The packers are here
The packers have been here all day. I’m sitting in my little office, which is close to the open front door, freezing and fiddling around with the computer. I managed to do some work this morning, but I’ve become so desperate that I’m resorting to writing my blog - which I haven’t done for a while.
I flew to Edinburgh from Luton on Wednesday evening for a meeting at and about the new Baha’i Centre in Albany Street. The meeting, with representatives of the Edinburgh Local Assembly, the Baha’i Council for Scotland and with a property developer and an architect (both Baha’is), was about how the rooms in the new Centre should be used. The Universal House of Justice stated in three separate letters to the National Spiritual Assembly that the building should be suitable to receive distinguished and prominent visitors. However, there was talk during the meeting about rooms for craft activities and children’s classes. I felt constrained to remind the meeting of the House of Justice’s guidance.
We walked through the building (mostly occupied by MORI at the moment) and admired it yet again. What a great purchase! We agreed by and large on what the main rooms should be used for, particularly two rooms on the first floor, which can be separated by elegant curved double doors or used as a single room. This is definitely the room for receptions, buffets and the like. It’s here that the Queen and the First Minister will come. Vain imaginings? I hope not.
Flew out of Edinburgh at 6.15 on Thursday morning for a meeting of the executive committee of the Inter Faith Network.
Anyway, I’m gradually freezing as I sit in my office. Erica’s sitting on a hard stool and we’re keeping the dog in here too, so she doesn’t get under the packers’ feet. There’s nowhere else to go until they finish. And once they have finished the house will look like the bailiffs have been in!
Technorati Tags: Baha’i, Bahai, family, inter-faith, interfaith, moving house
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2 comments
I’ve just found your blog through the Baha’i group on flickr and I’m very excited to read it. I’m currently an intern at the Youth Desk of the US National Teaching Committee and hope to work in External Affairs after I finish my degrees, so I’m very interested in reading what you have to say. I’d love to talk with you about your job some time.
Briana Saunders
Wednesday, February 08, 2006
On Separation of Church and State: Beyond Theocratism and Secularism
http://bahaiviews.blogspot.com georgewesley said…
Very good information, Marco. Europe provides many more examples beyond the American one, which is why having the benefit of the European perspective is so valuable. The author of Logos and Civilization is based in the United States.
Your blog provides a valuable window for obtaining a European perspective. What other Baha’i blogs in Europe do you find especially insightful?
8:10 AM
http://www.blogger.com/profile/2954729 Marco Oliveira said…
I don’t know many blogs by European baha’is. but check this one: Barnabas Quotidianus (http://www.leithjb.net/blog/).
It is a good baha’i blog from the United Kingdom.
10:30 AM
http://bahaiviews.blogspot.com georgewesley said…
Thank you, Marco. His site is very well-written, a true blog in the personal journal sense.
7:47 AM
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