The
Baha?i Faith
originated in the 19th century
Persian empire
, and soon spread into the neighboring
British India
, which is now
Pakistan
and other states. The roots of the religion in Pakistan go back to the 1840s, and it was recognized in the constitution of 1981 as a religious minority with legal rights.
According to various sources, there are 2,000 to 87,000 Baha'is living in Pakistan.
One of the
disciples of the Bab
, Shaykh Sa?id-i-Hindi, was from
Multan
, Pakistan, and was instructed by the
Bab
to spread the religion to his homeland. The Shaykh converted a blind man named Basir from Multan, who traveled to Iran, met
Baha?u'llah
, and was later killed for his beliefs while in Iran.
[4]
Another early Indian convert was Qahru'llah, who met the Bab in Chihriq and returned to India.
Baha?u'llah later encouraged followers to travel to India and spread the Baha?i Faith there.
In 1921 the Baha?is of Karachi elected their first Baha?i
Local Spiritual Assembly
and acquired a Baha?i Center before independence.
In 1923, still as part of India, a regional
National Spiritual Assembly
was formed for all India and Burma which then included the area now part of Pakistan.
By 1956 Baha?i local assemblies spread across many cities,
and in 1957, East and West Pakistan elected a separate National Baha?i Assembly from India and later East Pakistan became Bangladesh with its own national assembly.
In 1978, Baha?is in Pakistan established a
Montessori School
in
Karachi
that continues functioning as the "New Day Secondary School".
The school started with three students and by 2015 had over 700 enrolled.
There are about 12 Baha?i Centers (a.k.a. Baha?i Halls) spread around Pakistan.
With the constitutional recognition that they received in 1981,
Baha’is in Pakistan have had the right to hold public meetings, establish academic centers, teach their faith, and elect their administrative councils.
However, the government prohibits Baha?is from travelling to Israel for
Baha?i pilgrimage
,
and they face challenges due to the requirement to identify religion on identity papers.
Many Baha?is feel threatened and avoid displaying their religious identity publicly. Most Pakistanis have not heard about the Baha’i Faith and consider it to be a sect of Islam or a cult.
Minority Rights Group International
in its 2002 report states that the Baha’i in Pakistan, "
are still a young and almost invisible community, which is confined to intellectuals who try to keep out of the limelight. Their magazines and books are available in Urdu but the fundamentalists, unlike their counterparts in Iran, have not yet seen them as a threat.
"
[16]
Baha?is in Pakistan are very active. They organize social programs for their community, as well as activities in which others can participate. Activities are focused on the teachings and writings of Baha?u'llah, and are similar to those of Baha?is around the world: children's classes, junior youth spiritual empowerment, study circles, devotional gatherings, and other social activities.
Their official website claims that they are active in "literacy programs for rural areas, free medical camps and tree plantations, discourses with dignitaries and leaders of thought, promoting interaction amongst the youth of all communities and by actively participating in dialogues on religious coexistence."
There is a large annual gathering of Baha?is in Pakistan that takes place in the auditorium of the
National Council of Arts
, Islamabad, to celebrate the Baha?i holy day of
Ridvan
. The gathering is attended by government ministers and other faith groups.
Size and demographics
[
edit
]
According to Baha?i sources, the Baha?i population in Pakistan was around 30,000 in 2001,
and around 1,000 individuals had completed Ruhi Book 1 by 2004.
The first edition of
World Christian Encyclopedia
(1982) estimated the Baha?is in Pakistan to be 100 in 1900, 15,100 in 1970, 20,000 in 1975, and 25,000 in 1980, with an annual growth rate of 4.5% from 1970 to 1980.
It also noted that the Baha?is in Pakistan had, "rapid growth from 19 local spiritual assemblies (1964) to 97 (1973). Baha'is are mostly Persian residents."
