When… We went to Ámul, [December 1848] such was the turmoil
which the people had raised that above four thousand persons had congregated in
the masjid and had crowded onto the roofs of their houses. The leading mullá of
the town denounced Us bitterly… We informed him that, although We had never met
Him [the Qá'im] face to face, yet We cherished, none the less, a great
affection for Him. We expressed Our profound conviction that He had, under no
circumstances, acted contrary to the Faith of Islám.
The mullá and his followers, however refused to believe Us,
and rejected Our testimony as a perversion of the truth. They eventually placed
Us in confinement, and forbade Our friends to meet Us. The acting governor of
Ámul succeeded in effecting Our release from captivity. Through an opening in
the wall that he ordered his men to make, he enabled Us to leave that room, and
conducted Us to his house. No sooner were the inhabitants informed of this act
than they arose against Us, besieged the governor’s residence, pelted Us with
stones, and hurled in Our face the foulest invectives.
- Bahá’u’lláh (Quoted
in ‘The Dawn-Breakers’)