayn Khan, assumed undivided responsibility
for Him by pledging his word in writing. It was he who surrounded
Him, while under his care, with unfailing solicitude,
who served Him with such devotion, and who acted as intermediary
between Him and the hosts of His followers who
flocked to Shiraz to see Him. His only child, a Siyyid Javad,
died in infancy. Towards the middle of the year 1265 A.H.,(3)447
this same Haji Mirza Siyyid Ali left Shiraz and visited the
Bab in the castle of Chihriq. From thence he went to Tihran
and, though having no special occupation, remained in that
city until the outbreak of the sedition which brought about
eventually his martyrdom.
Though his friends appealed to him to
escape the turmoil
that was fast approaching, he refused to heed their counsel
and faced, until his last hour, with complete resignation, the
persecution to which he was subjected. A considerable
number among the more affluent merchants of his acquaintance
offered to pay his ransom, an offer which he rejected.
Finally he was brought before the Amir-Nizam. "The Chief
Magistrate of this realm," the Grand Vazir informed him,
"is loth to inflict the slightest injury upon the Prophet's
descendants. Eminent merchants of Shiraz and Tihran are
willing, nay eager, to pay your ransom. The Maliku't-Tujjar
has even interceded in your behalf. A word of recantation
from you is sufficient to set you free and ensure
your return, with honours, to your native city. I pledge my
word that, should you be willing to acquiesce, the remaining
days of your life will be spent with honour and dignity under
the sheltering shadow of your sovereign." "Your Excellency,"
boldly replied Haji Mirza Siyyid Ali, "if others before me,
who quaffed joyously the cup of martyrdom, have chosen to
reject an appeal such as the one you now make to me, know
of a certainty that I am no less eager to decline such a request.
My repudiation of the truths enshrined in this Revelation
would be tantamount to a rejection of all the Revelations that
have preceded it. To refuse to acknowledge the Mission of
the Siyyid-i-Bab would be to apostatise from the Faith of my
forefathers and to deny the Divine character of the Message
which Muhammad, Jesus, Moses, and all the Prophets of the
past have revealed. God knows that whatever I have heard
and read concerning the sayings and doings of those Messengers,
I have been privileged to witness the same from
this Youth, this beloved Kinsman of mine, from His earliest
boyhood to this, the thirtieth year of His life. Everything
in Him reminds me of His illustrious Ancestor and of the
imams of His Faith whose lives our recorded traditions have
portrayed. I only request of you that you allow me to be
448
the first to lay down my life in the path of my beloved Kinsman."
The Amir was stupefied by such an
answer. In a frenzy of
despair, and without uttering a word, he motioned that he
be taken out and beheaded. As the victim was being conducted
to his death, he was heard, several times, to repeat
these words of Hafiz: "Great is my gratitude to Thee, O my
God, for having granted so bountifully all I have asked of
Thee." "Hear me, O people," he cried to the multitude that
pressed around him; "I have offered myself up as a willing
sacrifice in the path of the Cause of God. The entire province
of Fars, as well as Iraq, beyond the confines of Persia, will
readily testify to my uprightness of conduct, to my sincere
piety and noble lineage. For over a thousand years, you have
prayed and prayed again that the promised Qa'im be made
manifest. At the mention of His name, how often have you
cried, from the depths of your hearts: `Hasten, O God, His
coming; remove every barrier that stands in the way of His
appearance!' And now that He is come, you have driven
Him to a hopeless exile in a remote and sequestered corner
of Adhirbayjan and have risen to exterminate His companions.
Were I to invoke the malediction of God upon you, I am
certain that His avenging wrath would grievously afflict you.
Such is not, however, my prayer. With my last breath, I
pray that the Almighty may wipe away the stain of your
guilt and enable you to awaken from the sleep of heedlessness."(1) These words stirred his executioner to his
very depths.
Pretending that the sword he had been holding in readiness
in his hands required to be resharpened, he hastily went
away, determined never to return again. "When I was
appointed to this service," he was heard to complain, weeping
bitterly the while, "they undertook to deliver into my hands
only those who had been convicted of murder and highway
robbery. I am now ordered by them to shed the blood of
449
one no less holy than the Imam Musay-i-Kazim
(1) himself!"
