RAJIV MEHROTRA IN CONVERSATION- H.E. AGA KHAN
VIDEO/Rajiv Mehrotra (1988 interview)/Youtube (India’s public TV Doordarshan Presentation)
Karim Aga Khan and His Life’s Work – a film by Veronika Hofer
His Higness the Aga Khan: Reminiscenes of over six decades
by DR. SEYYED HOSSEIN NASR
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As we reflect on the life of His Highness the Aga Khan, we share this essay by the eminent Muslim scholar, Dr. Seyyed Hossein Nasr, about their many decades of friendship.
His Highness the Aga Khan passed away on February 4th, 2025. This tribute by Dr. Seyyed Hossein Nasr on the occasion of the Aga Khan’s Diamond Jubilee originally appeared in Sacred Web 41, published in June 2018.
In the Name of God, The Most Merciful, The Most Compassionate
I am grateful to be given this opportunity to write a few words about reminiscences concerning His Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan on the occasion of his Diamond Jubilee.
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I have known him personally for over six decades and have met him in places as far apart as Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the USA, Aiglemont, Gouvieux, in France, and Tehran in my home country of Iran. The trajectory of the meeting of the lines of his noble family and mine goes back to even before Prince Karim and I met in the mid-1950s at Harvard. When Pakistan became independent, my uncle, Seyyed Ali Nasr, became Iran’s first ambassador to the newly founded nation and soon became close friends with His Highness Sir Sultan Mohamed Shah, Aga Khan III, Prince Karim’s grandfather, to the extent that later when Sir Sultan Mohamed Shah and the Begum would come to Iran, they would visit the Nasr family home in Tehran.
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When I went to Harvard in 1954, I founded the Harvard Islamic Society, the first Islamic Society to be established in an American University. Among its seven original members was the late Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan, Prince Karim’s uncle with whom I became good friends. Shortly thereafter, when as a teaching fellow at Harvard I was giving a lecture on Islam, I met the young Prince Karim who was then a student in my class. We became close friends and he would occasionally even visit our home where my mother, who was then residing in the Boston area, would cook Persian food for him which he appreciated like most other things Persian.
It was in this period that during a university holiday he was called away to Europe to visit his grandfather, Sir Sultan Mohamed Shah, during his last illness, and on his passing on July 11, 1957, Prince Karim was, according to the hereditary customs of the Shi’a Imami Ismaili Muslims, appointed by the Last Will of the late Imam to succeed to the title of ‘Aga Khan’ and to be Imam and Pir of his community. He was 20 at the time. When the young Prince Karim, now Imam and Aga Khan IV, returned to Cambridge, we continued our discussions but on a deeper level about Islam, its art and philosophy, Twelver Shi‘ism and its relation to Ismailism and the whole question of im?mah or the Imamat in addition to many other related subjects. I would often speak to him about the fact that Ismailism was and remains a part of the totality of Shi‘ism and therefore of Islam, and I was very glad to see that soon he added the name Shi‘a to the official name of the branch of Ismailism of which he was now the ???ir Imam.
When I returned to Iran in 1958 my relation with His Highness continued. He wanted to have a new generation of Ismaili intellectual leaders trained and, to that end, he sent several very gifted Ismaili students to Tehran University where I was teaching and they completed their doctorate under my care. His keen interest in the Islamic intellectual tradition combined with devotion to Islamic art and architecture was and is unique among major Islamic leaders.
The early Sixties were the hey-day of Arab nationalism, both Nasserism and the Ba‘th movement, the latter led ideologically by Christian Arabs such as Michel Aflaq and Constantine Zurayk, who was a professor at the American University of Beirut (AUB), which was then the intellectual seat of Arab nationalism. It was at the AUB that such famous Jordanian and Palestinian nationalists as Nayef Hawatemah and Yasser Arafat as well as many Lebanese and Syrian political figures had studied, and where there was the attempt both to secularize Islam or to reduce it to a part of Arab nationalism. His Highness Prince Karim decided very wisely that it was there, precisely because of the AUB’s influential position, that he would seek to establish a Chair of Islamic Studies, and he indicated that he wanted me to apply for it and to go to the AUB in Beirut to found the Chair. At the time, I was very busy in Iran and did not want to leave my country for a whole year, but I obliged to follow His Highness’s suggestion and when the invitation came from AUB to apply for the Aga Khan Chair, I sent them my CV and publications, and soon afterwards I was informed that I had been chosen for the Chair. And so, I spent the whole academic year of 1964 – 1965 in Beirut as Aga Khan Professor, a year that was one of the most difficult and at the same time most fruitful of my life.
