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Bahaʾi, Religion founded in Iran in the mid-19th century by Bahāʾ Ullāh. It emerged from Bābism when in 1863 Bahāʾ Ullāh asserted that he was the messenger of God predicted by the Bāb. Before his death in 1892, he appointed his son ʿAbd ol-Bahā to lead the community. The writings of the Bāb, Bahāʾ Ullāh, and ʿAbd ol-Bahā form the sacred literature. Worship consists of readings from scriptures of all religions. Bahā’ī faith proclaims the essential unity of all religions and the unity of humanity. It is concerned with social ethics and has no priesthood or sacraments. Because of its 19 initial disciples, it considers the number 19 sacred, and the calendar consists of 19 months of 19 days (with four additional days). Adherents are expected to pray daily, fast 19 days a year, and keep to a strict ethical code. Bahā’ī has experienced major growth since the 1960s but has been persecuted in Iran since the fundamentalist revolution of 1979.
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