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| Mr Ron Price | Wafting, at last, over all created things
The transition from a loosely connected movement to a fully organized one can be said to have ended in 1925....But by 1936 the National Assembly...the national committees and Local Spiritual Asemblies were sufficiently strong to come together for the prosecution of an international missionary program.-Loni Bramson-Lerche, “Development of Baha’i Administration”, Studies In Babi and Baha’i History, Vol.1, Moojan Momen, editor, Kalimat Press, 1982, pp.258-275. About 5 in 1000 went to university that year and most people in the UK ate bread, margarine, dripping, tea and a little condensed milk if they were lucky, with tragedy staring many of the working class in the face, as conditions slowly rose for most. The form and pattern slowly set for a new World Order; a massive turbulence rose over Europe; a sense of crisis became endemic and a reactionary conservatism gripped people everywhere: the roaring twenties gave way to a mythologized hungry thirties and its equally mythologized Auden generation. We went to two billion during that decade as an Administrative Order served to unify and propagate the fragrances of mercy wafting, at last, over all created things. Ron Price ![]() ------------------ |
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| Mr Ron Price | Perceptual creation
The question is not what you look at, but how you look and whether you look. -Henry David Thoreau in`The Environmental Imagination: Thoreau, Nature Writing and the Formation of American Culture, Lawrence Buell, Harvard UP, London, 1995, p.115. ![]() The year I went pioneering Rachael Carson’s Silent Spring was published and the Wilderness Act was passed.1 Environmentalism had emerged full-fledged as a topic of public concern and in its burgeoning poetry. This was, too, the eve of the tenth and final stage of history and the election of the apex of Baha’i Administration, the nucleus and pattern of a future world Order, where meaning and value, consciousness and the mythopoetic power of the human mind, filled the intellectual gap between my role, my place and the pervasive placelessness, the vast absense which filled my head when I theorized and watched a 400,000 strong community unfold the grand design, keep the ship2 on its course through yet another epoch. A structure of meaning and freedom is found in this Order and a standard of public discussion has been slowly emerging, as this Order has been taking fuller shape these last several decades in a new etiquette of expression. The poet can appreciate the great expansion which has occurred since the apex was put in place. It is an Order as much aesthetic as practical, subjective as objectively realizable, spiritual as an exercise in number crunching: there is a religio-aestheticism here in which we must practice some kind of institutional therapy to keep the boring, routine and familiar, fresh, spontaneous and timeless. So, I’ve known where I’ve been working and on what these forty-odd years, although it has often not been easy. The places are all on the map, perhaps two dozen of them, but the what is based on an evolving understanding. I might say that my where is as follows: Near the outer rim of the first concentric circle of a vast system whose centre point is the Bab’s holy dust, Australasia, the south-west corner of the spiritual axis in Australia, Western Australia, Belmont community of metropolitan Perth on a flat plain beside the Indian Ocean, about fifteen minutes by car from an escarpment, from the city-centre and from two universities. and my what is: a Baha’i and member of a Local Spiritual Assembly serving as chairman, an international pioneer, travel-teacher, husband, father, step-father, lecturer at a TAFE college, poet, middle-aged man, citizen of the world, student, friend, lover, income-earner. I have described myself in terms of this new organic form emerging on this planet. I am partly one of its products; I am defined by being confined. This form acts like some ground conductor of emotion, belief and conviction that will take me a lifetime to articulate, apprehend, describe. And even when I do 99.999% of what takes place within this form will remain outside my oral or archival history. My home is here within this vast design which he unfolded and which I carry ‘round in my head, in my bones, even if they fade beyond thought into last traces of dust, remembered by some cold stone on a sunlit day and star-lit night. I carry it ‘round in the silence of the tongues of the departed buried all ‘round this home whose design is carried in their heads too: for there is now only one home, one place, one humanity. This vast design, my home, is not without its complacency, smugness, simplicity, obviousness. I reach out for an exhuberance, wonder, freshness to recalibrate the familiar. to perceptually recreate the universe in a grain of sand with thoughts too deep for tears. Ron Price 16 June 1995 1 1962 2 Universal House of Justice, first statement, 30 April 1963. |
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