World Canada | |||
date | event | tags | firsts |
1988 24 Dec 198- |
The first National Youth Conference of Côte d'Ivoire took place. [BINS196:9] | Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Youth; Youth; - First conferences; Ivory Coast | first National Youth Conference of Côte d’Ivoire |
1988 30 Dec - 1989 1 Jan 198- |
Senior officers of the Bahá'í International Community in the Holy Land, Geneva, and New York met with representatives of five national spiritual assemblies to discuss their collaboration with the United Nations, its agencies and their governments. | Bahá'í International Community | |
1988 29 Dec 198- |
The Universal House of Justice issued a letter to the Bahá'ís in the United States published as Individual Rights and Freedoms in the World Order of Bahá'u'lláh. [Mess86-01p60] | * Universal House of Justice, Letters and messages; * Publications; * Administration; * Administrative Order; Authority; Bahá'í Faith, Evolutionary nature of; Consultation; Criticism and apologetics; - Ethics; Freedom and liberty; Freedom of expression; Human rights; Individualism; Moderation; Publishing, Review; Unity; Culture, Western; * Bahá'í World Centre; United States (USA) | |
1988 28 Dec 198- |
Sean Hinton, a British Bahá'í youth of 22 years, arrived in Ulaan Baator, Mongolia, as an official research scholar in ethnomusicology from the University of Cambridge, the first Bahá'í to reside in Mongolia. [VV101]
|
Sean Hinton; - Knights of Bahá'u'lláh; Ulaan Baatar, Mongolia; Mongolia | first Bahá’í to reside in Mongolia |
1988 18 Dec 198- |
H. Borrah Kavelin, (b. 18 March, 1906, Russia), former member of the first House of Justice, passed away in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He was buried in Fairview Memorial Park in Albuquerque. [VV97]
|
H. Borrah Kavelin; Universal House of Justice, Members of; Births and deaths; In Memoriam; Albuquerque, NM; New Mexico, USA; United States (USA) | |
1988 9 Dec 198- |
The passing of Edna M. True, (b. July 29, 1888, in Grand Rapids, Michigan) She was a daughter of the Hand of the Cause of God Corinne Knight True whose valiant work from 1909-25 as financial secretary of Bahá'í Temple Unity was instrumental in building the House of Worship in Wilmette.
|
Edna True; Corinne True; Counsellors; National Spiritual Assemblies; European Teaching Committee; In Memoriam; Grand Rapids, MI; Wilmette, IL; United States (USA) | |
1988 8 Dec 198- |
The plenary session of the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted a resolution concerning human rights in Iran which specifically mentions the suffering of the Bahá'ís. [BINS189:2] | United Nations; Persecution, Iran; - Persecution, Other; - Persecution; Human rights; Bahá'í International Community; Iran | |
1988 4 Dec 198- |
A two-week teaching project was launched, resulting in 414 people becoming Bahá'ís, including ten chiefs. [BINS192:4] | Mass conversion | |
1988 Dec c. 198- |
The Government of Western Samoa published a Christmas issue of four stamps of religious buildings, among them the Bahá'í House of Worship in Samoa. [BINS196:8] | Mashriqu'l-Adhkár, Apia, Samoa; Stamps; Apia, Samoa; Samoa | |
1988 Nov - 1989 Feb 198- |
Teaching projects were launched in the Philippines, resulting in 3,847 people becoming Bahá'ís. [BINS195:4] | Mass conversion; Philippines | |
1988 30 Nov 198- |
The Bahá'í International Community was elected Secretary of the Board of the 'Conference on Non-Governmental Organizations in consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations' (CONGO) for the period 1988–91. [BINS189:2] | Bahá'í International Community; United Nations; Social and economic development; New York, USA | |
