Nov 30, 2009

મા ઉમાના મહોત્સવમાં ઇસ્માઈલી સમાજનું બેન્ડ

Rajendra Patel, Unjha
festival_umiya_mataજગતજનની મા ઉમિયાના ધર્મોત્સવમાં પાટીદારોની સાથે સાથે દરેક જ્ઞાતિ અને ધર્મના લોકો પણ એકસંપ થઈ તન-મન-ધનથી આ મહોત્સવને સફળ બનાવવા સંકલ્પબદ્ધ થઇ રહ્યા છે ત્યારે વિવિધ રીતે ફાળો આપી રહ્યા છે.


મહોત્સવના પ્રથમ દિવસે સિદ્ધપુરના ખ્યાતિપ્રાપ્ત આગાખાન ઈસ્માઈલી સમાજના ખાસ મ્યૂઝિક બેન્ડની સુરાવલી પણ મા ઉમાના ધર્મોત્સવમાં ભક્તિસંગીત રેલાવી ભાઈચારાનો સંદેશ પ્રસરાવશે.


સિદ્ધપુર તથા આસપાસના ગામોમાં વસતા આગાખાન ઈસ્માઈલી સમાજના અગ્રણીઓએ પોતાનાં ખાસ મ્યૂઝિક બેન્ડ મા ઉમાના અવસરમાં વગાડીને સેવા આપવાની તૈયારી દર્શાવતાં ઉમિયા માતાજી સંસ્થાને તેમની સેવા સ્વીકાર કર્યો હતો.


પ્રોજેકટ ચેરમેન મહેન્દ્રભાઈ પટેલે જણાવ્યું હતું કે, સિદ્ધપુર તથા આસપાસના ગામોના આગાખાન સમાજના ત્રણ ખાસ મ્યુઝીક બેન્ડના ૧૨૦ જેટલા સભ્યો શનિવારે સવારે મહોત્સવના પ્રારંભે ૭ વાગ્યે, વિવિધ પેવેલીયનોના ઉદ્ઘાટન પ્રસંગે ૯-૪૫ વાગ્યે, સાંજે પાંચ વાગ્યે મુખ્યમંત્રીના આગમન સમયે તથા સાંજે ૭-૦૦ વાગ્યે દિપપ્રાગટય સમયે આ ખાસ બેન્ડની સુરાવલી વહાવશે.


આગાખાન સમાજના અગ્રણીઓએ જણાવ્યા મુજબ ૪૬ જેટલા દેશોમાં ફેલાયેલા આગાખાન ઈસ્માઈલી સમાજમાં પોતાના ખાસ ધાર્મિક પ્રસંગોએ દરેક દેશમાંથી સમાજના લોકો આવે છે. સમાજના ધાર્મિક પ્રસંગોએ અને ધર્મગુરૂની ઉપસ્થિતિમાં પોતાનું આ ખાસ મ્યુઝીક બેન્ડ વગાડવામાં આવતું હોય છે.


સિદ્ધપુર તથા આસપાસના ૨૪ ગામોના આગાખાન સમાજના વિધાર્થીઓ, વેપારીઓ તેમજ નોકરીયાતો ઉપરાંત આ ત્રણ બેન્ડમાં ૧૬ જેટલી છોકરીઓ પણ વિવિધ ઈન્ટ્રુમેન્ટ વગાડે છે. કુલ ૧૨૦ સભ્યોના આ ત્રણેય બેન્ડના સભ્યો અલગ-અલગ ડ્રેસકોડમાં સજજ હશે.


આ બેન્ડ સ્વદેશી તેમજ વિદેશી આધુનિક ઈન્સ્ટ્રુમેન્ટથી સજજ છે. તેમણે ઉમેર્યું હતું કે, અમારાં બેન્ડ પ્રોફેશનલ નથી પરંતુ મા ઉમિયાના આ ધાર્મિક પ્રસંગમાં અમે પણ ભાઈચારાની દ્રષ્ટિએ સેવા આપવા માટે તત્પર બન્યા છીએ.


જ્યારે સંસ્થાનના સહમંત્રી અંબાલાલ ચારીએ જણાવ્યું હતું કે, આગાખાન સમાજનું મુંબઈનું બેન્ડ પ્રસિદ્ધ છે ત્યારે સિદ્ધપુરના આગાખાન સમાજે નિ:શુલ્ક સેવા આપવાની તૈયારી બતાવી તેને અમે આવકારી છે અને તેમનો આભાર માનીએ છીએ.

 http://www.divyabhaskar.co.in/2009/11/27/091127041408_muslims_are_also_taking_part_in_umiya_mata.html

