Unprecedented in any religious dispensation
is the emphasis Bahá'u'lláh has placed on the role that artists and craftsmen
have in advancing the progress of humankind. 'Abdu'l-Báhá implored parents to
raise their children to become accomplished practitioners of the arts:
While the
children are yet in their infancy feed them from the breast of heavenly grace,
foster them in the cradle of all excellence, rear them in the embrace of
bounty. Give them the advantage of every useful kind of knowledge. Let them
share in every new and rare and wondrous craft and art. Bring them up to work
and strive, and accustom them to hardship. Teach them to dedicate their lives
to matters of great import, and inspire them to undertake studies that will
benefit mankind.
By specifying "studies that will
benefit mankind," 'Abdu'l-Báhá indicates that arts are not a luxury, nor
are they on the periphery of human existence, but are rather at its very heart.
Contemporary Canadian painter Otto Donald Rogers has expressed the perspective
this way:
Art... has a
fundamental role to play in the evolution of community since artistic form is
not simply the ornament of society but is an important measurement of the
progress made in reaching the ideal. The creation of models of profound beauty
have, by their very order, educative effect; art becomes in time a common
experience of unity in the culture of a whole population.
Source
This article is reproduced from the Canadian Bahá'í website.
More on this subject
Read more Bahá'í perspectives on the arts
at the Bahá'í World website.
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