1988 26 Nov - 4 Dec 198- |
Over a thousand people became Bahá'ís in Bolivia during a teaching project. [BINS189:2]
|
Mass conversion; Bolivia | |
1988 Nov - Dec 198- |
Six hundred people became Bahá'ís in West Bengal and 5,150 in Orissa, India. [BINS189:4–5] | Mass conversion; West Bengal, India; Orissa, India; India | |
1988 Nov - Dec 198- |
One thousand one hundred people became Bahá'ís in the State of Gujarat, India. [BINS190:5] | Mass conversion; Gujarat, India; India | |
1988 Nov 198- |
More than 2,500 people enrolled in Bangladesh. [BINS190:5]
|
Mass conversion; LSA; Bangladesh | |
1988 Nov c. 198- |
Pietro Pandolfini, the first from the Albanian minority in Sicily to become a Bahá'í, enrolled. [BINS189:5] | First believers by background; Sicily, Italy | first from Albanian minority Sicily |
1988 Nov - Dec 198- |
The first members of the Jhana tribe to become Bahá'ís enrolled in India. [BINS189:5] | First believers by background; India | |
1988 Oct 198- |
Thirteen Romanies became Bahá'ís in northern Spain. [BINS186:7] | Gypsies; Minorities; Spain | |
1988 Oct 198- |
One hundred and twenty people in Hong Kong and 280 in Macau become Bahá'ís as a result of teaching institutes. [BINS189:8]
|
Teaching institutes; Mass conversion; Hong Kong; Macau | |
1988 Oct 198- |
In the State of Orissa, India, 2,600 people became Bahá'ís and 16 new local spiritual assemblies were formed in 15 days. | Mass conversion; LSA; Orissa, India; India | |
1988 24 – 25 Sep 198- |
The first annual Bahá'í Studies Conference of Spain was held in Barcelona. [BINS192:5] | Bahá'í studies; Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Other; - First conferences; Barcelona, Spain; Spain | first annual Bahá’í Studies Conference of Spain |
1988 24 Sep 198- |
The six-week Manicaland Teaching Campaign was launched in Zimbabwe and reported 166 enrolments in the first three weeks. [BINS188:8] | Zimbabwe | |
1988 10 Sep 198- |
A three-month teaching project was launched in Colombia, resulting in 1,245 people becoming Bahá'ís. [BINS193:1] | Colombia | |
1988 Sep 198- |
A five-day teaching project in the Lake Titicaca region of Peru enrolled 738 youth and 1,026 adults, almost half of whom were women. [BINS184:10]
|
Lake Titicaca; Peru | |
1988 Sep 198- |
An intensive teaching campaign in Kenya enrolled 448 new Bahá'ís. [BINS184:8] | Kenya | |
1988 Sep 198- |
A teaching project in Maddhya Pradesh, India, enrolled 20,000 new Bahá'ís in Morena District. [BINS185:4] | Mass conversion; Madhya Pradesh, India; India | |
1988 3 – 7 Aug 198- |
The first Iberian Youth Conference was held in Lisbon, attended by 120 Bahá'ís from nine European countries. [BINS181:6] | Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Youth; - Conferences, International; Youth; Lisbon, Portugal; Portugal; - Europe | first Iberian Youth Conference |
1988 Aug 198- |
A 20-day teaching project in Coro, Falcon State, Venezuela, enrolled 120 people in the first two days. [BINS182:7] | Falcón, Venezuela; Venezuela | |
1988 Jul - Aug 198- |
Over 500 people became Bahá'ís in Liberia. [BINS184:8] | Liberia | |
1980-1988 198- |
The paper, Iranian Baha'is and the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988) was presented by Dr Kamali Sarvestani at the annual meeting of the Middle East Studies Association on November 4th, 2023. The study examines the Iranian Bahá'ís engagement in the Iran-Iraq War.