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Nov 26, 2009

Eid al-Adha

Eid al-Adha, the Festival of Sacrifice, is observed by Muslims around the world in commemoration of one of the greatest trials of faith in the life of Prophet Ibrahim (Abraham — upon whom be peace). In Muslim and Judeo-Christian traditions, it is related that, as a test of Hazrat Ibrahim’s faith, the Almighty calls upon him to sacrifice his beloved son. At the moment of the sacrificial act, a Merciful intervention spared his son’s life. The Holy Qur’an says:
“We called out to him, ‘O Ibrahim, you have already fulfilled the vision’ – thus indeed we reward the righteous… indeed this was a manifest trial…”
— Surah 37, Ayats 104–106
The Qur’an refers to Prophet Ibrahim as a Muslim — one who leads a life of devotion and willing submission to Allah — and confirms that many great prophets were descended from him, including Prophet Musa (Moses — upon whom be peace), Prophet Isa (Jesus — upon whom be peace), as well as Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him and his family). The notion that divine guidance is vested in the family of Prophet Ibrahim is firmly established in the Qur’an:
“Allah did choose Adam and Nuh, the family of Ibrahim, and the family of Imran above all people; Offspring, one from the other, Allah is All-Hearing, All-Knowing.”
— Surah 3, Ayats 33–34
In Shia tradition and belief, divine guidance, which Allah vested in the descendants of Hazrat Ibrahim, continued in Prophet Muhammad, the last and final Messenger of Allah, after whom, at Divine Command, the authority for guidance devolved upon his cousin and son-in-law Hazrat Ali and vests thereafter in the Imams in the progeny of Prophet Muhammad through Hazrat Ali and Bibi Fatima, the Prophet's daughter.
Through the remembrance of the Prophet of Allah who is venerated in Judaism, Christianity and Islam, Eid al-Adha also celebrates the common humanity and ethical heritage shared by the Ahl al-Kitab — the People of the Book. In the words of Mawlana Hazar Imam:
“The shared destiny of the ethos of the Abrahamic tradition that unites Christians, Jews and Muslims is governed by the duty of loving care to help nurture each life that is born to its God-given potential.”
— Mawlana Hazar Imam in Houston, USA, 23 June 2002.

 http://www.theismaili.org/cms/909/


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Nov 23, 2009

Ismaili Community Ensemble celebrates Eid in the Square

The audience takes in a performance by the Ismaili Community Ensemble. Photo: Kois Miah
The audience takes in a performance by the Ismaili Community Ensemble. Photo: Kois Miah
In celebration of this year’s Eid ul-Fitr, the Mayor of London organised a programme of live entertainment in Trafalgar Square on Saturday, 26 September 2009. The Ismaili Community Ensemble was invited to take part in the event, which attracted thousands of Muslims and non-Muslims, and marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan with live musical performances from diverse genres.
The Ismaili Community Ensemble brass section performs at Trafalgar Square. Photo: Kois Miah
The Ismaili Community Ensemble brass section performs at Trafalgar Square. Photo: Kois Miah
From rap to devotional chants, the array of acts demonstrated the diversity of backgrounds to which Muslims belong. But the different performances were united in their message of belief in one God — as well as their energising effect on the audience.
The Ismaili Community Ensemble’s performance was vivacious, with carefully written lyrics and evocative harmonies that drew admiration and respect from the audience. Richard Barnes, the Deputy Mayor of London, posed for photographs with members of the Ensemble and expressed his delight at their performance.
Huge crowds packed Trafalgar Square for Eid celebrations in London. Photo: Kois Miah
Huge crowds packed Trafalgar Square for Eid celebrations in London. Photo: Kois Miah
The Ensemble, which was established in 2007 during the commemoration of Mawlana Hazar Imam's Golden Jubilee, is made up of members of all ages, genres and levels of ability. “They have always risen to the occasion,” says Naseem Jivraj, one of the group's founders. “Since their debut performance in February 2008, they have performed at nearly ten different events reaching out to more than eleven thousand people.”
The setting and sense of occasion surrounding the Trafalgar Square event provided an ideal venue to showcase the Jamat’s musical talent. The Ensemble delivered a powerful expression of their identity as British Ismaili Muslims.

http://www.theismaili.org/cms/908/spinner


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Nov 19, 2009

Ugandan Vice President speaks at the Ismaili Centre, Burnaby


Gathered at the Ismaili Centre, Burnaby (L to R): His Excellency George Abola, High Commissioner for Uganda in Ottawa; Samira Alibhai, President of the Ismaili Council for British Columbia; His Excellency Professor Gilbert Bukenya, Vice President of Uganda; Malik Talib, Vice-President of the Ismaili Council for Canada; and John Halani, Honorary Consul for Uganda in BC. Photo: Riyaz Lalani

