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Baháʼí Faith by country

The Baháʼí Faith formed in the late 19th century in the Middle East, later gaining converts in India, East Africa, and the Western world. Traveling promoters of the religion played a significant role in spreading the religion into most countries and territories during the second half of the 20th century,[1] mostly seeded out of North America by the planned migration of individuals.[2] The Baháʼí Faith was recognized as having a widespread international membership by the 1980s,[3][4] and is now recognized as the second-most geographically widespread religion after Christianity.[5]

The Baháʼí World Centre estimated over a million Bahá'ís in 1965,[6] 5 million in 1991,[7] and about 8 million in 2020.[8] The official agencies of the religion have focused on publishing data such as numbers of local and national spiritual assemblies, countries and territories represented, languages and tribes represented, schools, and publishing trusts, not the total number of believers.[9][10]

Analyzing Baháʼí data on localities and activity levels, Danish sociologist Margit Warburg suggested that by 2001, registered Baháʼís reliably numbered over 5 million and that active participants numbered approximately 900,000 (18% of registered Baháʼís).[11] Independent estimates, such as Encyclopædia Britannica and the World Christian Encyclopedia, have listed Baháʼí membership as over 7 million[12][13][14] and described it as the fastest growing religion by percentage across the 20th century.[15]

The number of Baháʼí adherents is difficult to estimate accurately. Few national Baháʼí communities have the administrative capacity to enumerate their members[16] and Baháʼí membership data does not break out active participation from the total number of people who have expressed their belief. Due to its small size, few censuses or religious surveys include the Baháʼí Faith as a separate category[a][18] and some government censuses count Baháʼís as Muslims or Hindus.[19] Country-level detail from World Christian Encyclopedia (WCE), on which many estimates rely, counts declared Baháʼís along with sympathizers, leading to much higher counts than those of self-identifying Baháʼís.[20][21]

Difficulties in enumeration edit

The fact that the religion is diffuse and proportionally small are major barriers to demographic research by outsiders. Even in the United States, where significant resources are dedicated to gathering data, the Baháʼí Faith is often omitted from religious surveys due to the high sample size required to reduce the margin of error.[17] In the Middle East, especially Iran, Baháʼís face persecution, and the lack of Baháʼí administration makes it difficult to maintain a count.

Baháʼí authors Peter Smith and Moojan Momen, commenting on the difficulties of counting Baháʼís, wrote the following:

With any religious movement there are invariable problems of quantification unless the movement's own enumeration techniques are exceptionally efficient, or government censuses incorporate questions on religion. Even here there are often considerable problems of definition. Are gradations of commitment to be taken into consideration so as to differentiate between active and nominal members? Are the children of members to be included as well as adults? Is allowance to be made for the pattern of multi-religious adherence which is common in many parts of the world? These are, of course, problems that affect the estimation of numbers for any religion and are not confined to Bahá'í statistics.

— Smith & Momen, "The Bahá'í Faith 1957-1988: A Survey of Contemporary Developments", Religion (1989)[22]

Definition of membership edit

Throughout the early development of the Baháʼí Faith in Iran and the West, Baháʼís often retained some of the religious identity that they converted from, many remaining members of churches and mosques. Later, Shoghi Effendi made it clear that the Baháʼí Faith was its own tradition with laws and institutions, and that Baháʼís could not remain members of other religions. The practice of maintaining membership rolls of believers began in the 1920s.[23]

In the 1930s the Baháʼís of the United States and Canada began requiring new adherents to sign a declaration of faith, stating their belief in Baháʼu'lláh, the Báb, and ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, and affirming that there are laws and institutions to obey. The original purpose of signing a declaration card was to allow followers to apply for lawful exemption from active military service.[24] The signature of a card later became optional in Canada, but in the US is still used for records and administrative requirements.[25]

All local and national Spiritual Assemblies are expected to keep membership records that include declarations of faith and withdrawals, which are used for annual assembly elections.[26] The Baháʼí system of membership thus has a system of contracting into the religion and some maintenance of the membership list is required for community functioning. Being removed from membership requires an opposite declaration of disbelief.[citation needed]

Children edit

A peculiar difficulty arises in counting Baháʼís because a tenet of the faith is that parents cannot choose the religion of their children and that 15 is the age of spiritual maturity when an individual can make the choice.[27] Early membership rolls excluded children of Baháʼís and didn't even count them separately.[22] In 1979 the Universal House of Justice requested that children be included separately for statistical purposes, matching the methodology of most censuses and surveys. Before that, membership rolls may have only indicated ages 21 or older (the age required for voting).[28]

The change toward including children in statistics caused an increase in the total number of reported Baháʼís in the late 1980s, but has been consistent since.[29]

Active vs inactive edit

Another difficulty arises from defining membership based on participation. The number of active participants in any religious movement will always be smaller than the number who profess belief. The prevailing norm in the Western world is that members of minority religious groups must be actively participating to be considered a member, and members of majority religious groups have a large number of passive adherents.[29] Margit Warburg wrote,

As with other voluntary organisations, some members become more active than others, but the fact that there is no fixed membership subscription means that there is no economic motive for inactive Baháʼís to take the initiative to resign membership. Inactive Baháʼís, however, are not expelled just because they are inactive in community life, since in principle they could still be believing Baháʼís.[30]

Warburg also noted: "Baháʼís do not lose membership status just by being inactive."[29]

In the 1980s the Baháʼís of the United States started including “address unknown” in their membership statistics; members designated as such may profess belief but are no longer participating in community life.[22] For example, in its 2020 Annual Report the US National Spiritual Assembly had 177,647 registered Baháʼís of all ages, only 77,290 of which had good addresses, and 57,341 total participants in core activities, with 37% of attendees from outside of the Baháʼí population.[31] The higher American number has been challenged because it includes some who no longer believe, but the lower number with good addresses does not include inactive Baháʼís who continue their belief.[32] As author William Garlington noted,

Just as there are many people who claim to be followers of Jesus Christ and yet are not official members of an established church, it seems fair to assume that there are a sizable number of individuals who identify with Baha'u'llah and his principles while remaining outside the established institutions of the Baha'i Faith... the significant point is that at least [the registered Baha'is] have experienced enough identity with the Baha'i teachings to have made official written declarations of that belief.[33]

Using activity data, Warburg estimated a percentage of activity in Baháʼí communities around the world and concluded that in 2001 there were reliably 5.1 million registered Baháʼís in the world and 900,000 active Baháʼís, or 18% of the total. The estimates on activity were broken out by continent: Europe 82% active, USA and Canada 71%, Australia and New Zealand 91%, Africa 22%, India 5%, Other Asia 26%, Latin America 13%, and Oceania 43%.[34] On the question of whether the Baháʼí numbers are intentionally inflated, Warburg feels that the “numbers are not rooted in any sinister manipulation of data”.[29]

Number of Baháʼís worldwide edit

Estimates of Baháʼís worldwide

Baháʼí sources edit

Recent edit

  • In 2020, the Secretariat of the Universal House of Justice wrote, "on the basis of information received from Baháʼí communities across the world, and on reputable external sources", the current estimate for the number of Baháʼís worldwide is "about eight million", and Baháʼís reside in "well over 100,000 localities".[8]
  • A 1997 statement by the NSA of South Africa wrote: "…the Baháʼí Faith enjoys a world-wide following in excess of six million people."[35]
  • As early as 1991 official estimates were of "more than five million Baháʼís",[7] which was still in use as of 2020.[9]
  • In 1989 the journal Religion published an article by Baháʼí authors Moojan Momen and Peter Smith. They observed that in the 1950s there were "probably in the region of 200,000 Baháʼís world-wide. The vast majority of these (over 90%) lived in Iran. There were probably fewer than 10,000 Baháʼís in the West and no more than 3,000 Baháʼís in the Third World, mostly India".[16] By the end of the 1960s, they wrote, "we 'guestimate' that there may now have been about one million Baháʼís." And by 1988 they estimated about 4.5 million.[36]
  • A 1987 report, published in the United States Baháʼí News reported 3.62 million Baháʼís in 1979 and 4.74 million Baháʼís in 1986, a growth of 31% over the period, or 4.4% per year on average.[37]
  • The document The Promise of World Peace, produced by the Universal House of Justice in 1985, stated that the Bahá’í community has "some three to four million people".[38]
  • Baháʼí author Moojan Momen wrote in 2008, "In the early 1950s, there were probably some 200,000 Baháʼís in the world. This has increased to about a million by the late 1960s, about four and a half million by the late 1980s, and over five million by 2000s."[39]

Before 1950 edit

  • The first known survey of the religion comes from an unpublished work in 1919–1920 gathered by John Esslemont and had been intended to be part of his well-known Baháʼu'lláh and the New Era.[40] In it, consulting various individuals, he summarizes the religion's presence in Egypt, Germany, India, Iran, Iraq, Turkestan, and the United States. It did not arrive at a total but did have some regional statistics based on some individual reports.
  • In 1867, 53 Baháʼís from Baghdad sent an appeal to the American Consul in Beirut for assistance in freeing Bahá'u'lláh from Ottoman captivity. According to missionary Henry Harris Jessup, "The petitioners claim that they number 40,000."[41]

Other sources edit

2010 and newer edit

  • The World Religion Database has estimated a worldwide Baháʼí population of 8,531,050 in 2020.[13]
  • In April 2017, The Economist reported that there were more than 7 million Baháʼís in the world.[42]
  • In 2016 the Yearbook of International Religious Demography 2016 noted just over 7.8 million Baháʼís in the world in 2015, having grown at an overall rate of 2.79% across the century 1910 to 2010.[43] The countries with the largest Baháʼí populations in 2015 were, (starting with the largest): India, the US, Kenya, Viet Nam, Congo DR, Philippines, Zambia, South Africa, Iran and Bolivia, ranging upwards from 232,000 to just over 2 million in India.[44]
  • In 2016 the book 12 Major World Religions wrote, "Today it numbers at least 5 million adherents and possibly more."[45]
  • In 2013 the book The World's Religions in Figures: An Introduction to International Religious Demography wrote, "The Baha'i Faith is the only religion to have grown faster in every United Nations region over the past 100 years than the general population; Bahaʼi was thus the fastest-growing religion between 1910 and 2010, growing at least twice as fast as the population of almost every UN region."[15]
  • In 2011, Bei Dawei said in an academic conference presentation that the Baháʼí Faith had "several hundred thousand" adherents. He noted that "estimates of five, six, or seven million are more usually encountered" but said that these estimates are projections based on self-reporting by Baháʼís and that the national figures they are based on "tend to exceed apparent Bahá'í activity by whole orders of magnitude."[46]
  • In 2010, The World Religion Database stated that there were 7.3 million Baháʼís in the world.[47] The Association of Religion Data Archives cited this estimate in 2010.[48]
  • In 2010, Encyclopædia Britannica estimated a total of 7.3 million Baháʼís residing in 221 countries.[12]
  • In 2010, Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices estimated 7.4 million Baháʼís in 2010,[49] citing UN median variant figures from World Population Prospects: The 2006 Revision.