An abstract can be found at myMESA. |
Persecution, Iran; Iran; Iraq | |
1988 26 Jul 198- |
In the final phases of the Iran-Iraq war Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini felt that defeat was imminent and decided to take his revenge on the political prisoners. He issued fatwas ordering the execution of anyone who had not "repented" and who was not willing to collaborate entirely with the regime. The massacres began, and every day hundreds of political prisoners were hanged and their corpses were buried hurriedly in mass graves all over major cities, in particular, Tehran. By the time it ended in the autumn of 1988, some 30,000 political prisoners, the overwhelming majority activists of the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI or MEK), had been slaughtered. On August 9, 2016, an audiotape was released by Khomeini's former heir, Hossein-Ali Montazeri, acknowledging that that massacre took place and had been ordered at the highest levels. [National Council of Resistance in Iran website; Facebook - Iran Gathering]
|
Persecution, Iran; Mohammad Jaffar Mahallati; Ayatollah Bahaoddin Mahallati; Iran | |
1988 15 Jul 198- |
The first International Women's Conference of Paraguay opened, attended by 130 women from seven countries. [BINS180:5] | Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Women; Women; Paraguay; Latin America | first International Women’s Conference of Paraguay |
1988 14 – 17 Jul 198- |
The Bahá'í Association for Arts (BAFA) helds its first arts festival at the Bahá'í conference centre De Poort, Netherlands. [BINS180:4] | Bahá'í Association for Arts (BAFA); Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Arts; - First conferences; De Poort, Netherlands; Groesbeek, Netherlands; Netherlands | first arts festival Netherlands |
1988 7 – 10 Jul 198- |
The first Youth Convention of Spain was held in Madrid. [BINS180:5] | Madrid, Spain | first Youth Convention of Spain |
1988 Jul 198- |
In 18 days of teaching, 876 adults, youth and children became Bahá'ís in Haiti. [BINS181:7]
|
Mass conversion; Haiti | |
1988 Jul 198- |
Eighty–nine people became Bahá'ís in Belize. [BINS186:2] | Belize | |
1988 Jul 198- |
Nearly 50 people became Bahá'ís in Saipan, Mariana Islands. [BINS181:5]
|
Saipan, Mariana Islands; Mariana Islands | |
1988 30 Jun - 3 Jul 198- |
The Bahá'í Arts Council, Canada, held the first arts festival, 'Invitation 88: A Festival of the Human Spirit' at the University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario. [BINS179:2] | * Arts and crafts; Firsts, other; London, England; Ontario, Canada; Canada | first arts festival Canada |
1988 Jun 198- |
The founding of the Virtues Project by Dr. Dan Popov, Linda Kavelin-Popov and her brother John Kavelin. The project spawned a number of books by Linda Kavelin-Popov:
|
Virtues Project; Dan Popov; Linda Kavelin-Popov (Linda Popov); John Popov | |
1988 Jun 198- |
Over 100,000 people, including large numbers of women, youth and families, became Bahá'ís in Uttar Pradesh, India. [BINS179:4] | Mass conversion; Uttar Pradesh, India; India | |
1988 31 May 198- |
The Universal House of Justice wrote to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of New Zealand to comment on a paper titled The Service of Women on the Institutions of the Baha'i Faith presented at the New Zealand Bahai Studies Association Conference in Christchurch earlier that month.
The paper raised the possibility that the ineligibility of women for membership on the Universal House of Justice may be a temporary provision subject to change through a process of progressive unfoldment of the divine purpose. [31 May 1988] |
Bahá'í Studies, Associations for; Women; Universal House of Justice, Membership on; Christchurch, NZ; New Zealand | |
1988 19 May 198- |
The Universal House of Justice announced changes in the membership of the International Teaching Centre.