Gathered at the Ismaili Centre, Burnaby (L to R): His Excellency George Abola, High Commissioner for Uganda in Ottawa; Samira Alibhai, President of the Ismaili Council for British Columbia; His Excellency Professor Gilbert Bukenya, Vice President of Uganda; Malik Talib, Vice-President of the Ismaili Council for Canada; and John Halani, Honorary Consul for Uganda in BC. Photo: Riyaz Lalani
On 25 October 2009, His Excellency Professor Gilbert Bukenya, Vice President of Uganda visited the Ismaili Centre, Burnaby. Accompanied by His Excellency George Abola, High Commissioner of Uganda in Ottawa, he sought to reach out to the Canadian Ismaili community — many of whom were born in Africa — with an invitation to invest in the future of Uganda.
Upon their arrival, they were received by Malik Talib, Vice-President of the Ismaili Council for Canada and Samira Alibhai, President of the Ismaili Council for British Columbia, as well as John Halani, Honorary Consul for Uganda in British Columbia. A number of businessmen and professionals had also gathered at the Ismaili Centre to hear Vice President Bukenya’s presentation.


More @ >>>> http://www.theismaili.org/cms/907/Ugandan-Vice-President-speaks-at-the-Ismaili-Centre-Burnaby

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Nov 17, 2009

Develop healthy habits to manage your diabetes

World Diabetes Day. Copyright: International Diabetes Federation
World Diabetes Day is observed every year on 14 November to raise awareness of diabetes. This year’s theme focuses on diabetes education and prevention.
Type 2 diabetes is at least five times more common in South Asians than in the wider population. While there is currently no cure for it, people with diabetes can still live a full life by carefully managing their condition.
If you are affected by diabetes, it’s important to avoid swings in your blood glucose (sugar), so it doesn’t go too high or too low. What you eat and how often you eat has a direct impact on your blood glucose.
Also, people with diabetes are more prone to developing heart disease, but that doesn’t mean you need to switch to eating boiled curries and Western foods. If you look after your diet and lifestyle habits, then you can significantly reduce your risks.
Eat regular meals. Eating regularly helps to keep your blood glucose levels steady throughout the day. It can also help you to maintain good energy levels as the day progresses. Get in the habit of creating a balanced plate.
Choose starchy carbohydrate foods, especially those which have a low glycaemic index (GI). Eating medium or low GI foods at mealtimes can help you manage your diabetes. Examples include dhals, beans, basmati rice, pasta, grainy or seeded breads (such as granary), bulgur wheat, sweet potato, cassava (mogo) porridge, and fruit and vegetables. Starchy foods will fill you up, often provide fibre, and tend to be lower in calories than fatty foods, but you also need to watch portion sizes.
We probably eat too much of the wrong type of carbohydrate. There's no need to have rice, chapati and potato in the same meal. And frying mogo is not a good idea! Instead, try boiling it and sprinkling with chilli and lemon.
Cut down on fried and fatty foods such as butter, ghee, full-fat cheese (like paneer), fatty meats, skin on chicken, chevda, ganthia, sev, samosas, crisps and pastries. Animal or saturated fat (from fatty meat and full-fat dairy products) can raise your bad (LDL) cholesterol level, and lead to a build-up of fatty streaks in your arteries, which can in turn reduce blood flow to your heart. Instead, choose monounsaturated fats, like the fat found in olive and rapeseed oil, avocado, nuts, or polyunsaturated fats such as corn oil, sunflower oil, and spreads made from these oils.
Of course this isn’t a licence to smother your salad in olive oil or deep fry your kebabs in rapeseed oil! It is still important not to eat too much of these healthier fats, as weight for weight, they contain the same calories as unhealthy fats. Find out more about healthy cooking.
Photo: Mansur Rupshi
Photo: Mansur Rupshi
Eat more fruit and vegetables. These foods are rich in valuable antioxidants which can help prevent damage to your arteries. Enjoy a variety of colours so you get a good range of nutrients. For example, beta-carotene comes from orange and yellow coloured vegetables like carrots and yellow peppers, and anthocyanins (a powerful anti-oxidant) are found in purple plums, red cabbage and beetroot.
South Asian cuisine is packed with brightly coloured vegetables, from bhindi to brinjal, so enjoy at your leisure. Try the healthy okra recipe.
Enjoy fish and choose oily fish once a week. Scientific studies suggest that regularly eating oily fish can protect you from developing heart problems. The special omega-3 oils found in oily fish have been shown to lower a type of fat in your blood called triglyceride. They may also help to reduce blood stickiness, making your blood less likely to clot and cause a blockage in your arteries. Examples of oily fish include salmon, fresh tuna, mackerel, trout, sardines and herring.
Swap high sugar foods for low sugar foods. Cut back on tinned fruit in syrup, sugar, and mithai, and consider tinned fruit in natural juice, artificial sweeteners, and dried fruit instead. Be especially careful with sugary drinks, since they tend to get into your blood stream more quickly. Choose unsweetened fruit juice and have it with a meal so you slow down the rise in your blood glucose (because the juice mixes with other foods in your gut). Or choose diet drinks and use an artificial sweetener for hot drinks.
Note that many sugary foods tend to also be high in fat (think of cakes, biscuits, kheer, kulfi) and are generally unhealthy, so it’s best to save them for special occasions.
Photo: Nazma Lakhani
Photo: Nazma Lakhani
Choose foods which are low in salt. We don’t usually measure salt in traditional cooking — it’s often a generous pouring straight from the salt container, and we don’t think twice about it. However, there is now solid research showing that eating too much salt makes you more at risk of raised blood pressure and strokes. As you try out some of the healthier recipes on this site, you’ll notice that they are low in salt yet high in flavour. It is possible to eat healthily and still enjoy traditional foods.
Get down to a healthy weight and stay there. Just by losing 5 – 10 per cent of your weight can make a significant difference to your blood pressure, blood fats and blood glucose control. Adopt a healthier lifestyle by choosing balanced meals and being more act


