Congo
Congo is a country located in Central Africa. Its capital city is Kinshasa. The democratic republic of Congo is considered as the second largest country in Africa and the 11th-alrgest in the world. With a population of over 91 million, it is the 16th populated country in the world and the 4th populated country in Africa.
This country gained full independence on June, 30, 1960 and was called Zaire from 1971 to 1997.
Although this country is rich in natural resources and is one of the wealthiest countries in the world, its people are the poorest ones in the world. 96 percent of people are Christians and there are 250 various tribes. Most people of Congo are from Congo, loban and Mongo.
The Second Congo War began in 1998 and is still ongoing devastated he country. This war is also sometimes referred to as “World War I Africa’ because five Africa countries. In recent years, the unrestrained interference of Congo’s neighbors in the affairs of the country has led to a subversive war with the Republic of Rwanda, which has been relatively relaxed with the deployment of UN peacekeepers on the borders of the two countries. The country’s civil war ended in 2003; but its eastern regions remain unstable due to dozens of insurgent groups. In Congo, sexual violence with abnormal brutality is used as a weapon of War. Group rape is commonplace and guns are sometimes used.
The value Congo’s mineral resources is estimated at 24 trillion dollars, equivalent to US and European GDP. The acquisition of this extraordinary underground wealth was the main motive behind the country’s civil war. It holds 80 percent of the Cultan stone reserves (two precious metal similar to Tantalum and Niobium) and is the largest producer of Cobalt in the world, the second largest producer of diamonds in the world, and the largest producer of copper in Africa. It also has significant reserves of tin, Zinc, gold and oil. There are also large reserves of uranium in the country, and the uranium used in Manhattan project to build the world’s first atomic bombs was Congolese uranium. Its vast forests also account for more than half of Sub-Saharan Africa’s timber reserves.
More than two-thirds of the workforce is agricultural, with coffee, tea, cocoa, rubber and raw materials exported. Minerals are the backbone of the country’s economy with copper, cobalt, zinc and diamonds according for about 60 percent of exports. Congo has a high inflation rate and has one of the lowest levels of living in Africa.
Papua New Guinea
The independent state of Papua New Guinea is a country located in the pacific Oceania and the Malay Peninsula. Its capital is Port Moresby, located on the southeast coast of the country.
Papua New Guinea is made up of the northeast of New Guinea and a large number of offshore island. Its population is eight million and its official languages are lok Pisin, Hiri Motu and English. Its currency is Kenya Papua New Guinea and its government style is parliamentary democracy and constitutional monarchy. Pupa New Guinea became independent from Australia in year 1973 after being governed by three foreign countries.
It is one of the most “multicultural” countries in the world, and its people are made up of many different tribes, the largest of which is Papua. It also has the highest number of languages spoken in the world and according to the latest data, there are 852 different languages in the country out of which 12 ones have been extincted. 96 percent of its people are Christians. There are four thousand Muslims in this country.
Although hunting and cannibalism was practically eradicated in Papua New Guinea in the late 20th century; in the past, it was practiced in many parts of the country as part of the rituals of warfare and taking away the spirit and power of the enemy.
In 1901, in the island of Guaribari in the Gulf of Papua, Harry Davinci, a Christian preacher found 10,000 human skulls in the tribal homes of the island reflecting past customs of human hunting in the area. Cannibalism can also be found in Papua New Guinea until the 70th and there are still traces of it in some social groups.
Exported products of this country include oil, gold, copper, timber, palm oil, coffee, cocoa, freshwater crayfish and Shrimp which are exported to Australia Japan and China.
Papua Guinea is facing severe economic problems due to falling oil prices and drought.
Papua New Guinea lost its right to vote at the United Nations General Assembly in 2017 for falling to pay its annual dept to the United Nations. Papua New Guinea will have to pay at least 180,000 dollars to join the United Nations in order to regain its right to vote in the UN General Assembly. Electricity for the Papua New Guinea National Assembly, the government house and several other government agencies was also cut off because of the government’s inability to pay bills. Government agencies had 11 million in dept to energy producers by the end of the year.
Batembang-Cambodia
The city of Batembang is in northwest Cambodia. It was founded in the 11th century by the Khmer Empire and the leading rice-producing province of the country. For nearly 100 years, this large business center and the provincial capital of Siamese province, Cambodia, were inland, though it was always inhabited by Kjmer and with some Vietnamese, Lao, Thai and Chinese people. Batembang is in the northwest of Cambodia and connects the area with Phnom Penh and Thailand. The city is located on the Sangari river, a small, tranquil body that winds its way through Batembang province. Like many Cambodians, French Colonial architecture has a remarkable aspect of the city, some of which are extremely in this country. Batembang is the second populated city of Cambodia and is an important commercial city.
The dawning place of the Mention of God was opened on Sep, 1, 2017.
Norte del Cauca-Colombia
With the population of 48 million people, Colombia is the third most populous country in Latin America after Brazil and Mexico.