2000 to 2009 edit

  • In 2009, Paula Hartz wrote in World Religions: Baha'i Faith: "Today the Baha’i Faith has some 5 million followers. It is one of the world’s fastest-growing religions. It is also probably the most diverse."[50]
  • The World Factbook states that Baháʼís make up 0.12% of the world based on a 2007 estimate,[51] corresponding to 7.9 million people.
  • Margit Warburg’s 2006 academic book on the Baháʼí Faith claimed, “a conservative estimate would be that in 2001 there were about 5.1 million registered Baháʼís in the world.”[52]
  • The 2005 Association of Religion Data Archives estimate is of 7.6 million[53] which is also echoed elsewhere.[54]
  • In 2005, the Encyclopedia of Religion, second edition, records that:

In the early twenty-first century the Baháʼís number close to six million in more than two hundred countries. The number of adherents rose significantly in the late twentieth century from a little more than one million at the end of the 1960s.[55]

  • In 2004, the Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa reported that "Baháʼís worldwide [are] estimated in 2001 at 5 million."[56]
  • In 2003, World Book Encyclopedia reported that "there are about 5,500,000 Baháʼís worldwide."[57]
  • In 2001, World Christian Encyclopedia (2nd edition, 2001) estimated 7.1 million adherents of the Baháʼí Faith in the year 2000 representing 0.1% of the world population. The same source projected 12 million in 2025 and 18 million in 2050, assuming then-current trends were to continue.[14] They also noted, "In government censuses Baháʼís are usually counted as Muslims or Hindus and not shown separately."[19]
  • In 2000, Encyclopædia Britannica estimated a total of 7.1 million Baháʼís residing in 218 countries.[58]
  • In 2000, Denis MacEoin wrote in the Handbook of Living Religions that:
"the movement has had remarkable success in establishing itself as a vigorous contender in the mission fields of Africa, India, parts of South America, and the Pacific, thus outstripping other new religions in a world-wide membership of perhaps 4 million and an international spread recently described as second only to that of Christianity. The place of Baha'ism among world religions now seems assured."[5]

1990 to 1999 edit

  • In 1998, the Academic American Encyclopedia said that the Baháʼís "are estimated to number about 2 million."[59]
  • In 1997, Dictionary of World Religions said that there are "five million Baháʼís" in the world.[60]
  • In 1997, Religions of the World published: "today there are about 5 million" Baháʼís.[61]
  • In 1993, the Columbia Encyclopedia published: "There are about 5 million Baháʼís in the world."[62]

1950 to 1989 edit

  • In 1995, the HarperCollins Dictionary of Religion stated: "In 1985, it was estimated that there were between 1.5 to 2 million Baha'is, with the greatest areas of recent growth in Africa, India, and Vietnam."[63]
  • In 1982, the World Christian Encyclopedia (1st edition, 1982) wrote of Baháʼí adherents in the world: “(1970) 2,659,400, (1980) 3,822,600 in 194 countries, (1985) 4,442,600.”[64]
  • In 2010, Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices estimated 2.7 million Baháʼís in 1970,[49] citing UN median variant figures from World Population Prospects: The 2006 Revision.
  • Paul Oliver wrote in World Faiths (2001) that there were "approximately five million Baháʼís" in 1963.[65]
  • Paula Hartz wrote in World Religions: Baha'i Faith (2009) that by the end of Shoghi Effendi's life (1957), "the Baha'i Faith had reached more than 400,000 [adherents]."[66]

Before 1950 edit

During ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's tour of North America several newspapers made claims of how large the religion was, with figures in the range of millions of people:

  • In 1912, a reporter in Salt Lake City claimed ʻAbdu'l-Bahá said the religion had "10,000,000 followers in the world."[71]
  • On June 16, 1912, a news report introduced him as the "Persian religious leader and spiritual and temporal head of the 14,000,000 of Baháʼís scattered throughout the world."[72]
  • On April 24, 1912, a newspaper article said "Baháʼísm now has 15,000,000 adherents scattered throughout the world, several hundred thousand of whom are in the United States and Canada."[73]
  • On April 12, 1912, a newspaper introduced him as "head of one of the newest and most thriving religions in the world, numbering 20,000,000 souls among his followers, of whom several hundred souls are in New York."[74]
  • On September 9, 1911, a news report about ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's visit to London claimed "at a moderate estimate, three million followers."[75]

Adherents by country edit

Although the Baháʼí News Service has reported on the total number of Baháʼís in the world, the data is not broken out by country.[76]

The World Christian Encyclopedia (WCE), and its successor The World Christian Database (WCD), is an authority on membership data for religions in the world, and its decades-long study by David Barrett and co-workers is a basis for many other estimates of Baháʼís in the world, such as ARDA. The data were released in editions of 1982, 2001, and 2018, and includes a break down by country. The WCE data has consistently reported higher numbers of Baháʼís than the reports of Baháʼí institutions.[77][47] Danish researcher Margit Warburg studied Baháʼí membership data and feels that the WCE data is overstated for Baháʼís.[76] For instance, WCE reports an estimated 1,600 Baháʼís in Denmark in 1995 and 682,000 Baháʼís in the USA. The number of registered Baháʼís at the same time were 240 and 130,000, respectively.[76] Peter Smith found that the WCE data is meant to include "members plus those who regularly attend Baháʼí events, that is including a wider circle of sympathizers as well as declared Baháʼís".[8]

The Association for Religious Data Archives (ARDA) is "a collection of surveys, polls, and other data submitted by the foremost scholars and research centers in the world." It gathers data from, "the US Census Bureau's International Data Base, the US State Department's International Religious Freedom Report, the United Nations Human Development Reports, and others"[48] including World Christian Database.[78]

Baháʼí Faith by country
Country or Territory Baháʼí sources WCE (1980)[79] WCE (2000)[80] ARDA (2010)[48][c] UNSD (2020)[81] Other sources
  Afghanistan (details) 600 23,075 16,541 400 (2007)[82]
  Albania (details) 14,024[citation needed] 5,711 7,126
  Algeria (details) 1,000 2,806 3,309
  American Samoa (details) 925 (2014)[83][d] 280 990
  Andorra (details) 110
  Angola (details) 600 1,488 2,061
  Anguilla (details) 50 86
  Antigua and Barbuda (details) 320 629 51 (2009)
  Argentina (details) 6,900 10,212 13,972
  Armenia (details) 1,331 1,190
  Aruba (details) 148
  Australia (details) 17,000[citation needed] 11,300 33,536 19,365 13,989 (2017) 8,947 (1996)[84]
11,036 (2001)[85]
12,331 (2006)[86]
13,706 (2011)[87]
13,988 (2016)[87]
  Austria (details) 2,120 3,780 1,948 760 (2003)
  Azerbaijan (details) 1,432 1,685
  Bahamas (details) 430 1,241 1,375 65 (2013)
  Bahrain (details) 500 1,379 2,832
  Bangladesh (details) 4,200 8,341 9,603
  Barbados (details) 400 (2010)[88] 1,440 3,522 3,337 98 (2016) 178 (2010)[89]
  Belarus (details) 106 100
  Belgium (details) 1,900 2,358 2,617
  Belize (details) 4,100 6,941 7,742 216 (2014) 202 (2010)[90]
  Benin (details) 5,400 13,074 11,637
  Bermuda (details) 120 325 124 (2011)
  Bhutan (details) 300 647 74
  Bolivia (details) 100,000 (1988)[91] 160,000 269,246 215,359
  Bosnia and Herzegovina (details) 0 0
  Botswana (details) 4,600 12,417 16,464 2,074 (2015) 700 (2001)[92]
  Brazil (details) 18,000 36,745 42,108
  British Virgin Islands (details) 90 192 10 (2016)
  Brunei (details) 710 981 199
  Bulgaria (details) 657 592
  Burkina Faso (details) 600[e] 2,767 2,860
  Burundi (details) 2,200 5,414 6,779
  Cambodia (details) 10,000[citation needed] 35,000 12,862 16,659
  Cameroon (details) 40,000[citation needed] 49,600 64,286 49,885
  Canada (details) 30,000[93] 40,000 31,396 46,826 18,945 (2013)
  Cape Verde (details) 200 655 759
  Cayman Islands (details) 80 336
  Central African Republic (details) 6,500 7,833 10,913
  Chad (details) 7,000 80,683 94,499
  Chile (details) 6,000 (2002)[94] 9,600 17,943 26,382
  People's Republic of China (details) 6,525 6,012
  Colombia (details) 30,000[citation needed] 38,000 64,758 70,504
  Comoros (details) 390 521 647
  Congo, Republic of (details) 6,200 12,927 25,879
  Congo, Democratic Republic of (details) 70,000[citation needed] 180,000 224,596 282,916
  Cook Islands (details) 160 161
  Costa Rica (details) 4,000[95] 8,400 11,571 13,457 3,000[96]
  Croatia (details) 150 (2006)[97] 0 0
  Cuba (details) 620 1,139 1,145
  Cyprus (details) 400 828 1,170
  Czech Republic (details) 950 966
  Denmark (details) 240 (1995)[76]
375 (2013)[98]
1,400 1,785 1,264 1,600 (1995)[76]
  Djibouti (details) 140 552 769
  Dominica (details) 70 1,225
  Dominican Republic (details) 5,500 5,904 6,899
  East Timor (details) 300 1,190
  Ecuador (details) 27,000 15,599 17,820
  Egypt (details) 3,000 (1960)[99]
500 (1987)[99]
500 (2001)[100]
1,000-2,000 (2019)[101]
1,500 5,760 6,946 2,000[102]
  El Salvador (details) 12,000 (1990)[103] 15,000 27,712 27,345
  Equatorial Guinea (details) 900 2,317 3,589
  Eritrea (details) 1,198 1,426
  Estonia (details) 459 496
  Eswatini (details) 11,000 4,516
  Ethiopia (details) 11,000 21,592 22,764
  Falkland Islands (details) 50 67 12 (2009)
  Faroe Islands (details) 50 124
  Fiji (details) 1,800 5,674 2,338
  Finland (details) 775 (2013)[98] 2,500 1,676 1,674 568 (2011)
  France (details) 5,000[citation needed] 3,700 4,136 4,453
  French Guiana (details) 500 725
  French Polynesia (details) 360 695
  Gabon (details) 300 405 605
  Gambia (details) 5,100 10,790 14,184
  Georgia (details) 1,725 1,639
  Germany (details) 6,000 (2019)[f] 11,500[g] 12,391 12,356 5,600 (2005)[105]
  Ghana (details) 10,000 12,146 14,106
  Greece (details) 300 611 189
  Greenland (details) 280 355
  Grenada (details) 160 145
  Guadeloupe (details) 640 1,595
  Guam (details) 800 1,863
  Guatemala (details) 7,000 20,073 19,898
  Guinea (details) 140 288 150
  Guinea-Bissau (details) 90 333 266
  Guyana (details) 110 (1969)
22,000 (1989)[106]
2,700 14,584 11,787 500 (2002)[107]
800 (2019)[108]
  Haiti (details) 11,700 17,055 22,614
  Honduras (details) 11,600 32,635 37,591
  Hong Kong (details) 600 1,120
  Hungary (details) 100 246 290
  Iceland (details) 360 (2013)[98] 400 801 599
  India (details) 700 (1953)[109]
2,000,000 (2020)[110]
1,050,000[h] 1,716,148 1,897,651 5,574 (1991)[111]
1,000,000 (1996)[112]
400,000 (1999)[112]
11,324 (2001)[113]
100,000 (2002)[114]
4,572 (2011)[115]
  Indonesia (details) 15,000 26,537 22,815
  Iran (details) 300,000 (1988)[116]
110,000 (2010)[117]
300,000 (2020)[9]
340,000 463,151 251,127 300,000–350,000 (1979)[118]
150,000–300,000[119]
300,000 (2019)[120]
  Iraq (details) 2,000[121] 700 2,607 3,801
  Ireland (details) 900 1,274 1,550 520 (2012)
  Israel (details) 650[122] 600 13,734 11,705
  Italy (details) 4,600 5,681 5,108
  Ivory Coast (details) 6,000 22,289 30,321
  Jamaica (details) 4,000[123] 5,000 7,456 5,157 269 (2013)
  Japan (details) 12,500 15,579 15,594
  Jordan (details) 1,000 17,221 15,655
  Kazakhstan (details) 6,967
  Kenya (details) 25,000-40,000[124] 180,000 308,292 422,782
  Kiribati (details) 3,500 4,321 2,322 (2013)
  Korea, North (details) 0 0 0
  Korea, South (details) 200[125] 18,000 32,096 33,084
  Kuwait (details) 2,000 5,172 8,992
  Kyrgyzstan (details) 0 1,426
  Laos (details) 150 1,229 13,450 2,122 (2019)
  Latvia (details) 0 0
  Lebanon (details) 1,400 3,272 3,889
  Lesotho (details) 10,700 19,062 19,195
  Liberia (details) 5,000 8,955 11,231
  Libya (details) 300 560 636
  Liechtenstein (details) 60 107
  Lithuania (details) 0 267 29 (2014)
  Luxembourg (details) 1,400 1,546 1,597
  Macao (details) 130
  Madagascar (details) 5,600 15,270 18,347
  Malawi (details) 15,000 (2003)[126] 11,600 24,501 34,323
  Malaysia (details) 30,000 (1986)[127] 62,000 97,78 67,549
  Maldives (details) 25 60 120
  Mali (details) 640 1,030 1,244
  Malta (details) 140 255 274
  Marshall Islands (details) 1,023
  Martinique (details) 1,600 2,031
  Mauritania (details) 140 267 346
  Mauritius (details) 7,500[citation needed] 9,500 21,848 23,742 645 (2012)
  Mexico (details) 23,000 33,903 38,902
  Micronesia, Federated States of (details) 8,000[citation needed] 1,909
  Moldova (details) 0 526
  Monaco (details) 30 57
  Mongolia (details) 8,000-9,000 (2020)[128] 0 53 55
  Montenegro (details) 0
  Montserrat (details) 200
  Morocco (details) 350-400[129] 3,200 28,719 32,598
  Mozambique (details) 1,400 3,405 2,877
  Myanmar (details) 15,000 49,044 78,915
  Namibia (details) 500 8,864 10,995
  Nauru (details) 130 1,106
    Nepal (details) 4,000 6,163 4,366 1,283 (2013) 1,211 (2011)[130]
  Netherlands (details) 11 (1948)
110 (1962)
365 (1973)
525 (1979)[131]
3,100 5,506 6,672
  New Caledonia (details) 570 932
  New Zealand (details) 3,200 3,878 7,518 2,634 (2013) 2,925 (2018)[132]
  Nicaragua (details) 4,000 9,616 10,918
  Niger (details) 1,100 2,978 5,528
  Nigeria (details) 21,000 27,031 38,190
  North Macedonia (details) 0 0
  Norway (details) 1,200 (2013)[98] 1,400 2,179 2,737 1,015 (2007)[133]
  Oman (details) 420 9,123 9,987
  Pakistan (details) 30,000 (2001)[134] 25,000 78,658 87,259 33,734 (2012)[135]
31,543 (2018)[136]
2,000-3,000 (2013)[137]
  Palau (details) 150 96 (2005)
  Panama (details) 20,000 35,318 41,170
  Papua New Guinea (details) 40,000 (2006)[138] 17,900 34,939 59,898
  Paraguay (details) 2,900 9,011 10,624
  Peru (details) 20,000 36,463 41,316
  Philippines (details) 64,000[citation needed] 115,000 229,522 275,069
  Poland (details) 504 766
  Portugal (details) 6,000[citation needed] 2,000 1,845 2,086
  Puerto Rico (details) 1,400 2,788 2,698
  Qatar (details) 420 985 2,717
  Réunion (details) 1,800 5,927
  Romania (details) 542 (1990)[139] 100 1,843 1,895
  Russia (details) 3,000[citation needed] 4,600[i] 16,586 19,338
  Rwanda (details) 4,000[140] 7,500 14,211 19,592
  Samoa (details) 925 (2014)[141][j] 3,300 4,178 817 (2018)
  São Tomé and Príncipe (details) 90 3,011 1,645[k]
  Saudi Arabia (details) 1,000 4,045 5,138
  Senegal (details) 3,200 16,804 23,883
  Serbia (details) 1,268
  Seychelles (details) 210 312 392 (2005)
  Sierra Leone (details) 1,150 11,385 13,765
  Singapore (details) 900 5,482 7,963
  Slovakia (details) 200[citation needed] 667 686 1,065 (2013)
  Slovenia (details) 297 396
  Solomon Islands (details) 800 1,903
  Somalia (details) 1,000 2,110[l] 2,677
  South Africa (details) 23,000 255,775 238,532 2,264 (2000)
  South Sudan (details)
  Spain (details) 4,500 13,647 13,528
  Sri Lanka (details) 9,700 15,489 15,502
  Sudan (details) 700 1,828 2,706
  Suriname (details) 5,000 6,424 3,591
  Sweden (details) 1,080 (2013)[142] 1,900 5,048 6,814
   Switzerland (details) 3,500 3,728 3,878
  Syria (details) 100 123 430
  Taiwan (details) 5,000 12,555 16,252
  Tajikistan (details) 743 3,092 1,000 (2018)[143]
  Tanzania (details) 35,000[citation needed] 60,000 140,593 190,419
  Thailand (details) 10,000 144,243 65,096
  Togo (details) 2,800 25,395 30,423
  Tonga (details) 1,700 6,582 755 (2019)
  Trinidad and Tobago (details) 8,000 15,627 15,973
  Tunisia (details) 520 1,917 2,096 150 (2001)[144]
  Turkey (details) 5,100 19,618 21,259
  Turkmenistan (details) 964 1,090
  Tuvalu (details) 400 580 177 (2007)
  Uganda (details) 105,000[145] 330,600 66,546 95,098 29,601 (2014)[146]
  Ukraine (details) 1,000[citation needed] 252 227
  United Arab Emirates (details) 1,400 55,214 38,364
  United Kingdom (details) 5,000 (1985)[147]
7,000 (2020)[148]
15,600[m] 30,628 47,554 5,021 (2011)[149]
  United States (details) 1,500 (1899)[150]
1,200 (1906)[150]
100,000 (1988)[151]
130,000 (1995)[76]
177,647 (2020)[31]
[n]
210,000 753,423 512,864 28,000 (1991)[152]
84,000 (2001)[152]
100,000 (2006)[153]
  United States Virgin Islands (details) 360 577
  Uruguay (details) 3,800 7,356 7,385
  Uzbekistan (details) 1,000[citation needed] 708 800
  Vanuatu (details) 160 5,418 3,293
  Venezuela (details) 1,218 (1965)[154]
20,000 (2000)[154]
35,000 141,072 169,811
  Vietnam (details) 200,000 (<1975)
6,000 (2006)[155]
220,000 356,133 388,802 3,000 (2019)[156]
  Western Sahara (details) 100 121
  Yemen (details) 250[citation needed] 480 1,000 1,328
  Zambia (details) 4,000 (2017)[157] 16,000 162,443 241,112 3,891 (2015)
  Zimbabwe (details) 1,000 (1971)
20,000 (1985)[158]
14,500 37,077 39,893 35,000 (1995)[159]

