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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.
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]
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)
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 Kia (1920–2002), Iranian man of letters, professor of Iranian languages; Sadeq Larijani (born 1961), better known as Amoli Larijani, Iranian cleric, conservative politician; Sadeq Naihoum (1937–1994), Libyan writer and journalist; Sadeq Rohani (1926–2022), or Grand Ayatollah Sayyid Mohammad Sadeq Hussaini Rohani, Iranian Twelver ...
For example, Rouhani appointed Hesamoddin Ashna, a communications professor at Imam Sadiq, as his advisor. Nonetheless, Ashna was later compelled to resign following controversial disclosures from an interview leak involving Mohammad Javad Zarif , the then- foreign minister , who critiqued Ashna for his involvement in military political ...
Traditionally (and as of 1985, at least in Iran) education of a member of the ulema (and many other people) began with primary school or maktab. After completing this, those who wanted to be members of the ulama attended madrasa (religious college, "collectively referred to as hawza ", plural hawzat ) [ 6 ] situated in big cities.
On November 7, 1990, Mohammad Salimi was appointed the head of the Second Branch of the Special Court for the Clerics. [6] Khamenei "significantly expanded the SCC. While the courts had hitherto functioned on the basis of no specific code, Khamenei commissioned an extraordinary ordinance of 47 articles, which was expanded in 2005. [ 7 ]