List of Baháʼís
Appearance
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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
[edit]- Ásíyih Khánum - known by her title Navváb
- ʻAbdu'l-Bahá
- Bahíyyih Khánum
- Mírzá Mihdí
- Shoghi Effendi
Royalty
[edit]- Malietoa Tanumafili II (r. 1962–2007) - chieftain of the government of Samoa.[1]
- Marie of Romania (r. 1914–1927) - queen of Romania.[2]
Artists
[edit]Bands
[edit]- Common Market - hip hop duo from the American Pacific Northwest.[3]
- Seals and Crofts - American soft rock duo in the early 1970s.[4]
Musicians
[edit]- Mirza Abdollah - also known as Agha Mirza Abdollah Farahani was a tar and setar player. He is among the most significant musicians in Iran's history
- Randy Armstrong[5] - American musician and composer
- Cindy Blackman[6] - American jazz and rock drummer
- Jeff and Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff[7] - folk music performers
- Celeste Buckingham - singer/songwriter
- Doug Cameron - Canadian musician/composer
- Vic Damone[8] - American singer and entertainer
- Khalil Fong[9] - American-born Hong Kong singer and songwriter
- Hazel Scott[10]- American pianist and activist
- Russell Garcia[11] - motion picture composer
- Dizzy Gillespie[12] - American jazz trumpeter
- Andy Grammer - American singer-songwriter
- Red Grammer - American singer-songwriter best known for children's music[13]
- Anousheh Khalili - Iranian-American singer, pianist and songwriter
- Jack Lenz[14] - Canadian composer
- Kevin Locke - Lakota musician and dancer
- Mike Longo[15] - American jazz pianist
- James Moody[16] - American jazz saxophone and flute player
- KC Porter[17] - American multi-Grammy winning producer
- Rachael Price - jazz vocalist[dead link ][18]
- Tom Price - conductor, composer and producer[19]
- Flora Purim[20] - Brazilian American jazz singer
- Dan Seals[21] - American musician, of England Dan and John Ford Coley
- Tierney Sutton[22] - American jazz singer
- Louie Shelton[23] - American jazz guitarist and producer
- Charles Wolcott[24] - pianist, arranger, composer for Disney and MGM films, credited with bringing rock and roll to the movies
- J. B. Eckl[25]- songwriter, producer, recording artist
- Ryan Abeo[26] - American singer/songwriter from Kentucky who performs under the moniker RA Scion.
- Huening Kai - member of Tomorrow X Together
- Huening Bahiyyih - member of Kep1er
Broadcasters
[edit]- Susan Audé - news anchor at WIS, Columbia, South Carolina
Filmmakers
[edit]- Mark Bamford - writer, director (Cape of Good Hope)
- Mary Darling - producer, Little Mosque on the Prairie
- Clark Donnelly - producer, Little Mosque on the Prairie
- Phil Lucas - Native American filmmaker
- Harold Lee Tichenor - film producer
Actors
[edit]- Penn Badgley[27] (Gossip Girl, You)
- Justin Baldoni[28] (Everwood, Jane the Virgin)
- Earl Cameron[29] (Thunderball, The Interpreter)
- Omid Djalili[30] - comedian and actor
- Barbara Hale[31] - Emmy Award winner (Perry Mason)
- Lois Hall - American movie and television actress
- Lloyd Haynes - actor and television writer
- Jeremy Iversen[32] - actor and writer
- Eva LaRue[33] (All My Children, CSI: Miami)
- Carole Lombard[34] - ranked 23rd greatest American female screen legend, star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
- Inder Manocha[35] - British Asian stand-up comedian and actor
- Julie Mitchum[36] - American Actress
- Pardis Parker[37] - Canadian comedian
- Alex Rocco[38] - Emmy Award winner (The Famous Teddy Z, The Godfather, The Wedding Planner)
- Rehana Sultan - Indian Actress
- Valeska Surratt[39] - Silent Film Actress
- Travis Van Winkle[40] - American actor, The Last Ship, Hart of Dixie
- O. Z. Whitehead[41] - American character actor (The Grapes of Wrath, The Horse Soldiers, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The Lion In Winter)
- Rainn Wilson[42] (The Office, Six Feet Under)
Architects
[edit]- Hossein Amanat[43] (Azadi Tower, buildings of the Baháʼí Arc, House of Worship of Samoa)
- Louis Bourgeois[44] (House of Worship of Wilmette)
