.
.
Home
Author search
Title search
Date search
Journals/Series
Chronology
New
Tags
Site map
.
.
.
full details for
Commentary on a Passage in the Epistle to the Son of the Wolf
Author
Moojan Momen
Title of item
Commentary on a Passage in the Epistle to the Son of the Wolf
Volume
14
Pages
281-288
Parent publication
Lights of Irfan
Publisher of this ed.
Wilmette, IL: Haj Mehdi Armand Colloquium
Date of this edition
2013
Language
English
Permission
editor and publisher
Posted
2015-03-18 by Jonah Winters
Classified in
Biographies
and
Published Articles
URL
bahai-library.com/momen_commentary_esw_2013
Abstract
Short biography of the Son of the Wolf, Aqa Najafi; summary of persecutions from 1874-1903; and the
Epistle's
references to Qayyumu’l-Asma and the Muslim dawn prayer for Ramadan.
Notes
Mirrored with permission from
irfancolloquia.org/u/momen_wolf
.
Tags
Ark (metaphor)
;
Badi calendar
;
Covenant (general)
;
Crimson
;
Crimson Ark
;
Dawn prayer for Ramadan
;
Greatest name
;
Interfaith dialogue
;
Islam
;
Lawh-i-Ibn-i-Dhib (Epistle to the Son of the Wolf)
;
Opposition
;
Persecution
;
Qayyumul-Asma (book)
Page views
4167 hits since 2015-03-18
Last edited
2015-10-30 23:49 EST. See
previous versions
[archive.org]
.
click on any question mark above for details
Select collection:
Archive
Articles, published
Articles, unpublished
Articles, newspaper
Articles, encyclopedia
Audio
Bibliographies
BIC, published
Biographies
Books
Chronologies, timelines
Compilations, Baha'i World Centre
Compilations, Nat'l Spiritual Assemblies
Compilations, personal
Documents, historical
Essays, informal
Etcetera
Excerpts from books
Fiction
Glossaries, doctionaries
Guardian, letters
Histories, memoirs
Introductory items
Letters, personal
Maps
NSA documents
NSA letters
Pilgrims notes
Poetry
Presentations
Research notes
Reviews of books etc.
Scripts, screenplays
Songbooks, music
Statistics
Study guides
Talks
Theses
Translations, provisional
UHJ documents
UHJ letters
Video
Visual items
Writings, Sacred
Home
Site Map
Forum
Links
Copyright
About
Contact
.
.
.