AlÃÂ-Yulláh Nakhjavánà(19 September 1919 – 11 October 2019) was an Azerbaijani-born Iranian BaháüÃÂ, who served as a member of the Universal House of Justice, the supreme governing body of the BaháüàFaith, between 1963 and 2003.
Ali Nakhjavani was born in 1919 in Baku, in the then Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, to Ali-Akbar Nakhjavani and Fatimih Khanum, both BaháüÃÂs. After his father's death circa 1921, when he was two, his family was advised by ûAbdu'l-Bahá to move to Haifa, Israel, where he grew up. In 1939 he received a Bachelor of Arts degree with distinction from the American University of Beirut, and then in the early 1940s he returned to Iran, residing first in Tehran, then Tabriz and finally in Shiraz. In 1950 he was elected to the BaháüàNational Spiritual Assembly of Iran, the governing body of the BaháüÃÂs in that country, where he served until the following year.
In 1951, Ali Nakhjavánàand his family moved to Uganda to assist with the development of the Baháüàcommunity in that country; while he was there he worked as a teacher and lecturer. During his early years there, Enoch Olinga joined the religion, and in 1953 NakhjavánÃÂ, and his wife along with Olinga and two other BaháüÃÂs travelled from Uganda to Cameroon to help spread the BaháüàFaith in Cameroon. From 1954-61 he was a member of the Auxiliary Board for the spread of the religion in Africa, and later from 1956 to 1961 he was elected to the BaháüàNational Spiritual Assembly of Central and East Africa, the Baháüàgoverning body for the region.
In 1961, Nakhjavánàwas elected to the International BaháüàCouncil â the forerunner to the Universal House of Justice, the worldwide governing body of the BaháüÃÂs â and thus moved to Haifa, Israel. In 1963 he was elected to the Universal House of Justice during its inaugural convention, and served as a member of that body until 2003.
Nakhjavánàwrote many works that were published in Baháüàperiodicals, as well as authoring three books: