HE letter of Mulla Husayn
decided the Bab to undertake His contemplated pilgrimage to Hijaz.
Entrusting His wife to His mother, and committing
them both to the care and protection of His maternal
uncle, He joined the company of the pilgrims of Fars
who were preparing to leave Shiraz for Mecca and Medina.(1) Quddus was His only companion, and the Ethiopian servant His personal attendant. He first proceeded to Bushihr, the
seat of His uncle's business, where in former days He, in
close association with him, had lived the life of a humble
merchant. Having there completed the preliminary arrangements
for His long and arduous voyage, He embarked on a
sailing vessel, which, after two months of slow, stormy, and
unsteady sailing, landed Him upon the shores of that sacred
land.(2) High seas and the complete absence of comfort could
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hardships of that voyage. "For days," He wrote, "we suffered
from the scarcity of water. I had to content myself with the
juice of the sweet lemon." Because of this experience, He
supplicated the Almighty to grant that the means of ocean
travel might soon be speedily improved, that its hardships
might be reduced, and its perils be entirely eliminated.
Within a short space of time, since that prayer was offered,
the evidences of a remarkable improvement in all forms of
maritime transport have greatly multiplied, and the Persian
Gulf, which in those days hardly possessed a single steam-driven
vessel, now boasts a fleet of ocean liners that can,
within the range of a few days and in the utmost comfort,
carry the people of Fars on their annual pilgrimage to Hijaz.
The peoples of the West, among whom the first evidences
of this great Industrial Revolution have appeared, are, alas,
as yet wholly unaware of the Source whence this mighty
stream, this great motive power, proceeds--a force that has
revolutionised every aspect of their material life. Their own
history testifies to the fact that in the year which witnessed
the dawn of this glorious Revelation, there suddenly appeared
evidences of an industrial and economic revolution that the
people themselves declare to have been unprecedented in the
history of mankind. In their concern for the details of the
working and adjustments of this newly conceived machinery,
they have gradually lost sight of the Source and object of
this tremendous power which the Almighty has committed to
their charge. They seem to have sorely misused this power
and misunderstood its function. Designed to confer upon
the people of the West the blessings of peace and of happiness,
it has been utilised by them to promote the interests of destruction
and war.
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His own name, seven in the name of Quddus, and three in
the name of His Ethiopian servant. He refused to partake
of the meat of this consecrated sacrifice, preferring instead
to distribute it freely among the poor and needy of that
neighbourhood.
Although the month of Dhi'l-Hijjih,(1) the month of pilgrimage
to Mecca and Medina, coincided in that year with
the first month of the winter season, yet so intense was the
heat in that region that the pilgrims who made the circuit of
of the Truth which I have proclaimed. Thus shall He
who speaks the Truth be made known, and he that speaks
falsely shall be condemned to eternal misery and shame.
Then shall the way of Truth be revealed and made manifest
to all men."
This peremptory challenge, thrust so unexpectedly by the
Bab upon Mirza Muhit-i-Kirmani, profoundly distressed
him. He was overpowered by its directness, its compelling
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majesty and force. In the presence of that Youth, he, notwithstanding
his age, his authority and learning, felt as a
helpless bird prisoned in the grasp of a mighty eagle. Confused
and full of fear, he replied: "My Lord, my Master!
Ever since the day on which my eyes beheld You in Karbila,
I seemed at last to have found and recognised Him who had
been the object of my quest. I renounce whosoever has failed
to recognise You, and despise him in whose heart may yet
linger the faintest misgivings as to Your purity and holiness.
I pray You to overlook my weakness, and entreat You to
answer me in my perplexity. Please God I may, at this
very place, within the precincts of this hallowed shrine,
swear my fealty to You, and arise for the triumph of Your
Cause. If I be insincere in what I declare, if in my heart I
should disbelieve what my lips proclaim, I would deem
myself utterly unworthy of the grace of the Prophet of God,
and regard my action as an act of manifest disloyalty to Ali,
His chosen successor."
The Bab, who listened attentively to his words, and who
was well aware of his helplessness and poverty of soul, answered
and said: "Verily I say, the Truth is even now known
and distinguished from falsehood. O shrine of the Prophet
of God, and you, O Quddus, who have believed in Me! I
take you both, in this hour, as My witnesses. You have
seen and heard that which has come to pass between Me and
him. I call upon you to testify thereunto, and God, verily,
is, beyond and above you, My sure and ultimate Witness.
He is the All-Seeing, the All-Knowing, the All-Wise. O
Muhit! Set forth whatsoever perplexes your mind, and I
will, by the aid of God, unloose My tongue and undertake to
resolve your problems, so that you may testify to the excellence
of My utterance and realise that no one besides Me
is able to manifest My wisdom."
Mirza Muhit responded to the invitation of the Bab and
submitted to Him his questions. Pleading the necessity of
his immediate departure for Medina, he expressed the hope
of receiving, ere his departure from that city, the text of the
promised reply. "I will grant your request," the Bab assured
him. On My way to Medina I shall, with the assistance
of God, reveal My answer to your questions. If I meet you
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not in that city, My reply will surely reach you immediately
after your arrival at Karbila. Whatever justice and fairness
may dictate, the same shall I expect you to fulfil. `If ye do
well, to your own behoof will ye do well: and if ye do evil,
against yourselves will ye do it.' `God is verily independent
of all His creatures.'"(1) Mirza Muhit, ere his departure, again expressed his firm
resolve to redeem his solemn pledge. "I shall never depart
from Medina," he assured the Bab, "whatever may betide,
until I have fulfilled my covenant with You." As the mote
which is driven before the gale, he, unable to withstand the
sweeping majesty of the Revelation proclaimed by the Bab,
fled in terror from before His face. He tarried awhile in Medina
and, faithless to his pledge and disregardful of the admonitions
of his conscience, left for Karbila.
