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2020 13 Jan
202- |
A tree-planting ceremony coinciding with the start of the construction of the Shrine of 'Abdu'l-Bahá was attended by the mayor of Akka, Shimon Lankri, and dignitaries representing the city's religious communities as well as guests including leaders of the Jewish, Muslim, Christian, and Druze communities, officials of local government, and academics from educational institutions in the area.
[BWNS1383]
Photos.
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- Bahá'í World Centre; `Abdu'l-Bahá, Shrine of |
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2020 23 Jan
202- |
The Cambridge University Press published Global Governance and the Emergence of Global Institutions for the 21st Century co-authored by Augusto Lopez-Claros (former Director, Global Indicators Group at the World Bank Group), Arthur L. Dahl (former Deputy Assistant Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)), Maja Groff (International lawyer, Visiting Professor, Faculty of Global Governance and Global Affairs, Leiden University College). [BWNS1279; Photo]
See a graphic presentatation of the proposals made.
The PDF may be obtained from the Cambridge University Press site.
The book is also available on the website for purchase or downloading at no charge.
See the International Environmental Forum for a brief description of the book.
See as well the synopsis at Global Challenges Foundation.
See the Wilmette Institute for a webinar hosted by the authors.
Using the book as a model, the Global Governance Forum was created with the objects to:
Promote research
Organize conferences and presentations
Assist like-minded businesses, organization, or initiatives
Offer support to sub-national entities, governments, and intergovernmental organizations
Promote the agenda of global governance to achieve prosperity, health, education, peace and justice.
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Arthur Dahl; Augusto Lopez-Claros; Cambridge, England; Maja Groff |
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2020 27 Jan
202- |
The Baha'i International Community expressed its concern with the surge in persecution by the Iranian authorities against the Bahá'í community. It had the appearance of an institutional decision that impacted Bahá'ís across the country.
By restricting applicants of the new Iranian national identification card to select only one of the four recognized religions—i.e. Islam, Christianity, Judaism or Zoroastrianism—those belonging to other faiths, including Bahá'ís, were forced to either lie about their beliefs or remain deprived of the most basic civil services, such as applying for a loan, cashing a check, or buying property.
A court has ruled that all of the properties belonging to the Bahá'ís in the village of Ivel be confiscated on the basis that Bahá'ís have "a perverse ideology" and therefore have no "legitimacy in their ownership" of any property. This outrageous decision is despite the fact that Baha'is have been resident in the area and owned properties there for generations, reaching as far back as the mid 1800s.
In the previous three months alone, dozens of Bahá'ís were arrested and dozens more received religiously-motivated sentences, for a combined prison term of nearly one hundred years. Individual Bahá'ís were sentenced to upwards of ten years in prison; in yet another case the gold used by a Bahá'í in his jewelry business was called for to be confiscated.
In the previous three months, Bahá'ís also experienced multiple home raids, attacks on properties, confiscation of possessions, dismissals from employment, and continued denial of access to higher education. In one case, a Bahá'í home was entirely destroyed. In another instance, a non-Bahá'í employer was forced to provide a list of her Bahá'í employees and then to dismiss them from employment.
A relentless campaign of misinformation about the Bahá'í Faith targeting the Iranian public has continued in full force in the news and social media. Thousands of such anti-Bahá'í propaganda have circulated in 2019 alone. [BIC 27 January 2020]
See an update on the situation of the Bahá'ís in Iran from the Bahá'í International Community as of August 2020.
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* Persecution, Iran; Bahá'í International Community; Iran; Ivel, Mazandaran |
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