List of Baháʼís

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following list sets down the name of each member of the Baháʼí Faith who is the subject of a Wikipedia article. For another index of individual Baháʼís with Wikipedia articles, see Category:Bahá'ís by nationality.

Family of Baháʼu'lláh[]

Royalty[]

Artists[]

Bands[]

  • Common Market - hip hop duo from the American Pacific Northwest.[3]
  • Seals and Crofts - American soft rock duo in the early 1970s.[4]

Musicians[]

Broadcasters[]

  • Susan Aude Fisher News Anchor WIS Columbia SC

Filmmakers[]

Actors[]

Architects[]

Writers[]

Other artists[]

Athletes[]

  • Nelson Évora[71] - Portuguese Olympic gold medal (Beijing, 2008) and gold medal recipient for the 2007 Athletics World Championship in Osaka, Japan in Triple Jump
  • Cathy Freeman - Australian Olympic gold medal-winning runner
  • Matthew W. Bullock - American footballer
  • Khalil Greene[72] - shortstop for the Texas Rangers
  • David Krummenacker[73] - Track & Field World Champion in 800m in 2003, NCAA Champion (Georgia Tech) 1997, 1998
  • Pellom McDaniels - NFL Defensive End for the Kansas City Chiefs, Atlanta Falcons, Birmingham Fire (1991-2000)
  • Luke McPharlin[74] - Australian footballer for the Fremantle Dockers

Business[]

Scholarly[]

Educators[]

  • Dwight W. Allen - professor, author, education reformer, consultant and advisor to UNESCO and the World Bank Group
  • Alessandro Bausani - a leading Islamic studies scholar in Italy, professor Naples, Rome
  • Ali Murad Davudi[78] - Tehran University professor who disappeared in 1979
  • Donna Denizé[79] - American poet and award-winning teacher
  • Phoebe Hearst[80] - first woman Regent of the University of California
  • Auguste-Henri Forel[81] - Swiss myrmecologist, neuroanatomist and psychiatrist
  • ʻAlí-Akbar Furútan - Prominent Iranian educator, administered the Tarbiyat School for Boys. Hand of the Cause.
  • Jagdish Gandhi[82] - founder of City Montessori School, Lucknow, India
  • Firuz Kazemzadeh[83] - historian, member of the National Spiritual Assembly
  • Patricia Locke - Lakota Native American educator
  • Dr. Pellom McDaniels - professor, researcher, inventor, author, historian, curator at Emory University and the University of Missouri at Kansas City. Founder of Arts For Smarts Foundation.
  • Joseph Watson[84] - Professor of Modern Irish at University College Dublin

Journalism[]

  • Robert Sengstacke Abbott[85] - lawyer and newspaper publisher, one of the first self-made African American millionaires of the United States.

Public service[]

  • David Kelly[86] - former employee of the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD)
  • Dorothy Wright Nelson - Senior Judge on the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals; former dean, University of Southern California Gould School of Law
  • Jacqueline Left Hand Bull[87] - Indian Health care policy administrator
  • Layli Miller-Muro[88] - Executive Director of the Tahirih Justice Center
  • Payam Akhavan - prosecutor for United Nations tribunals and law professor
  • Robert B. Powers - prominent police officer in the history of California during which he co-established one of the earliest training programs for police in matters of race relations.

Scholars (of Baháʼí history, Baháʼí theology, apologetics, etc.)[]

  • Udo Schaefer - A German lawyer and prolific author, specialising in Baháʼí apologetics and theology, notably ethics.
  • Moojan Momen - historian specializing in Baháʼí history and theology
  • Peter Smith - historian and sociologist, author of a much-cited academic study of Baháʼí history, The Babi and Bahaʼi Religions: From Messianic Shi��ism to a World Religion.[89]
  • Franklin Lewis - author and translator in Iranian studies, who has also published literary analyses of the works of the Báb and Baháʼu'lláh.
  • Robert Stockman - historian, theologian, apologist and biographer, noted especially for works on the Baháʼí community in North America.
  • Mírzá Abu'l-Faḍl - (Persian language: ميرزا أبوالفضل‎), or Mírzá Abu'l-Faḍl-i-Gulpáygání (1844–1914) - was the foremost Baháʼí scholar who helped spread the Baháʼí Faith in Egypt, Turkmenistan, and the United States. He is one of the few Apostles of Baháʼu'lláh who never actually met Baháʼu'lláh.
  • ʻAbdu'l-Hamíd Ishráq-Khávari - (1902 – 1972) was a prominent Iranian Baháʼí scholar. He became a Baháʼí in 1927. He was a teacher in one of the Baháʼí schools in Iran, until the schools were closed in 1934. He prepared many compilations of Bahá'í writings, commentaries, apologetic works, and historic studies.
  • Ali Murad Davudi - (1922–1979?) was an Iranian Baháʼí who was a member of the national governing body of the Baháʼís in Iran. He was a professor at Tehran University in the philosophy department. In 1979, during a wave of persecution toward Baháʼís, he was kidnapped and has been presumed a victim of state execution.

Scientist[]

  • Dr. Ron McNair - physicist and astronaut; died on the space shuttle Challenger in 1986[90]

Others[]

Other lists[]

References[]

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