The second edition of
World Christian Encyclopedia
(2001) estimated the Baha?is in Pakistan to be 55,100 in 1990, 68,500 in 1995, and 78,658 in 2000, with an annual growth rate of 3.64% from 1990 to 2000.
Based on the same dataset and projected growth rate,
ARDA
estimated 87,259 in 2010.
Pakistan's
National Database and Registration Authority
(NADRA) is a national
statistical database
that records the religion of all citizens. In 2012 there were 33,734 Baha?is registered,
and in 2018 there were 31,543 Baha?i voters.
Shoba Das of
Minority Rights Group International
reported in 2013, "There are around 200 Baha’is in Islamabad, and perhaps two or three thousand in the whole of Pakistan."
In 2014, a correspondent for
The News International
visited Baha?is in Lahore and reported, "At least 200 followers of Baha’i faith currently reside here in Lahore... " with a mix of Iranian and Pakistani backgrounds, with both men and women serving on the Local Spiritual Assembly.
In his PhD thesis for the Islamic University of Islamabad (2015), Abdul Fareed researched the Baha?is of Pakistan and wrote,
According to the International Religious Freedom Report 2002 of the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, U.S. Department of State, the estimated population of the Baha’is of Pakistan was 30,000. In its 2010 and 2013 reports, U.S. government estimates the population of the Baha’is of Pakistan approximately 30,000... the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) of the government of Pakistan claims that... there are over 33,000 Pakistanis who declare them as Baha’i. These are the official figures which show the Baha’is of Pakistan are a significant minority. However, the ground facts seem different. A large number of the Baha’is of Pakistan belong to the rural areas of the province Sindhi. There are many Hindu tribes in the rural Sindh called the Bhels and Meghwar. A significant number of these tribesmen accepted the Baha’i faith and converted to Baha’ism. But many of them are no longer active in the Baha’i activities. This mass conversion is due to some social works done in the areas of Hyderabad, Matli, Badin, Sukkur and Mirpurkhas. The Baha’is of Pakistan state that they do not know the actual population of Baha’is and they rely on the statistics of NADRA. It is an assumption that the Baha’is do not want to declare their exact population, which is supposed to be more or less 3000 in total... The large number of the Baha’is is in Karachi and the rural Sindh. However, the statistics offered by NADRA has to be believed. However, the exact population of Baha’i community is not known.
Abdul Fareed visited several Baha?i communities in Pakistan and said that they come from diverse linguistic and regional backgrounds,
but he found many converts are from an
Ahmadi
and some from
Shia
background.
He also claims that most Baha?is in Pakistan have roots in Iran, in part due to the
persecution of Baha?is
in Iran driving many to leave their homeland and find citizenship elsewhere.
According to
Minority Rights Group International
, the Baha?is are generally converts and middle-class urbanites who keep a very low profile. So far they have escaped any collective anger from other majority communities due to their small number and limited activities.
[16]
History
[
edit
]
Babi period
[
edit
]
The roots of the Baha?i Faith in the region go back to the first days of the
Babi
religion in 1844.
Four Babis are known from India in this earliest period ? it is not known from what sub-region most of them came from but at least some of them were known as
Sufis
and some termed
Sayyid
.
[26]
The first was Shaykh Sa'id Hindi ? one of the
Letters of the Living
who was from
Multan
then in India.
[27]
Basir-i-Hindi was a member of the Jalalia sect who also converted in this early period from the region which later became Pakistan. After embracing the Babi religion, Hindi set out to Iran but learned that the Bab had been confined to the hills of
Azerbaijan
and made his way to Fort Tabarsi where he was one of four Indians listed among the 318 Babis who fought at the
Battle of Fort Tabarsi
.
[28]
After that he went to Nur and met Baha?u'llah and later moved to
Luristan
where he worked in the court of the governor of Luristan, Yaldram Mirza. When the governor learned he was a Babi, he was killed.
Early Baha?i period
[
edit
]
During
Baha?u'llah
's lifetime, as founder of the Baha?i Faith, he encouraged some of his followers to move to India.