|
International Teaching Centre; Farzam Arbab; Hartmut Grossmann; Lauretta King; Donald Rogers; Joy Stevenson; Peter Vuyiya; Magdalene Carney; Masud Khamsi; Isobel Sabri; Aziz Yazdi; Anneliese Bopp; * Bahá'í World Centre | |
1988 8 May 198- |
The passing of Beatrice Owen Ashton (b. 17 May, 1890, Cleveland). She was buried in the Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland. [BW20p896-899]
|
Beatrice Owen Ashton; Beatrice Ashton; Travel Teaching; Summer schools; Cleveland, OH; Ohio, USA; Lethbridge, AB; Canada | |
1988 Ridván 198- |
The Universal House of Justice was elected for the sixth time at the International Convention held in Haifa. Delegates from 148 National/Regional Assemblies participated. [BINS176; VV97]
|
Universal House of Justice, Election of; Elections; Universal House of Justice, Members of; Conventions, International; David Hofman; H. Borrah Kavelin; Retirements; Hooper Dunbar; Gifts; Roses; Bahá'í World News Service (BWNS); * Bahá'í World Centre; Haifa, Israel; Iran | |
1988 11 - 15 Apr 198- |
The Global Survival Conference in Oxford attracted 200 spiritual and legislative leaders. For five days parliamentarians and cabinet members met with cardinals, metropolitans, bishops, swamis, rabbis, imams and elders. Among them were the Dalai Lama, Mother Teresa, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the High Priest of Togo's Sacred Forest, Cardinal Koenig of Vienna and Native American spiritual leader Chief Oren Lyons of the Onondaga. They conferred with renowned experts on the issues: astronomer Carl Sagan, Soviet scientist Evguenij Velikhov, women's leader Wangari Maathai, environmental scientist James Lovelock, Cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova and population specialist Fred Sai. [] | Global Survival Conference; Calamities and catastrophes; Interfaith dialogue; Carl Sagan; Oxford, England; United Kingdom | |
1988 Apr 198- |
The House of Abdu'lláh Páshá was open for the Bahá'ís to visit for the first time on the occasion of the Sixth International Convention. [ARG61-62] | House of `Abdu'lláh Páshá; Conventions, International; Haifa, Israel; * Bahá'í World Centre | |
1988 11 Mar 198- |
The passing of Italian orientalist, scholar and linguist Alessandro Bausani. As an orientalist he made contributions in several fields: Persian Literature, Islam, linguistics, the history of Islamic science, Urdu, Indonesian, and other Islamic literatures. He was a polyglot having studied all the main European languages plus Basque, Arabic, Turkish, Persian as well as Latin and Greek.
|
Alessandro Bausani; In Memoriam; Births and deaths; Italy | |
1988 8 Mar 198- |
Shirin Fozdar, ardent champion of women's rights and influential women's leader, was honoured for her work for equality and women's advancement at a ceremony organized by the Singapore Council of Women, which she founded in 1952. [BINS176:7] | Shirin Fozdar; Women; Awards; Singapore | |
1988 Mar 198- |
The publication of the first edition of the trilingual publication The Journal of Bahá'í Studies under the auspices of the Association for Bahá'í Studies in North America.
|
Bahá'í studies; Journal of Bahá'í Studies; Bahá'í Studies, Associations for; Association for Bahá'í Studies (North America); Canada; United States (USA); North America | |
1988 19 Feb 198- |
The publication of the statement by the Bahá'í International Community, "Eliminating Torture", for the forty-fourth session of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. | Torture; United Nations; Bahá'í International Community; - BIC statements; Geneva, Switzerland | |
1988 17 Feb 198- |
The publication of the statement by the Bahá'í International Community, "Eliminating Religious Intolerance", for the forty-fourth session of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. | Religious intolerance; United Nations; Bahá'í International Community; - BIC statements; * Publications; Geneva, Switzerland; Switzerland | |
1988 1 Jan 198- |
The publication of Fountain of Wisdom: A Collection of Writings from Bahá'u'lláh by the Bahá'í Publishing Trust in Wilmette. It is a re-printed and re-titled Tablets of Baha'u'llah Revealed after the Kitab-i-Aqdas. | * Bahá'u'lláh, Writings of | |
1988 Jan 198- |
A teaching campaign was launched in Chad, resulting in 1,340 new Bahá'ís and 33 new local spiritual assemblies. [BINS187:1] | Local Spiritual Assembly; Chad | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