http://www.theismaili.org/cms/906/spinner


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Nov 14, 2009

IIS Scholar Presents Paper at BASR Conference


November 2009

Stephen Burge, an IIS Research Associate, presented a paper at the Annual Conference of the British Association for the Study of Religions (BASR). The conference, which took place in Bangor, Wales from 7th to 9th September 2009, was called “Religion, Landscapes and other Uncertain Boundaries”. The attendees heard presentations on subjects ranging from Judaism to New Religious Movements, as well as a number of papers on themes in Islamic Studies.

Burge’s paper, entitled ‘Angels and Sacred Space in Islam’, looked at ways in which angels are used to create, denote and give authority to sacred spaces, as described in the hadith of Prophet Muhammad.

Read More @ >>>> http://iis.ac.uk/view_article.asp?ContentID=110707


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Free Clinics in Pakistan Promote Microinsurance for Healthcare

Several hundred clients of the First Microinsurance Agency (FMiA) in Karachi were offered basic outpatient care, along with information on health insurance, in a new programme designed to make poor people aware of microinsurance services and their benefits. The clinics, which are sponsored by FMiA, are run by two qualified doctors.

The health clinics programme, which is expected to continue, is meant to help fulfill FMiA’s goal of providing affordable insurance products carefully tailored to the needs of poor families.

“FMiA hopes to keep playing an important role in making health care easily available to its clients and others that need it,” said Al Malik Khoja, the acting CEO of FMiA.

Microinsurance services offered by FMiA include: hospitalisation insurance, savings completion and credit life. Counselors at the clinics offer advice on microinsurance products, including how:

  • Health insurance provides cashless coverage for medical expenses incurred in private and medical hospitals due to serious illnesses, obstetric care and accidents,
  • Savings completion ensures that a family’s savings objectives are met even in the event of the death or injury of the breadwinner,
  • Credit life helps to protect the family of the loan borrower from debt in case of death or serious disability.

The clinics, which provide services related to outpatient care and basic screening, were offered in the Landh, New Karachi and Malir, all neighbourhoods of Karachi, starting on 22 October 2009. Sixty percent of the patients were female and 25 percent were children. The last of the clinics took place in the Baldia Town neighbourhood on 1 November 2009.

FMiA Pakistan is the first of two microinsurance institutions operated by the Aga Khan Agency for Microfinance (AKAM). FMiA focuses on the needs of poor families, in both the formal and informal economies, by providing them with a range of financial products that will help protect their assets and well-being.

For more information, please contact:

Aliyah Esmail
Aga Khan Agency for Microfinance
1-3 Avenue de la Paix
1202 Genève Switzerland
Tel: +41 22 909 7200
Fax: +41 22 909 7290
Email: aliyah.esmail@akdn.org


Notes

About the Aga Khan Agency for Microfinance


Since its establishment in 2005, AKAM has brought together over 25 years of microfinance activities, programmes and banks that were administered by sister agencies within the Aga Khan Development Network. The underlying objectives of AKAM are to reduce poverty, diminish the vulnerability of poor populations and alleviate economic and social exclusion. AKAM is a not-for-profit, non-denominational, international development agency created under Swiss law and it has 13 microcredit operations and two microinsurance operations in 13 countries. Its headquarters are in Geneva, Switzerland. It is governed by a Board of Directors and the Chairman of the Board is His Highness the Aga Khan.




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Ageing gracefully: Caring for elders with dignity


Roshan Budhwani never wanted to leave her surroundings, let alone her country. After all, she had worked hard to make her home what it was — a safe haven in her old age. But in their 70s, she and her husband, Tajuddin, made the gut-wrenching decision to leave their Karachi home, and move in with their only daughter, Nilusha Patel, in California.
Four generations of Budhwani girls (L to R): Nazleen, Nilusha, Baby Rayna and Roshan. Photo: Courtesy of Nilusha Patel
Four generations of Budhwani girls (L to R): Nazleen, Nilusha, Baby Rayna and Roshan. Photo: Courtesy of Nilusha Patel
“The choice was tough for them but a necessary one to make,” says Nilusha. “I knew I would be the eventual caregiver, and wanted my parents to be close to me before old age completely took over.”
It was a well thought out plan. As aches and illnesses took over their lives and their health slowly deteriorated, the elderly couple started relying more and more on their daughter and her family for their loving care. In September 2008, Roshan’s husband passed away and a few months later she suffered a fall — an incident that further weakened her.