Shortly after, he departed for Khurasan and there sought to
earn his livelihood as a porter and crier. To the believers
of that province, he recounted the tale of that tragedy, and
expressed his repentance of the act which he had been compelled
to perpetrate. Every time he recalled that incident,
every time the name of Haji Mirza Siyyid Ali was mentioned
to him, tears which he could not repress flowed from his
eyes, tears that were a witness to the affection which that
holy man had instilled into his heart.
2. Mirza Qurban-'Ali,(2) a native of Barfurush in the
province
of Mazindaran, and an outstanding figure in the community
known by the name of Ni'matu'llahi. He was a man
of sincere piety and endowed with great nobleness of nature.
Such was the purity of his life that a considerable number
among the notables of Mazindaran, of Khurasan and Tihran
had pledged him their loyalty, and regarded him as the very
embodiment of virtue. Such was the esteem in which he was
held by his countrymen that, on the occasion of his pilgrimage
to Karbila, a vast concourse of devoted admirers
thronged his route in order to pay their homage to him. In
Hamadan, as well as in Kirmanshah, a great number of people
were influenced by his personality and joined the company
of his followers. Wherever he went, he was greeted with the
acclamations of the people. These demonstrations of popular
enthusiasm were, however, extremely distasteful to him. He
avoided the crowd and disdained the pomp and circumstance
of leadership. On his way to Karbila, while passing through
Mandalij, a shaykh of considerable influence became so
enamoured of him that he renounced all that he had formerly
cherished and, leaving his friends and disciples, followed him
as far as Ya'qubiyyih. Mirza Qurban-'Ali, however, succeeded
in inducing him to return to Mandalij and resume
the work which he had abandoned.
On his return from his pilgrimage, Mirza
Qurban-'Ali
met Mulla Husayn and through him embraced the truth of
the Cause. Owing to illness, he was unable to join the defenders
450
of the fort of Tabarsi, and, but for his unfitness to
travel to Mazindaran, would have been the first to join its
occupants. Next to Mulla Husayn, among the disciples of
the Bab, Vahid was the person to whom he was most attached.
During my visit to Tihran, I was informed that the
latter had consecrated his life to the service of the Cause and
had risen with exemplary devotion to promote its interests
far and wide. I often heard Mirza Qurban-'Ali, who was
then in the capital, deplore that illness. "How greatly I
grieve," I heard him several times remark, "to have been
deprived of my share of the cup which Mulla Husayn and
his companions have quaffed! I long to join Vahid and
enrol myself under his banner and strive to make amends for
my previous failure." He was preparing to leave Tihran,
when he was suddenly arrested. His modest attire witnessed
to the degree of his detachment. Clad in a white tunic,
after the manner of the Arabs, cloaked in a coarsely woven
aba,(1) and wearing the
head-dress of the people of Iraq, he
seemed, as he walked the streets, the very embodiment of
renunciation. He scrupulously adhered to all the observances
of his Faith, and with exemplary piety performed his devotions.
"The Bab Himself conforms to the observances
of His Faith in their minutest details," he often remarked.
"Am I to neglect on my part the things which are observed
by my Leader?"
When Mirza Qurban-'Ali was arrested
and brought before
the Amir-Nizam, a commotion such as Tihran had rarely
experienced was raised. Large crowds of people thronged
the approaches to the headquarters of the government, eager
to learn what would befall him. "Since last night," the Amir,
as soon as he had seen him, remarked, "I have been besieged
by all classes of State officials who have vigorously interceded
in your behalf.(2) From what I
learn of the position you
occupy and the influence your words exercise, you are not
451
much inferior to the Siyyid-i-Bab Himself. Had you claimed
for yourself the position of leadership, better would it have
been than to declare your allegiance to one who is certainly
inferior to you in knowledge." "The knowledge which I
have acquired," he boldly retorted, "has led me to bow down
in allegiance before Him whom I have recognised to be my
Lord and Leader. Ever since I attained the age of manhood,
I have regarded justice and fairness as the ruling motives of
my life. I have judged Him fairly, and have reached the
conclusion that should this Youth, to whose transcendent
power friend and foe alike testify, be false, every Prophet
of God, from time immemorial down to the present day,
should be denounced as the very embodiment of falsehood!