After first visiting Mumbai, India, Jamal Effendi visited
Karachi
in 1875 on one of his trips to parts of Southern Asia.
His trips included
Lahore
,
Sialkot
,
Jammu
,
Kashmir
,
Ladakh
.
Following the passing of Baha?u'llah, the leadership of the religion fell to
?Abdu'l-Baha
and he in turn sent further representatives to the region ? followers who travelled to the region included both Persians and Americans and included
Sydney Sprague
and Mirza Mahmood Zarghani.
[29]
On instructions from ?Abdu'l-Baha, Zarghani stayed in Lahore for most of 1904 and subsequently travelled to nearby regions.
There is information that an American Baha?i was in Lahore about 1905; little is known except that he became sick with cholera but recovered under care from a Baha?i, Mr. Kaikhosru, who came from (then named) Bombay to nurse him but himself died of the disease.
[30]
The first Baha?i to settle in current-day Pakistan may have been Muhammad Raza Shirazi who became a Baha?i in Bombay in 1908 and settled in Karachi.
As early as 1910 the national community in India/Burma was being urged to visibly distinguish itself from Islam by the Baha?i institutions of America.
[31]
Jamshed Jamshedi moved from Iran to Karachi in 1917 and Mirza Qalich Beg translated
The Hidden Words
into
Sindhi
.
National coordinated activities across India began and reached a peak with the first All-India Convention which occurred in Mumbai for three days in December 1920.
[29]
Representatives from India's major religious communities were present as well as Baha?i delegates from throughout the country. In 1921 the Baha?is of Karachi elected their first Baha?i
Local Spiritual Assembly
.
Growth and challenges
[
edit
]
In 1923, while what is now Pakistan was part of
British India
, a regional
National Spiritual Assembly
was formed for India and Burma - which then included the area now part of Pakistan.
Martha Root
, an American Baha?i, visited Karachi and Lahore in 1930
[30]
and again in 1938 when she stayed for three months and supervised the publication of her book titled
Tahirih ? the Pure
.
She died about a year later.
[32]
The Baha?is of Karachi obtained land for a cemetery in 1931.
[33]
Mirza Tarazullah Samandari, later appointed as a
Hand of the Cause
? a distinguished rank in the religion ?, visited the area several times; he first visited the region in 1930, and then again in 1963, 1964, 1966, and in 1993 travelling to many cities. From 1931 to 1933, Professor Pritam Singh, the first Baha?i from a
Sikh
background, settled in Lahore and published an English language weekly called
The Baha?i Weekly
and other initiatives. A
Baha?i publishing committee
was established in Karachi in 1935. This body evolved and is registered as the
Baha?i Publishing Trust
of Pakistan. In 1937,
John Esslemont
's
Baha?u'llah and the New Era
was translated into
Urdu
and
Gujarati
in Karachi.
[34]
The committee also published scores of Baha?i books and leaflets in Urdu, English,
Arabic
,
Persian
, Sindhi,
Pushtu
,
Balochi
,
Gojri
,
Balti
and
Punjabi
and memorials including those marking the centenaries of the declaration of the Bab and Baha?u'llah.
[35]
The Local Spiritual Assembly of
Quetta
was formed in 1943 by Baha?is from Mumbai and Iran while the Local Spiritual Assembly of
Hyderabad
was also formed in 1943 by Baha?is from Karachi. A spiritual assembly was elected for the first time in
Jammu
in 1946. Baha?is from Karachi were among those to help elect the local spiritual assemblies in
Sukkur
and
Rawalpindi
in 1948. Further local assemblies were formed in
Sialkot
in 1949,
Multan
,
Chittagong
, and
Dhaka
in 1950,
Faisalabad
in 1952,
Sargodha
in 1955, and
Abbottabad
,
Gujranwala
,
Jahanabad
,
Mirpurkhas
,
Nawabshah
, and
Sahiwal
by 1956 thus raising the number of local spiritual assemblies to 20.
