The Seven Who Would Not Recant
Nabíl-i-Aʻẓam, The Dawn-Breakers (Nabíl's Narrative), (1932), Bahá'í Publishing Trust · Read original
When in Bahá'í history
A retelling based on The Dawn-Breakers: Nabíl's Narrative (trans. Shoghi Effendi). The narrative is retold in our own words; the short line in quotation marks is verbatim from the book. Read the full text for Nabíl's complete account.
In the city of Tihrán, fourteen believers were arrested for their faith in the Báb. They were given a simple way out: deny your belief, and you may go home to your families. Refuse, and you will die.
Seven of them, under that terrible pressure, chose to recant, and they were let go. No one can stand in judgment over a frightened soul facing death.
But the other seven would not.
They were not all alike — and that is part of what makes their story so striking. Among them was Ḥájí Mírzá Siyyid 'Alí, a leading merchant of Shíráz, who was also the Báb's own maternal uncle — the man who had helped raise Him. Among them was Mírzá Qurbán-'Alí, a gentle and much-loved dervish. Among them was Ḥájí Mullá Ismá'íl, a learned theologian. A rich man, a wandering mystic, a scholar — people who in ordinary life might never have stood side by side. Now they stood together, in the same square, for the same Beloved.
One by one they were offered their lives in exchange for their faith. One by one they refused. And what witnesses remembered was not terror but a strange, shining eagerness. One of them, as the executioner approached, said:
The sooner you strike off my head, the greater will be my gratitude to you.
All seven were put to death in the public square. Even after, their enemies were not satisfied, and the bodies were left exposed for three days before they were finally buried beyond the city gates.
They are remembered together — the Seven Martyrs of Tihrán — because they showed something the world finds hard to understand: that there are things a person can love more than life itself, and that to die faithful to such a love is not a defeat but a kind of victory. Merchant and dervish and scholar, they walked into that square as strangers from different worlds, and walked out of this life as brothers.
This account is retold for the Bahai Story Library; it is a paraphrase, not the original text. The quoted line is verbatim from The Dawn-Breakers (Nabíl, trans. Shoghi Effendi). See the source for the complete account.
Cite this story
Nabíl-i-Aʻẓam. (1932). *The Dawn-Breakers (Nabíl's Narrative)*. Bahá'í Publishing Trust. https://reference.bahai.org/en/t/nz/DB/
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