Read   MOre @ >>>>> http://www.theismaili.org/cms/905/spinner

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Mombasa group offers support to families of children with medical needs

The PSG supports families in crisis, both emotionally and financially, regardless of race or religion. Photo: Courtesy of the PSG

Zainab was easily fatigued and breathless, even when resting. This would have been worrying in an older person, but concern over Zainab’s condition was particularly acute — she was only 2 years old. After numerous doctor’s visits and tests that took Zainab and her father far from home, they were told that she had a congenital heart defect and would need surgery. Zainab’s family led a simple life in Mombasa and did not have the kind of money needed for the surgery. Never would they have imagined that the solution to their dilemma had been conceived at a kitchen table in another part of the city.
Nine years earlier, Tanuja Walli entered that same world when her son was diagnosed with a similar heart defect. Fortunately for her, her son underwent surgery and is now a healthy 12-year-old, living a full life. During her experience, Tanuja met other families with children with congenital heart defect but soon realised that many did not have the resources to provide their children with the required healthcare. Not one to sit back, Tanuja formed the Paediatric Support Group (PSG) in 1998, at the Aga Khan Hospital in Mombasa.
Providing assistance and support to parents as well as children. Photo: Courtesy of the PSG
Providing assistance and support to parents as well as children. Photo: Courtesy of the PSG
The whole idea was born around her kitchen table, when she and a circle of concerned friends devised a plan to support families in crisis, both emotionally and financially, regardless of race or religion. Initially, the PSG focused on all chronic conditions in children, such as congenital heart defects, asthma, cerebral palsy, Down’s syndrome and diabetes, but over time they realised that the majority of children they came across suffered from heart conditions and needed special needs support. Therefore, the Group chose to concentrate more on these.
Since 2002, 90 children have received surgery and have been given a new lease on life, thanks to contributions from numerous donors, all facilitated by the PSG. Over the past four years, with the help of Aga Khan Hospital, as well as Medical and Educational Aid to Kenya (MEAK), a team of doctors from Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital in the United Kingdom has come to conduct free heart clinics where an average of 100 children are assessed, a number of whom are then operated. Several children with acute cases have also been sent to India for special treatment.
A member of the medical team from the UK’s Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital examines a patient. Photo: Courtesy of the PSG
A member of the medical team from the UK’s Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital examines a patient. Photo: Courtesy of the PSG
At present 55 children await surgery. Parents are asked to contribute what they can towards the costs while the rest is covered by donations from groups such as the Mamujee Foundation, Rotary Club, Lions Club, Plan International, Mombasa Liners, Aga Khan Hospital, the PSG members and other donors. Several Mombasa area doctors have also generously donated their time to this cause.
The PSG has also raised funds to brighten the Children’s Ward of the Aga Khan Hospital, Mombasa. With coloured wall murals, as well as a playroom stocked with toys and staffed by a recreational therapist, the Hospital is now more child-friendly.
A support group for parents of learning disabled children was also introduced in 2004. Parents meet regularly to boost each other’s morale, share experiences and hold educational talks on conditions such as dyslexia, autism and sensory integration disorder, amongst others. The group also seeks to support parents and raise awareness of special needs in Mombasa schools. This ensures that the children have access to equal educational opportunities and do not fall through the cracks.
Members of the Paediatric Support Group pose together for a photograph. Photo: Courtesy of the PSG
Members of the Paediatric Support Group pose together for a photograph. Photo: Courtesy of the PSG
“Being able to give these children a new life gives us joy and we feel we have made a difference,” says Walli. “Seeing the tears of happiness in the parents’ eyes is just overwhelming, especially when they say we have been sent from God.”
Who would have thought that a casual conversation around a kitchen table could give hope and a new chance in life to so many children in Mombasa?

 http://www.theismaili.org/cms/813/spinner

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Nov 7, 2009

Must Visit -Aga Khan Development Network Focus Areas



ArchitectureArchitecture
The Aga Khan Award for Architecture, established in 1977 by His Highness the Aga Khan, recognises examples of architectural excellence that encompass contemporary design, social housing, community improvement and development, restoration, re-use, and area conservation, as well as landscaping and environmental issues.

Civil SocietyCivil Society
Aga Khan Foundation's Civil Society activities focus on extending, improving and sustaining health, education and welfare services for the poor by creating partnerships involving government, business and citizen organisations .