The opposition among many members of the faculty to Islam being taught by a Persian who was at the same time a Shi‘ite was more than I had imagined. It had been easier for me to teach Islamic subjects from a Muslim point of view at Harvard where I had been visiting professor just two years earlier than to teach such subjects in Beirut. But I had the full backing of His Highness and that support gave me strength in carrying out his wishes to sink the roots of Islamic studies in the soil of the intellectual heart of modern Arab nationalism and modernism.
Sacred Web for more
Aga Khan Award for Architecture in Kazan, Russia, 2019
VIDEO/The Ismaili TV/Youtube
Argo Contemporary Art Museum and Cultural Centre | Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2022
VIDEO/Aga Khan Development Network/Youtube
The Silent Prince of Islam – Aga Khan Interviewed by Annette Allison
A better world through education: The Aga Khan Academies (with subtitles)
VIDEO/Aga Khan Academies/Youtube
India’s silence on Aga Khan IV’s passing is an insult to his memory and legacy
by MANI SHANKAR AIYAR
Prince Karim Aga Khan IV passed away in Lisbon on February 4 after having held the Imamate of the Nizari Ismaili community, as the 49th Mawlana Hazrat Imam, since 1957. As far as I know, the Narendra Modi government has issued no official condolence message. This is not only an insult to the memory of the prince, but also an insult to the 1.5 million-strong Indian Ismaili community he led for the last 68 years. It not only ignores the Padma Vibhushan awarded to the prince, but also neglects that it was in the Prime Minister’s home State of Gujarat that Aga Khan IV started and has until now sustained the Aga Khan Rural Support Programme, the precursor to the worldwide Aga Khan Development Network which deals with healthcare, housing, education, and rural economic development.
The guiding principle of the Aga Khan’s life has been to recognise that his followers live among others of different ethnicities and religions. Therefore, he devotes a significant portion of his vast wealth to “improving the quality of life for individuals and communities across the world” as he wished to do so “irrespective of their religious affiliations or origins”.
I go for a walk whenever I can to Sunder Nursery in central New Delhi. It used to be an unkempt jungle until the Aga Khan Trust for Culture took charge of it. While preserving, conserving, restoring, and renovating the numerous Mughal-era monuments that dot the park, the Aga Khan Trust has converted the wilderness into an arresting Mughal Gardens with a profusion of flowers in full bloom as winter turns to spring. The greenery is enhanced by the numerous trees and the woods at its periphery, home to many birds and small animals.
And because Sunder Nursery is close to Muslim residential areas, Muslim families and students, young men and women in wooing mode, and newly married Muslim couples holding hands wander at ease through its enchanted gardens and waterways, the way they do along the sea-face at Mumbai’s Marine Drive.
Aga Khan Trust’s contribution
It is one place in Modi’s India where our major minority community can have a sense of belonging, where their identity is unquestioned, their heritage (which is also ours) is lovingly celebrated. The open-air auditorium is a magnificent setting to display the composite civilisation that defines the Idea of India, especially in poetry, music, and dance—and true spirituality. Is that why the current Indian establishment shuns this UNESCO-recognised site, although it was Vice President Venkaiah Naidu, a former BJP activist, who inaugurated the park?
Right next to Sunder Nursery is Humayun’s Tomb. It was neglected and run-down till Prince Karim turned his attention to it. Today, it stands rejuvenated, its surrounding greens and lawns perfectly manicured and with a world-class museum that explains and celebrates that period of our history. A fitting tribute to Humayun whose father, the Mughal emperor Babur, left him a letter emphasising that if he wished to keep the empire he was inheriting, he must remember not to forcibly convert to Islam the inhabitants of the land. This injunction resulted in only a quarter of India’s population being Muslim after 666 years of Muslim sultans and badshahs ruling from the throne of Delhi (1192-1858). India was where Islam learned to co-exist with other religions. Elsewhere, Islam was either totally triumphant (from Afghanistan and Iran to West Asia and North Africa, Central Asia, and much of South-East Asia down to Indonesia, the most populous Muslim nation in the world) or totally defeated (as at the Pyrenees that separate Spain from France and at the gates of Vienna).
