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Delegates arrive in Haifa for International Bahá'í Convention
27 April 2008HAIFA, Israel — A thousand delegates from 153 countries have arrived – from the southern tip of Africa, to Siberia, to the Americas, to remote Pacific islands – to participate in the 10th International Bahá’í Convention.
On Tuesday, 29 April, they will gather to elect the nine members of the Universal House of Justice, the international governing body of the Bahá’í Faith, a task that delegates view as both a sacred duty and a supreme privilege.
“I’ve been preparing myself since November, when I got the ballot,” said Bakary Bojang, 31, a delegate from Gambia. “I give praise that I have the opportunity and the health to be here.”
The convention, held every five years, runs from 29 April to 2 May at the Haifa International Convention Center. In addition to the election, it will include consultation on issues and concerns facing the worldwide Baha’i community.
The delegates are all members of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of their countries, elected councils that oversee Baha’i activity in a particular jurisdiction. The balloting process to elect the Universal House of Justice is unlike any other election system in the world.
Most of the countries of the world are represented at the convention, which officially opens on 29 April. Registration began on 26 April at the Haifa… »
A delegate from the nation of Georgia on the eastern end of the Black Sea talks with a staff member of the Baha’i World Centre before boarding a bus at the… »
A couple from Greenland leave the visitors’ center at Bahji near Acre in northern Israel. Delegates to the convention go there to the Shrine of Baha’u’llah… »
The Baha’i gardens in Haifa were one of the first places many of the delegates visited. This participant is from Puerto Rico.
Two delegates from Bolivia walk in the gardens near the Shrine of the Bab on Mount Carmel.
A convention participant pauses at the entrance to the Shrine of the Bab on Mount Carmel. The tomb holds the earthly remains of the Bab, the divine Messenger who… »
“There are no nominations and no campaigning,” said Erica Toussaint, 61, a delegate from the United States. “Rather, each elector writes down the names of nine people they feel are the most qualified to serve.
“The process is free from the constraints that I’ve seen in other electoral processes around the world, which for me makes it very profound and moving,” she said.
Preparing for the four-day convention presented a number of logistical hurdles, said Anja Nicke, project manager of the International Convention Office.
“One of the biggest challenges was just communications with National Spiritual Assemblies,” said Ms. Nicke, 35, who was a schoolteacher before coming to the Bahá’í World Centre as a volunteer in September 2004.
“For us, it is a simple matter to send an e-mail or make a telephone call,” she said. “But some National Assemblies are in countries that are torn by war or poverty, and such types of communications are not always so easy.”
In one case, she said, a National Assembly was out of contact for two weeks because someone had stolen the wires that connected them to the Internet and telephone system.
For delegates, the importance of prayer was foremost in their minds as they discussed how they would prepare themselves for voting.
“We have many things to pray for,” said Francis Reimers, 65, from the Marshall Islands, explaining the process by which he decides who to vote for. “I come and I mix with people and I pray about who I am going to vote for and I try to reflect on the people I know.”