Colombia has a diverse population reflecting the rich history of the country and the people who lived in the area from ancient times. A mixture of different main groups forms the basis of Colombia’s current population: European immigrants, natives, African slaves<Asians, Middle Easterners and other recent immigrants. Many indigenous population became hybrid ones but the remaining 700,000 indigenous are from more than 85 different cultures. European settlers were mostly Spanish ones but a few were from the Nethelands, France, Switzerland, Belgium and fewer than Poland, Lithuania, Britian and Croatia, which had migrated during World War II and the cold war.
According to census data, the majority of Colombians are Catholic, Hispanic and Mestizo (European-Indian). About 25 percent of Colombians are of pure European descent, 123 percent are black or of African and European descent. Ancestors of Colombian blacks were brought to slavery during the exploitation period. They have played an important role in shaping Colombia’s cultural heritage. About 3 percent of Colombia are a mixture of black and red. 5 percent of the population is of pure Inian race.
More than two-third of Colombians live in urban area- This number is above the global average. Colombia’s literacy rate (94 percent) is well above the global average and population growth is well above the global average. Colombia’s young population is very large due to the recent decline in infant mortality. About 33 percent of Colombia’s population is 14 years of age or younger; but only 4 percent of its population is 65 years of age or older.
It downing place of the Mention of God was opened on July, 22, 2018.
Bihar Sharif-India
The temple land has been purchased
The state Bihar is confined from the west to Uttar Pradesh and from the north to Nepal and from the east to Bangal and Bangladesh and from the south to Eris.
Its area is 173877 square Kilometers and its population in 2011 has been 103804637 people out of which 14 percent have been Muslims.
There is very little public awareness of Islam and Shia in India and the Indian government has pursued its policy of undermining Muslim cultural foundations. One of the awareness of Shiites in India is the lack of a strong leadership. At the time of India’s liberation from colonialism and the declaration of its independence, Pakistan and Bangladesh were separated from India as the center of India’s Muslims; however, many Sunnis remained in India having many problems with coexistence with Hindus.
Shiites in India are form different groups and tendencies; though most of them are believing in 12 Imams. Another group of Ismailis called Nizari is known in India consisting of twenty thousand people living in Gujarat. The Orangeh district of Badaria is one of the largest villages in the city of Rahtas in Bihar, India.
Here are 1500 Shiite familiar living in the Orangeh district of Badaria and most of them are economically well off. There are also 2200 Sunni families living in the area. Shiites in the region are very polite and hospitable and have a very good relationships with each other.
Education is an issue that Muslims in India emphasize. This general thinking that the religious conservatism of Muslims is the main cause of their inaccessibility to education is a completely wrong one. The educational backwardness is clearly seen in a large part of the Indian Muslim Community and Muslims wish this issue to be resolved soon.
The high dropout rate among Muslim and Shia students is annoying. As is the case with other people in India, the main cause of Muslim educational disadvantage is their poverty and financial disadvantage, which forces students to drop out of school after spending a few years of education. The same is true of Indian Muslim girls. Children have to work in small workshops to provide for their livelihoods or work as housekeepers in others, and care should be taken when their mothers go abroad to work with their younger siblings. The prevalence of child labor in the Muslim community seems to be higher than in other socio-religious communities. The poor and illiterate parents of these children can not afford school tuition nor can they support children at home which is an essential part of today’s education system. The cost of educating children is also high enough to make schooling impossible.
Matandasui-Kenya
The Republic of Kenya has located on the East African continent with the area of 582646 square kilometers is 47th largest country in the world after Madagascar. Its neighbors include Tanzania to the south, Uganda to the west, Sudan to the northwest, Ethiopia to the north, Somalia to the northeast and the Indian Ocean to the east.
According to statistics, 89 percent of people are Christians, 8 percent are Muslim and 3 percent are Animists.
Kenya is a country of different cultures. Notable cultures include coastal in coastal areas, Pastoralist in the north and various communities in the central and western.
Today, the Masai culture is well known for its tourism industry, though it is only a small tribe.
Although Islam has been spread in Kenya long before Christianity, Christians have been able to extend their influence day by day through coherent planning and the support of two time slots. The extent to which Kenya Muslims adhere to religion depends on their awareness of religion. This awareness isn’t public. People who have more access to scholars and Sheikhs are estimating their religious needs. There is more awareness in cities because of access to mosques and scholars. The beack people’s religious interest and adherence are greater than elsewhere. Because Islam has a wider and longer history in these areas. Matondasoui is a rural area.
Conclusion:
These dawning places for the mention of God and its peripheral institutions will be built in communities which deal with poverty and social problems. It seem the universal house of justice believes that the deprived societies need the Baha’i dawning places of Mention of God and its peripheral foundations. In such communities, the lack of influential social foundations gives the Baha’is the opportunity to play a key role and to pioneer in creating the social changes and socialization.
Except for the dawning place for Mention of God in Eshq Abad, other continental dawning places for the Mention of God have deprived of the peripheral foundations. This issue had caused these temples to be symbolicly important and to have a role beyond the silent proselytizers of the Baha’i faith. Nevertheless, building the local and national dawning places for the Mention of God indicates and important change because from this time on, the dawning places for the Mention of God and their peripheral foundations will provide local non-Baha’i communities’ requirements that are from the poor communities. And in this way, they follow proselytizing of the Baha’i faith.