Adherents by continent edit

The following data comes from World Christian Encyclopedia (1st ed., 1982).[160]

Continent 1900 1970 1975 1980
Africa 225 695,094 847,795 1,024,440
East Asia 0 27,307 31,620 36,230
Europe 0 53,810 58,580 63,270
Latin America 0 298,350 376,070 462,100
Northern America 2,800 162,350 206,410 250,470
Oceania 0 29,355 38,640 48,115
South Asia 5,800 1,389,160 1,639,260 1,933,405
USSR 200 4,000 4,300 4,600
World[69] 9,025 2,659,426 3,202,675 3,822,630

The following data comes from World Christian Encyclopedia (2st ed., 2001).[161]

Continent 1900 1970 1990 1995 2000
Africa 225 698,094 1,383,320 1,546,330 1,732,816
Asia 5,900 1,411,530 2,811,995 3,034,140 3,475,167
Europe 210 56,810 106,635 120,275 129,706
Latin America 0 299,350 357,845 763,205 872,757
Northern America 2,800 162,350 628,675 712,335 785,587
Oceania 400 29,215 83,217 97,595 110,387
World[14] 9,535 2,657,349 5,671,687 6,273,880 7,106,420

In "The Baha'i Faith 1957–1988: A Survey of Contemporary Developments" (Religion: 1989), Baháʼí authors Momen and Smith provide the following estimates of the Baháʼís in the world over 3 decades, broken out by cultural areas. They derived numbers from, "calculation of approximate numbers from the number of Bahá'í organizations; extrapolating back from the official figures for the number of individual Bahá'ís provided more recently; estimates provided by informed Bahá'ís; and when the first draft of this paper was completed, a copy was sent to the Department of Statistics in Haifa and the present table incorporates some of the statistical information given in the reply to this, dated 8 July 1988."[1]

Cultural area 1954 1968 1988
Middle East and North Africa 200,000 250,000 300,000
North America, Europe & Anglo-Pacific 10,000 30,000 200,000
South Asia 1,000 300,000 1,900,000
South-east Asia 2,000 200,000 300,000
East Asia 10,000 20,000
Latin America & the Caribbean 100,000 700,000
Africa (sub-Saharan) 200,000 1,000,000
Oceania (excluding Anglo-Pacific) 5,000 70,000
World 213,000 1,095,000 4,490,000

Other statistics from Baháʼí sources edit

1928[162] 1949[162] 1968[10] ± 1986[10] 2001 2006[163]
National Spiritual Assemblies 7 11 81 165 179
Local Spiritual Assemblies 102 595 6,840 18,232 11,740[164]
Countries where the Baháʼí Faith is established:
independent countries
36 92 187 191
Localities where Baháʼís reside 573 2315 31,572 >116,000 127,381[10]
Indigenous tribes, races,
and ethnic groups
1,179 >2,100 2,112
Languages into which Baháʼí literature is translated 417 800
Baháʼí Publishing Trusts 9 26 33[10]

Further data on National Spiritual Assemblies edit

Year Number of NSAs[165][166][167]
1923 3
1936 10
1953 12
1963 56
1973 113
1979 125
1988 148
2001 182
2008 184

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ In 2012 the Pew Research Center published a report on the Global Religious Landscape. Baháʼís were grouped into the category "Other Religions" together with Sikhs, Zoroastrians, and various others. The report said, "Because of the lack of data on these faiths in many countries, the Pew Forum has not attempted to estimate the size of individual religions within this category..." It also noted: "Although some faiths in the 'other religions' category have millions of adherents around the world, censuses and surveys in many countries do not measure them specifically. Estimates of the global size of these faiths generally come from other sources, such as the religious groups themselves."[17]
  2. ^ "Samakh and Al-Hama" are grouped rather than listed as separate locations.
  3. ^ The ARDA's data is reproduced from the World Christian Database's 2010 estimates.[48]
  4. ^ Samoa and American Samoa share a single Baháʼí National Spiritual Assembly
  5. ^ The source refers to the country by its old name, Republic of Upper Volta.
  6. ^ Minors under 15 years of age not counted.[104]
  7. ^ This number is for West Germany, and there is no entry for Baháʼís in East Germany.
  8. ^ Source separately lists 10,000 in the Indian state of Sikkim
  9. ^ Data is for the USSR
  10. ^ Samoa and American Samoa share a single Baháʼí National Spiritual Assembly
  11. ^ Source gives the number for Guadalupe, which is the main city of the nation of São Tomé and Príncipe.
  12. ^ Source lists 1,838 in Somalia and 272 in Somaliland
  13. ^ The source separately identifies 300 on the Channel Islands.
  14. ^ Baháʼí numbers are for the continental states, excluding Alaska, Hawai'i, and territories.

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References edit

Books edit

  • Ančić, Branko (May 2014). "Bahá'í Religion as a New Religious Movement?". In Ott, Michael R. (ed.). The Dialectics of the Religious and the Secular. Brill. pp. 168–180.
  • Bigelow, Kit (2006). The Plight of Religious Minorities: Can Religious Pluralism Survive?. Pennsylvania State University: U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 89. ISBN 9780160772580.
  • Bowker, John W., ed. (1997). The Oxford Dictionary of World Religions. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-213965-8.
  • Boyett, Jason (2016). 12 Major World Religions. Berkeley, CA: Zephyros Press. pp. 217–31. ISBN 978-1-62315-692-3.
  • MacEoin, Denis (2000). "Baha'i Faith". In Hinnells, John R. (ed.). The New Penguin Handbook of Living Religions: Second Edition. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-051480-3.
  • Miller, Timothy (2006). "New Religious Movements in American History". In Gallagher, Eugene V.; Ashcraft, W. Michael (eds.). History and Controversies. Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America. Vol. 1. Westport, Connecticut • London: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0275987121.
  • Gallagher, Eugene V.; Ashcraft, W. Michael, eds. (2006). "The Baháʼís of the United States". Asian Traditions. Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America. Vol. 4. Westport, Connecticut • London: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0275987121.
  • Garlington, William (2008). The Baha'i Faith in America (Paperback ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-6234-9.
  • Grim, Brian; Johnson, Todd; Skirbekk, Vegard; Zurlo, Gina, eds. (2016). Yearbook of International Religious Demography 2016. Vol. 3. Brill. pp. 17–25. doi:10.1163/9789004322141. ISBN 9789004322141.
  • Hartz, Paula (2009). World Religions: Baha'i Faith (3rd ed.). New York, NY: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-1-60413-104-8.
  • Johnson, Todd M.; Grim, Brian J. (2013). "Global Religious Populations, 1910–2010" (PDF). The World's Religions in Figures: An Introduction to International Religious Demography. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 59–62. doi:10.1002/9781118555767.ch1. ISBN 9781118555767.
  • Momen, Moojan (1981). The Babi and Baha'i Religions 1844-1944: Some Contemporary Western Accounts. Oxford: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-102-7.
  • Momen, Moojan (2008). The Baha'i Faith. Beginner's Guide. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-1-85168-563-9.
  • Oliver, Paul (28 September 2001). World Faiths (1st ed.). Teach Yourself Books. p. 78. ISBN 978-0340790601.
  • O'Brien, Joanne; Palmer, Martin (2005). Religions Of The World. Facts on File. ISBN 978-0-8160-6258-4.
  • Roof, Wade Clark (1993). A Generation of Seekers: Spiritual Journeys of the Baby Boom Generation. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-066964-5.
  • Smith, Jonathan Z. (1995). The Harpercollins Dictionary of Religion. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-067515-8.
  • Smith, Peter (2022). "Ch. 41: The History of the Bábí and Bahá'í Faiths". In Stockman, Robert H. (ed.). The World of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge. pp. 501–512. ISBN 978-1-138-36772-2.
  • Smith, Peter (2022). "Ch. 50: Southeast Asia". In Stockman, Robert H. (ed.). The World of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge. pp. 614–621. ISBN 978-1-138-36772-2.
  • Effendi, Shoghi (1971). Letters from The Guardian to Australia and New Zealand (reprint ed.). Australia: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN.|
  • Jones, Dale E. (2002). Religious Congregations and Membership in the United States, 2000. Nashville, Tenn: Glenmary Research Center.
  • Gaustadd, Edwin Scott; Barlow, Philip L. (2001). New Historical Atlas of Religion in America. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Hornby, Helen, ed. (1983). Lights of Guidance: A Baháʼí Reference File. New Delhi, India: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN 978-81-85091-46-4.
  • Momen, Moojan (2004). Smith, Peter (ed.). Baháʼís in the West. Kalimat Press. ISBN 978-1-890688-11-0.
  • Warburg, Margit (2006). Citizens of the world: a history and sociology of the Bahaʹis from a globalisation perspective. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-474-0746-1. OCLC 234309958.
  • Warburg, Margit (2015). "The Baha'is of the North". Handbook of Nordic New Religions. Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion. Vol. 11. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-29244-4.