Hand of the Cause
Dorothy Beecher Baker
spoke at a variety of events in India extending her stay twice to speak at schools ? her last public talk was in
Karachi
in early 1954.
[36]
Meanwhile, a Muslim emigre from near Lahore, Fazel (Frank) Khan, moved to Australia where he was asked to present the teachings of Islam at a Baha?i school and was so affected by the class that he and his family converted to the Baha?i Faith in 1947.
[37]
On two later occasions Fazel visited his home village and endeavoured to teach them his new religion. On the first visit there was no response, but during the second visit a cousin converted in the town of Sialkot.
[38]
On the other hand, a
fatwa
was issued in Sialkot against the Baha?is.
[39]
Plans for an independent national assembly for Pakistan began as early as spring 1954.
[40]
A regional convention in Karachi in 1956 had 17 delegates.
[41]
With independence from India proceeding, the Baha?is of East and West Pakistan elected a separate Baha?i National Spiritual Assembly from India in 1957,
[42]
witnessed by Hand of the Cause Shu?a?u'llah ?Ala?i.
[43]
The Baha?is elected to this first national assembly included Isfandiar Bakhtiari, Chaudhri Abdur Rehman, Faridoon Yazameidi, A.C. Joshi, M.H. IImi, Abdul Abbas Rizvi, M.A. Latif, Nawazish Ali Shah, and Mehboob Iiahi Qureshi. Joshi in particular was then the chairman of the national assembly and had been elected to assemblies since 1947 and eventually in other institutions.
[42]
The new national assembly saw to the publishing of a history of the Baha?i Faith in Pakistan in 1957.
[44]
In 1961 the national assembly held a reception to honor the dedication of the
Baha?i House of Worship
in Australia by inviting Australian and other diplomats as well as judges of Pakistani courts, business leaders and college professors
[45]
while the local assembly of Sukkur hosted a regional summer school.
[46]
In 1962 one was hosted by the local assembly of Quetta.
[47]
In 1963 the
Universal House of Justice
, the international governing body of the Baha?is, was elected and all nine members of the Pakistani National Spiritual Assembly participated in the voting.
[48]
In 1964 Hand of the Cause Tarazu'llah Samandari visited Baha?is and social leaders in Dacca, East Pakistan at the time.
[49]
From 1946 through the 1980s the Baha?i publishing trust published a variety of works oriented to youth.
[50]
Mason Remey's influence
[
edit
]
In 1960
Mason Remey
declared himself to be the successor of
Shoghi Effendi
,
thus he was excommunicated by the
Hands of the cause
at Haifa and expelled from the Baha?i faith. He was declared a
covenant-breaker
.
A small group of Baha’i's in Pakistan accepted his claims and published some materials from 1965 through 1972.
[53]
Rawalpindi, Pakistan
was one of three local assemblies that Remey appointed, and Pakistan was one of two countries to form a national assembly loyal to Remey, which was only active for a few years.
[50]
He also had followers in
Faisalabad
and
Sialkot
.
A newsletter published by Baha?is loyal to Remey announced in 1964 that almost all the Baha?is in Pakistan accepted Remey as the successor to Shoghi Effendi.
Encyclopædia Iranica
also states that Mason Remey was "successful in Pakistan".
[56]
Government officials have occasionally attended events at Baha?i centres.
However, the government prohibits Baha?is from travelling to Israel for
Baha?i pilgrimage
.
The government of Pakistan also voted against the United Nations resolution
Situation of Human Rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran
on 19 December 2001 raised in response to the
Persecution of Baha?is
in Iran.
In 2003 a series of youth collaborations highlighted internal developments in the community using the
Ruhi Institute
process.
Indeed, nearly 1000 individuals had completed Ruhi Book 1 by 2004,
and classes have continued through 2007.
In 2004 the Baha?is of Lahore began seeking for a new Baha?i cemetery.