I am assured of the unquestioning devotion of over a thousand
admirers, and yet I am powerless to change the heart of the
least among them. This Youth, however, has proved Himself
capable of transmuting, through the elixir of His love,
the souls of the most degraded among His fellow men. Upon
a thousand like me He has, unaided and alone, exerted such
influence that, without even attaining His presence, they
have flung aside their own desires and have clung passionately
to His will. Fully conscious of the inadequacy of the sacrifice
they have made, these yearn to lay down their lives for His
sake, in the hope that this further evidence of their devotion
may be worthy of mention in His Court."
"I am loth," the Amir-Nizam remarked,
"whether your
words be of God or not, to pronounce the sentence of death
against the possessor of so exalted a station." "Why hesitate?
burst forth the impatient victim. "Are you not
aware that all names descend from Heaven? He whose
name is Ali,(1) in whose path I
am laying down my life, has
452
from time immemorial inscribed my name, Qurban-'Ali,
(1)
in the scroll of His chosen martyrs. This is indeed the day
on which I celebrate the Qurban festival, the day on which
I shall seal with my life-blood my faith in His Cause. Be
not, therefore, reluctant, and rest assured that I shall never
blame you for your act. The sooner you strike off my head,
the greater will be my gratitude to you." "Take him away
from this place!" cried the Amir. "Another moment, and
this dervish will have cast his spell over me!" "You are
proof against that magic," Mirza Qurban-'Ali replied, "that
can captivate only the pure in heart. You and your like
can never be made to realise the entrancing power of that
Divine elixir which, swift as the twinkling of an eye, transmutes
the souls of men."
Exasperated by the reply, the Amir-Nizam arose from his
seat and, his whole frame shaking with anger, exclaimed:
"Nothing but the edge of the sword can silence the voice
of this deluded people!" "No need," he told the executioners
who were in attendance upon him, "to bring any more members
of this hateful sect before me. Words are powerless
to overcome their unswerving obstinacy. Whomever you
are able to induce to recant his faith, release him; as for the
rest, strike off their heads."
As he drew near the scene of his death,
Mirza Qurban-'Ali,
intoxicated with the prospect of an approaching reunion
with his Beloved, broke forth into expressions of joyous
exultation. "Hasten to slay me," he cried with rapturous
delight, "for through this death you will have offered me the
chalice of everlasting life. Though my withered breath you
now extinguish, with a myriad lives will my Beloved reward
me; lives such as no mortal heart can conceive!" "Hearken
to my words, you who profess to be the followers of the Apostle
of God," he pleaded, as he turned his gaze to the concourse
of spectators. "Muhammad, the Day-Star of Divine guidance,
who in a former age arose above the horizon of Hijaz,
has to-day, in the person of Ali-Muhammad, again risen from
the Day-Spring of Shiraz, shedding the same radiance and
imparting the same warmth. A rose is a rose in whichever
garden, and at whatever time, it may bloom." Seeing on
453
followers hasten to Khurasan, reached him, he enthusiastically
responded, joined the companions who were proceeding to
Badasht, and there received the appellation of Sirru'l-Vujud.
Whilst in their company, his understanding of the Cause
grew deeper and his zeal for its promotion correspondingly
increased. He grew to be the very embodiment of detachment,
and felt more and more impatient to demonstrate in a
befitting manner the spirit with which his Faith had inspired
him. In the exposition of the meaning of the verses of the
Qur'an and the traditions of Islam, he displayed an insight
which few could rival, and the eloquence with which he set
forth those truths won him the admiration of his fellow-disciples.
In the days when the fort of Tabarsi had become
the rallying centre for the disciples of the Bab, he languished
disconsolate upon a sick-bed, unable to lend his assistance
and play his part for its defence. No sooner had he recovered
than, finding that that memorable siege had ended with the
massacre of his fellow-disciples, he arose, with added determination,
to make up by his self-sacrificing labours for the
loss which the Cause had sustained. That determination
carried him eventually to the field of martyrdom and won
him its crown.
