Baha'is

The Baha’i religion emerged in the mid-1800s as an offspring of Shi’i Islam in Iran. Baha’is base their religion on the scriptures of two successive founding prophets after Muhammed, and both Muslims and Baha’is agree that the Baha’i religion is not part of Islam. Baha’i later spread all over the wo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Warburg, Margit 1952- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Walter De Gruyter GmbH 2024
In: Religious minorities online
Year: 2024
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)

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520 |a The Baha’i religion emerged in the mid-1800s as an offspring of Shi’i Islam in Iran. Baha’is base their religion on the scriptures of two successive founding prophets after Muhammed, and both Muslims and Baha’is agree that the Baha’i religion is not part of Islam. Baha’i later spread all over the world, primarily through conversion among the majority populations, and most of the about six million Baha’is worldwide have a non-Muslim background. In general, Baha’is blend into the majority society with few or no tensions. However, in many Muslim countries, primarily in Iran, Baha’is are met with suspicion and hostility, and the legal position of Baha’is is precarious and makes life difficult for them. In Iran, Baha’is have repeatedly suffered from bloody persecutions. A general scheme of minority-majority attitudes and behaviour is proposed, and it can also be used to view the Baha’is’ minority situation. The second and more important of the Baha’i prophets, Baha’u’llah (1817–1892), was exiled to the Haifa area, and the world headquarters of the Baha’i religion were established in Haifa many years before the founding of the state of Israel. Baha’is have a special minority position in Israel. 
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