Islamic contact with India may have started with invasions and bigotry but very quickly turned to mutual respect and cultural synthesis. Right opposite Sunder Nursery is a large sign proclaiming, “I LOVE NIZAMUDDIN”. The reference is not to the great Sufi spiritual leader, Nizamuddin Auliya, but to the upscale post-Partition residential colony named in an earlier more tolerant and accommodating period of independent India. It was here, at what is now his dargah, that Nizamuddin Auliya, spiritual adviser to the Khiljis and the Tughlaqs, persuaded Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq that Alauddin’s resort to merciless armed conversions was not the way the sultan should adopt, leading to Ghiyasuddin’s imperial decree to leave non-Muslims free to believe in and practise their faith. It is here that lie the origins not only of modern India’s secularism but also its national language, Hindi. For it was here that Nizamuddin Auliya’s renowned disciple, Amir Khusrau, fused the vernacular Braj Bhasha with imported words, phrases, and expressions from Turkish, Persian, and Central Asian dialects into a language he called “Hindawi”, from which contemporary Hindi was derived.
This was also the locale of the Sufi movement that evolved in India parallel to the Bhakti movement and led to the intertwining of the spiritual ecstasy that is the essence of both Sufism and Bhakti. Where in its heyday the dargah of Nizamuddin Auliya rested in expansive surroundings, it is now enclosed in a warren of narrow streets and dilapidated buildings. The Aga Khan Trust for Culture has made the renovation and upgrading of the Nizamuddin basti and its numerous imposing structures, as also that wondrous architectural masterpiece, the tomb of Abdur Rahim Khan-e-Khanan, another focus of its generous attention.
It is no surprise that non-Islamic, secular India is where Prince Karim Aga Khan IV concentrated his efforts. I only met him once—when he visited Karachi in 1981, where I was serving as India’s first-ever Consul General, to present his annual award for architecture to a highly talented Pakistani architect, Yasmeen Lari, who had brilliantly designed a hotel in India incorporating Islamic motifs with modern ones. Her fellow awardee was an Indian Christian named Charles Correa.
The chairman of the Aga Khan Trust, Rajeshwar Dayal, a former High Commissioner to Pakistan, was also present. Prince Karim was not concerned that a Hindu was heading his Trust. (One amusing but telling fallout of that visit was that the Jama’at-e-Islami Mayor of Karachi found himself being pushed down the reception line by higher-ups from Islamabad. Indignant, he rang me the next day to ask where the Mayor of Mumbai stood in the warrant of precedence. I was much taken by the fact that he did not think the position of the Lord Mayor of London, or the Mayor of New York, relevant. He instinctively understood that his case would be strengthened only by an Indian example. The Aga Khan was sensitive to the nuances of such a relationship between Pakistan and India!)
Champion of justice
His ecumenical (in the sense of all-embracing) and inclusive approach was also evident when Aga Khan IV took up the cause of Asians being expelled from East Africa, especially from Uganda under Idi Amin. Having himself been brought up as a boy in Kenya, Prince Karim championed his campaign of justice for all uprooted Asian communities, not only Ismailis, in those tense and difficult times, using his wide network in the West, particularly his friendship with Canadian premier Pierre Trudeau, to resettle thousands of refugee families in Canada.
It is surely churlish of the government of India to not issue a statement of condolence on the passing away of so noble an international Muslim leader with numerous followers in India and the recipient of India’s second highest civilian honour. But then the Modi-Amit Shah-Yogi Adityanath trio was preoccupied at the time of his passing with covering up the Mahakumbh stampede that killed uncounted numbers of Hindu pilgrims in the narrow alleys leading to the bathing ghats at Prayagraj, with those who escaped death being welcomed into mosques and madrasas that had thrown open their doors to offer hospitality and succour—although the triumvirate had let it be known that no Muslim would be allowed into the sangam (river confluence) during the Mahakumbh.
The irony of this is lost on no one.
Postscript: After the column was uploaded, I learned that the Prime Minister had in fact put out a condolence message on X (formerly Twitter). While apologising for not knowing this, I do wish to add that, given the stature and contribution of Khan, and India’s significant Indian Ismaili community, I believe more prominence should have been accorded to the sad event.
