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Forward to Part IV
The Prosperity Of Humankind
A Statement Prepared by the
Bahá'í International Community's
Office of Public Information
Part III
In order for the standard of human rights now in the process of
formulation by the community of nations to be promoted and established
as prevailing international norms, a fundamental redefinition of human
relationships is called for. Present-day conceptions of what is
natural and appropriate in relationships -- among human beings
themselves, between human beings and nature, between the individual
and society, and between the members of society and its institutions --
reflect levels of understanding arrived at by the human race during
earlier and less mature stages in its development.
If humanity is indeed coming of age, if all the inhabitants of the
planet constitute a single people, if justice is to be the ruling
principle of social organisation -- then existing conceptions that were
born out of ignorance of these emerging realities have to be recast.
Movement in this direction has barely begun. It will lead, as it
unfolds, to a new understanding of the nature of the family and of the
rights and responsibilities of each of its members. It will entirely
transform the role of women at every level of society. Its effect in
reordering people's relation to the work they do and their
understanding of the place of economic activity in their lives will be
sweeping. It will bring about far-reaching changes in the governance
of human affairs and in the institutions created to carry it out.
Through its influence, the work of society's rapidly proliferating
non-governmental organisations will be increasingly rationalised. It
will ensure the creation of binding legislation that will protect both
the environment and the development needs of all peoples. Ultimately,
the restructuring or transformation of the United Nations system that
this movement is already bringing about will no doubt lead to the
establishment of a world federation of nations with its own
legislative, judicial, and executive bodies.
Central to the task of reconceptualising the system of human
relationships is the process that Bahá'u'lláh refers to
as consultation. "In all things it is necessary to consult,"
is His advice. "The maturity of the gift of understanding is made
manifest through consultation."
The standard of truth seeking this process demands is far beyond the
patterns of negotiation and compromise that tend to characterise the
present-day discussion of human affairs. It cannot be achieved --
indeed, its attainment is severely handicapped -- by the culture of
protest that is another widely prevailing feature of contemporary
society. Debate, propaganda, the adversarial method, the entire
apparatus of partisanship that have long been such familiar features
of collective action are all fundamentally harmful to its purpose:
that is, arriving at a consensus about the truth of a given situation
and the wisest choice of action among the options open at any given
moment.
What Bahá'u'lláh is calling for is a consultative
process in which the individual participants strive to transcend their
respective points of view, in order to function as members of a body
with its own interests and goals. In such an atmosphere,
characterised by both candour and courtesy, ideas belong not to the
individual to whom they occur during the discussion but to the group
as a whole, to take up, discard, or revise as seems to best serve the
goal pursued. Consultation succeeds to the extent that all
participants support the decisions arrived at, regardless of the
individual opinions with which they entered the discussion. Under
such circumstances an earlier decision can be readily reconsidered if
experience exposes any shortcomings.
Viewed in such a light, consultation is the operating expression of
justice in human affairs. So vital is it to the success of collective
endeavour that it must constitute a basic feature of a viable strategy
of social and economic development. Indeed, the participation of the
people on whose commitment and efforts the success of such a strategy
depends becomes effective only as consultation is made the organising
principle of every project. "No man can attain his true station",
is
Bahá'u'lláh"s counsel, "except through his justice. No
power can exist except through unity. No welfare and no well-being
can be attained except through consultation."
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