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Azalī

The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica

published in Encyclopaedia Britannica

2011-09-28

Azalī, any member of the Bābī movement (followers of a 19th-century Iranian prophet, the Bāb) who chose to remain faithful to the Bāb’s teachings and to his chosen successor, Mirza Yaḥya, given the religious title Ṣobḥ-e Azal, after a split in the movement occurred in 1863. For about 13 years after the Bāb’s execution (1850), his followers acknowledged Ṣobḥ-e Azal as their lawful leader. In 1863, when Ṣobḥ-e Azal’s half-brother Bahāʾ Ullāh privately declared himself “him whom God shall manifest”—a new prophet foretold by the Bāb—the Bābī community polarized. The Azalīs rejected the divine claims of Bahāʾ Ullāh as premature, arguing that the world must first accept Bābī laws in order to be ready for “him whom God shall manifest.” Most Bābīs, however, favoured Bahāʾ Ullāh and, after the public manifestation of his mission in 1867, began the development of a new religion, the Bahāʾī faith.

The Azalīs have retained the original teachings of the Bāb’s Bayān (“Revelation”) and supplemented them with the instructions of Ṣobḥ-e Azal. Numerically they have remained considerably outnumbered by the Bahāʾīs.

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