The Bab, faithful to His promise, revealed, on His way
from Mecca to Medina, His written reply to the questions
that had perplexed the mind of Mirza Muhit, and gave it the
name of Sahifiyi-i-Baynu'l-Haramayn.(2) Mirza Muhit, who
received it in the early days of his arrival in Karbila, remained
unmoved by its tone and refused to recognise the precepts
which it inculcated. His attitude towards the Faith was one
of concealed and persistent opposition. At times he professed
to be a follower and supporter of that notorious adversary of
the Bab, Haji Mirza Karim Khan, and occasionally claimed
for himself the station of an independent leader. Nearing
the end of his days, whilst residing in Iraq, he, feigning submission
to Baha'u'llah, expressed, through one of the Persian
princes who dwelt in Baghdad, a desire to meet Him. He
requested that his proposed interview be regarded as strictly
confidential. "Tell him," was Baha'u'llah's reply, "that in
the days of My retirement in the mountains of Sulaymaniyyih,
I, in a certain ode which I composed, set forth the essential
requirements from every wayfarer who treads the path of
search in his quest of Truth. Share with him this verse from
that ode: `If thine aim be to cherish thy life, approach not
our court; but if sacrifice be thy heart's desire, come and let
others come with thee. For such is the way of Faith, if in
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to all people the appearance of the promised Qa'im. I remained,
however, ignorant of the name of the author of that
book, nor was I informed of the circumstances attending
that call.' `A great commotion,' I remarked, `has indeed
seized that land during the last few years. A Youth, a
descendant of the Prophet and a merchant by profession,
has claimed that His utterance was the Voice of Divine inspiration.
He has publicly asserted that, within the space
of a few days, there could stream from His tongue verses of
such number and excellence as would surpass in volume and
beauty the Qur'an itself--a work which it took Muhammad
no less than twenty-three years to reveal. A multitude of
people, both high and low, civil and ecclesiastical, among the
inhabitants of Persia, have rallied round His standard and
have willingly sacrificed themselves in His path. That
Youth has, during the past year, in the last days of the month
of Sha'ban,(1) suffered martyrdom in Tabriz, in the province
of Adhirbayjan. They who persecuted Him sought by this
means to extinguish the light which He kindled in that land.
Since His martyrdom, however, His influence has pervaded
all classes of people.' The Sherif, who was listening attentively,
expressed his indignation at the behaviour of those
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who had persecuted the Bab. `The malediction of God be
upon these evil people,' he exclaimed, `a people who, in days
past, treated in the same manner our holy and illustrious
ancestors!' With these words the Sherif concluded his conversation
with me."
From Mecca the Bab proceeded to Medina. It was the
first day of the month of Muharram, in the year 1261 A.H.,(1)
when He found Himself on the way to that holy city. As
He approached it, He called to mind the stirring events that
had immortalised the name of Him who had lived and died
within its walls. Those scenes which bore eloquent testimony
to the creative power of that immortal Genius seemed to be
re-enacted, with undiminished splendour, before His eyes.
He prayed as He drew nigh unto that holy sepulchre which
enshrined the mortal remains of the Prophet of God. He
also remembered, as He trod that holy ground, that shining
Herald of His own Dispensation. He knew that in the
cemetery of Baqi', in a place not far distant from the shrine
of Muhammad, there had been laid to rest Shaykh Ahmad-i-Ahsa'i,
the harbinger of His own Revelation, who, after a
life of onerous service, had decided to spend the evening of
his days within the precincts of that hallowed shrine. There
came to Him also the vision of those holy men, those pioneers
and martyrs of the Faith, who had fallen gloriously on the
field of battle, and who, with their life-blood, had sealed the
triumph of the Cause of God. Their sacred dust seemed as
if reanimated by the gentle tread of His feet. Their shades
seemed to have been stirred by the reviving breath of His
presence. They looked to Him as if they had arisen at His
approach, were hastening towards Him, and were voicing their
welcome. They seemed to be addressing to Him this fervent
plea: `Repair not unto Thy native land, we beseech Thee,
O Thou Beloved of our hearts! Abide Thou in our midst,
for here, far from the tumult of Thine enemies who are lying
in wait for Thee, Thou shalt be safe and secure. We are
fearful for Thee. We dread the plottings and machinations
of Thy foes. We tremble at the thought that their deeds
might bring eternal damnation to their souls." "Fear not,"
the Bab's indomitable Spirit replied: "I am come into this
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world to bear witness to the glory of sacrifice. You are aware
of the intensity of My longing; you realise the degree of My
renunciation. Nay, beseech the Lord your God to hasten
the hour of My martyrdom and to accept My sacrifice. Rejoice,
for both I and Quddus will be slain on the altar of our
devotion to the King of Glory. The blood which we are
destined to shed in His path will water and revive the garden
of our immortal felicity. The drops of this consecrated blood
will be the seed out of which will arise the mighty Tree of
God, the Tree that will gather beneath its all-embracing
shadow the peoples and kindreds of the earth. Grieve not,
therefore, if I depart from this land, for I am hastening to
fulfil My destiny."