Encyclopedias edit

  • van den Hoonaard, Will (1993-11-08). "Netherlands: History of the Baha'i Faith". The Bahá'í Encyclopedia: draft. Baha'i Library Online. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  • "Baha'i". Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). Macmillan Reference USA. 2004-06-01. ISBN 978-0028657691.
  • Barrett, David B., ed. (1982). "Global Adherents of all religions". World Christian Encyclopedia: A comparative survey of churches and religions in the modern world (1st ed.). Nairobi: Oxford University Press.
  • Barrett, David B.; Kurian, George T.; Johnson, Todd M. (2001). "Countries". World Christian Encyclopedia: A comparative survey of churches and religions in the modern world (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
  • "Religion: Year In Review 2000". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 2000.
  • "Religion: Year In Review 2010". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 2010.
  • Melton; Baumann, eds. (2010). "Baha'i". Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices. Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). ABC-Clio. ISBN 978-1598842036.
  • Momen, Moojan (2011). "Baha'i". In Juergensmeyer, Mark; Roof, Wade Clark (eds.). Encyclopedia of Global Religion. SAGE Publications. doi:10.4135/9781412997898.n61. ISBN 978-0-7619-2729-7.
  • Smith, Peter (2000). A Concise Encyclopedia of the Baha'i Faith. Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-1-85168-184-6. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  • Jones, Lindsay, ed. (2005). "Baha'i". Encyclopedia of Religion. Vol. 2 (Second ed.). MacMillan Reference Books. ISBN 978-0-02-865733-2.
  • "World Book". World Book Encyclopedia. World Book Inc. 2003. ISBN 978-0-7166-0103-6.
  • Mattar, Philip, ed. (2004). Encyclopedia of Modern Middle East & North Africa. Thomson/Gale. ISBN 978-0-02-865769-1.
  • "Baha'i". Academic American Encyclopedia. Grolier Academic Reference. 1998. ISBN 978-0-7172-2068-7.
  • Chernow, Barbara A.; Vallasi, George A. (1993). "Baha'i". The Columbia Encyclopedia. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-395-62438-8.

Journals edit

  • Cole, Juan (1998). "The Baha'i Faith in America as Panopticon, 1963-1997". The Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 37 (2): 234–248. doi:10.2307/1387523. JSTOR 1387523.
  • Demmrich, Sarah (2020-01-06). "How to measure Baha'i Religiosity". Religions. 11 (1:29). doi:10.3390/rel11010029.
  • Hsu, Becky; Reynolds, Amy; Hackett, Conrad; Gibbon, James (2008-07-09). (PDF). Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 47 (4): 678–693. doi:10.1111/j.1468-5906.2008.00435.x. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-03-26.
  • Smith, Peter (1984). "A note on Babi and Baha'i numbers in Iran". Iranian Studies. 17 (2–3): 295–301. doi:10.1080/00210868408701633.
  • Smith, Peter; Momen, Moojan (1989). "The Baha'i Faith 1957–1988: A Survey of Contemporary Developments". Religion. 19: 63–91. doi:10.1016/0048-721X(89)90077-8.
  • Grim, Brian J (2012). (PDF). International Journal of Religious Freedom. 5 (1): 17–33. ISSN 2070-5484. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 11, 2017. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  • Smith, Peter (26 November 2014). "The Baha'i Faith: Distribution Statistics, 1925–1949". Journal of Religious History. 39 (3): 352–369. doi:10.1111/1467-9809.12207. ISSN 1467-9809.
  • Warf, Barney; Vincent, Peter (August 2007). "Religious diversity across the globe: a geographic exploration". Social & Cultural Geography. 8 (4): 597–613. doi:10.1080/14649360701529857. ISSN 1470-1197. S2CID 144530568.
  • Alexandre Avdeev; Tatiana Eremenko; Patrick Festy; Joëlle Gaymu; Nathalie le Bouteillec; Sabine Springer (2011). "Populations and Demographic Trends of European Countries, 1980-2010" (PDF). Population-E. 66 (1): 15–17. Retrieved 2017-07-05.

News reports edit

  • Baháʼí World News Service (1992). . The Baháʼís. Baháʼí International Community. p. 14. Archived from the original on 17 July 2015.
  • Baháʼí World News Service (2020). "Statistics". Baháʼí International Community. Retrieved 2020-12-23.
  • "ʻAbdu'l-Bahá ʻAbbas Comes to Lecture on Baháʼí Religion". The Evening Standard. Salt Lake, UT. 30 September 1912. Retrieved 2017-07-05.
  • Ghauri, Irfan (2012-09-01). "Over 35,000 Buddhists, Baha'is call Pakistan home". The Express Tribune. Karachi, Pakistan.
  • "People Worth While". Houston Texas Chronicle. Houston, TX: National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. 24 April 1912. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  • "Gossip of the Metropolis". The Anaconda Standard. Montclair, NJ: National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. 16 June 1912. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  • Greeley-Smith, Nicola (12 April 1912). "ʻAbdu'l-Bahá ʻAbbas, Head of New Religion, Believes in Woman Suffrage and Divorce". The Evening World. New York: National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
  • "Persian Prophet In London". Boston Evening Transcript. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. 9 September 1911. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  • "The List: The World's Fastest-Growing Religions". Foreign Policy. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. May 2007. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  • A.V. (20 April 2017). "The Economist explains: The Bahai faith". The Economist. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  • "A bit more religious freedom". The Economist. 2008-02-14. Retrieved 2021-01-24.
  • Hinton, Sean (2020-08-28). "Baha'i Blogcast with Rainn Wilson – Ep 53: Sean Hinton (part 1) – The Story of Becoming the Knight of Baha'u'llah for Mongolia" (Interview). Interviewed by Rainn Wilson. Baha’i Blog. Retrieved 2020-12-23.
  • McClure, Hal (15 May 1965). "Baha'i: a new belief in an old land". Tampa Bay Times. St. Petersburg, Florida. p. 41. Retrieved Aug 19, 2022.
  • Rabbani, Ahang (July 1987). "Achievements of the Seven Year Plan". Baháʼí News. No. 676. Department of Statistics at the Baháʼí World Centre. Baháʼí World Center, Haifa: Baháʼí International Community. pp. 2–7. Retrieved Aug 19, 2022.
  • "Commons sees first debate on Iran persecutions" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 647. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. February 1985. p. 8. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "Zimbabwe" (PDF). Baháʼí News No. 653. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. August 1985. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "The story of Van Kee Leong, Malaysia's first Baha'i" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 668. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. November 1986. p. 3. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "The Faith in India: Chronicle of growth" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 671. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. February 1987. pp. 6–15. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "Government fines, imprisons 48 Baháʼís" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 676. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. July 1987. p. 1. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "'Grave concern' over rights in Iran" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 682. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. January 1988. p. 1. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "FUNDESIB aids development work" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 685. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. April 1988. pp. 10–11. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "Congress again decries persecutions" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 688. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. July 1988. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • Farrand, Quentin (February 1990). "Amid the chaos, a celebration" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 706. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. pp. 1–3. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "On cutting edge of 'entry by troops'" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 707. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. May 1990. p. 8. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  • "Eastern Europe" (PDF). Baha'i News. No. 714. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. October 1990. p. 13. Retrieved 2020-12-21.

