Everyone was so happy and thankful, and the mill engine changed completely the life of the farmers and their families.īut this happiness and joy didn’t continue long. For the first time, we had electric lights. I remember I was five years old when my father, who was among the few educated people in our small city, brought electricity and a mill engine to the city. Sabet: I would like to say that I am a cry of genocide from the hearth of history. Sarvestany: Could you please introduce yourself and share something of your personal experience as a girl from a religious minority growing up in Iran before the Islamic revolution? Interview with Mahvash Sabet * by RAHA SABET SARVESTANY ‘Abdu’l-Bahá: The Perfect Exemplar by Dariush Lami.Agnes Parsons’ Diary by Richard Hollinger.Pearls of Bounty and Light of the World.Books for Children by Allison Grover Khoury.The All-Highest Paradise by Melika Rezvani.The Silence of Being Heard by Nazanin Eslami.Thy Court of Holiness by Mahsa Foroughian.Interview with Mahvash Sabet by Raha Sabet Sarvestany.The Wound is Where the Light Enters by Sandra Lynn Hutchison.Encountering Beauty: An Interview with Painter and Photographer Chris Page by Christine Anne Pratt.An Opening in the Curtain by Martha Washington.Elegy with Mourning Dove and Red-Tailed Hawk by Sandra Lynn Hutchison.The Fountain and the Thirsty One by Mahvash Sabet.Global Poetry Reading Honors ‘Abdu’l-Bahá.
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