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Abstract:
Extensive history of Bahá'í events and personages in Japan, 1914-1983.
Notes:
See also Errata for Traces that Remain and Japan Will Turn Ablaze.
Proofread by S. Sims and updated August 2019.
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Chapter 15![]() click here for larger image Shortly before Christmas Miss Alexander had an inspiration to invite the children of the shopkeepers on the street where she lived to a party. Mrs. Finch also attended. The blind Bahá'ís Mr. Tomonaga Noto and Mr. Kenjiro Ono sang for the children, and Miss Mochizuki told them Bahá'í stories. Fifty-eight children attended. The next year at the Christmas party there were seventy-seven and in 1922 more than ninety, including some mothers. The year after, 1923, Miss Alexander was in China on Christmas Day. She wrote that a wave of homesickness came over her to be with the children again.
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METADATA | |
Views | 253015 views since posted 2000; last edit 2025-01-28 14:57 UTC; previous at archive.org.../sims_traces_that_remain; URLs changed in 2010, see archive.org.../bahai-library.org |
Permission | author |
History | Scanned 2000 by Jonah Winters; Formatted 2000 by Jonah Winters; Proofread 2000 by Barbara R. Sims. |
Share | Shortlink: bahai-library.com/414 Citation: ris/414 |
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