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7/8/13
July 8
Much as He[the Báb] Himself had suffered, the agony He was
made to endure was but a drop compared to the calamities which were to rain
down upon the multitude of His avowed followers. The cup of sorrow that had
touched His lips had yet to be drained to its very dregs by those who still
remained after Him. The catastrophe of Shaykh Tabarsí, which
robbed Him of His ablest lieutenants, Quddús and Mullá Husayn, and which
engulfed no less than three hundred and thirteen of His staunch companions,
came as the cruelest blow that had yet fallen upon Him, and enveloped with a
shroud of darkness the closing days of His fast-ebbing life. The struggle of
Nayríz, with its attendant horrors and cruelties, involving as it did the loss
of Vahíd, the most learned, the most influential, and the most accomplished
among the followers of the Báb, was an added blow to the resources and numbers
of those who continued to hold aloft the torch in their hands. The siege of
Zanján, following closely in the wake of the disaster that had befallen the
Faith in Nayríz, and marked by the butcheries with which the name of that
province will ever remain associated, depleted still further the ranks of the
upholders of the Faith, and deprived them of the sustaining strength with which
the presence of Hujjat inspired them. With him was gone the last outstanding
figure among the representative leaders of the Faith who towered, by virtue of
their ecclesiastical authority, their learning, their fearlessness and force of
character, above the rank and file of their fellow-disciples. The flower of the
Báb’s followers had been mown down in a ruthless
carnage, leaving behind it a vast company of enslaved women and children, who
groaned beneath the yoke of an unrelenting foe. Their leaders, who, alike by
their knowledge and example, had fed and sustained the flame that glowed in
those valiant hearts, had also perished, their work seemingly abandoned amidst
the confusion that afflicted a persecuted community. (Shoghi Effendi, Epilogue
to ‘The Dawn-Breakers’)