Conducted to the block and waiting for
the moment of
his execution, he turned his gaze towards those twin martyrs
who had preceded him and who still lay entwined in each
other's embrace. "Well done, beloved companions!" he
cried, as he fixed his gaze upon their gory heads. "You have
turned Tihran into a paradise! Would that I had preceded
you!" Drawing from his pocket a coin, which he handed
to his executioner, he begged him to purchase for him something
with which he could sweeten his mouth. He took
some of it and gave the rest to him, saying: "I have forgiven
you your act; approach and deal your blow. For thirty years
I have yearned to witness this blessed day, and was
fearful lest I should carry this wish with me unfulfilled to
the grave." "Accept me, O my God," he cried, as he turned
his eyes to heaven, "unworthy though I be, and deign to
inscribe my name upon the scroll of those immortals who
have laid down their lives on the altar of sacrifice." He was
455
Upon his arrival in Tihran, he requested Haji
Muhammad-Taqi to join him. Siyyid Husayn accompanied
him from Baghdad to the capital and through him was converted
to the Faith.
As he faced the multitude that had
gathered round him
to witness his martyrdom, Siyyid Husayn raised his voice
and said: "Hear me, O followers of Islam! My name is
Husayn, and I am a descendant of the Siyyidu'sh-Shuhada,
who also bore that name.(1)
The mujtahids of the holy cities
of Najaf and Karbila have unanimously testified to my position
as the authorised expounder of the law and teachings of
their Faith. Not until recently had heard thee name of the
Siyyid-i-Bab. The mastery I have obtained over the intricacies
of the Islamic teachings has enabled me to appreciate
the value of the Message which the Siyyid-i-Bab has brought.
I am convinced that, were I to deny the Truth which He has
revealed, I should, by this very act, have renounced my
allegiance to every Revelation that has preceded it. I appeal
to every one of you to call upon the ulamas and mujtahids
of this city and to convene a gathering, at which I will undertake
in their presence to establish the truth of this Cause.
Let them then judge whether I am able to demonstrate the
validity of the claims advanced by the Bab. If they be
satisfied with the proofs which I shall adduce in support of
my argument, let them desist from shedding the blood of
the innocent; and if I fail, let them inflict upon me the punishment
I deserve." These words had scarcely dropped from
his lips when an officer in the service of the Amir-Nizam
haughtily interjected: "I carry with me your death-warrant
signed and sealed by seven of the recognised mujtahids of
Tihran, who have in their own handwriting pronounced you
an infidel. I will myself be answerable to God on the Day of
Judgment for your blood, and will lay the responsibility upon
those leaders in whose judgment we have been asked to put
our trust and to whose decisions we have been compelled to
submit." With these words he drew out his dagger and
stabbed him with such force that he immediately fell dead
at his feet.
5. Soon after, Haji Muhammad-Taqiy-i-Kirmani was led
457
to the scene of execution. The ghastliness of the sight he
beheld provoked his violent indignation. "Approach, you
wretched and heartless tyrant," he burst forth as he turned
to his persecutor, "and hasten to slay me, for I am impatient
to join my beloved Husayn. To live after him is a torture
I cannot endure."
6. No sooner had Haji Muhammad-Taqi
uttered these
words than Siyyid Murtada, who was one of the noted
merchants of Zanjan, hastened to take precedence of his
companions. He flung himself over the body of Haji Muhammad-Taqi,
and pleaded that, being a siyyid, his martyrdom
would be more meritorious in the sight of God than
that of Haji Muhammad-Taqi. As the executioner un-
At this stage of my narrative I was
privileged to submit
to Baha'u'llah such sections of my work as I had already
revised and completed. How abundantly have my labours
been rewarded by Him whose favour alone I seek, and for
whose satisfaction I have addressed myself to this task!