CultureCulture
The Aga Khan Trust for Culture focuses on the physical, social, cultural and economic revitalisation of communities in the Muslim world. It includes the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, the Aga Khan Historic Cities Programme, the Music Initiative in Central Asia, the Museums and Exhibitions Project, the on-line resource ArchNet and the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Economic Development Economic Development
The Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development (AKFED) is an international development agency dedicated to promoting entrepreneurship and building economically sound enterprises in the developing world. AKFED focuses on building enterprises in parts of the world that lack sufficient foreign direct investment. It also makes bold but calculated investments in situations that are fragile and complex.

EducationEducation
The AKDN’s education programmes cover a wide spectrum of activities ranging from early childhood care and education through to degrees in medicine. The Aga Khan Education Services, the Aga Khan Foundation, Aga Khan University, the Aga Khan Academies and the University of Central Asia are the lead organisations in education, but all institutions are involved in some form of training or education, whether it is through curriculum reform, exhibitions of Islamic art or literacy programmes for employees of economic project companies.

AKDN's Health Activities Health
With community health programmes in large geographical areas in Central and South Asia, as well as East Africa, and more than 200 health facilities including nine hospitals, the Aga Khan Health Services (AKHS) is one of the most comprehensive private not-for-profit health care systems in the developing world.

Historic Cities Historic Cities
The Aga Khan Historic Cities Programme (HCP) promotes the conservation and re-use of buildings and public spaces in historic cities in the Muslim World. HCP undertakes the restoration and rehabilitation of historic structures and public spaces in ways that can spur social, economic and cultural development.

Humanitarian Assistance Humanitarian Assistance
Focus Humanitarian Assistance is an international group of agencies established in Europe, North America and South Asia to complement the provision of emergency relief, principally in the developing world. It helps people in need reduce their dependence on humanitarian aid and facilitates their transition to sustainable self-reliant, long-term development.

AKDN and Microfinance Microfinance
Since its establishment in 2005, The Aga Khan Agency for Microfinance (AKAM) has taken over 25 years of microfinance activities, programmes and banks that were administered by sister agencies within the Aga Khan Development Network.

Aga Khan Music Initiative in Central Asia Music
The Aga Khan Music Initiative in Central Asia (AKMICA) was created by His Highness the Aga Khan in 2000 to support the efforts of Central Asian musicians and communities to sustain, further develop and transmit musical traditions that are a vital part of their cultural heritage.

Planning and BuildingPlanning and Building
The Aga Khan Planning and Building Services (AKPBS) works to improve the built environment, particularly housing design and construction, village planning, natural hazard mitigation, environmental sanitation, water supplies, and other living conditions. AKPBS achieves these goals through the provision of material and technical assistance and construction management services for rural and urban areas.

Rural DevelopmentRural Development
The Aga Khan Foundation is committed to reducing rural poverty, particularly in resource-poor, degraded or remote environments. It concentrates on a small number of programmes of significant scale. The model of participatory rural development it has pioneered combines a set of common development principles with the flexibility to respond to specific contexts and needs.


http://www.akdn.org/programmes.asp

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Gallery - Must Visit --- IIS.ac.uk

Delicacy and Harmony in Persian Book Covers
The art of binding and the protection of scripts are as old as writing itself. The contribution made by Muslim craftsmen has been a significant element in the history of this craft and the contribution of Persian craftsmen is particularly important. More

The Sayyidi Muhammad ‘Ali Hamdani Collection
The Sayyidi Muhammad ‘Ali Hamdani Collection came to The Institute of Ismaili Studies in 2006, thanks to the generosity of Professor and Mrs. Abbas Hamdani. The Collection is extremely important, not only because of the rare and precious manuscripts it contains but because it was formed over generations by scholars in a single distinguished family. More

Muslim Spaces of Worship and Gathering
While the mosque is the site most often associated with Muslim expressions of piety, there are a range of spaces used by Muslim communities – Shi‘a and Sunni – for their worship and gathering. These range from the ashurkhana and zawiya to the khanqah and tekke. While some of these spaces are specific to particular Muslim communities, others are clustered geographically or are prominent amongst particular cultural groups. More

The Calligraphic Tradition in Islam
Adapted and edited from a presentation given by the late Dr Duncan Haldane at “The Spirit of Islam: Experiencing Islam through Calligraphy” exhibition in Vancouver, Canada. Calligraphy has developed into a very important artform and devotional activity in Islam since it is regarded as one means by which the divine word of God can be recorded. It has permeated all aspects of creative expression in Muslim culture, including art and architecture. More

Coinage of the Fatimids
The selection of Fatimid coins presented here are important documents providing unique chronological and historical details. Further, the fine, elegant epigraphy, the more open design characterised by its circular emphasis, and the myriad of stylistic and artistic variations makes Fatimid coinage particularly interesting. More

Illuminating Beauty, Illustrating Harmony: A Gallery celebrating the 25th Anniversary of The Institute of Ismaili Studies
Drawing on examples from the collection at The Institute of Ismaili Studies, this gallery invites the viewer to the large and complex subject of the artistic and intellectual heritage of Islam. The artefacts reflect the great diversity and range of a distinctive visual culture with its own unique artistic language. More

