There are surely more than 12 laws, and commandments, in the Bahá'à Faith. You can find a summary of the most important laws and ordinances in the Synopsis and Codification of the Kitab-i-Aqdas, for example here: http://www.ibiblio.org/Bahai/Texts/EN/AQD/AQD-17.html
Note that some of the laws are intended for a future society, and can't be currently implemented, because they are under the jurisdiction of civil authorities. For example, this applies to division of estate, when somebody dies without leaving a testament.
The Bahai Faith does not use any code in its scriptures, which everyone is encouraged to read for themselves. See the Bahai Reference Library for a good selection of Bahai scriptures, all for free. The Bahai community today also does not use codes, secret handshakes, etc..
A Bahai place of worship is called: 1) a Bahai house of worship, 2) a Bahai temple or 3) a Mashriqu'l-adhkar These are three different names for the same thing.
because the bahai religion is afraid that there are secrets that getting told to the outsideworld
Although the Bahá'í Faith originated in a Muslim country, it should be considered a separate religion. Bahá'ís have their own founders, their own holy books, and their own laws. Some of those laws are similar to Muslim laws, some not.
Bahai Zoroastrianism
William McElwee Miller has written: 'Baha'ism' -- subject(s): Babism, Bahais 'The Bahai cause today' -- subject(s): Bahai Faith 'Baha'ism, its origin, history, and teachings' -- subject(s): Bahai Faith
To my knowledge, no such thing exists.
it has many but it is mainly jewish.and bahai :)
there are 12 universal laws
A Bahai is a disciple of Baha'u'llah and his son Abdu'l-Baha. Baha'u'llah was a Persian nobleman who founded the Bahai Faith, a new religion teaching world unity. He was imprisoned and banished and exiled, until he was eventually sent to Akka in the north of Israel. There's a good wikipedia page on the Bahai Faith.
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