The decade-long exile of
Bahá’u’lláh in
‘Iráq began under the harshest of conditions and at the lowest ebb in the fortunes of the
Bábí Faith. It witnessed, however, the gradual crystallization of those potent spiritual forces which were to culminate in the declaration of His world-embracing mission in 1863. In the course of these years, and from the city of
Baghdád, there radiated,
Shoghi Effendi writes, “wave after wave, a power, a radiance and a glory which insensibly reanimated a languishing
Faith, sorely-stricken, sinking into obscurity, threatened with oblivion. From it were diffused, day and night, and with ever-increasing energy, the first emanations of a
Revelation which, in its scope, its copiousness, its driving force and the volume and variety of its literature, was destined to excel that of
the Báb Himself.”
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