Awhad
While the exact name Awhad appears as a divine attribute in Surah Al-Ikhlas (112:1) as 'Ahad' (The One), it is not used as a personal name in the Quran but is derived from this supreme divine attribute of oneness.
The name is historically significant due to Awhad al-Din Kirmani (d. 1291), a 13th-century Persian Sufi mystic and poet whose works on divine love and spiritual intoxication influenced Islamic spirituality across Persia, Bengal, and Anatolia.
Yes, Awhad is a meaningful choice for parents seeking a rare, spiritually significant name with strong Sufi roots and connections to divine oneness and uniqueness.
In Bengali, it is pronounced as 'Awhad' (আহ্বাদ) with a soft 'w' sound, maintaining the original Persian-Arabic pronunciation while adapting to Bengali phonology.
The name suggests uniqueness, leadership, spiritual depth, monotheistic conviction, and a strong connection to Sufi mysticism and the concept of divine unity.