History since 1967
[
edit
]
In Pakistan, 1967 was a year of multiplying activities. The Baha?i youth of Karachi sponsored a youth symposium on world peace,
[62]
the community at large elected a woman to the national assembly,
[63]
for the first time elected a local assembly in
Rahim Yar Khan
,
[64]
and held a reception for a Baha?i from the
Sokoine University of Agriculture
in
Morogoro
with guests including executive engineers, attorneys, businessmen and industrialists, doctors, press representatives, bankers and university students.
[65]
In 1972 the assembly of Karachi held an observance of
United Nations Day
which over one hundred people attended. Talks presented dealt with the elimination of racial discrimination.
[66]
Also in 1972 the government of Pakistan invited the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha?is to send a delegate to participate in a Conference of the Religious Minorities.
[67]
By 1974 there were Baha?is that were members of the
Bhil
tribe in
Thatta
.
[68]
In 1975 Baha?is held meetings for the
International Women's Year
[69]
and a seminar on "Education in Pakistan."
[70]
In 1976 Baha?is were invited to participate in a week long celebration of minorities.
[71]
Later Baha?is and non-Baha?is gathered to commemorate
Letter of the Living
Tahirih
[72]
and a Baha?i was acknowledged as part of the delegation from Pakistan to an Asian conference on religion and peace by the chief Muslim delegate late in the conference.
[73]
In 1977 membership of the Baha?is reached the state of
Kalat
[74]
and
Tharparkar
.
[75]
The 1977 winter school gathered 250 Baha?is
[75]
while 1978's gathered 350.
[76]
In 1978 conditions in
Afghanistan
, including the
Soviet invasion
, lead to many Afghan Baha?is being arrested in that country and many fled to Pakistan.
[77]
Iranian Baha?is also fled to Pakistan from Iran in 1979 due to the
Iranian Revolution
.
[78]
In 1979 the New Day Montessori School was established with ten students but would grow in time to three hundred and most of the students were not Baha?is.
[79]
[80]
At this time Baha?is report there were 83 assemblies amongst many hundreds of places Baha?is lived which included three district centers and there were 47 delegates to the national convention.
[81]
In winter 1979?80
Zahida Hina
gave a speech on the life and works of Tahirih at a women's conference.
[82]
In spring 1980 for the
International Year of the Child
the local assembly of Hyderabad organized an event that showcased children's art, essays, singing and quiz competitions,
[83]
and the topic of the elimination of racial prejudice was a theme in Baha?i gatherings in several cities.
[84]
In the summer an institute and a seminar were held for children and youth covering a variety of topics including "The Role of Baha'i Youth during Political Upheavals."
[85]
That fall and winter further gatherings were held, this time commemorating the United Nations Day (which highlighted the Commission for Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities) and a talk by a professor of Superior Science College (see
Government Colleges affiliated with the University of Karachi
) which encouraged discussion on the elimination of prejudices.
[86]
Before spring 1981, the youth of Karachi organized a conference recapitulating many of the same themes of games, quizzes, a poster contest and round of prayers.
[87]
Come April and May there was a broad attempt at engaging several interest groups from primary and secondary schools, universities and colleges, professional publishers and the general public through a radio broadcast.
[88]
Still that spring, president of Pakistan,
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq
, wrote an executive order categorizing the Baha?i Faith as a non-Muslim religion.
[89]
That December the Baha?is again held an observance of United Nations Day in several cities that received press coverage from print and radio.
[90]
Representatives of the Muslim, Christian, Hindu, Zoroastrian and Baha?i communities gathered for a symposium in the fall of 1982 with the theme, "The Increasing Social Unrest in the World Today and its Solution" while presentations were made to judges and lawyers about the
Persecution of Baha?is
in Iran.
[91]
Still in the fall a women's conference brought together sixty non-Baha'i women who were wives of judges, university professors, headmistresses and teachers to hear talks.
