The Glad Tidings in Japan: Agnes Alexander Writes from Tokyo
Star of the West Editors, Star of the West, (1916), Bahai News Service · Read original
When in Bahá'í history
Tokyo (today: Tokyo, Japan)

In Issue 5 of Volume 7 of the Star of the West, dated the fifth of June, 1916, the editors printed a letter from Agnes B. Alexander, then five years into her residence in Tokyo. An early call in the Star of the West — American Bahá'ís are needed in Japan — had borne, by Alexander's arrival in 1914, its first real fruit. She was the first American Bahá'í to settle in the country.
The letter she sent to Chicago in 1916 reported on the slow, patient work of the previous spring.
She had been holding informal meetings with Japanese university students who had heard of the Bahá'í teachings and come to her small Tokyo rooms for conversation. She had been placing copies of Bahá'í books in the libraries of universities and educational institutions in Tokyo and Yokohama, so that the seekers of the next generation might find on their library shelves what their own elders had not yet provided.
She had also been teaching through the Esperanto societies of Tokyo. Esperanto — Dr. Zamenhof's constructed international language — was, in 1916, the great hope of internationalist movements across the world; 'Abdu'l-Bahá Himself had encouraged its study as a step toward the auxiliary universal language He had foretold. Japanese intellectuals interested in Esperanto were often interested also in the broader vision of human unity underneath it. Alexander was using the Esperanto societies as a natural bridge into conversations about the Bahá'í Cause.
University students, library placements, and Esperanto activities — the glad tidings in Japan.
The work was small. The Tokyo Bahá'í community in 1916 numbered only a handful. But Alexander was, by her presence and patience, holding open a door that had only first been knocked on six years earlier. She would remain in Japan, with intervals of travel, for the next forty years. By the time she finally returned home, in the late 1960s, she had been named a Hand of the Cause by Shoghi Effendi and had become the indispensable figure in the Faith's establishment across the whole of East Asia.
The Star of the West letter of 1916 was an early dispatch from that long campaign. It carried, into the American Bahá'í parlours of Boston and Chicago and Washington, the sound of one woman in a Tokyo apartment patiently making the world smaller.
Source: Star of the West, Volume 7, Issue 5 (June 5, 1916), "The Glad Tidings in Japan" by Agnes B. Alexander. Public domain text from bahai-library.com.
Cite this story
Editors, S. O. T. W.. (1916). *Star of the West*. Bahai News Service. https://bahai-library.com/star_of_the_west_volume_1
Record yourself reading this story
Recording stays on this device only. Nothing is uploaded.
Related stories
The Faith Reaches Japan: Tokyo and the First Believers
In 1915 the *Star of the West* carried news of the small but significant entry of the Faith into Japan — through the patient teaching work of Agnes Alexander in Tokyo and the formation of the first small Japanese Bahá'í community.
Lua Getsinger: The Mother-Teacher of the West
Bahá'í Chronicles preserves the biographical record of Lua Aurelia Getsinger — the radiant Tennessee farm girl who, after the 1898 pilgrimage of fifteen Westerners to 'Akká, became the most celebrated travel-teacher of her generation, and whom 'Abdu'l-Bahá named *Livá* — *the Banner-Bearer.*
May Maxwell: A Mother of the Western Bahá'í Community
Bahá'í Chronicles preserves the biographical record of May Bolles Maxwell — one of the first pilgrims to 'Akká, the woman who established the Bahá'í community of Paris and of Montreal, the mother of Rúḥíyyih Khánum, and the travel-teacher whom Shoghi Effendi would name a martyr of the Faith after her death in Buenos Aires in 1940.
Eight Hundred in Budapest: 'Abdu'l-Bahá in Hungary
In April 1913 'Abdu'l-Bahá visited Budapest. The Star of the West reported that He addressed Hungarian peace societies, Theosophical groups, and meetings drawing some eight hundred listeners — and that He charged a young Bahá'í named Leopold Stark with establishing the first nucleus of the Faith in the Hungarian capital.