Bahai Library Online

Chronology of the Bahá'í Faith in Canada

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Date 1954-06-00-01, ascending sort latest first

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1954 Jun
195-
Ted and Joanie Anderson wrote the Guardian and asked him who they should teach. They received this reply:
    The Guardian...urges you to concentrate on the native populations it is for that reason that we have opened new countries to the Faith. After all, Europeans, Americans, etc., can become Bahá'ís in their homeland. We have entered new fields all over the world to bring the light of divine guidance to the native population, who have thus far been deprived of the spiritual teachings of Bahá'u'lláh. May you be confirmed with this teaching effort among the natives. The great foal would be an assembly in Whitehorse, made up of native Bahá's or at least the majority natives..
[Native Conversion, Native Identity: An Oral History of the Bahá'í Faith among First Nations People in the Southern Central Yukon Territory, Canada by Carolyn Patterson Sawin p91-92]

It was through the participation of the Bahá'í in the Yukon Indian Advancement Association that many of the early Native people became Bahá'ís. [ibid p92]

Ted Anderson; Joan Anderson; Teaching, Native; Whitehorse, YT
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