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BWNS -- Speakers urge spiritual and intellectual solutions


From Bahá'í World News Service <bwns@bwc.org>
Date Thu, 23 Sep 2004 17:24:43 +0200

Baha'i World News Service
See story with photographs http://www.bahaiworldnews.org
<http://www.bahaiworldnews.org/>
For more information, contact editor@bahaiworldnews.org

Speakers urge spiritual and intellectual solutions
CALGARY, Canada, 23 September 2004 (BWNS) -- Spiritual ideas are an essential
component in solving the world's complex problems, according to the opening
speaker at the annual conference of the Association for Baha'i Studies-North
America.

"The global problems of the contemporary world make interdisciplinary
research
a necessity," said Harold Coward, founding director of the Centre for Studies
of Religion and Society at the University of Victoria in Canada.

The inclusion of religious and spiritual ideas in any such interdisciplinary
approach is important, Dr. Coward told the conference, held here 3-6
September
2004.

Dr. Coward, who is not a Baha'i, said his own center was established to
ensure
"that the wisdom of the religious traditions is included alongside the best
that science, social science and the humanities have to offer when major
global problems are addressed."

Contributions by the other 58 major presenters addressed various aspects of
the theme of the conference -- "Spirit and Intellect: Advancing Civilization"
-- to the more than 1,200 participants. It was the association's 28th annual
conference.

In an address titled "The New World Disorder: Obstacles to Universal Peace,"
scholar Andy Knight outlined how insights from the Baha'i teachings could
help
in developing solutions to conflict and other problems affecting the planet.

Although the world yearns for peace, an exercise of volition and action is
required to bring it about, said Dr. Knight, the McCalla Research Professor
of
International Relations in the Department of Political Science at the
University of Alberta.

"It is not ephemeral, it won't fall from the sky into our laps because we
hope
for it -- it requires extraordinary effort and it will require fundamental
change to the present world order," said Dr. Knight, who is a Baha'i.

The Baha'i writings, said Dr. Knight, provide the most comprehensive view of
the requirements for peace to be established. Primary among them is the
recognition of the unity of the human race.

"We have to reach out to the non-Baha'i world, not to proselytize, but to let
them know what is possible in terms of world order," said Dr. Knight.

Other speakers and sessions covered a wide range of issues, including the
arts
and architecture, issues affecting indigenous peoples, spiritual and moral
principles, and community in the workplace.

Siamak Hariri, a partner in Hariri Pontarini Architects in Toronto, spoke of
the process involved in designing the first Baha'i Temple of South America,
to
be located in Santiago, Chile.

Mr. Hariri described how the concept for the temple emerged from a broad
collaboration among a team of Baha'i and non-Baha'i designers. The process
was
in marked contrast to the milieu in contemporary architecture, which he said
fixates on deconstruction and frenetic experimentation.

"In a sense, we tried to abandon what we knew. We wanted a structure that is
whole, with a sense of its completeness that leaves exploration of disharmony
to others, without going back to pastoral expression," said Mr. Hariri.

Mr. Ali Nakhjavani, who until recently served as a member of the Universal
House of Justice, presented the Hasan M. Balyuzi Memorial Lecture.

Mr. Nakhjavani described how the former head of the Faith Shoghi Effendi
carefully prepared the Baha'is of the world for a ten-year plan (1953-1963),
which achieved its aim of opening the majority of the nations and territories
of the world to the Baha'i Faith.

Kimberley Naqvi, one of the conference's organizers, said  that part of the
importance of the conference was that it expanded the Baha'i community's
world
view and its knowledge of critical social issues -- and directed it toward
action.

Conference chairman Ridvan Moqbel said that Baha'i scholarship involves a
community of learning, where everyone -- with or without academic credentials
-- can learn from each other and contribute to the betterment of the world.

"The association strives to promote diverse approaches to scholarship that
apply the insights of the revelation of Baha'u'llah to the critical problems
facing humanity," said Mr. Moqbel.

[Paul Hanley contributed to this report.]

For more information, see http://www.bahai-studies.ca
<http://www.bahai-studies.ca/>


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