[92]
And in January 1983 a multi-faith presentation covered "the need of religion" on
World Religion Day
held in Karachi.
[93]
In February and April Baha?is gathered for regional school sessions in Karachi, Quetta, Rawalpindi and Sibi.
[94]
In August assemblies were formed for the first time in Sialkot, near Lahore, and Multan, the birthplace of
Letter of the Living
, Sa'id-i-Hindi.
[95]
In September a symposium on
Tahirih
was held with presentations including
Sahar Ansari
, a professor of Urdu at the University of Karachi and Zahida Hina with the attendance of noted Pakistani poet,
Jon Elia
.
[96]
Also in September a Baha?i women's group decided to provide treats to students at a government school for physically and mentally handicapped children which evolved into the first set of volunteers helping in the school ever had.
[97]
From December 1984 through July 1985, more than ten vocational or tutorial schools had been set up in several cities and run by Baha?is or Baha?i assemblies.
[98]
Also in the early 1980s, Baha?is in Pakistan started social and economic development projects like small-scale medical camps.
[99]
In the mid-1980s, Iranian Baha?i refugees who had come to Pakistan began to arrive in other countries.
[100]
[101]
The office attending to the refugees attracted visitors from governments and institutions including members of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (LSHCR) in Islamabad and Lahore; an official from the Ministry of Justice of the Nelherlands; a delegation from Finland that included the Ambassador from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ambassador of the Embassy of Finland in Tehran, and three senior officials of the Finnish government; and the Australian Immigration Officer from Canberra.
[102]
In 1985 the
Universal House of Justice
published
The Promise of World Peace
and in 1986 and the assembly of Hyderabad used the occasion of the
International Year of Peace
to sponsor a symposium on world peace and present the document to attendees.
[103]
In 1989 Baha?is from Karachi moved to and elected the first local assembly in
Muzaffarabad
while Baha?is from Quetta sponsored a week long series of student competitions that were run in 11 schools in Baluchistan ? each day different activities were run;
The Elimination of Prejudice
, national songs, a quiz game, and a drama contest were among the events held.
[104]
In 1990 several individuals converted from an
Ahamdi
background to the Baha?i Faith and formed an assembly.
In 1998, when the
Taliban
authorities in Afghanistan arrested many Baha?is, many fled to Pakistan but many were able to return by 2002.
[77]
See also
[
edit
]
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
Zarandi 1932
, pp. 558?590.
- ^
a
b
Malik, Iftikhar H.
Religious minorities in Pakistan
. Vol. 6. London: Minority rights group international, 2002.
- ^
Manuchehri, Sepehr (April 2001). Walbridge, John (ed.).
"Historical Accounts of two Indian Babis: Sa'in Hindi and Sayyid Basir Hindi"
.
Research Notes in Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Studies
.
05
(2)
. Retrieved
2009-04-04
.
- ^
Manuchehri, Sepehr (September 1999). Walbridge, John (ed.).
"The Practice of Taqiyyah (Dissimulation) in the Babi and Bahai Religions"
.
Research Notes in Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Studies
.
03
(3)
. Retrieved
2009-04-04
.
- ^
Momen, Moojan (2000).
"Jamal Effendi and the early spread of the Baha?i Faith in Asia"
.
Baha?i Studies Review
.
09
(1999/2000). Association for Baha'i Studies (English-Speaking Europe)
. Retrieved
2009-04-04
.
- ^
a
b
Garlington, William (1997). R.I. Cole, Juan; Maneck., Susan (eds.).
"The Baha'i Faith in India: A Developmental Stage Approach"
.
Occasional Papers in Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Studies
. June, 1997 (2). Humanities & Social Sciences Online
. Retrieved
2009-04-04
.
- ^
a
b
"Miss Martha Root in India".
Baha?i News
(45): 7?8. October 1930.
- ^
"Letter from the House of Spirituality of Bahais, Chicago, Ill., U. S. A. to the Assembly of Rangoon Burma"
.
