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Rohani was born on 16 July 1926, [5] to Sayyid Mahmoud Rohani (d. 1961), a renowned instructor in the Islamic seminary of Qom. It is believed that his father was the person who convinced Sheikh Abd al-Karim al-Haeri to move to the city of Qom and establish the seminary there.
Mohammad Kazem Shariatmadari (1904–1986) Mohammad Khamenei (born 1935) Mostafa Hosseini Tabatabaei (born 1936) Muhammad Husayn Tabatabai (1903–1981) Mohammad Sadeq Rouhani (1926–2022) Mohammad Sadeqi Tehrani (1926–2011) Mohammad Sadoughi (1909–1982) Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi (1935–2021) Mohammad-Taqi Bahjat Foumani (1916–2009)
His grandfather Ayatollah Sadeq Qomiye was a student of the great Murtadha al-Ansari. His mother is the daughter of Seyed Fakhreddin Qomiye and granddaughter of Mirza-ye Qomi. [3] [4] He is also the cousin of Mohammad Sadeq Rouhani and Seyed Mohammad Hosseini Rohani, both of whom are Marja', otherwise known as Grand Ayatollah. [5]
Muhammad Sadiq Hassan (1886–1967), Iraqi poet; Mohammad Sadeq Rouhani (1926–2022), Iranian grand ayatollah; Muhammad Sadik Muhammad Yusuf (born 1952–2015), Uzbekistani Muslim scholar; Mohammad Seddigh Kaboudvand (born 1963), Iranian Kurdish activist and journalist; Mufti Muhammad Sadiq (1872–1957), Indian Muslim missionary
Sadeq Khan, a Faujdar of the Mughal Bengal's Sylhet Sarkar Sadeq Mohammad Khan IV (1861–1899), 10th Nawab of Bahawalpur who ruled the Bahawalpur State Sadeq Khan Zand (died 1781), also known as Mohammad Sadeq, the fifth Shah of the Zand dynasty from 1779 to 1781
Neda Agha-Soltan (1983–2009), shot during the 2009 Iranian election protests; her name quickly became a rallying cry for the opposition Bibi Khatoon Astarabadi (1858/9 – 1921), author and pioneer of the Persian women's movement in modern Iran
Mohammed Sadeq Givi Khalkhali (Persian: محمدصادق گیوی خلخالی; 27 July 1926 – 26 November 2003) [3] was an Iranian Shia cleric who is said to have "brought to his job as Chief Justice of the revolutionary courts a relish for summary execution" that earned him a reputation as Iran's "hanging judge".
In 1678, Farhad Khan took a one year break from being the faujdar of Sylhet as he was appointed the task of being the faujdar of Chittagong. During this time, Sadeq may have been the regent faujdar. It is said that Sadeq was ordered by Farhad to have built a mosque (which now remains incomplete) west of the former Sylhet Police lines. [1]