What We Did on our Vacation
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We just got back from our epic annual fall voyage, first to upper New York State, where we attended ARE, the Auxtuna Renkonto de Esperantistoj, at the Silver Bay YMCA Resort (photos are already available at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/limako/sets/72157602368084841/). There are two separate schedules of events there, one for the YMCA resort, and one of the Esperantists. Among the sports offered is archery. We took up the hobby of archery with great enthusiasm, the entire family; the resort featured a good teacher, who showed us the ropes. We are all anxious to try the activity here at home. As always, the children were greatly impressed by the abundance of chipmunks at
After the weekend was over, we drove to
Yesterday, we got up at
From a Baha'i teaching point of view, the highlight of the trip was a talk I gave early Sunday morning on the travels of the Master. Although I have what I think is an impressive collection of photos and documentation, much of it never before seen in public, all my attempts to show it to an English-speaking audience have turned up duds. I pushed myself onto our local monthly fireside proclamation meeting in the Dunnville Library in September, and nobody turned up to see it. Even Ron, who has the key and opened the room, was sick that day and had to leave after a few minutes.
But I have no problem getting onto the program and presenting to the Esperantists at ARE, who are not even Baha'is. I had quickly translated the Powerpoint captions into Esperanto for this event. I showed photos and drawings of early Babi history and Abdu'l-Baha's western voyages; then Marie read aloud the text of an address the Master gave in
Surprisingly, the Master does not talk about God or anything religious in this address; He barely mentions Baha'i or Baha'u'llah. His sole concern is with the practical problem of overcoming the language problem, what Esperantists call the "interna ideo de Esperanto." The internal idea is the use of Esperanto not as a language like any other but as an official auxiliary world language, called in Esperanto a "helplingvo." Listening to Marie read the talk, I was thrilled to hear that a little personal anecdote that the Master tells at one point about an occurrence in
After it was all over, a veteran Esperantist, also named Marie, asked me to send her a copy of the talk in English so that she can show it to her English-speaking Baha'i friends, all of whom refuse to consider learning Esperanto. Good luck to her. You would have an easier time persuading neo-Nazi party members to take a sexual and racial sensitivity training course. (In my opinion, what English speakers need is to take a forced tour of the world's linguistic concentration camps, as was done by the liberating armies to the "innocent" nearby villagers after WWII.) Anyway, in an upcoming Badi' blog entry I will include the talk in both English and Esperanto (it is in an old Star of the West, as well as Khursheed's "Seven Candles of Unity," if you have that book). Only one other Baha'i turned up at ARE this time, Magnolia, a young French Canadian believer from
Also attending this gathering, and teaching the "Introductory Esperanto" Courses, was Dr. Ronald Glossop, a prominent figure in the discipline of peace studies. He wrote the text book that I studied with a fine toothed comb when I was taking correspondence courses back in the early 1990's. He was kind enough to agree to an interview on his life, which we conducted after the Socia Renkonto on Saturday night. The notes I made on that occasion will be the subject of an upcoming Badi blog entry.
1 comment:
Hi John,
It was nice to read about your trip. I too loved archery when I did it in high school.
Please feel free to look me up on facebook.
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