- Siamak Hariri (Baháʼí Temple of South America, House of Worship of South America)
- William Sutherland Maxwell (Central Tower of the Château Frontenac; he was also a Hand of the Cause)
- Fariborz Sahba[45] (Lotus Temple, terrace gardens of Haifa)
Writers
[edit]- Burl Barer[46] - true crime genre specializing, author of The Saint, as well as Baháʼí oriented articles
- Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff[7] - fantasy and science fiction author in short story and longer formats
- André Brugiroux[47] - traveller and author
- Barry Crump[48] - New Zealand comic author
- Margaret Danner - African-American poet
- Rod Duncan - author of the Gaslight series
- William S. Hatcher[49] - mathematician, philosopher, educator
- Robert Hayden[50] - Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 1976 to 1978
- Alain LeRoy Locke[51] - author of books on poetry, race-awareness and research in various arts
- Guy Murchie[52] - philosopher, scientific writer, aviator
- Bahiyyih Nakhjavani - Iranian writer
- Arvid Nelson[53] - comic book writer, creator of Rex Mundi
- Margaret Bloodgood Peeke[54] - traveler, lecturer, author
- Wellesley Tudor Pole[55] - British writer
- Jeffrey Reddick - creator of the Final Destination series
- Holiday Reinhorn - writer[56]
- Gholamreza Rouhani - poet and satirist[57][better source needed]
- William Sears[58] - author of multiple books, an Emmy award-winning sportscaster, and host of a children's television program "In the Park."
- Adib Taherzadeh[59] - literary historian of Baha'i sacred texts
- Sverre Holmsen, a Swedish writer, environmentalist, traveller to Tahiti
Other artists
[edit]- Alice Pike Barney - portrait artist
- Laura Clifford Barney - philanthropist
- Hussein Bikar[60] - Egyptian painter
- Amelia Collins - philanthropist
- Sky Glabush[61] - Painter
- Bernard Leach[62] - potter
- Anis Mojgani[63] - spoken-word poet
- Tom Morey[64] - musician, inventor of the bodyboard, founder and namesake for the Morey Boogie bodyboard company
- Fayard Nicholas[65] - American dancer and one half of the Nicholas Brothers
- Rae Perlin (1910-2006) - artist
- Mishkín-Qalam[66] - calligrapher
- Otto Rogers[67] - Painter
- Juliet Thompson - portrait artist
- Mark Tobey[68] - painter
- Gwen Wakeling[69] - Academy Award-winning Hollywood costume designer
Athletes
[edit]- Nelson Évora[70] – 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 soccer player
- Khalil Greene[71] – American professional baseball player
- David Krummenacker[72] – Track & Field World Champion in 800m in 2003, NCAA Champion (Georgia Tech) 1997, 1998
- Pellom McDaniels – American professional gridiron football player
- Luke McPharlin[73] – Australian footballer for the Fremantle Dockers
Business
[edit]- Thornton Chase - first Baháʼí of the West, was a businessman when he joined the religion in 1894/5.[74]
- Mildred Mottahedeh - founder of Mottahedeh & Company
- Steve Sarowitz (born 1965/1966), American billionaire, founder of Paylocity[75]
- Zhang Xin and Pan Shiyi[76] - famous Chinese business couple
- Zia Mody - Indian corporate lawyer and businesswoman.
Scholarly
[edit]Educators
[edit]- Dwight W. Allen – American professor, author, education reformer, consultant and advisor to UNESCO and the World Bank Group
- Julie Oeming Badiee – American professor, Islamic art historian, educator[77]
- 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
- Mae C. Hawes[80] - African-American professor, settlement worker, literacy educator
- Phoebe Hearst[81] - first woman Regent of the University of California
- Auguste-Henri Forel[82] - Swiss myrmecologist, neuroanatomist and psychiatrist
- ʻAlí-Akbar Furútan - Prominent Iranian educator, administered the Tarbiyat School for Boys. Hand of the Cause.
- Jagdish Gandhi[83] - founder of City Montessori School, Lucknow, India
- Firuz Kazemzadeh[84] - 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[85] - Professor of Modern Irish at University College Dublin
- Todd Lawson - Emeritus Professor of Islamic thought at the University of Toronto.
