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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!qiclab!nabil
- From: ChesleyJ@hfx001.ns.istc.ca (John Chesley)
- Newsgroups: soc.religion.bahai
- Subject: Someone who touched our lives
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.093636.22956@qiclab.scn.rain.com>
- Date: 11 Jan 93 13:38:52 GMT
- Article-I.D.: qiclab.1993Jan25.093636.22956
- Sender: nabil@qiclab.scn.rain.com (Aaron Nabil)
- Organization: Industry Science & Technology Canada
- Lines: 76
- Approved: nabil@cse.ogi.edu (Aaron Nabil)
-
- A tribute to the late Doris McKay as printed in Canadian Baha'i
- News, Vol. 5, No. 8; January 1993.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Doris McKay
-
- The radiant spirit of Doris McKay, one of Canada's senior
- Baha'i pioneers, ascended to the next world on November 30, 1992,
- at the home of Bob and Shirley Donnelly in Charlottetown, P.E.I.
-
- Doris and her husband Willard became Baha'is in 1925 in
- Geneva, N.Y., taught by Howard and Mabel Colby Ives and Harlan and
- Grace Ober. Active in racial amity work with Louis Gregory, co-
- workers of Dorothy Baker, Martha Root, May Maxwell, Horace Holley,
- and numerous other early American Baha'is, Doris and Willard
- assisted in the formation of Spiritual Assemblies in Memphis,
- Tenn., Jamestown, N.Y., Hamilton, Ont., and Moncton, N.B. They
- undertook many travelling teaching trips, both together and
- separately, and Doris served as the chair of the U.S. National
- Publishing Committee, as secretary of the National Teaching
- Committee, and as member of the Outline Bureau. Both Doris and
- Willard taught many summer schools at Green Acre, and her synopsis
- of The Dawnbreakers, done when the volume was first published, has
- been a useful teaching tool for more than fifty years. Among the
- many articles published in Baha'i World paying tribute to Martha
- Root on her passing, Doris's intimate portrait of that heroine was
- at once stirring and profoundly moving.
-
- In the late 1930's, Doris and Willard began to make travelling
- teaching trips to the eastern part of Canada, and they eventually
- pioneered to Canada in the early 1940s, first to Moncton, and then
- in 1942 to Prince Edward Island. Doris described the circumstances
- of their move in her memoirs, Fires in Many Hearts, published in
- 1991:
-
- "The objectives of the Seven Year Plan wanted a local
- Spiritual Assembly in every state and province of the United
- States and Canada. In July of 1943 the National Teaching
- Committee, then far off on the American West Coast, realized
- that Prince Edward Island was, of itself, a province. In
- accordance with the Plan, it would have to have an Assembly by
- Ridvan '44. While at breakfast with Grace and Irving Geary,
- the wire arrived: `Would the McKays leave Moncton and re-
- pioneer to P.E.I. at the earliest possible date?' A letter
- followed with the news that the Guardian had cabled the
- National Assembly saying that, due to the insularity of the
- people, P.E.I. was a most difficult place to teach. The
- letter posed the question: would we settle there, planning to
- remain, if necessary, the rest of our lives? We wired back.
- `Yes, we would.'"
-
-
- And they did. Willard passed away in the late 1960's, and now
- Doris, after inspiring generations of Baha'is through her luminous
- example as a stalwart pioneer and a radiant, deepened soul, has
- gone at age 98, to be reunited with him in the Abha Kingdom.
-
- The Universal House of Justice wrote, on December 4, 1992:
-
- "...Her years of devoted service will long be remembered
- by the countless believers whose lives were touched by her
- manifold activities on behalf of the Cause. Her steadfastness
- and obedience to the beloved Guardian in remaining at her
- pioneer post will serve as a shining example for generations
- to come...."
-
-
- ********************************End of Excerpt***************
- Respectfully submitted by some of "the countless believers whose
- lives were touched" by Doris,
-
-
- John Chesley
- Sharon Chesley-Smith
- and Leah
-
- chesleyj@hfx001.ns.istc.ca
-