Other sources edit

  • Marshall, Svetlana (2019-10-13). "Bahá'ís in Guyana celebrate the bicentenary of the birth of the Báb". Guyana Chronicle.
  • National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States (2020). "Ridvan 2020 Annual Report".
  • . 1998-03-03. Archived from the original on 2010-05-05.
  • (PDF). A Practical Reference to Religious Diversity. Australian Police: Multicultural Advisory Bureau. p. 83. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-06-19.
  • "SBS Census Explorer". SBS Online. Retrieved 2020-12-24.
  • Census of Population and Housing, Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020, retrieved 2020-12-24
  • Hampson, Arthur (May 1980). The growth and spread of the Baha'i Faith (PhD). Department of Geography, University of Hawaii. pp. 458–459, 472. OCLC 652914306. UMI 8022655. Retrieved Jul 24, 2022.
  • Stockman, Robert (November 1998). "Baháʼí membership statistics". Bahai-library.com. Retrieved Feb 12, 2016.
  • Baháʼí World Centre Department of Statistics (August 2001). "Baháʼí World Statistics August 2001 CE". Baha'i Library Online. Retrieved 2013-04-14.
  • "World: People: Religions". CIA World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. 2007. ISSN 1553-8133. Retrieved 2009-09-06.
  • . QuickLists > Compare Nations > Religions >. The Association of Religion Data Archives. 2010. Archived from the original on April 27, 2022. Retrieved Feb 12, 2015.
  • "Redatam". Census. Barbados Statistical Service. 2010. from the original on 4 October 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2017.
  • . National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is Of Barbados. Archived from the original on 14 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-24.
  • "2010 Census of Belize Overview". 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-05-29. Retrieved 2017-04-23.
  • "2011 National Household Survey: Data tables". Statistics Canada. 2011. Retrieved April 23, 2017.
  • "Facts and Figures - How many Baháʼís are there?". The Baháʼí Community Canada. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  • "Chapter II, Population Composition, 2002 Census" (PDF). Statistics Bureau. 2002. Retrieved April 23, 2017.
  • "Indian Census Returns for Baha'is 1991". h-net.org. Retrieved 2020-11-04.
  • "C-1 Appendix- Details of Religious Communities Shown Under Other Religious and Persuasions in Main Table C-1, State: India". Census Digital Library. Census 2001. Retrieved November 8, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • "Data on Religion - Religion PCA". 2011. Retrieved September 17, 2016.
  • . Official Website of the Baháʼís of India. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of India. Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  • 2011 Housing and Population Census – Volume II: Demographic and Fertility Characterisitcs (PDF). Republic of Mauritius: Republic of Mauritius, Ministry of Finance and Economic Development. Statistics Mauritius. October 2012. p. 68. Retrieved 2017-07-05.
  • India: Situation of Baha'is, especially in New Delhi, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, 2000-06-14, retrieved 2021-03-23
baháʼí, faith, country, baháʼí, faith, formed, late, 19th, century, middle, east, later, gaining, converts, india, east, africa, western, world, traveling, promoters, religion, played, significant, role, spreading, religion, into, most, countries, territories,. The Bahaʼi Faith formed in the late 19th century in the Middle East later gaining converts in India East Africa and the Western world Traveling promoters of the religion played a significant role in spreading the religion into most countries and territories during the second half of the 20th century 1 mostly seeded out of North America by the planned migration of individuals 2 The Bahaʼi Faith was recognized as having a widespread international membership by the 1980s 3 4 and is now recognized as the second most geographically widespread religion after Christianity 5 The Bahaʼi World Centre estimated over a million Baha is in 1965 6 5 million in 1991 7 and about 8 million in 2020 8 The official agencies of the religion have focused on publishing data such as numbers of local and national spiritual assemblies countries and territories represented languages and tribes represented schools and publishing trusts not the total number of believers 9 10 Analyzing Bahaʼi data on localities and activity levels Danish sociologist Margit Warburg suggested that by 2001 registered Bahaʼis reliably numbered over 5 million and that active participants numbered approximately 900 000 18 of registered Bahaʼis 11 Independent estimates such as Encyclopaedia Britannica and the World Christian Encyclopedia have listed Bahaʼi membership as over 7 million 12 13 14 and described it as the fastest growing religion by percentage across the 20th century 15 The number of Bahaʼi adherents is difficult to estimate accurately Few national Bahaʼi communities have the administrative capacity to enumerate their members 16 and Bahaʼi membership data does not break out active participation from the total number of people who have expressed their belief Due to its small size few censuses or religious surveys include the Bahaʼi Faith as a separate category a 18 and some government censuses count Bahaʼis as Muslims or Hindus 19 Country level detail from World Christian Encyclopedia WCE on which many estimates rely counts declared Bahaʼis along with sympathizers leading to much higher counts than those of self identifying Bahaʼis 20 21 Contents 1 Difficulties in enumeration 1 1 Definition of membership 1 2 Children 1 3 Active vs inactive 2 Number of Bahaʼis worldwide 2 1 Bahaʼi sources 2 1 1 Recent 2 1 2 Before 1950 2 2 Other sources 2 2 1 2010 and newer 2 2 2 2000 to 2009 2 2 3 1990 to 1999 2 2 4 1950 to 1989 2 2 5 Before 1950 3 Adherents by country 4 Adherents by continent 5 Other statistics from Bahaʼi sources 5 1 Further data on National Spiritual Assemblies 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 Citations 9 References 9 1 Books 9 2 Encyclopedias 9 3 Journals 9 4 News reports 9 5 Other sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksDifficulties in enumeration editThe fact that the religion is diffuse and proportionally small are major barriers to demographic research by outsiders Even in the United States where significant resources are dedicated to gathering data the Bahaʼi Faith is often omitted from religious surveys due to the high sample size required to reduce the margin of error 17 In the Middle East especially Iran Bahaʼis face persecution and the lack of Bahaʼi administration makes it difficult to maintain a count Bahaʼi authors Peter Smith and Moojan Momen commenting on the difficulties of counting Bahaʼis wrote the following With any religious movement there are invariable problems of quantification unless the movement s own enumeration techniques are exceptionally efficient or government censuses incorporate questions on religion Even here there are often considerable problems of definition Are gradations of commitment to be taken into consideration so as to differentiate between active and nominal members Are the children of members to be included as well as adults Is allowance to be made for the pattern of multi religious adherence which is common in many parts of the world These are of course problems that affect the estimation of numbers for any religion and are not confined to Baha i statistics Smith amp Momen The Baha i Faith 1957 1988 A Survey of Contemporary Developments Religion 1989 22 Definition of membership edit Throughout the early development of the Bahaʼi Faith in Iran and the West Bahaʼis often retained some of the religious identity that they converted from many remaining members of churches and mosques Later Shoghi Effendi made it clear that the Bahaʼi Faith was its own tradition with laws and institutions and that Bahaʼis could not remain members of other religions The practice of maintaining membership rolls of believers began in the 1920s 23 In the 1930s the Bahaʼis of the United States and Canada began requiring new adherents to sign a declaration of faith stating their belief in Bahaʼu llah the Bab and ʻAbdu l Baha and affirming that there are laws and institutions to obey The original purpose of signing a declaration card was to allow followers to apply for lawful exemption from active military service 24 The signature of a card later became optional in Canada but in the US is still used for records and administrative requirements 25 All local and national Spiritual Assemblies are expected to keep membership records that include declarations of faith and withdrawals which are used for annual assembly elections 26 The Bahaʼi system of membership thus has a system of contracting into the religion and some maintenance of the membership list is required for community functioning Being removed from membership requires an opposite declaration of disbelief citation needed Children edit A peculiar difficulty arises in counting Bahaʼis because a tenet of the faith is that parents cannot choose the religion of their children and that 15 is the age of spiritual maturity when an individual can make the choice 27 Early membership rolls excluded children of Bahaʼis and didn t even count them separately 22 In 1979 the Universal House of Justice requested that children be included separately for statistical purposes matching the methodology of most censuses and surveys Before that membership rolls may have only indicated ages 21 or older the age required for voting 28 The change toward including children in statistics caused an increase in the total number of reported Bahaʼis in the late 1980s but has been consistent since 29 Active vs inactive edit Another difficulty arises from defining membership based on participation The number of active participants in any religious movement will always be smaller than the number who profess belief The prevailing norm in the Western world is that members of minority religious groups must be actively participating to be considered a member and members of majority religious groups have a large number of passive adherents 29 Margit Warburg wrote As with other voluntary organisations some members become more active than others but the fact that there is no fixed membership subscription means that there is no economic motive for inactive Bahaʼis to take the initiative to resign membership Inactive Bahaʼis however are not expelled just because they are inactive in community life since in principle they could still be believing Bahaʼis 30 Warburg also noted Bahaʼis do not lose membership status just by being inactive 29 In the 1980s the Bahaʼis of the United States started including address unknown in their membership statistics members designated as such may profess belief but are no longer participating in community life 22 For example in its 2020 Annual Report the US National Spiritual Assembly had 177 647 registered Bahaʼis of all ages only 77 290 of which had good addresses and 57 341 total participants in core activities with 37 of attendees from outside of the Bahaʼi population 31 The higher American number has been challenged because it includes some who no longer believe but the lower number with good addresses does not include inactive Bahaʼis who continue their belief 32 As author William Garlington noted Just as there are many people who claim to be followers of Jesus Christ and yet are not official members of an established church it seems fair to assume that there are a sizable number of individuals who identify with Baha u llah and his principles while remaining outside the established institutions of the Baha i Faith the significant point is that at least the registered Baha is have experienced enough identity with the Baha i teachings to have made official written declarations of that belief 33 Using activity data Warburg estimated a percentage of activity in Bahaʼi communities around the world and concluded that in 2001 there were reliably 5 1 million registered Bahaʼis in the world and 900 000 active Bahaʼis or 18 of the total The estimates on activity were broken out by continent Europe 82 active USA and Canada 71 Australia and New Zealand 91 Africa 22 India 5 Other Asia 26 Latin America 13 and Oceania 43 34 On the question of whether the Bahaʼi numbers are intentionally inflated Warburg feels that the numbers are not rooted in any sinister manipulation of data 29 Number of Bahaʼis worldwide editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Estimates of Bahaʼis worldwide Bahaʼi sources edit Recent edit In 2020 the Secretariat of the Universal House of Justice wrote on the basis of information received from Bahaʼi communities across the world and on reputable external sources the current estimate for the number of Bahaʼis worldwide is about eight million and Bahaʼis reside in well over 100 000 localities 8 A 1997 statement by the NSA of South Africa wrote the Bahaʼi Faith enjoys a world wide following in excess of six million people 35 As early as 1991 official estimates were of more than five million Bahaʼis 7 which was still in use as of 2020 9 In 1989 the journal Religion published an article by Bahaʼi authors Moojan Momen and Peter Smith They observed that in the 1950s there were probably in the region of 200 000 Bahaʼis world wide The vast majority of these over 90 lived in Iran There were probably fewer than 10 000 Bahaʼis in the West and no more than 3 000 Bahaʼis in the Third World mostly India 16 By the end of the 1960s they wrote we guestimate that there may now have been about one million Bahaʼis And by 1988 they estimated about 4 5 million 36 A 1987 report published in the United States Bahaʼi News reported 3 62 million Bahaʼis in 1979 and 4 74 million Bahaʼis in 1986 a growth of 31 over the period or 4 4 per year on average 37 The document The