From Ibn Sina to Tusi: The Scientific Tradition in Medieval Islam
From the ninth century onwards, scholars in Muslim lands were engaged in all of the disciplines of science. A treasury of Greek, Indian, Persian and Babylonian philosophic and scientific thought became available through translations into Arabic, and philosopher-scientists, physicians, mathematicians and astronomers... More

Al-Azhar: An Ancient Centre of Learning
Al-Azhar (The Luminous) was constructed as the central grand-mosque for Cairo by al-Qaid Jawhar al-Siqillí when he took Egypt for the Fatimid Imam-Caliph al-Mu‘izz li Dín Allah in 969 CE and founded Cairo as its capital city. It was inaugurated on 7 Ramadan 361 AH / 22 June 972 CE. Possibly so-named after Prophet Muhammad’s daughter Fatima al-Zahra, through whom the Fatimids traced their genealogy back to the Prophet. More

Khojki Manuscripts
The Institute of Ismaili Studies has a collection of over 800 volumes of Khojki and Gujarati manuscripts. Khojki, or Khwajah Sindhi, is the term applied to the special script that was used by the followers of the Nizari Ismaili Muslim tradition in the Indian subcontinent to record their religious literature. More

Nizari Ismaili Castles of Iran and Syria
In 483/1090, the Persian Ismailis under the leadership of Hasan Sabbah occupied the castle of Alamut, situated in a remote and mountainous area of the Rudbar district in northern Iran. Over the next 150 years, the Ismailis succeeded in capturing more than 200 large and small fortresses in Iran and Syria with settlements in surrounding towns and villages, thus establishing their own autonomous states in these regions. More

The Amirali Mamdani Collection
A large collection of original slides, photographs and films belonging to and shot exclusively by Mr Amirali G Mamdani was presented to The Institute in autumn, 2001. A small selection of images taken by Mr Mamdani during his visits to Iran, the Indian subcontinent and Syria are available for viewing on the website. More

Music and Poetry from the Pamir Mountains
The Pamiris are divided into different ethnic groups according to their origin and language. The musical traditions of Badakshan have been influenced by the surrounding Muslim cultural context, but the inaccessibility of the Pamir Mountains has been an important factor in the development and preservation of some of the unique musical practices of Badakhshan... More

The Institute of Ismaili Studies: Reflections on the first 25 Years
From its modest beginnings in the late 1970s, The Institute of Ismaili Studies (IIS) has developed into a vibrant centre of learning, addressing not only the needs of the international Ismaili community, but also contributing to and participating in the contemporary debates of the Muslim world at large. More

Wellsprings of Wisdom: Persian Contributions to Ismaili Thought
An exhibition from the Library’s collections - many displayed for the first time - that reflect the textual contributions of Persian scholars to various strands of Ismaili thought from the 8th to the 18th centuries. More

Manuscripts in the Zahid ‘Ali Collection
A prominent Ismaili scholar of the 20th century, Dr Zahid ‘Ali passed away in 1958, leaving a small number of widely acclaimed studies on the history and doctrines of the Ismailis. In 1997, the only surviving son of Dr Zahid ‘Ali, Professor ‘Abid ‘Ali, generously donated to The Institute of Ismaili Studies an exceptional collection of Arabic manuscripts from his father’s collection. More

The Diversity of Mosque Architectures
The mosque, an emblematic building in Islam, while theoretically requiring nothing more than marking the direction of prayer, has developed a number of distinctive architectural forms. Local building traditions and differing social and cultural contexts have influenced the diversity of mosque architectures and variety of methods in which mosques have been built. More

From the Manuscript Tradition to the Printed Text: The Transmission of the Rasa’il of the Ikhwan al-Safa’ in the East and West
The Ikhwan al-Safa’, a group of Muslim thinkers who, in the late ninth and early tenth centuries, produced an encyclopaedic corpus of 52 epistles (rasa’il). The Rasa’il occupies a unique position in the history of Islamic thought and has engaged the attention of scholars in the East and West. An eloquent testimony to their popularity and influence is the existence of numerous manuscript copies of the text scattered throughout the world. More

Rahat al-‘aql of Hamid al-Din al-Kirmani
The Rahat al-‘aql of Hamid al-Din al-Kirmani: An Arabic Manuscript from the Zahid Ali Collection. Hamid al-Din al-Kirmani was a major Muslim scholar and writer who flourished during the time of the Fatimid Imam al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah (who reigned from 996 to 1021 CE). More

Ginans: A Tradition of Religious Poetry Amongst the Ismailis
The ginans are a corpus consisting of several hundred (by some estimates over a thousand) hymns or religious lyrics which have long been a central part of the religious life of the Indian Nizari Ismaili Community, and also shared by the Imamshahi community in Gujarat. More


Source: www.iis.ac.uk

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Canadian Government honours FOCUS and the Ismaili Council for Canada