Hand of the Cause of God William Sears and his wife Marguerite Reimer Sears initiated the first Desert Rose Bahá'í School with the assistance of a core group of dedicated friends. This became an annual event for the Southern Arizona Bahá'í's each Thanksgiving weekend and was held in a rented hall in Tucson, Arizona. in 1992, after the passing of her husband, Mrs Sears was encouraged by the Universal House of Justice to expand the four-day Desert Rose Bahá'í school to a permanent institute. In 1996 Mrs Sears, with the help of many friends, purchased land near Eloy, Arizona for the development of the Desert Rose Bahá'í Institute, which she envisioned as an Institute for education in the arts and agriculture. When the land was purchased, the Round House was the only building on the property. A cottage was constructed for Mrs. Sears that provided both comfortable living space and room where she could work with partners on cataloguing and publishing some of Bill Sears' remaining works while building a library. The following year the Desert Rose Bahá'í Institute was incorporated with Not-for-Profit status. Since that time a Meeting and Dining Hall was built and a Guest House was constructed near the Sears Cottage was built by David Hadden for use by him and his family. In 2018 this Guest House was converted into and Art Gallery. In 2001 a 16 rental apartment was built to help offset the operating costs. In 2004 the William Sears Pavilion was dedicated. It was designed as a place were people could go to reflect, pray, meditate, or celebrate. More accommodations were built in 2005 in the name of the Guffey Center, honouring two volunteers, Ray and Gloria Guffey. In 2017 the DRBI was granted a licence to operate a low power (LP) radio station for Eloy Arizona to serve the community. Radio station KURE was licensed to operate on 106.1 FM as part of the Institute. In 2019 DRBI Board member Dwight Cox initiated an agricultural project to grow organic produce. [DRBI website; Desert Rose Bahá'í Institute - History] |
Bahá'í Radio; Bahá'í-owned radio; Institutes; Tucson, AZ; United States (USA) | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
The publication of La terre n'est qu'un seul pays! by Andre Brugiroux. Brugiroux, a French traveller, set out in 1955 at the age of 17 with 10 Francs in his pocket to fulfill his dream of travelling to every country in the world. He did so purely by hitchhiking and spent no more than a dollar a day on his journey. He travelled a total of 240,000 miles and ended his journey in South Sudan in 2011, having visited 251 countries and territories. He went on to write several books, this being the first. It was published in English as One People, One Planet: The Adventures of a World Citizen. [Wikipedia]
|
Andre Brugiroux | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
The Bahá'í International Community became a founding member of 'Advocates for African Food Security: Lessening the Burden for Women, a coalition of agencies and organizations formed to act on behalf of farm women in Africa, and is convener for 1988–92. | Bahá'í International Community; Rural development; Social and economic development; Women; - Africa | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
More than a thousand people became Bahá'ís in Taiwan as a result of the Muhájir Teaching Project. [BINS187:4] | Muhajir Teaching Project; Taiwan | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
'Arts for Nature', a fund-raising programme held to benefit the work of the World Wide Fund for Nature, was held in London with the collaboration of the Bahá'í International Community. [AWH61; VV106] | Bahá'í International Community; * Arts and crafts; Nature; World Wide Fund for Nature; Environment; London, England; United Kingdom | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
Branches of the Bahá'í International Community's Office of Public Information were established in Paris and London. [VV54] | Bahá'í International Community; Paris, France; London, England | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
The first Caribbean Bahá'í Women's conference took place in Antigua. | Caribbean; Conferences, Bahá'í; Conferences, Women; - First conferences; Antigua | first Caribbean Bahá’í Women’s conference |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
The government of Niger authorized the resumption of Bahá'í activities and Bahá'í administration under an administrative committee. | Recognition (legal); Niger | |
1988 (In the year) 198- |
The opening of the School of the Nations in Taipa, Macau with 5 students enrolled in kindergarten and operated out of an apartment. The teachers outnumbered the students.
|
School of the Nations, Macau; - Bahá'í inspired schools; Bahá'í World News Service (BWNS); Taipa, Macau; Macau |
|
|
Home
Site Map
Tags
Search
Series Chronology Links About Contact RSS |