Promise of World Peace produced by the Universal House of Justice in 1985 stated that the Baha i community has some three to four million people 38 Bahaʼi author Moojan Momen wrote in 2008 In the early 1950s there were probably some 200 000 Bahaʼis in the world This has increased to about a million by the late 1960s about four and a half million by the late 1980s and over five million by 2000s 39 Before 1950 edit The first known survey of the religion comes from an unpublished work in 1919 1920 gathered by John Esslemont and had been intended to be part of his well known Bahaʼu llah and the New Era 40 In it consulting various individuals he summarizes the religion s presence in Egypt Germany India Iran Iraq Turkestan and the United States It did not arrive at a total but did have some regional statistics based on some individual reports In 1867 53 Bahaʼis from Baghdad sent an appeal to the American Consul in Beirut for assistance in freeing Baha u llah from Ottoman captivity According to missionary Henry Harris Jessup The petitioners claim that they number 40 000 41 Other sources edit 2010 and newer edit The World Religion Database has estimated a worldwide Bahaʼi population of 8 531 050 in 2020 13 In April 2017 The Economist reported that there were more than 7 million Bahaʼis in the world 42 In 2016 the Yearbook of International Religious Demography 2016 noted just over 7 8 million Bahaʼis in the world in 2015 having grown at an overall rate of 2 79 across the century 1910 to 2010 43 The countries with the largest Bahaʼi populations in 2015 were starting with the largest India the US Kenya Viet Nam Congo DR Philippines Zambia South Africa Iran and Bolivia ranging upwards from 232 000 to just over 2 million in India 44 In 2016 the book 12 Major World Religions wrote Today it numbers at least 5 million adherents and possibly more 45 In 2013 the book The World s Religions in Figures An Introduction to International Religious Demography wrote The Baha i Faith is the only religion to have grown faster in every United Nations region over the past 100 years than the general population Bahaʼi was thus the fastest growing religion between 1910 and 2010 growing at least twice as fast as the population of almost every UN region 15 In 2011 Bei Dawei said in an academic conference presentation that the Bahaʼi Faith had several hundred thousand adherents He noted that estimates of five six or seven million are more usually encountered but said that these estimates are projections based on self reporting by Bahaʼis and that the national figures they are based on tend to exceed apparent Baha i activity by whole orders of magnitude 46 In 2010 The World Religion Database stated that there were 7 3 million Bahaʼis in the world 47 The Association of Religion Data Archives cited this estimate in 2010 48 In 2010 Encyclopaedia Britannica estimated a total of 7 3 million Bahaʼis residing in 221 countries 12 In 2010 Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices estimated 7 4 million Bahaʼis in 2010 49 citing UN median variant figures from World Population Prospects The 2006 Revision 2000 to 2009 edit In 2009 Paula Hartz wrote in World Religions Baha i Faith Today the Baha i Faith has some 5 million followers It is one of the world s fastest growing religions It is also probably the most diverse 50 The World Factbook states that Bahaʼis make up 0 12 of the world based on a 2007 estimate 51 corresponding to 7 9 million people Margit Warburg s 2006 academic book on the Bahaʼi Faith claimed a conservative estimate would be that in 2001 there were about 5 1 million registered Bahaʼis in the world 52 The 2005 Association of Religion Data Archives estimate is of 7 6 million 53 which is also echoed elsewhere 54 In 2005 the Encyclopedia of Religion second edition records that In the early twenty first century the Bahaʼis number close to six million in more than two hundred countries The number of adherents rose significantly in the late twentieth century from a little more than one million at the end of the 1960s 55 In 2004 the Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa reported that Bahaʼis worldwide are estimated in 2001 at 5 million 56 In 2003 World Book Encyclopedia reported that there are about 5 500 000 Bahaʼis worldwide 57 In 2001 World Christian Encyclopedia 2nd edition 2001 estimated 7 1 million adherents of the Bahaʼi Faith in the year 2000 representing 0 1 of the world population The same source projected 12 million in 2025 and 18 million in 2050 assuming then current trends were to continue 14 They also noted In government censuses Bahaʼis are usually counted as Muslims or Hindus and not shown separately 19 In 2000 Encyclopaedia Britannica estimated a total of 7 1 million Bahaʼis residing in 218 countries 58 In 2000 Denis MacEoin wrote in the Handbook of Living Religions that the movement has had remarkable success in establishing itself as a vigorous contender in the mission fields of Africa India parts of South America and the Pacific thus outstripping other new religions in a world wide membership of perhaps 4 million and an international spread recently described as second only to that of Christianity The place of Baha ism among world religions now seems assured 5 1990 to 1999 edit In 1998 the Academic American Encyclopedia said that the Bahaʼis are estimated to number about 2 million 59 In 1997 Dictionary of World Religions said that there are five million Bahaʼis in the world 60 In 1997 Religions of the World published today there are about 5 million Bahaʼis 61 In 1993 the Columbia Encyclopedia published There are about 5 million Bahaʼis in the world 62 1950 to 1989 edit In 1995 the HarperCollins Dictionary of Religion stated In 1985 it was estimated that there were between 1 5 to 2 million Baha is with the greatest areas of recent growth in Africa India and Vietnam 63 In 1982 the World Christian Encyclopedia 1st edition 1982 wrote of Bahaʼi adherents in the world 1970 2 659 400 1980 3 822 600 in 194 countries 1985 4 442 600 64 In 2010 Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices estimated 2 7 million Bahaʼis in 1970 49 citing UN median variant figures from World Population Prospects The 2006 Revision Paul Oliver wrote in World Faiths 2001 that there were approximately five million Bahaʼis in 1963 65 Paula Hartz wrote in World Religions Baha i Faith 2009 that by the end of Shoghi Effendi s life 1957 the Baha i Faith had reached more than 400 000 adherents 66 Before 1950 edit The 1922 census of Palestine lists 265 Baha i in Mandatory Palestine 152 in Haifa four in Tiberias three in Al Nahr wal Tal two in Affuleh one each in Samakh and Al Hama b and Tulkarm 67 which increased on the 1931 census of Palestine to 350 Baha i 196 in Haifa 51 in Acre 35 in Acre s suburbs 10 in Lydda eight each in El Mazra a and Hebron seven each in Jerusalem New City and Tiberias six in Nuqeib five each in Beersheba Nazareth and Samra four in El Bassa one each in Jaffa Rosh Pinna police and Yibna 68 The World Christian Encyclopedia 1st edition 1982 lists the global Bahaʼi population of 1900 at 9 025 69 In 2004 the Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa reported that By 1900 the community had reached 50 000 100 000 56 Paula Hartz wrote in World Religions Baha i Faith 3rd edition 2009 that during the last years of ʻAbdu l Baha s life d 1921 The faith was now established in many countries around the world and its followers numbered around 100 000 70 During ʻAbdu l Baha s tour of North America several newspapers made claims of how large the religion was with figures in the range of millions of people In 1912 a reporter in Salt Lake City claimed ʻAbdu l Baha said the religion had 10 000 000 followers in the world 71 On June 16 1912 a news report introduced him as the Persian religious leader and spiritual and temporal head of the 14 000 000 of Bahaʼis scattered throughout the world 72 On April 24 1912 a newspaper article said Bahaʼism now has 15 000 000 adherents scattered throughout the world several hundred thousand of whom are in the United States and Canada 73 On April 12 1912 a newspaper introduced him as head of one of the newest and most thriving religions in the world numbering 20 000 000 souls among his followers of whom several hundred souls are in New York 74 On September 9 1911 a news report about ʻAbdu l Baha s visit to London claimed at a moderate estimate three million followers 75 Adherents by country editSee also Category Baha i Faith by country This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2020 Although the Bahaʼi News Service has reported on the total number of Bahaʼis in the world the data is not broken out by country 76 The World Christian Encyclopedia WCE and its successor The World Christian Database WCD is an authority on membership data for religions in the world and its decades long study by David Barrett and co workers is a basis for many other estimates of Bahaʼis in the world such as ARDA The data were released in editions of 1982 2001 and 2018 and includes a break down by country The WCE data has consistently reported higher numbers of Bahaʼis than the reports of Bahaʼi institutions 77 47 Danish researcher Margit Warburg studied Bahaʼi membership data and feels that the WCE data is overstated for Bahaʼis 76 For instance WCE reports an estimated 1 600 Bahaʼis in Denmark in 1995 and 682 000 Bahaʼis in the USA The number of registered Bahaʼis at the same time were 240 and 130 000 respectively 76 Peter Smith found that the WCE data is meant to include members plus those who regularly attend Bahaʼi events that is including a wider circle of sympathizers as well as declared Bahaʼis 8 The Association for Religious Data Archives ARDA is a collection of surveys polls and other data submitted by the foremost scholars and research centers in the world It gathers data from the US Census Bureau s International Data Base the US State Department s International Religious Freedom Report the United Nations Human Development Reports and others 48 including World Christian Database 78 Bahaʼi Faith by country Country or Territory Bahaʼi sources WCE 1980 79 WCE 2000 80 ARDA 2010 48 c UNSD 2020 81 Other sources nbsp Afghanistan details 600 23 075 16 541 400 2007 82 nbsp Albania details 14 024 citation needed 5 711 7 126 nbsp Algeria details 1 000 2 806 3 309 nbsp American Samoa details 925 2014 83 d 280 990 nbsp Andorra details 110 nbsp Angola details 600 1 488 2 061 nbsp Anguilla details 50 86 nbsp Antigua and Barbuda details 320 629 51 2009 nbsp Argentina details 6 900 10 212 13 972 nbsp Armenia details 1 331 1 190 nbsp Aruba details 148 nbsp Australia details 17 000 citation needed 11 300 33 536 19 365 13 989 2017 8 947 1996 84 11 036 2001 85 12 331 2006 86 13 706 2011 87 13 988 2016 87 nbsp Austria details 2 120 3 780 1 948 760 2003 nbsp Azerbaijan details 1 432 1 685 nbsp Bahamas details 430 1 241 1 375 65 2013 nbsp Bahrain details 500 1 379 2 832 nbsp Bangladesh details 4 200 8 341 9 603 nbsp Barbados details 400 2010 88 1 440 3 522 3 337 98 2016 178 2010 89 nbsp Belarus details 106 100 nbsp Belgium details 1 900 2 358 2 617 nbsp Belize details 4 100 6 941 7 742 216 2014 202 2010 90 nbsp Benin details 5 400 13 074 11 637 nbsp Bermuda details 120 325 124 2011 nbsp Bhutan details 300 647 74 nbsp Bolivia details 100 000 1988 91 160 000 269 246 215 359 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina details 0 0 nbsp Botswana details 4 600 12 417 16 464 2 074 2015 700 2001 92 nbsp Brazil details 18 000 36 745 42 108 nbsp British Virgin Islands details 90 192 10 2016 nbsp Brunei details 710 981 199 nbsp Bulgaria details 657 592 nbsp Burkina Faso details 600 e 2 767 2 860 nbsp Burundi details 2 200 5 414 6 779 nbsp Cambodia details 10 000 citation needed 35 000 12 862 16 659 nbsp Cameroon details 40 000 citation needed 49 600 64 286 49 885 nbsp Canada details 30 000 93 40 000 31 396 46 826 18 945 2013 nbsp Cape Verde details 200 655 759 nbsp Cayman Islands details 80 336 nbsp Central African Republic details 6 500 7 833 10 913 nbsp Chad details 7 000 80 683 94 499 nbsp Chile details 6 000 2002 94 9 600 17 943 26 382 nbsp People s Republic of China details 6 525 6 012 nbsp Colombia details 30 000 citation needed 38 000 64 758 70 504 nbsp Comoros details 390 521 647 nbsp Congo Republic of details 6 200 12 927 25 879 nbsp Congo Democratic Republic of details 70 000 citation needed 180 000 224 596 282 916 nbsp Cook Islands details 160 161 nbsp Costa Rica details 4 000 95 8 400 11 571 13 457 3 000 96 nbsp Croatia details 150 2006 97 0 0 nbsp Cuba details 620 1 139 1 145 nbsp Cyprus details 400 828 1 170 nbsp Czech Republic details 950 966 nbsp Denmark details 240 1995 76 375 2013 98 1 400 1 785 1 264 1 600 1995 76 nbsp Djibouti details 140 552 769 nbsp Dominica details 70 1 225 nbsp Dominican Republic details 5 500 5 904 6 899 nbsp East Timor details 300 1 190 nbsp Ecuador details 27 000 15 599 17 820 nbsp Egypt details 3 000 1960 99 500 1987 99 500 2001 100 1 000 2 000 2019 101 1 500 5 760 6 946 2 000 102 nbsp El Salvador details 12 000 1990 103 15 000 27 712 27 345 nbsp Equatorial Guinea details 900 2 317 3 589 nbsp Eritrea details 1 198 1 426 nbsp Estonia details 459 496 nbsp Eswatini details 11 000 4 516 nbsp Ethiopia details 11 000 21 592 22 764 nbsp Falkland Islands details 50 67 12 2009 nbsp Faroe Islands details 50 124 nbsp Fiji details 1 800 5 674 2 338 nbsp Finland details 775 2013 98 2 500 1 676 1 674 568 2011 nbsp France details 5 000 citation needed 3 700 4 136 4 453 nbsp French Guiana details 500 725 nbsp French Polynesia details 360 695 nbsp Gabon details 300 405 605 nbsp Gambia details 5 100 10 790 14 184 nbsp Georgia details 1 725 1 639 nbsp Germany details 6 000 2019 f 11 500 g 12 391 12 356 5 600 2005 105 nbsp Ghana details 10 000 12 146 14 106 nbsp Greece details 300 611 189 nbsp Greenland details 280 355 nbsp Grenada details 160 145 nbsp Guadeloupe details 