He graciously summoned me to His presence and vouchsafed
me His blessings. I was in my home in the prison-city
of Akka, and lived in the neighbourhood of the house of
Aqay-i-Kalim, when the summons of my Beloved reached
me. That day, the seventh of the month of Rabi'u'th-Thani
in the year 1306 A.H.,(1) I
shall never forget. I here
reproduce the gist of His words to me on that memorable
occasion:
"In a Tablet which We yesterday
revealed, We have
explained the meaning of the words, `Turn your eyes away,'(2)
in the course of Our reference to the circumstances attending
the gathering at Badasht. We were celebrating, in the company
of a number of distinguished notables, the nuptials of
one of the princes of royal blood in Tihran, when Siyyid
Ahmad-i-Yazdi, father of Siyyid Husayn, the Bab's amanuensis,
appeared suddenly at the door. He beckoned to Us,
and seemed to be the bearer of an important message which
he wished immediately to deliver. We were, however, unable
at that moment to leave the gathering, and motioned to
him to wait. When the meeting had dispersed, he informed
460
Us that Tahirih had been placed in strict confinement in
Qazvin, and that her life was in great danger. We immediately
summoned Muhammad-Hadiy-i-Farhadi, and gave him
the necessary directions to release her from her captivity, and
escort her to the capital. As the enemy had seized Our house,
We were unable to accommodate her indefinitely in Our home.
Accordingly, We arranged for her transference from Our
house to that of the Minister of War,
(1) who, in those days, had
been disgraced by his sovereign and had been deported to
Kashan. We requested his sister, who still was numbered
among Our friends, to act as hostess to Tahirih.
"She remained in her company until the
call of the Bab,
bidding Us proceed to Khurasan, reached Our ears. We
decided that Tahirih should proceed immediately to that
province, and commissioned Mirza
(2) to conduct her to a place
outside the gate of the city, and from thence to any locality
she deemed advisable in that neighbourhood. She was taken
to an orchard in the vicinity of which was a deserted building,
where they found an old man who acted as its caretaker.
Mirza Musa returned and informed Us of the reception
which had been accorded to them, and highly praised the
beauty of the surrounding landscape. We subsequently arranged
for her departure for Khurasan, and promised that
We would follow within the space of a few days.
"We soon joined her at Badasht, where
We rented a garden
for her use, and appointed the same Muhammad-Hadi who
had achieved her deliverance, as her doorkeeper. About
seventy of Our companions were with Us and lodged in a place
in the vicinity of that garden.
"We fell ill one day, and were confined to
bed. Tahirih
sent a request to call upon Us. We were surprised at her
message, and were at a loss as to what We should reply.
Suddenly We saw her at the door, her face unveiled before
Us. How well has Mirza Aqa Jan
(3) commented upon that
incident. `The face of Fatimih,' he said, `must needs be
revealed on the Day of Judgment and appear unveiled before
the eyes of men. At that moment the voice of the Unseen
461
shall be heard saying: "Turn your eyes away from that which
ye have seen."
"How great was the consternation that
seized the companions
on that day! Fear and bewilderment filled their
hearts. A few, unable to tolerate that which was to them
so revolting a departure from the established customs of
Islam, fled in horror from before her face. Dismayed, they
sought refuge in a deserted castle in that neighbourhood.
Among those who were scandalised by her behaviour and
severed from her entirely were the Siyyid-i-Nahri
(1) and his
brother Mirza Hadi, to both of whom We sent word that it
was unnecessary for them to desert their companions and
seek refuge in a castle.
"Our friends eventually dispersed,
leaving Us at the
mercy of Our enemies. When, at a later time, We went to
Amul, such was the turmoil which the people had raised
that above four thousand persons had congregated in the
masjid and had crowded onto the roofs of their houses. The
leading mulla of the town denounced Us bitterly. `You have
perverted the Faith of Islam,' he cried in his mazindarani
dialect, `and sullied its fame! Last night I saw you in a
dream enter the masjid, which was thronged by an eager
multitude that had gathered to witness your arrival. As the
crowd pressed round you, I beheld, and, lo, the Qa'im was
standing in a corner with His gaze fixed upon your countenance,
His features betraying great surprise. This dream
I regard as evidence of your having deviated from the path
of Truth.' We assured him that the expression of surprise
on that countenance was a sign of the Qa'im's strong disapproval
of the treatment he and his fellow-townsmen had
accorded Us. He questioned Us regarding the Mission of the
Bab. We informed him that, although We had never met
Him face to face, yet We cherished, none the less, a great
affection for Him. We expressed Our profound conviction
that He had, under no circumstances, acted contrary to
the Faith of Islam.
