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Tag: "Bagdadi family (Baghdadi family)"

tag name Bagdadi family (Baghdadi family) type: People
web link bahai-library.com/tags/Bagdadi_family_(Baghdadi_family)

"Bagdadi family (Baghdadi family)" has been tagged in:

3 results from the Main Catalog

1 result from the Chronology

from the main catalog (3 results; collapse)

sorted by  
  1. 2015. In Memoriam: Kamran Ekbal (1946 - 2014). Ramez Ekbal. Bio of a scholar, translator of the Writings, and frequent contributor to the Irfan Colloquia. Biographies.
  2. 2014. Bagdádi Family. Kamran Ekbal. Brief excerpt, with link to article offsite. Encyclopedia.
  3. 1930. Treasures of the East: The Life of Nine Oriental Countries. Zia M. Bagdadi. Descriptions of nine "Treasures" — Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Iraq, Jijaz (Arabia), Transjordania (Arabia), Persia, India, and Turkey — by an Iraqi physician who traveled to the U.S. and was instrumental in the establishment of several Bahá'í communities. Books.

from the Chronology (1 result)

  1. 1937-04-11
      The passing of Dr. Zíá Bagdádí (b. February 9, 1882, Beirut, Lebanon) in Augusta, Georgia. He was buried in Westover Memorial Park, Augusta, Georgia. [Find a grave]
    • Dr. Bagdádí attended the American University of Beirut and graduated as a physician. In September 1909, on 'Abdu'l-Bahá's advice, he moved to Chicago to further his medical studies and soon emerged as a pillar of the Chicago Bahá'í community. A major translator of 'Abdu'l-Bahá's tablets into English and the editor of the Persian pages of Star of the West, he accompanied 'Abdu'l-Bahá on much of His North American travels in 1912. In the year 1929, Dr. Bagdádí wrote a book telling of his birthplace and travels in the Orient under the title, Treasures of the East. He wrote of his experiences in the presence of Bahá'u'lláh as a child.
    • He married Zeenat Khanum who was the daughter of Hasan Aqa Tabrizi, aunt of Ali Nakhjavani who went to the Holy Land to give information relating to the restoration of the house of 'Abdu'llah Pasha. Zeenat's sister was Fatimih Khanum (Ali Nakhjavani's mother) who spent her youth in service to the Greatest Holy Leaf. These two sisters, when they were young girls in 'Akka, nine and eleven years old, were accepted into the household of 'Abdu'l-Bahá. They were married in the first Bahá'í marriage in Montreal, Canada which took place on April 30, 1914. [Bahá'í Chronicles] iiiii
 
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