640 1 595 nbsp Guam details 800 1 863 nbsp Guatemala details 7 000 20 073 19 898 nbsp Guinea details 140 288 150 nbsp Guinea Bissau details 90 333 266 nbsp Guyana details 110 1969 22 000 1989 106 2 700 14 584 11 787 500 2002 107 800 2019 108 nbsp Haiti details 11 700 17 055 22 614 nbsp Honduras details 11 600 32 635 37 591 nbsp Hong Kong details 600 1 120 nbsp Hungary details 100 246 290 nbsp Iceland details 360 2013 98 400 801 599 nbsp India details 700 1953 109 2 000 000 2020 110 1 050 000 h 1 716 148 1 897 651 5 574 1991 111 1 000 000 1996 112 400 000 1999 112 11 324 2001 113 100 000 2002 114 4 572 2011 115 nbsp Indonesia details 15 000 26 537 22 815 nbsp Iran details 300 000 1988 116 110 000 2010 117 300 000 2020 9 340 000 463 151 251 127 300 000 350 000 1979 118 150 000 300 000 119 300 000 2019 120 nbsp Iraq details 2 000 121 700 2 607 3 801 nbsp Ireland details 900 1 274 1 550 520 2012 nbsp Israel details 650 122 600 13 734 11 705 nbsp Italy details 4 600 5 681 5 108 nbsp Ivory Coast details 6 000 22 289 30 321 nbsp Jamaica details 4 000 123 5 000 7 456 5 157 269 2013 nbsp Japan details 12 500 15 579 15 594 nbsp Jordan details 1 000 17 221 15 655 nbsp Kazakhstan details 6 967 nbsp Kenya details 25 000 40 000 124 180 000 308 292 422 782 nbsp Kiribati details 3 500 4 321 2 322 2013 nbsp Korea North details 0 0 0 nbsp Korea South details 200 125 18 000 32 096 33 084 nbsp Kuwait details 2 000 5 172 8 992 nbsp Kyrgyzstan details 0 1 426 nbsp Laos details 150 1 229 13 450 2 122 2019 nbsp Latvia details 0 0 nbsp Lebanon details 1 400 3 272 3 889 nbsp Lesotho details 10 700 19 062 19 195 nbsp Liberia details 5 000 8 955 11 231 nbsp Libya details 300 560 636 nbsp Liechtenstein details 60 107 nbsp Lithuania details 0 267 29 2014 nbsp Luxembourg details 1 400 1 546 1 597 nbsp Macao details 130 nbsp Madagascar details 5 600 15 270 18 347 nbsp Malawi details 15 000 2003 126 11 600 24 501 34 323 nbsp Malaysia details 30 000 1986 127 62 000 97 78 67 549 nbsp Maldives details 25 60 120 nbsp Mali details 640 1 030 1 244 nbsp Malta details 140 255 274 nbsp Marshall Islands details 1 023 nbsp Martinique details 1 600 2 031 nbsp Mauritania details 140 267 346 nbsp Mauritius details 7 500 citation needed 9 500 21 848 23 742 645 2012 nbsp Mexico details 23 000 33 903 38 902 nbsp Micronesia Federated States of details 8 000 citation needed 1 909 nbsp Moldova details 0 526 nbsp Monaco details 30 57 nbsp Mongolia details 8 000 9 000 2020 128 0 53 55 nbsp Montenegro details 0 nbsp Montserrat details 200 nbsp Morocco details 350 400 129 3 200 28 719 32 598 nbsp Mozambique details 1 400 3 405 2 877 nbsp Myanmar details 15 000 49 044 78 915 nbsp Namibia details 500 8 864 10 995 nbsp Nauru details 130 1 106 nbsp Nepal details 4 000 6 163 4 366 1 283 2013 1 211 2011 130 nbsp Netherlands details 11 1948 110 1962 365 1973 525 1979 131 3 100 5 506 6 672 nbsp New Caledonia details 570 932 nbsp New Zealand details 3 200 3 878 7 518 2 634 2013 2 925 2018 132 nbsp Nicaragua details 4 000 9 616 10 918 nbsp Niger details 1 100 2 978 5 528 nbsp Nigeria details 21 000 27 031 38 190 nbsp North Macedonia details 0 0 nbsp Norway details 1 200 2013 98 1 400 2 179 2 737 1 015 2007 133 nbsp Oman details 420 9 123 9 987 nbsp Pakistan details 30 000 2001 134 25 000 78 658 87 259 33 734 2012 135 31 543 2018 136 2 000 3 000 2013 137 nbsp Palau details 150 96 2005 nbsp Panama details 20 000 35 318 41 170 nbsp Papua New Guinea details 40 000 2006 138 17 900 34 939 59 898 nbsp Paraguay details 2 900 9 011 10 624 nbsp Peru details 20 000 36 463 41 316 nbsp Philippines details 64 000 citation needed 115 000 229 522 275 069 nbsp Poland details 504 766 nbsp Portugal details 6 000 citation needed 2 000 1 845 2 086 nbsp Puerto Rico details 1 400 2 788 2 698 nbsp Qatar details 420 985 2 717 nbsp Reunion details 1 800 5 927 nbsp Romania details 542 1990 139 100 1 843 1 895 nbsp Russia details 3 000 citation needed 4 600 i 16 586 19 338 nbsp Rwanda details 4 000 140 7 500 14 211 19 592 nbsp Samoa details 925 2014 141 j 3 300 4 178 817 2018 nbsp Sao Tome and Principe details 90 3 011 1 645 k nbsp Saudi Arabia details 1 000 4 045 5 138 nbsp Senegal details 3 200 16 804 23 883 nbsp Serbia details 1 268 nbsp Seychelles details 210 312 392 2005 nbsp Sierra Leone details 1 150 11 385 13 765 nbsp Singapore details 900 5 482 7 963 nbsp Slovakia details 200 citation needed 667 686 1 065 2013 nbsp Slovenia details 297 396 nbsp Solomon Islands details 800 1 903 nbsp Somalia details 1 000 2 110 l 2 677 nbsp South Africa details 23 000 255 775 238 532 2 264 2000 nbsp South Sudan details nbsp Spain details 4 500 13 647 13 528 nbsp Sri Lanka details 9 700 15 489 15 502 nbsp Sudan details 700 1 828 2 706 nbsp Suriname details 5 000 6 424 3 591 nbsp Sweden details 1 080 2013 142 1 900 5 048 6 814 nbsp Switzerland details 3 500 3 728 3 878 nbsp Syria details 100 123 430 nbsp Taiwan details 5 000 12 555 16 252 nbsp Tajikistan details 743 3 092 1 000 2018 143 nbsp Tanzania details 35 000 citation needed 60 000 140 593 190 419 nbsp Thailand details 10 000 144 243 65 096 nbsp Togo details 2 800 25 395 30 423 nbsp Tonga details 1 700 6 582 755 2019 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago details 8 000 15 627 15 973 nbsp Tunisia details 520 1 917 2 096 150 2001 144 nbsp Turkey details 5 100 19 618 21 259 nbsp Turkmenistan details 964 1 090 nbsp Tuvalu details 400 580 177 2007 nbsp Uganda details 105 000 145 330 600 66 546 95 098 29 601 2014 146 nbsp Ukraine details 1 000 citation needed 252 227 nbsp United Arab Emirates details 1 400 55 214 38 364 nbsp United Kingdom details 5 000 1985 147 7 000 2020 148 15 600 m 30 628 47 554 5 021 2011 149 nbsp United States details 1 500 1899 150 1 200 1906 150 100 000 1988 151 130 000 1995 76 177 647 2020 31 n 210 000 753 423 512 864 28 000 1991 152 84 000 2001 152 100 000 2006 153 nbsp United States Virgin Islands details 360 577 nbsp Uruguay details 3 800 7 356 7 385 nbsp Uzbekistan details 1 000 citation needed 708 800 nbsp Vanuatu details 160 5 418 3 293 nbsp Venezuela details 1 218 1965 154 20 000 2000 154 35 000 141 072 169 811 nbsp Vietnam details 200 000 lt 1975 6 000 2006 155 220 000 356 133 388 802 3 000 2019 156 nbsp Western Sahara details 100 121 nbsp Yemen details 250 citation needed 480 1 000 1 328 nbsp Zambia details 4 000 2017 157 16 000 162 443 241 112 3 891 2015 nbsp Zimbabwe details 1 000 1971 20 000 1985 158 14 500 37 077 39 893 35 000 1995 159 Adherents by continent editFurther information Bahaʼi Faith in Africa Bahaʼi Faith in Asia Bahaʼi Faith in Europe Bahaʼi Faith in North America Bahaʼi Faith in Oceania and Bahaʼi Faith in South America The following data comes from World Christian Encyclopedia 1st ed 1982 160 Continent 1900 1970 1975 1980 Africa 225 695 094 847 795 1 024 440 East Asia 0 27 307 31 620 36 230 Europe 0 53 810 58 580 63 270 Latin America 0 298 350 376 070 462 100 Northern America 2 800 162 350 206 410 250 470 Oceania 0 29 355 38 640 48 115 South Asia 5 800 1 389 160 1 639 260 1 933 405 USSR 200 4 000 4 300 4 600 World 69 9 025 2 659 426 3 202 675 3 822 630 The following data comes from World Christian Encyclopedia 2st ed 2001 161 Continent 1900 1970 1990 1995 2000 Africa 225 698 094 1 383 320 1 546 330 1 732 816 Asia 5 900 1 411 530 2 811 995 3 034 140 3 475 167 Europe 210 56 810 106 635 120 275 129 706 Latin America 0 299 350 357 845 763 205 872 757 Northern America 2 800 162 350 628 675 712 335 785 587 Oceania 400 29 215 83 217 97 595 110 387 World 14 9 535 2 657 349 5 671 687 6 273 880 7 106 420 In The Baha i Faith 1957 1988 A Survey of Contemporary Developments Religion 1989 Bahaʼi authors Momen and Smith provide the following estimates of the Bahaʼis in the world over 3 decades broken out by cultural areas They derived numbers from calculation of approximate numbers from the number of Baha i organizations extrapolating back from the official figures for the number of individual Baha is provided more recently estimates provided by informed Baha is and when the first draft of this paper was completed a copy was sent to the Department of Statistics in Haifa and the present table incorporates some of the statistical information given in the reply to this dated 8 July 1988 1 Cultural area 1954 1968 1988 Middle East and North Africa 200 000 250 000 300 000 North America Europe amp Anglo Pacific 10 000 30 000 200 000 South Asia 1 000 300 000 1 900 000 South east Asia 2 000 200 000 300 000 East Asia 10 000 20 000 Latin America amp the Caribbean 100 000 700 000 Africa sub Saharan 200 000 1 000 000 Oceania excluding Anglo Pacific 5 000 70 000 World 213 000 1 095 000 4 490 000Other statistics from Bahaʼi sources edit1928 162 1949 162 1968 10 1986 10 2001 2006 163 National Spiritual Assemblies 7 11 81 165 179 Local Spiritual Assemblies 102 595 6 840 18 232 11 740 164 Countries where the Bahaʼi Faith is established independent countries 36 92 187 191 Localities where Bahaʼis reside 573 2315 31 572 gt 116 000 127 381 10 Indigenous tribes races and ethnic groups 1 179 gt 2 100 2 112 Languages into which Bahaʼi literature is translated 417 800 Bahaʼi Publishing Trusts 9 26 33 10 Further data on National Spiritual Assemblies edit Year Number of NSAs 165 166 167 1923 3 1936 10 1953 12 1963 56 1973 113 1979 125 1988 148 2001 182 2008 184See also editHistory of the Bahaʼi Faith Spiritual Assembly Socioeconomic development and the Bahaʼi Faith Bahaʼi divisionsFootnotes edit In 2012 the Pew Research Center published a report on the Global Religious Landscape Bahaʼis were grouped into the category Other Religions together with Sikhs Zoroastrians and various others The report said Because of the lack of data on these faiths in many countries the Pew Forum has not attempted to estimate the size of individual religions within this category It also noted Although some faiths in the other religions category have millions of adherents around the world censuses and surveys in many countries do not measure them specifically Estimates of the global size of these faiths generally come from other sources such as the religious groups themselves 17 Samakh and Al Hama are grouped rather than listed as separate locations The ARDA s data is reproduced from the World Christian Database s 2010 estimates 48 Samoa and American Samoa share a single Bahaʼi National Spiritual Assembly The source refers to the country by its old name Republic of Upper Volta Minors under 15 years of age not counted 104 This number is for West Germany and there is no entry for Bahaʼis in East Germany Source separately lists 10 000 in the Indian state of Sikkim Data is for the USSR Samoa and American Samoa share a single Bahaʼi National Spiritual Assembly Source gives the number for Guadalupe which is the main city of the nation of Sao Tome and Principe Source lists 1 838 in Somalia and 272 in Somaliland The source separately identifies 300 on the Channel Islands Bahaʼi numbers are for the continental states excluding Alaska Hawai i and territories Citations edit a b Smith amp Momen 1989 Hampson 1980 Smith amp Momen 1989 pp 70 71 Religion amp Baha i Faith Britannica Book of the Year Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 1988 p 303 a b MacEoin 2000 McClure 1965 a b Bahaʼi World News Service 1992 a b c Smith 2022 p 509 a b c Bahaʼi World News Service 2020 a b c d e BWC Stats 2001 Warburg 2006 p 225 a b Britannica 2010 a b Baha is by Country World Religion Database Institute on Culture Religion and World Affairs 2020 Retrieved 21 December 2020 subscription required a b c World Christian Encyclopedia 2001 p 1 4 a b Johnson amp Grim 2013 a b Smith amp Momen 1989 p 70 a b Pew Research 2012 Kosmin amp Keysar a b World Christian Encyclopedia 2001 p 2 653 Smith 2022 p 25 Warburg 2006 pp 221 222 a b c Smith amp Momen 1989 p 69 Smith 2000 p 68 Effendi 1971 p 140 Hornby 1983 p 76 Smith 2000 p 244 Warburg 2006 p 226 Smith amp Momen 1989 p 72 a b c d Warburg 2006 p 227 Warburg 2006 p 221 a b US Annual Report 2020 Garlington 2008 p xxi Garlington 2008 pp xxi xxii Warburg 2006 pp 225 226 NSA South Africa 1997 Smith amp Momen 1989 p 71 Bahaʼi News No 676 1987b Universal House of Justice 1985 Momen 2008 p 154 Momen 2004 pp 63 106 Momen 1981 p 265 A V 2017 Grim et al 2016 Populations and Demographic Trends 2011 Boyett 2016 p 231 Dawei Bei 2011 Baha i and Subud Dissent Developments in the 2000s New Religion in a Globalized East Taiwan Southeast Asia the World Aletheia University Danshui Taipei Taiwan Center for Studies on New Religions a b Grim 2012 a b c d ARDA 2010 a b Melton amp Baumann 2010 p lix Hartz 2009 p 8 CIA World Factbook 2007 Warburg 2006 p 220 ARDA 2005 Warf amp Vincent 2007 Jones 2005 p 739 a b Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa 2004 World Book 2003 Britannica 2000 Academic American Encyclopedia 1998 Bowker 1997 O Brien amp Palmer 2005 Chernow amp Vallasi 1993 Smith 1995 World Christian Encyclopedia 1982 p 817 Oliver 2001 Hartz 2009 p 85 Palestine Census 1922 Palestine Census 1931 a b World Christian Encyclopedia 1982 p 6 Hartz 2009 p 79 Evening Standard 1912 Anaconda Standard 1912 Houston Chronicle 1912 Greeley Smith 1912 Boston Evening Transcript 1911 a b c d e f Warburg 2006 p 218 Foreign Policy 2007 Summary Data from the ARDA National Profiles 2005 Update Religion Indexes Adherents and Other Data Data Archive The Association of Religion Data Archives www thearda com Retrieved 2020 11 13 World Christian Encyclopedia 1982 World Christian Encyclopedia 2001 UN Statistics Division 2020 International Religious Freedom Report 2007 Muccio Nicholas 2014 Lighting Young Lights The Junior Youth Spiritual Empowerment Program in Samoa Independent Study Project ISP Collection ABS 1996 ABS 2001 ABS 2020 2006 Census Ethnicity a b SBS Census Explorer 2020 NSA Barbados 2010 Barbados Statistical Service 2010 Belize Census 2010 Bahaʼi News No 685 1988 p 10 Botswana U S Department of State Retrieved 2020 11 08 NSA Canada 2017 Melton amp Baumann 