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Bibliography 2: #BIB28781

Key BIB28781
Reference type Journal Article
Title Deriding Revealed Religions? : Baha'is in Egypt
Journal ISIM Newsletter
Author Pink, Johanna
Year2002
Date October 2002
Abstract When on 10 May 1925, the appellate shari'a court of Biba annulled the marriages of three Upper Egyptian
Baha'is to their Muslim wives, declaring that the Baha'i faith was not part of Islam and therefore Muslims
embracing it were to be considered apostates, this verdict was, paradoxically, hailed by the international Baha'i community as 'the first Charter of the emancipation of the Cause of Baha'u'llah from the fetters
of Islamic orthodoxy'. The National Spiritual Assembly (NSA) of the Baha'is of Egypt and the Sudan, one
of the first NSAs to be founded worldwide, felt inspired by the verdict that finally made the Egyptian
public aware of the existence of an active Baha'i community in their country. It was clear to everyone now
that the Baha'i faith could no longer be regarded as an Islamic reform movement, as had been the case
before World War I, when Abd'ul'baha's visits to Alexandria had caused a first wave of interest in the new religion.
Language English
Keywords EGYPT; PERSECUTION; LAW
Pages 30
Legal note 11.
File attachments internal-pdf://1385522912/Pink - Deriding_revealed_religions - ISIM_News.pdf

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