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Two new members join Universal House of Justice


From Bahá'í World News Service <bwns@bwc.org>
Date Mon, 21 Mar 2005 18:34:59 +0200

Baha'i World News Service
See story and photographs on the BWNS site at http://news.bahai.org
For more information, contact editor@bahaiworldnews.org

Two new members join Universal House of Justice
HAIFA, Israel, 21 March 2005 (BWNS) -- The Universal House of Justice
has announced the election of two new members, Payman Mohajer and Paul
Lample.

The Universal House of Justice, the international governing council of
the Baha'i Faith, conveyed to National Spiritual Assemblies the results
of a by-election to fill two vacancies on Naw-Ruz, the Baha'i new year.
The holy day is celebrated from sunset on March 20 to sunset on the
21st.

Dr. Mohajer and Mr. Lample fill the vacancies left by Mr. Ian Semple and
Mr. Douglas Martin, who have retired at Naw-Ruz owing to age and the
related needs of the Faith.

Dr. Mohajer was born in Tehran, Iran, where he received his elementary
school education. He then went with his family to India where he
received a degree in homoeopathic medicine in 1984. After several years
work in his medical clinic, Dr. Mohajer completed a master's degree in
psychology.

In 1966, his interest in the field of education led him to establish a
Baha'i-inspired institution, the Foundation for the Advancement of
Science.

He was appointed as an Auxiliary Board member in 1986, serving until he
was appointed to the Continental Board of Counsellors in Asia in 1991.
He was called to serve as a member of the International Teaching Centre
in 1998 and was reappointed in 2003. He and his wife, Svetlana, have
three children.

Mr. Lample, an author, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United
States of America. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in biology from
Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, and a Master of Science
from the National University in San Diego, California. In the early
1990s he served on the National Teaching Committee of the National
Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States.

In 1994 he moved to the Baha'i World Centre to serve as coordinator of
the Office of Social and Economic Development. He was appointed to the
International Teaching Centre in 2003. Mr. Lample and his wife, Marcia,
have three children.

The other members of the Universal House of Justice are Farzam Arbab,
Kiser Barnes, Hooper Dunbar, Hartmut Grossmann, Firaydoun Javaheri,
Peter Khan, and Glenford Mitchell.

The Faith, which has no clergy, administers its affairs through
democratically elected councils at the international, national, and
local levels.

Baha'i elections take place without campaigning or nominations, the
results being determined by plurality vote. Members of the Universal
House of Justice are elected by members of all National Spiritual
Assemblies throughout the world.

Electors are guided by the Faith's teachings, which advise each person
to vote, independently and in the privacy of his or her own conscience,
for "the names of those who can best combine the necessary qualities of
unquestioned loyalty, of selfless devotion, of a well-trained mind, of
recognized ability, and mature experience."

There are about five million Baha'is worldwide. Prominent among the
Faith's teachings are the oneness of humanity, the equality of men and
women, and the unity and harmony of the world's religions.

The Baha'i World Centre in the Acre/Haifa area of modern day Israel has
been both the spiritual and administrative center of the Faith since its
Founder, Baha'u'llah, was exiled there by the Ottoman Empire in 1868.


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