Bahai Shrine
Panama's Bahai Shrine was devised by English architect Peter Tillotson, the place opened on April 29, 1972 and was built atop the Sonsonete Peak, seven miles from the nation's capital and 730 feet high.
This sacred place for meditation can accommodate up to 550 people. The base diameter is 200 feet, while the structure's total height is 92 feet. It's made up of a geometrical layout shaped in the form of a nine-point star. There are only seven shrines like this one around the world since they can only be built in locations of great world affluence.
Texts have it that approximately every 1,000 years, God dispatches a Being down to Earth called prophets, likie Krishna, Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha, Jesus, Mahomet, and now Bahá'u'lláh.
Bahá'u'lláh was born in 1817 and passed away in 1892. He was the son of a well-to-do Persian nobleman, however, he spent his life in jail and exile. He became the spiritual founding leader of the Bahai faith, a belief that promotes concord and harmony.