|
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.
|
Chapter 27
![]() click here for larger image Mr. Aibara, second from the left, the young Bahá'í whose brilliant career was cut short at age thirty-two. He is seen here with Miss Alexander (rear). Mrs. Takeshita is standing next to Mr. Aibara. This photograph was taken at an Esperanto meeting in 1929.
After this young man's graduation he went to work for the Tokyo Branch of the League of Nations, where he showed leadership qualities. Mr. Aibara died suddenly a few years later, leaving a wife and baby girl. Miss Alexander was shocked at the sudden passing of her good friend, but was consoled when the Guardian wrote (through his secretary) that Mr. Aibara was now "in a higher spiritual realm enjoying a blissful being far beyond our powers to appreciate." Many years later Mrs. Aibara accidentally came into contact with a Bahá'í. She was so happy to meet Bahá'ís again that she quickly enrolled as a member of the Japan Bahá'í community.
![]() click here for larger image This photograph was taken near Yasukuni Shrine in 1929. It shows Miss Alexander, Mr. Aibara and two friends of theirs, twin sisters, ardent Esperantists. Miss Alexander sent the picture to be published in the American Star of the West, as an example of young Japanese women. They were among the first women in Japan to enter a medical school.
|
METADATA | |
Views | 253029 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 |
|
|
Home
![]() ![]() ![]() search: Author ![]() ![]() ![]() Links ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |