Was the Throne of Guardianship Ever Vacant?
Mason Remey left Haifa at the end of October, 1959, and went into “self-banished exile” (Spataro, p.31) to Washington, D.C. Remey had agreed with the hands that if they would follow everything Shoghi Effendi laid out in his plans for 1963, he would go along with them. Shoghi Effendi’s plan for the IBC, of which Remey was president, was that it would become a world court in 1963, and eventually it would blossom into the UHJ.
However, in 1959, the hands called for the election of a new IBC in 1961. Thereupon, Remey decided to leave the hands, in spite of their imploring that he stay, since he believed they had no authority to put anyone out of office who had been put there by Shoghi Effendi. This was an affront Remey could not endure.
Joel Marangella holds that it was not until Remey left Haifa that early in 1960, he finally saw how he was the second guardian of the Baha’i faith:
It was not until the end of His two-and-a-half year Period in Haifa and actually after his departure from Haifa when be was composing his appeals to the Hands of the Faith that for the first time, he began to consider the real significance of his appointment as the President of the International Baha’i Council, a subject that never came up in any of the conclaves. It was only then that he, himself, realized that by virtue of his appointment he had become the second Guardian of the Faith, coincident with the passing of Shoghi Effendi, and that the office of the Guardian had not been vacant for a single moment. It was then that he penned his Proclamation and released it to the Baha’i world at Ridvan 1960 (a Proclamation which remains unread by the vast majority of the Baha’is to this day). (Marangella, Foreword, “Extracts from the Daily Observations,” p.vi)
Remey saw himself clearly as the second guardian after he left Haifa. His “flash vision” speaks for itself:
During all these proceedings [in the first conclave] I sat quietly remembering the vision I had had a few years before in which I bad seen myself to be the second Guardian of the Faith — this I had been thinking of a great deal since Shoghi Effendi’s death, but I felt that of all the hundreds of millions of people upon the face of the earth that I was the very last one who should put forward or stand up for such. In fact, I sat there in the conclave praying silently to myself that there be nothing of the kind for me in that vision; nevertheless, I had a feeling that there was something in it, thus my feelings were in the balance, as it were. (“Extracts from the Daily Observations,” p. 3)
And again:
Of course, she [Ruhiyyih Khanum] insists that the Guardianship is BADAH because when the Cause has the second Guardian installed (the one I saw in my vision) she will then no longer be in the supreme position that she now has taken and this she is not yet ready to accept. (Ibid, p. 40)
In his entry for January 26, 1959, he refers to his “mental flash vision” outlining future events:
Had I not had that mental flash vision, now well over ten years ago, of things that were to come to pass: the death of Shoghi Effendi and the fact of there following him I would be the second Guardian, I in all probability would never have thus stood up alone against this move of the Hands of the Faith to abolish the Guardianship... . Ibid, p. 80)
Remey here attributes his holding up alone against the hands to his vision of himself as the second guardian. Although seeing himself as the second guardian, he did not know how this would come about just like Shoghi Effendi did not know that he will be the First Guardian of the Baha'i faith until the W&T was read or maybe he knew but did not reveal.
Acceptance of Guardianship remains a test for loyalty for all believers. Those who went by the flow and forsake the will and testament of Abdul Baha, did not bother to do independent investigation of truth, did not ponder of simple things which were in front of them have fell into the trap of the bogus UHJ, a bogus organization that is leading the faith towards destruction.



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