Journalists
[edit]- Robert Sengstacke Abbott[86] - lawyer and newspaper publisher, one of the first self-made African American millionaires of the United States.
Public service
[edit]- David Kelly[87] - 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[88] - Indian Health care policy administrator
- Layli Miller-Muro[89] - Executive Director of the Tahirih Justice Center
- Mahmud Jamal[90] - Judge on the Supreme Court of Canada
- 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.)
[edit]- 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 Shiʻism to a World Religion.[91]
- 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.
- 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.
Scientists
[edit]- Dr. Ron McNair - physicist and astronaut; died on the space shuttle Challenger in 1986[92]
Others
[edit]- Leonora Armstrong - international traveler[93]
- Richard St. Barbe Baker[94] - English environmentalist
- Lady Blomfield[95] - early Irish-British Baháʼí, and a supporter of the rights of children and women
- Dr Frederick D'Evelyn[96] - first Irish-born Baháʼí
- Helen Clevenger, murdered college student, Bahá'í.[97]
- Nelson Évora[98]
- Constance Langdon-Davies
- Dhabihu'llah Mahrami[99] - wrongfully accused Iranian Baháʼí, found dead in his cell in 2005
- Antony Moynihan, 3rd Baron Moynihan[100] - British hereditary peer
- Nossrat Peseschkian[101] - psychiatrist, psychotherapist; founder of Positive Psychotherapy
- Parivash Rohani, Iranian-American Baha'i activist[102]
- Hilda Yen[103] - internationalist, diplomat, aviator
- Lidia Zamenhof[104] - daughter of L. L. Zamenhof, inventor of Esperanto
Other lists
[edit]- List of Apostles of Baháʼu'lláh
- List of the Hands of the Cause of God
- List of the Knights of Baháʼu'lláh
- List of former Baháʼís
References
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- ^ Weinberg, Robert (1998). "Obituary O. Z. Whitehead Actor and writer". Baháʼí Studies Review. Vol. 8. Archived from the original on 2 May 2008.
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Did being of the Baha'i faith help you understand the spirituality? As a Baha'i, I believe in all the spiritual beliefs: Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity.
- ^ Baháʼí community of Canada. "Hossein Amanat". Archived from the original on 2004-10-27. Retrieved 29 April 2007.
- ^ Canadian Baha'i Community: Louis Bourgeois Archived 2004-10-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Baháʼí community of Canada. "Fariborz Sahba". Archived from the original on 2004-10-27. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
- ^ Burl Barer, Brilliant Author Archived 2006-12-18 at the Wayback Machine author's blog
- ^ André Brugiroux Archived 2001-04-17 at the Wayback Machine author's website
- ^ "" 'Crump Flags It Away'—Profile of Barry Crump, a New Zealand Baha'i" by Tony Reid, New Zealand Listener (Wellington, N. Z.) (Nov. 20, 1982): 21-22, 25, 26". Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2010-07-02.
- ^ reprint of open letter to fellow students on conversion Archived 2007-04-06 at the Wayback Machine Pamphlet copyright 1965, National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States of America, Baha'i Publishing Trust, Wilmette, Illinois
- ^ Robert Hayden Archived 2010-09-18 at the Wayback Machine by Christopher Buck, Published in Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature 2:4 pages 177-181, New York: Oxford University Press, 2004-01
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- ^ I am a Baháʼí Archived 2010-10-06 at the Wayback Machine by Guy Murchie, Chicago Sunday Tribune, magazine section, July 13, 1958
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I converted to Baha'i in college, so religion is interesting to me. I think it's an important part of the human experience, and will always be a important part of my writing.
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- ^ Anis Mojgani Bio[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Sultan of surf, baron of boogie (Apr 06) Archived 2008-02-14 at the Wayback Machine
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- ^ Balyuzi, H.M. (1985). Eminent Baháʼís in the time of Baháʼu'lláh. The Camelot Press Ltd, Southampton. pp. 270–271. ISBN 0-85398-152-3.
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{{cite thesis}}
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In 1961 [Moynihan and his second wife] converted to the Persian faith of Baha'ism: 'It propagates Oneness of Mankind,' Moynihan explained.
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