The mulla and his followers, however
refused to believe
Us, and rejected Our testimony as a perversion of the truth.
They eventually placed Us in confinement, and forbade Our
462
friends to meet Us. The acting governor of Amul succeeded
in effecting Our release from captivity. Through an opening
in the wall that he ordered his men to make, he enabled Us
to leave that room, and conducted Us to his house. No sooner
were the inhabitants informed of this act than they arose
against Us, besieged the governor's residence, pelted Us with
stones, and hurled in Our face the foulest invectives.
"At the time We proposed to send
Muhammad-Hadiy-i-Farhadi
to Qazvin, in order to achieve the deliverance of
Tahirih and conduct her to Tihran, Shaykh Abu-Turab wrote
Us, insisting that such an attempt was fraught with grave
risks and might occasion an unprecedented tumult. We
refused to be deflected from Our purpose. That Shaykh was
a kind-hearted man, was simple and lowly in temper, and
behaved with great dignity. He lacked courage and determination,
however, and betrayed weakness on certain
occasions."
A word should now be added regarding
the closing stages
of the tragedy that witnessed to the heroism of the Seven
Martyrs of Tihran. For three days and three nights they
remained abandoned in the Sabzih-Maydan, which adjoined
the imperial palace, exposed to untold indignities which an
unrelenting foe heaped upon them. Thousands of devout
shi'ahs gathered round their corpses, kicked them with their
463
feet, and spat upon their faces. They were pelted, cursed,
and mocked by the angry multitude. Heaps of refuse were
flung upon their remains by the bystanders, and the foulest
atrocities were perpetrated upon their bodies. No voice was
raised in protest, no hand was stretched to stay the arm of
the barbarous oppressor.
Having allayed the tumult of their
passion, they buried
them outside the gate of the capital, in a place which lay
beyond the limits of the public cemetery, adjoining the
moat, between the gates of Naw and of Shah Abdu'l-'Azim.
They were all laid in the same grave, thus remaining united
in body, as they had been in spirit during the days of their
earthly life.(1) The news of their martyrdom came as an
added blow to
the Bab, who was already plunged in sorrow at the fate that
had befallen the heroes of Tabarsi. In the detailed Tablet
He revealed in their honour, every word of which testified
to the exalted position they occupied in His eyes, He referred
to them as those very "Seven Goats" spoken of in the traditions
of Islam, who on the Day of Judgment shall "walk in
front of the promised Qa'im." They shall symbolise by their
life the noblest spirit of heroism, and by their death shall
manifest true acquiescence in His will. By preceding the
Qa'im, the Bab explained, is meant that their martyrdom
will precede that of the Qa'im Himself, who is their Shepherd.
What the Bab had predicted came to be fulfilled, inasmuch
as His own martyrdom occurred four months later in Tabriz.
That memorable year witnessed, in
addition to the martyrdom
of the Bab and that of His seven companions in Tihran,
the momentous happenings of Nayriz which culminated in
the death of Vahid. Towards the end of that same year,
Zanjan likewise became the centre of a storm which raged
with exceptional violence throughout the surrounding district,
bringing in its wake the massacre of a vast number of
464
the Bab's staunchest disciples. That year, rendered memorable
by the magnificent heroism which those staunch supporters
of His Faith displayed, not to speak of the marvellous
circumstances that attended His own martyrdom, must ever
remain as one of the most glorious chapters ever recorded
in that Faith's blood-stained history. The entire face of the
land was blackened by the atrocities in which a cruel and
rapacious enemy freely and persistently indulged. From
Khurasan, on the eastern confines of Persia, as far west as
Tabriz, the scene of the Bab's martyrdom, and from the
northern cities of Zanjan and Tihran stretching south as
far as Nayriz, in the province of Fars, the whole country was
enveloped in darkness, a darkness that heralded the dawning
light of the Revelation which the expected Husayn was soon
to manifest, a Revelation mightier and more glorious than
that which the Bab Himself had proclaimed.
(1)