The BaháüàFaith () has a following of at least several hundred people in Lebanon dating back to 1870. The community includes around 400 people, with a centre in Beit Mery, just outside the capital Beirut, and cemeteries in Machgara and Khaldeh. On the other hand, the Association of Religion Data Archives (relying on World Christian Encyclopedia) estimated some 3,900 BaháüÃÂs in 2005.
The first BaháüÃÂs who came to present day Lebanon were Iranians who came in the 1870s. The founder of the BaháüàFaith, Baháüu'lláh, was exiled to Acre, which was at the time was part of the same Ottoman province, or vilayet, of Beirut.
In 1880, Baháüu'lláh's son ûAbdu'l-Bahá, visited Beirut at the invitation of Midhat Pasha, the Ottoman governor of the Syria Vilayet. A Beirut newspaper described his visit by saying "His Excellency, the learned, erudite, intelligent and illustrious ûAbbas Effendi, resident of the city of ûAkka, has arrived in our city". Following the visit Baha'u'llah wrote the "Tablet of the Land of Ba (Beirut)", later described as a "glowing tribute" to ûAbdu'l-Bahá.
During his visits to Beirut, ûAbdu'l-Bahá also met Muhammad Abduh, one of the key figures of Islamic Modernism and the Salafi movement, at a time when the two men were both opposed to the Ottoman ulama and shared similar goals of religious reform. Rashid Rida asserts that during his visits to Beirut, ûAbdu'l-Bahá would attend Abduh's study sessions. Regarding the meetings of ûAbdu'l-Bahá and Muhammad ûAbduh, Shoghi Effendi asserts that "His several interviews with the well-known Shaykh Muhammad ûAbdu served to enhance immensely the growing prestige of the community and spread abroad the fame of its most distinguished member."
In 1894 a Lebanese Christian, Ibrahim George Kheiralla, converted to the BaháüàFaith whilst traveling in Cairo. After Abdu'l-Bahá wrote a specific tablet to him, he moved to Chicago in the United States and was instrumental in converting many of the early Baháüàfollowers there.
Two Beirut universities - the American University of Beirut and the Saint Joseph University - had significant Baha'i student populations in the early twentieth century. The first Baha'i student was recorded in the 1890s, the âÂÂSociety of the BaháüàStudents of Beirut" was formed in 1906 and by 1929 there were over 60 Baha'i students from Iran, Iraq, Egypt and Palestine. The university promoted "internationalism" as a core value and acknowledged the Baha'i students as a significant contribution to this vision. The Baha'i leader, Shoghi Effendi, studied at the American University of Beirut, graduating in 1917.
A Shiûite Imam in the southern village of Machgara, Sheikh Jaüafar Al-Tahhan, converted to the BaháüàFaith in 1923, and that village is now the centre of the community, with the only Lebanese local Spiritual Assembly.
The Encyclopedia of the Orient reported that there were 4,000 BaháüÃÂs living in Lebanon, or around 0.13% of the population.
In 1968, a prominent Baháüàacademic, Suheil Bushrui, became a visiting professor at the American University of Beirut. In the 1980s he was appointed an advisor by President Amine Gemayel, indicating how BaháüÃÂs are accepted. Bushrui was a noted scholar on Khalil Gibran, having published more than one volume about him and served as the Kahlil Gibran Chair for Values and Peace at the University of Maryland.
The Baha'i Faith is not one of the 18 recognised sects in Lebanon, so many BaháüÃÂs are officially listed according to the religion of their ancestors, mostly Shiite. Baháüàmarriages are therefore not recognised, so BaháüÃÂs tend to travel to Cyprus to have a civil wedding, which is recognised when they return. BaháüÃÂs often face backlash and oppression for practicing their faith, such as an attack on the Baha'i cemetery in Machgara in 2023, in which tombstones were broken, which has led to many leaving the country. .