This inter-disciplinary, genre-bending collection offers an indispensable introduction to the Bahįķ Faith and its multi-varied approaches to racial justice and African American Studies. Spanning the course of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, this volumes contributors have situated Bahįķ community action within the heart of the Black freedom strugglefrom the Civil Rights Movement to the Movement for Black Lives. For those currently grappling with the age-old question of what is to be done? this volume examines a series of possibilities from a religious community committed to doing what it can in a world that desperately needs to transform. -- Guy Emerson Mount, Auburn University