Bahai Story Library
The Dervish Who Would Not Be Spared: Mírzá Qurbán-ʻAlí
“"I have judged Him fairly, and have reached the conclusion" — and from that conclusion no offer of safety could move him.”
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"The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens."
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Bahai Story Library
“"I have judged Him fairly, and have reached the conclusion" — and from that conclusion no offer of safety could move him.”
*A retelling based on **The Dawn-Breakers**, Nabíl's eyewitness chronicle of the early days of the Faith, as translated by Shoghi Effendi. Short phrases in quotation marks are words preserved in that history.*
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In the year 1850, in Ṭihrán, seven believers were put to death together for refusing to deny their Faith. They are remembered as the Seven Martyrs of Ṭihrán. Among them was a man unlike the others in worldly standing — a dervish of great renown named Mírzá Qurbán-ʻAlí, whose story Nabíl preserves with particular care.
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Qurbán-ʻAlí was no obscure figure whom the authorities could quietly remove. He was a man of deep piety and noble nature, esteemed across whole provinces. Notables of Mázindarán, of Khurásán, and of the capital itself had pledged him their loyalty; thousands regarded him as the very embodiment of virtue. When he travelled, crowds thronged his route to do him honour. Yet the acclaim was distasteful to him; he shrank from the pomp of leadership and avoided the admiring throng.
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He had recognized the Báb through Mullá Ḥusayn, and grieved only that illness had kept him from joining the defenders of Fort Ṭabarsí, where he had longed to lay down his life.
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When at last he was arrested and brought before the Amír-Niẓám — the Grand Vizier, the most powerful minister in the realm — the city stirred as it rarely had. Great crowds pressed about the seat of government, anxious to learn what would befall the holy man. And the Grand Vizier, when he received him, was visibly reluctant to condemn him.
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**"Since last night,"** he admitted, **"I have been besieged by all classes of State officials who have vigorously interceded in your behalf."** The prisoner's reputation, he confessed, was such that he stood scarcely inferior to the Báb Himself; had he but claimed leadership for himself, the minister said, it would have been better than to declare allegiance to another.
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Here was the door held open. A man of Qurbán-ʻAlí's standing had only to step back from his confession, to let himself be reckoned a leader in his own right rather than a follower, and the powers of the State were half-inclined to let him live. It was an escape offered, very nearly, on a plate.
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He did not take it. The knowledge he had gained, he answered, had led him to bow in allegiance before the One he had recognized as his Lord. He had made justice and fairness the ruling motives of his life, and he had **"judged Him fairly,"** weighing the claim with the same scales he brought to everything else, and had reached his conclusion.
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He had a thousand admirers of his own, he said, and could not change the heart of the least of them — yet this Youth, unaided and alone, had transformed the souls of the most degraded among men, kindling in them a love for which they would gladly die. Against the living evidence of such a power, he would not retract a word to save himself.
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The Grand Vizier hesitated still, loath to put to death a man of so exalted a station. But the dervish would not let him hesitate. Why delay, he pressed — and declared that the sooner the blow fell, the greater would be his gratitude. Unsettled, the minister ordered him taken away, saying that a moment more and this dervish would have cast his spell over him. Even then Qurbán-ʻAlí had an answer: that spell, he said, could captivate only the pure in heart, and the powerful were proof against it.
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So the man whom the State would gladly have spared went to his death of his own unbending choice, rejoicing as he went. When the executioner's blow fell, the crowd that had gathered to watch broke into grief, stirred to indignation and sorrow by the killing of one so loved.
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This is the might the Feast of 'Izzat lifts up. The Grand Vizier held the power of life and death, and was minded — for once — to use it for mercy. Qurbán-ʻAlí held no power at all, and used the only thing he had, his free assent, to refuse the rescue and choose the truth. The mighty wavered; the powerless did not.
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He shows us that real might is not the ability to escape death, but the freedom of a soul so anchored in what it has found that no offer the world can make — not even its own life, handed back to it — can purchase a single word of denial.
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*This is a retelling. For the fuller account, see **The Dawn-Breakers** by Nabíl-i-A'ẓam.*
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Source
by Nabíl-i-A'ẓam · 1932 · Bahá'í Publishing Trust
Read the original at www.bahai.org/library/other-literature/historical/dawn-break