Leroy Ioas
Leroy C Ioas (15 February 1896, Wilmington, Illinois - 22 July 1965, Haifa, Israel) was a Hand of the Cause of the Bahá'í Faith. His parents declared themselves Bahá'ís in 1898 and took Ioas to meet `Abdu'l-Bahá during the latter’s travels in the United States in 1912. Ioas moved to San Francisco after marrying Sylvia Kuhlman and soon became active in the local Bahá’í community.[1]
Service at the Bahá’í World Centre
The head of the Bahá’í Faith in the first half of the 20th century, Shoghi Effendi, appointed Ioas to the International Bahá'í Council, precursor to the Universal House of Justice, in December 1951, where he served until 1961 as Secretary-General. In order to fulfill his duties, he quit his job in the railway industry, where he had worked for nearly forty years, and moved to Haifa, where he would reside until the end of his life.
After the death of Shoghi Effendi, Ioas was among nine Hands of the Cause elected as a Custodian of the Bahá'í Faith on 25 November 1957. He travelled far and frequently to promote and expand the faith, even as his health weakened after heart problems began in 1953. His last trip, to eight areas in the United States during 1964, weakened him so much that he could not return to Haifa for six months and died less than a year later.[2] He is buried in the Mount Carmel Bahá’í cemetery in Haifa.
Works
- Ioas, Leroy C, Julia Lynch Chanler, and Mirza Ahmad Sohrab. Three Letters. New York: Caravan of East and West, 1954.
References
Bibliography
- Adamson, Hugh C. ‘Ioas, Leroy C’. Historical dictionary of the Bahá’í faith. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2007.
- Chapman, Anita Ioas (1998). Leroy Ioas: Hand of the Cause of God. Oxford: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-426-3.
- Harper, Barron (1997). Lights of Fortitude (Paperback ed.). Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-413-1.
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