Frontline for more
FULL EVENT VIDEO: His Highness the Aga Khan’s visit to Brown University to deliver the Ogden Lecture
Who are Ismaili Muslims and how do their beliefs relate to the Aga Khan’s work?
by SHARIK SIDDIQUE
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Prince Karim Aga Khan, who died on Feb. 4, 2025, served as the religious leader of Ismaili Muslims around the world since being appointed as the 49th hereditary imam in 1957. He came to be known around the world for his enormous work on global development issues and other philanthropic work.
The Ismaili community considers the imam a direct descendant of the Prophet Muhammad. Ismaili Muslims are considered to be a branch of Shiite Islam. They constitute the second-largest community within the Shiite sect.
An estimated 15 million Ismaili Muslims live in 35 countries, across all parts of the world. In the U.S., with around 40,000 Ismailis, Texas has the largest concentration of the community.
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As a scholar of Muslim philanthropy, I have long been impressed by the philanthropic and civic engagement of the Ismailis.
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Ismaili religious beliefs
Following the death of the Prophet in A.D. 632, differences emerged over who should have both political and spiritual control over the Muslim community. A majority chose Abu Bakr, one of the Prophet’s closest companions, while a minority put their faith in his son-in-law and cousin, Ali. Those Muslims who put their faith in Abu Bakr came to be called Sunni, and those who believed in Ali came to be known as Shiite.
Like other Shiite sects, Ismailis believe that Ali should have been selected as the successor of the Prophet Muhammad. They also believe that he should have been followed by Ali’s two sons – the grandsons of Muhammad through his daughter Fatima.
The key difference among other Shiites and Ismailis lies in their lineage of imams. While they agree with the first six imams, Ismailis believe that Imam Ismail ibn Jafar was the rightful person to be the seventh imam, while the majority of Shiites, known as Twelvers, believe that Imam Musa al-Kazim, Ismail’s younger brother, was the true successor. They both agree that Ali was the first imam and on the next five imams, who are direct descendant of Ali and Fatima.
The Ismaili sect split into two branches in 1094. Aga Khan was the leader of the Nizari branch, which believes in a living imam or leader. The second branch – Musta’lian Tayyibi Ismailis – believes that its 21st imam went into “concealment”; in his physical absence, a vicegerent or “da’i mutlaq” acts as an authority on his behalf.
Like all Muslims, Ismailis believe that God sent his revelation to the Prophet Muhammad through Archangel Gabriel. However, they differ on other interpretations of the faith. According to the Ismailis, for example, the Quran conveys allegorical messages from God, and it is not the literal word of God. They also believe Muhammad to be the living embodiment of the Quran. Ismailis are strongly encouraged to pray three times a day, but it is not required.
Ismailis believe in metaphorical, rather than literal, fasting. Ismailis believe that the esoteric meaning of fasting involves a fasting of the soul, whereby they attempt to purify the soul simply by avoiding sinful acts and doing good deeds.
In terms of “Zakat,” or charity – the third pillar of Islam, which Muslims are required to follow – Ismailis differ in two ways. They give it to the leader of their faith, Aga Khan, and believe that they have to give 12.5% of their income versus 2.5%.
Pluralism and its embrace
Ismaili history has a strong connection to pluralism – part of their philosophy of embracing difference. The Fatimid Empire that ruled over parts of North Africa and the Middle East from 909 to 1171 is said to have been a “golden age of Ismaili thought.”
It was a pluralistic community, in which Shiite and Sunni Muslims, as well as Christian and Jewish communities, worked together for the success of the flourishing empire, under the rule of the Ismaili imams.
In the modern period, Ismailis have sought to further pluralism within their own communities by arguing that pluralism goes beyond tolerance and requires people to actively engage across differences and actively embrace difference as a strength. For example, Eboo Patel, an Ismaili American, has established the nonprofit Interfaith America as a way to further pluralism among faith communities.
The Aga Khan’s philanthropic work
The Conversation for more
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VIDEO/S Raheemani/Youtube
Inauguration of The Aga Khan University Hospital – 1985
VIDEO/Video Library/Youtube
Step inside the Aga Khan University, Karachi campus
VIDEO/Aga Khan University/Youtube
2005 03 AL AZHAR PARK Openning
Aga Khan Music Awards: Inaugural Awards Ceremony Lisbon, Portugal – 29 to 31 March 2019 – Part 1
Aga Khan Music Awards: Inaugural Awards Ceremony Lisbon, Portugal – 31 March 2019 – Part 2
(Thanks to a reader)