Star of the West
. Vol. 01, no. 11. 1910-02-10.
- ^
"Cablegram from Shoghi Effendi".
Baha?i News
(131): 2. November 1939.
- ^
"Letter from the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha?is of Karachi".
Baha?i News
(51): 16. April 1931.
- ^
- ^
MacEoin, Denis; William Collins.
"Memorials (Listings)"
.
The Babi and Baha'i Religions: An Annotated Bibliography
. Greenwood Press's ongoing series of Bibliographies and Indexes in Religious Studies. Entry #45, 56, 95, 96
. Retrieved
2009-04-06
.
- ^
"Memorial Meeting for Dorothy Beecher Baker; Intercontinental Mission".
Baha?i News
(277): 4. March 1954.
- ^
Hassall, Graham.
"Yerrinbool Baha'i School 1938 ? 1988, An Account of the First Fifty Years"
.
Published Articles
. Baha?i Library Online
. Retrieved
2008-07-20
.
- ^
Hassall, Graham (1999).
"Fazel Mohammad Khan"
.
The Baha?i World
.
XX
. Baha?i World Centre: 839?843.
- ^
"India, Pakistan and Burma".
Baha?i News
(227): 11?12. January 1950.
- ^
"Sixteen New National Assemblies by Ridvan, 1957".
Baha?i News
(291): 4?5. May 1955.
- ^
"Pakistan Regional Convention".
Baha?i News
(291): 12. May 1956.
- ^
a
b
Universal House of Justice (1986).
In Memoriam
. Vol. XVIII. Baha?i World Centre. pp. 795?797.
ISBN
0-85398-234-1
.
- ^
"National Assembly formed in Karachi".
Baha?i News
(318): 9?10. August 1957.
- ^
"International News; Paksitsan; NSA publishes Souvenir Booklet".
Baha?i News
(291): 7. November 1957.
- ^
"Two Asian National Communities Celebrate Dedication of Sydney Temple".
Baha?i News
(369): 15. December 1961.
- ^
"Pakistan Believers Hold Their Fifth Summer School in Sukkur".
Baha?i News
(370): 5. January 1962.
- ^
"Summer School h.e~d in Quetta".
Baha?i News
(392): 11. November 1963.
- ^
Rabbani, R. (Ed.)
(1992).
The Ministry of the Custodians 1957?1963
. Baha?i World Centre. pp. 411, 431.
ISBN
0-85398-350-X
.
- ^
"Summer School held in Quetta".
Baha?i News
(403): 5. October 1964.
- ^
a
b
MacEoin, Denis; William Collins.
"The Babi and Baha'i Religions: An Annotated Bibliography Children/education (Listings)"
.
The Babi and Baha'i Religions: An Annotated Bibliography
. Greenwood Press's ongoing series of Bibliographies and Indexes in Religious Studies. Entry #228, 229, 304, 370
. Retrieved
2009-04-06
.
- ^
MacEoin, Denis; William Collins.
"Schismatic Groups"
.
The Babi and Baha'i Religions: An Annotated Bibliography
. Greenwood Press's ongoing series of Bibliographies and Indexes in Religious Studies. Entry #24, 27, 30, 61, 90, 101, 108
. Retrieved
2009-04-06
.
- ^
"BAHAISM iii. Bahai and Babi Schisms ? Encyclopaedia Iranica"
.
iranicaonline.org
. Retrieved
2020-12-09
.
- ^
"Youth Symposium in Pakistan".
Baha?i News
(435): 11. June 1967.
- ^
"Eleventh annual Baha'i convention".
Baha?i News
(435): 11. July 1967.
- ^
"First Local Spiritual Assembly of...".
Baha?i News
(443): 13. February 1968.
- ^
"Pakistan".
Baha?i News
(444): 6. March 1968.
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Baha?i News
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Baha?i News
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Baha?i News
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Further reading
[
edit
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External links
[
edit
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