World Canada | |||
date | event | tags | firsts |
1947 (In the year) 194- |
The first Chilean Teaching Conference was held in Santiago. | Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Teaching; Teaching; - First conferences; Santiago, Chile; Chile | first Teaching Conference in Chile |
1947 (In the year) 194- |
Gladys Anderson Weeden arrived at the World Centre to assist Shoghi Effendi, and took responsibility for liaising with government and other officials. [BW18:694]
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Gladys Anderson Weeden; Ben Weeden; - Bahá'í World Centre | |
1947 (In the year) 194- |
The Hazíratu'l-Quds of Tihrán was completed. [BW11:588] | Haziratul-Quds (Bahá'í centres); Tehran, Iran; Iran | |
1947 (In the year) 194- |
The Australian-New Zealand teaching plan, the Australian Six Year Plan (1947–53), comprising internal goals only, was launched. [BBRSM158; LGANZ97; The Spiritual Conquest of the Planet (Supplement) p2]
The homefront goals were: |
- Teaching Plans; Australia-New Zealand Six Year Plan; Australia; New Zealand | |
1947 (In the year) 194- |
The first summer school in Chile took place in Loncoche on property donated by Mrs Fabienne Guillon. | Fabienne Guillon; Loncoche, Chile; Chile | first summer school in Chile |
1947 1 Feb 194- |
Reflecting the unity in diversity highly valued by the Bahá'í community, Amin Banani, Mildred Mottahedeh, Hilda Yen, and Matthew Bullock presented the statement "A Bahá'í Declaration of Human Obligations and Rights" to the UN, which ended by quoting a well-known passage by Baha'u'llah: "The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens."
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United Nations; Matthew Bullock; Bahá'í International Community; Firsts, other; Bahá'í World News Service (BWNS); Amin Banani; Mildred Mottahedeh; Hilda Yen; New York, USA; United States (USA) | the first delegation of the Baha'i International Community to the United Nations |
1947 7 Feb 194- |
Honor Kempton arrived in Luxembourg, the first pioneer to the country. | Honor Kempton; Luxembourg | first pioneer to Luxembourg |
1947 20 Feb 194- |
Ugo and Angeline Giachery moved from New York to Rome. [BN No 192 Feb 1947 p1]
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Ugo Giachery; Angeline Giachery; Pioneer; Augusto Salvetti; Italy | |
1947 Ridván 194- |
The Bahá'ís of Iraq launched a Three Year Plan (1947-1950). [Ruhi 8.2 p46; BBRSM158]
The goals were: |
- Teaching Plans; - Teaching Plans, National; Iraq | |
1947 Ridván 194- |
The National Spiritual Assembly of Australia and New Zealand launched a Six Year Plan (1947-1953). [Ruhi 8.2 p46] | - Teaching Plans; - Teaching Plans, National; Australia; New Zealand | |
1947 Ridván 194- |
The first Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Quito was established. Those elected were: Hascle Coxnbleth, Chaixman, Eithel Santos, Recording Secretary, Hans Levy, Vice-chairman, Eloy Maran, Treasurer, Hans Dory, Secretary, Nelson Sanchez, Librarian, Rosario Vera B., Jose Elias Cedeño, ama Lais Alcivar Z. [Heroes of God: History of the Bahá'í Faith in Ecuador, 1940-1979 p.33] | Quito, Ecuador | first local spiritual assembly of Quito |
1947 Ridván 194- |
The National Spiritual Assembly of India and Burma added the newly formed nation of Pakistan to their unit. As the state of Pakistan was created on the 14th of August 1947 it can be assumed that the National Spiritual Assembly of India, Pakistan and Burma was created after this date. In a letter from the Guardian 24 October 1947 he mentions all three nations as one unit. [MSEIp289] ] | National Spiritual Assembly, formation; India; India; Myanmar | |
1947 Ridván 194- |
The Bahá'ís of Germany held their first National Convention since Himmler's proclamation in 1937, marking the removal of more than a decade of oppression and the establishment of a return to normalcy. This freedom would not last long in the eastern part of Germany, as the newly-formed communist German Democratic Republic banned all Bahá'í activities again in 1948. Bahá'í activities were encouraged to continue in the Western Zone, under the new government now known as West Germany. The ban on the Faith in the GDR would last for the entirety of the GDR, where the Faith was not officially recognized until after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1990. During this time, the Bahá'ís of Germany distributed Bahá'u'lláh's messages of peace and unity throughout Eastern Europe.