2010 p 557 Los inicios de la Fe baha i en Costa Rica Comunidad Baha i de Costa Rica in Mexican Spanish Retrieved 2020 11 10 Navidad se vive diferente en hogares ticos no cristianos La Nacion Grupo Nacion in Spanish 25 December 2010 Retrieved 2020 11 10 Ancic 2014 p 10 a b c d Warburg 2015 a b Bahaʼi News No 676 1987 p 1 Bigelow 2006 p 89 USDoS 2019 Egypt Economist 2008 Farrand 1990 p 3 Demmrich 2020 Mitgliederzahlen Sonstige REMID Religionswissenschaftlicher Medien und Informationsdienst e V in German Retrieved 2020 11 08 Bahaʼi News No 707 1990 Guyana Census 2002 Marshall 2019 Bahaʼi News No 671 1987 p 12 NSA India 2017 India Census 1991 a b Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada 2000 India Census 2001 Warburg 2006 p 223 India Census 2011 Bahaʼi News No 682 1988 Bibliography No Jim Crow Church University Press of Florida pp 287 302 2015 08 25 doi 10 2307 j ctvx06zsp 15 retrieved 2023 09 26 Smith 1984 Sanasarian Eliz 2000 Religious Minorities in Iran Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 53 USDoS 2019 Iran USDoS 2019 Iraq Learn More The Baha i Gardens www ganbahai org il Archived from the original on 2020 10 26 Retrieved 2020 11 01 The Baha i Faith Dig Jamaica 12 June 2018 A Discussion with Joy Mboya Executive Director of the Godown Arts Centre Berkley Center for Religion Peace and World Affairs 15 February 2017 Retrieved 2 December 2020 Matthew Lamers 30 March 2010 Small but vibrant Baha is in Korea The Korea Herald Archived from the original on 2012 04 03 Retrieved 7 Dec 2023 Dramatic stories thrill Malawi golden jubilee Bahaʼi World News Service 9 July 2003 Bahaʼi News No 668 1986 Hinton 2020 Minute 50 USDoS 2019 Morocco Central Bureau of Statistics National Planning Commission Secretariat 2003 Archived from the original on 2011 05 19 van den Hoonaard 1993 2018 Census totals by topic national highlights Stats NZ stats govt nz Retrieved 21 December 2020 Table 1 Members of religious and life stance communities outside the Church of Norway by religion life stance Per 1 1 2005 2007 Numbers and per cent 2011 11 15 Archived from the original on 2011 11 15 Retrieved 2020 11 15 Wagner Ralph D ed Pakistan Synopsis of References to the Bahaʼi Faith in the US State Department s Reports on Human Rights 1991 2000 Bahaʼi Academics Resource Library Archived from the original on 2012 03 14 Retrieved 2009 04 12 Ghauri 2012 Khan Iftikhar A May 28 2018 Number of non Muslim voters in Pakistan shows rise of over 30pc DAWN COM Das Shobha 2013 04 10 A Pakistani Baha i s story Minority Rights Group Retrieved 2020 12 13 International Religious Freedom Report 2006 Bahaʼi News No 714 1990 Rwanda Bahai Boasts 4 000 Followers All Africa Muccio Nicholas 2014 Lighting Young Lights The Junior Youth Spiritual Empowerment Program in Samoa Independent Study Project Collection Warburg 2015 p 77 78 Tajik Bahais Keep Quiet About Their Faith iwpr net Retrieved 2021 03 05 International Religious Freedom Report 2001 Philip Hainsworth Telegraph Media Group Limited 2001 12 20 Retrieved October 12 2020 National Population and Housing Census 2014 PDF Uganda Bureau of Statistics 2016 Retrieved October 11 2020 Bahaʼi News No 647 1985 UK Baha i website Census 2011 data on religion reveals Jedi Knights are in decline The Guardian 2012 12 11 Retrieved 2020 10 12 a b Gallagher amp Ashcraft 2006 p 193 Bahaʼi News No 688 1988 a b Kosmin amp Mayer 2001 Miller 2006 p 10 a b Melton amp Baumann 2010 p 3060 International Religious Freedom Report 2006 USDoS 2019 Vietnam Baha i Faith in Zambia The Baha i Community of Zambia 2018 05 30 Archived from the original on 2018 05 30 Retrieved 2020 10 13 Bahaʼi News No 653 1985 p 12 Other religions Baha i Faith Religion in Zimbabwe World Christian Encyclopedia 1982 pp 782 785 World Christian Encyclopedia 2001 pp 1 13 15 a b Smith 2014 Momen 2011 Warburg 2006 pp 224 225 Hassall Graham Notes on Research on National Spiritual Assemblies Research notes Asia Pacific Bahaʼi Studies Retrieved 2008 12 21 Baha i World Statistics 2001 by Baha i World Center Department of Statistics 2001 08 The Life of Shoghi Effendi by Helen Danesh John Danesh and Amelia Danesh Studying the Writings of Shoghi Effendi edited by M Bergsmo Oxford George Ronald 1991 References editBooks edit Ancic Branko May 2014 Baha i Religion as a New Religious Movement In Ott Michael R ed The Dialectics of the Religious and the Secular Brill pp 168 180 Bigelow Kit 2006 The Plight of Religious Minorities Can Religious Pluralism Survive Pennsylvania State University U S Government Printing Office p 89 ISBN 9780160772580 Bowker John W ed 1997 The Oxford Dictionary of World Religions Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 213965 8 Boyett Jason 2016 12 Major World Religions Berkeley CA Zephyros Press pp 217 31 ISBN 978 1 62315 692 3 MacEoin Denis 2000 Baha i Faith In Hinnells John R ed The New Penguin Handbook of Living Religions Second Edition Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 051480 3 Miller Timothy 2006 New Religious Movements in American History In Gallagher Eugene V Ashcraft W Michael eds History and Controversies Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol 1 Westport Connecticut London Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0275987121 Gallagher Eugene V Ashcraft W Michael eds 2006 The Bahaʼis of the United States Asian Traditions Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol 4 Westport Connecticut London Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0275987121 Garlington William 2008 The Baha i Faith in America Paperback ed Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 6234 9 Grim Brian Johnson Todd Skirbekk Vegard Zurlo Gina eds 2016 Yearbook of International Religious Demography 2016 Vol 3 Brill pp 17 25 doi 10 1163 9789004322141 ISBN 9789004322141 Hartz Paula 2009 World Religions Baha i Faith 3rd ed New York NY Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 1 60413 104 8 Johnson Todd M Grim Brian J 2013 Global Religious Populations 1910 2010 PDF The World s Religions in Figures An Introduction to International Religious Demography John Wiley amp Sons pp 59 62 doi 10 1002 9781118555767 ch1 ISBN 9781118555767 Momen Moojan 1981 The Babi and Baha i Religions 1844 1944 Some Contemporary Western Accounts Oxford George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 102 7 Momen Moojan 2008 The Baha i Faith Beginner s Guide Oxford Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 85168 563 9 Oliver Paul 28 September 2001 World Faiths 1st ed Teach Yourself Books p 78 ISBN 978 0340790601 O Brien Joanne Palmer Martin 2005 Religions Of The World Facts on File ISBN 978 0 8160 6258 4 Roof Wade Clark 1993 A Generation of Seekers Spiritual Journeys of the Baby Boom Generation HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 066964 5 Smith Jonathan Z 1995 The Harpercollins Dictionary of Religion HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 067515 8 Smith Peter 2022 Ch 41 The History of the Babi and Baha i Faiths In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 501 512 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Smith Peter 2022 Ch 50 Southeast Asia In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 614 621 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Effendi Shoghi 1971 Letters from The Guardian to Australia and New Zealand reprint ed Australia Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN Jones Dale E 2002 Religious Congregations and Membership in the United States 2000 Nashville Tenn Glenmary Research Center Gaustadd Edwin Scott Barlow Philip L 2001 New Historical Atlas of Religion in America Oxford Oxford Univ Press Hornby Helen ed 1983 Lights of Guidance A Bahaʼi Reference File New Delhi India Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN 978 81 85091 46 4 Momen Moojan 2004 Smith Peter ed Bahaʼis in the West Kalimat Press ISBN 978 1 890688 11 0 Warburg Margit 2006 Citizens of the world a history and sociology of the Bahaʹis from a globalisation perspective Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 474 0746 1 OCLC 234309958 Warburg Margit 2015 The Baha is of the North Handbook of Nordic New Religions Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 11 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 29244 4 Encyclopedias edit van den Hoonaard Will 1993 11 08 Netherlands History of the Baha i Faith The Baha i Encyclopedia draft Baha i Library Online Retrieved 2022 06 17 Baha i Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa Vol 1 2nd ed Macmillan Reference USA 2004 06 01 ISBN 978 0028657691 Barrett David B ed 1982 Global Adherents of all religions World Christian Encyclopedia A comparative survey of churches and religions in the modern world 1st ed Nairobi Oxford University Press Barrett David B Kurian George T Johnson Todd M 2001 Countries World Christian Encyclopedia A comparative survey of churches and religions in the modern world 2nd ed New York Oxford University Press Religion Year In Review 2000 Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2000 Religion Year In Review 2010 Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2010 Melton Baumann eds 2010 Baha i Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices Vol 1 2nd ed ABC Clio ISBN 978 1598842036 Momen Moojan 2011 Baha i In Juergensmeyer Mark Roof Wade Clark eds Encyclopedia of Global Religion SAGE Publications doi 10 4135 9781412997898 n61 ISBN 978 0 7619 2729 7 Smith Peter 2000 A Concise Encyclopedia of the Baha i Faith Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 85168 184 6 Retrieved 23 March 2021 Jones Lindsay ed 2005 Baha i Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 2 Second ed MacMillan Reference Books ISBN 978 0 02 865733 2 World Book World Book Encyclopedia World Book Inc 2003 ISBN 978 0 7166 0103 6 Mattar Philip ed 2004 Encyclopedia of Modern Middle East amp North Africa Thomson Gale ISBN 978 0 02 865769 1 Baha i Academic American Encyclopedia Grolier Academic Reference 1998 ISBN 978 0 7172 2068 7 Chernow Barbara A Vallasi George A 1993 Baha i The Columbia Encyclopedia Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 62438 8 Journals edit Cole Juan 1998 The Baha i Faith in America as Panopticon 1963 1997 The Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 37 2 234 248 doi 10 2307 1387523 JSTOR 1387523 Demmrich Sarah 2020 01 06 How to measure Baha i Religiosity Religions 11 1 29 doi 10 3390 rel11010029 Hsu Becky Reynolds Amy Hackett Conrad Gibbon James 2008 07 09 Estimating the Religious Composition of All Nations PDF Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 47 4 678 693 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5906 2008 00435 x Archived from the original PDF on 2010 03 26 Smith Peter 1984 A note on Babi and Baha i numbers in Iran Iranian Studies 17 2 3 295 301 doi 10 1080 00210868408701633 Smith Peter Momen Moojan 1989 The Baha i Faith 1957 1988 A Survey of Contemporary Developments Religion 19 63 91 doi 10 1016 0048 721X 89 90077 8 Grim Brian J 2012 Rising restrictions on religion PDF International Journal of Religious Freedom 5 1 17 33 ISSN 2070 5484 Archived from the original PDF on April 11 2017 Retrieved 2017 07 06 Smith Peter 26 November 2014 The Baha i Faith Distribution Statistics 1925 1949 Journal of Religious History 39 3 352 369 doi 10 1111 1467 9809 12207 ISSN 1467 9809 Warf Barney Vincent Peter August 2007 Religious diversity across the globe a geographic exploration Social amp Cultural Geography 8 4 597 613 doi 10 1080 14649360701529857 ISSN 1470 1197 S2CID 144530568 Alexandre Avdeev Tatiana Eremenko Patrick Festy Joelle Gaymu Nathalie le Bouteillec Sabine Springer 2011 Populations and Demographic Trends of European Countries 1980 2010 PDF Population E 66 1 15 17 Retrieved 2017 07 05 News reports edit Bahaʼi World News Service 1992 How many Bahaʼis are there The Bahaʼis Bahaʼi International Community p 14 Archived from the original on 17 July 2015 Bahaʼi World News Service 2020 Statistics Bahaʼi International Community Retrieved 2020 12 23 ʻAbdu l Baha ʻAbbas Comes to Lecture on Bahaʼi Religion The Evening Standard Salt Lake UT 30 September 1912 Retrieved 2017 07 05 Ghauri Irfan 2012 09 01 Over 35 000 Buddhists Baha is call Pakistan home The Express Tribune Karachi Pakistan People Worth While Houston Texas Chronicle Houston TX National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States 24 April 1912 Retrieved 2017 07 06 Gossip of the Metropolis The Anaconda Standard Montclair NJ National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States 16 June 1912 Retrieved 2017 07 06 Greeley Smith Nicola 12 April 1912 ʻAbdu l Baha ʻAbbas Head of New Religion Believes in Woman Suffrage and Divorce The Evening World New York National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States Retrieved 2017 07 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Retrieved Aug 19 2022 Commons sees first debate on Iran persecutions PDF Baha i News No 647 National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States February 1985 p 8 Retrieved 2020 12 21 Zimbabwe PDF Bahaʼi News No 653 National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States August 1985 Retrieved 2020 12 21 The story of Van Kee Leong Malaysia s first Baha i PDF Baha i News No 668 National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States November 1986 p 3 Retrieved 2020 12 21 The Faith in India Chronicle of growth PDF Baha i News No 671 National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States February 1987 pp 6 15 Retrieved 2020 12 21 Government fines imprisons 48 Bahaʼis PDF Baha i News No 676 National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States July 1987 p 1 Retrieved 2020 12 21 Grave concern over rights in Iran PDF Baha i News No 682 National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States January 1988 p 1 Retrieved 2020 12 21 FUNDESIB 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