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Bahá'í Faith in Norway : ウィキペディア英語版 | Bahá'í Faith in Norway
The Bahá'í Faith in Norway began with contact between traveling Scandinavians with early Persian believers of the Bahá'í Faith in the mid-to-late 19th century. Bahá'ís first visited Scandinavia in the 1920s following `Abdu'l-Bahá's, then head of the religion, request outlining Norway among the countries Bahá'ís should pioneer to and the first Bahá'í to settle in Norway was Johanna Schubartt. Following a period of more Bahá'í pioneers coming to the country, Bahá'í Local Spiritual Assemblies spread across Norway while the national community eventually formed a Bahá'í National Spiritual Assembly in 1962.〔( The Bahá'í Faith: 1844-1963: Information Statistical and Comparative, Including the Achievements of the Ten Year International Bahá'í Teaching & Consolidation Plan 1953-1963 ), Compiled by Hands of the Cause Residing in the Holy Land, pages 22 and 46.〕 In 2010 the national census reported around 1000 Bahá'ís in the country however the Association of Religion Data Archives (relying on World Christian Encyclopedia) estimated some 2700 Bahá'ís in 2005. ==Early history== The first mentions of the religion happened in the era when Norway was politically united with Sweden; the first mention of the Báb, who Bahá'ís view as the herald to the founder of the religion, Bahá'u'lláh, was published in accounts of Persian travels in 1869, and the first mentions of Bahá'u'lláh were made in 1896.〔 Swedish Sufi Ivan Aguéli was able to meet `Abdu'l-Bahá, the son of the founder of the religion, in 1912 in Egypt.〔
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