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Persecution, German Democratic Republic; Germany | |
1947 Apr 194- |
The Tokyo Spiritual Assembly, suspended during the war, was re-established. | Local Spiritual Assembly; Tokyo, Japan | |
1947 May 194- |
Clarence Iverson visited the Bahamas, the first recorded visit to the islands by a Bahá'í. | - First Bahá'ís by country or area; - Islands; Bahamas | first recorded visit to Bahamas |
1947 18 May 194- |
The National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States and Canada was accredited by the United Nations as a non-governmental organization with observer status. [BW12:597; PP303; BIC site History 18 May 1947] | National Spiritual Assembly of the United States and Canada; United Nations; - Non-governmental organizations (NGO); Bahá'í International Community; New York, USA; United States (USA) | |
1947 5 Jun 194- |
Shoghi Effendi issued a directive to the National Spiritual Assembly of the United States and Canada. Among other objectives he assigned tasks to the Canadian community in preparation for establishing their own National Spiritual Assembly. They were to carry the message to territories not yet opened in country and externally to Newfoundland and Greenland. [Bahá'í News No 198 August 1947 p8] In 1948 the newly formed National Spiritual Assembly of Canada established a Teaching Committee for Greenland and Newfoundland. [Bahá'í News No 210 August 1948 p7] | Greenland; Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada | |
1947 18 Jun 194- |
The International Bahá'í Bureau contributed to the preparatory work of the Human Rights Commission for the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. [BIC History 18 Jun 1947] | United Nations; Bahá'í International Community; New York City, NY | |
1947 20 Jun 194- |
George Townshend sent a letter of resignation from the Church of Ireland to the Bishop of Killaloe, naming 30 September for the effective date. [GT195] | George Townshend; Ireland | |
1947 4 Jul 194- |
'Abbás Sháhídzádih was martyred in Sháhí, Mázandarán, Iran and a fellow Bahá'í, Habib Allah Hushmand, was murdered in Sarvistan. [BW18:390, Towards a History of Iran's Bahá'í Community During the Reign of Mohammad Reza Shah, 1941-1979 by Mina Yazdani.] | * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution, Deaths; - Persecution; Shahi, Iran; Mazandaran, Iran; Iran | |
1947 5 Jul 194- |
Manuel Garcia Vasquez became a Bahá'í in Spain, the first believer in the country. | - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Spain | first Bahá'í in Spain |
1947 9 Jul 194- |
Shoghi Effendi, as Head of the Bahá'í Faith resident in the Bahá'í World Centre, received a letter from the chairman of the United Nations Special Committee on Palestine requesting a statement on the relationship the Bahá'í Faith had to Palestine and the Bahá'í attitude to any future changes in the status of the country. [BW11:43, Text]
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United Nations; * Shoghi Effendi (chronology); Shoghi Effendi, Writings of; - Statements; * Publications; Shoghi Effendi, Works of; Politics; Peace; - Bahá'í World Centre; Haifa, Israel; Palestine; Israel | |
1947 Sep 194- |
Léa Nys became a Bahá'í in Belgium, the first Belgian to accept the Faith after World War Two.
|
- First Bahá'ís by country or area; Belgium | first Belgian Bahá'í |
1947 13 Sep 194- |
The passing of Haji Mahmúd Qassabchí. In 1933 Qassabchí had suffered a severe attack of paralysis which he narrowly survived and as a result of which he could hardly move or speak for the rest of his life. He was buried at Salman Pak, about thirty miles southeast of Baghdad. [BW11p502-503]
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Hájí Mahmud Qassabchi; - In Memoriam; House of Bahá'u'lláh (Baghdad); Báb, Shrine of (Haifa); Musa Banani; - Restoration and renovation; Baghdad, Iraq; Avashiq, Iraq; Iraq | first Hazíratu'l-Quds in Iraq in the village of Avashiq |
1947 30 Sep 194- |
George Townshend, at the age of 71 years, resigned his position with the Church of Ireland. [GT195]
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George Townshend; Ireland | first ordained priest of a Protestant church to renounce his Orders and become Bahá'í |
1947 17 Nov 194- |
The first two Danes to accept the Faith, May Marit Vestby and Palle Benemann Bischoff became Bahá'ís. | May Marit Vestby; Palle Benemann Bischoff; Denmark | first two Danish Bahá’ís |
1947 12 Dec 194- |
The first pioneer to Portugal, Valeria Lamb Nicols, arrived from a pioneer post in Denmark. | - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Portugal | first pioneer to Portugal |
1947 31 Dec 194- |
Suzette Hipp became a Bahá'í in Luxembourg, the second Luxembourger to accept the Faith and the first to do so in Luxembourg. | - First Bahá'ís by country or area; Luxembourg | first to become Bahá'í in Luxembourg |
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