Siyyid ‘Alí-Muhammad [the Báb] had some six to seven years of schooling with Shaykh ‘Abid. In all probability He left the school… before He was thirteen.
- Hand of the Cause Balyuzi ('The Báb - The Herald of the Day of Days')
…Following the story of the life of the Báb as we celebrate the bicentenary of His Birth (1819)
Siyyid ‘Alí-Muhammad [the Báb] had some six to seven years of schooling with Shaykh ‘Abid. In all probability He left the school… before He was thirteen.
- Hand of the Cause Balyuzi ('The Báb - The Herald of the Day of Days')
The Báb describes His own genealogy in Sahifih Baynu’l-Haramayn (The Treatise Between the Two Shrines):
“Say: My name is Muhammad after the word ‘Alí [i.e., ‘Alí-Muhammad]. And the name of My father, as hath been revealed in the Book of God, is Ridá after Muhammad. And the name of My grandfather in the Book of God is Ibráhím [Abraham], and his father is named Nasru’lláh as has been revealed in the Qur’án (Fathu’lláh)"
The same genealogy is given in the Qayyúmu'l-Asmá, Surih al-Qaribih, verses 14—15. (Provisional translation, Footnotes to ‘The Báb in Shiraz, An Account by Mírzá Habíbu’lláh Afnán’, provided by Ahang Rabbani)
In Qayyúmu’l-Asmá, Surih al-Qarabih [kinsmen], verse 14, tire Báb reveals:
“Verily, We have named this Remembrance by two Names from the divine Self, after two Beloved Ones among Our servants in the heavens.”
(Provisional translation, Footnotes to ‘The Báb in Shiraz, An Account by Mírzá Habíbu’lláh Afnán’, provided by Ahang Rabbani)
The Báb’s uncle recalled a group summer trip to a populous mountainous area about twelve kilometers from Shiraz when the Báb was about nine years old:
“When we arrived, being completely exhausted, we performed our ablutions, offered our late afternoon and the evening obligatory prayers, paid our homage of visitation, ate dinner, and went to bed. It was not long after, at midnight, that I awoke and noticed that He [the Báb] was not in bed. Deeply perturbed, I was overtaken with anxiety that perhaps He had fallen from the mountain. Finally, after searching extensively, I heard a voice raised in the obligatory prayer and prayers of glorification to the Lord, coming from the lower extremities [of the mountain]. When I followed the melody of that chant, I found the Child, standing alone and in private, in consummate rapture voicing prayers and supplications to the One Who transcends all mention, on the deserted mountainside and at that late hour of the night.”
- Mírzá Habíbu’lláh Afnán (‘The Báb in Shiraz, An Account by Mírzá Habíbu’lláh Afnán, translated and annotated by Ahang Rabbani)
| Entrance to ancient city of Saveh, circa 1900 |