Gulam Juma, Coordinator of the FOCUS International Coordinating Committee and Mina Mawani, CEO of the Ismaili Council for Canada accepted a letter from the Government of Canada, recognising and honouring their respective organisations for their work in refugee settlement since 1992. Photo: Courtesy of FOCUS
Gulam Juma, Coordinator of the FOCUS International Coordinating Committee and Mina Mawani, CEO of the Ismaili Council for Canada accepted a letter from the Government of Canada, recognising and honouring their respective organisations for their work in refugee settlement since 1992. Photo: Courtesy of FOCUS
Each year, millions of people around the world are forced to flee their homelands to escape persecution, war or severe human rights abuses. Often, these people are permanently displaced and are never able to return home. Following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, and the subsequent civil war, millions of people sought refuge in neighbouring Central and South Asian countries. Many also found themselves fleeing to North America, Europe and other countries to find a safe haven and start a new life.
On Friday, 9 October 2009, Focus Humanitarian Assistance (FOCUS) and the Ismaili Council for Canada, together with a number of other organisations, were honoured for their work on refugee settlement at a ceremony in Toronto.
The occasion marked the 30th anniversary of the Private Sponsorship Program run by the Canadian Government, which has facilitated the admission of over 200 000 refugees to Canada, allowing them to build new lives for themselves.
In a letter presented by Judge Patricia Phenix to Gulam Juma, Coordinator of the FOCUS International Coordinating Committee and Mina Mawani, CEO of the Ismaili Council for Canada, the Honourable Jason Kenney, Minister of Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism, wrote:
“The work you undertake in supporting refugees is a voluntary act, motivated by compassion, caring, and desire to take an active role in protecting refugees… I would like to take this opportunity to extend my gratitude for your contribution and personal sacrifice, which has allowed Canada to fulfill its humanitarian commitment to assist victims of persecution, human rights violations, and injustice from around the globe. The support from you and your organization has saved lives and ensured that sponsored refugees contribute to the social economic, political and cultural life of Canadian society.”
Through protocols with the Canadian and Quebec governments between 1992 and 2001, refugees from Afghanistan and Kosovo were settled in Canada by FOCUS on behalf of the Ismaili Council for Canada.
Over the last 15 years, more than 10 000 refugees or approximately 2 300 families have been assisted through the resettlement programme.
The resettlement programme has ensured that newly settled families have had access to resources, support assistance and basic needs such as shelter, food, clothing, information, orientations and practical assistance to help them adjust to their new living and work environments, as well as gaining necessary life-skills. The programme has also played an important role in supporting activities and initiatives that enable families and individuals to have access to education, health services, language training, job preparation and placement or additional training and education aimed at upgrading, accreditation and credentials.
Through their own hard work and the support provided by the Ismaili Council for Canada and FOCUS, newly settled members of the Jamat have been able to establish good foundations and achieve success in their lives. Some have even been able to return to Afghanistan to assist its rebuilding, and in strengthening the leadership capacity of the local Jamat.
Focus Humanitarian Assistance is affiliated with the Aga Khan Development Network, a group of institutions working to improve opportunities and living conditions, for people of all faiths and origins, in specific regions of the developing world. Underlying the establishment of FOCUS is a history of successful initiatives to assist people struck by natural and man-made disasters in South and Central Asia, and Africa.

 http://www.theismaili.org/cms/904/


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Nov 6, 2009

Legends: Our great knight



 



by Sabiha Essa Khan


“The present condition of mankind offers surely, with all its dangers and all its challenges, a chance too — a chance of establishing not just material peace among nations but that better peace of God on earth. In that endeavour Islam can play its valuable constructive part, and the Islamic world can be a strong and stabilising factor provided it is really understood and its spiritual and moral power recognised and respected.”— (Excerpt from The Memoirs of Aga Khan: World Enough and Time)




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IIS Scholar Investigates Perceptions of Youth in Northern Pakistan




Dr Najam Abbas recently investigated Pakistani youth’s contribution to social transformation in the Northern Areas of Pakistan. During his month long fieldwork, Dr Abbas used questionnaires and focus groups to ask young people a series of questions, including whether they perceive themselves and those around them as happy, successful, optimistic or content. He contextualised these responses through interviews with local intellectuals, including educators, artists and writers.

Map of Northern Areas of PakistanThe study analyses primary data, shedding light on young people’s perceptions of the nature of their own society. It attempts to unpack the relations between different social sectors, identifying the limitations and opportunities faced by youth from the mountainous Northern Areas. Dr Abbas is seeking to establish what empowers youth in this challenging setting so as to suggest measures for effective youth development in that society.

Alamin Secondary School at Gulmit, Gojal valleyPakistan’s Northern Areas extend over 72,496 sq. km and are situated between China’s Xinjiang province to the north, Afghanistan to the north-west and the Indian controlled provinces of Kashmir and Ladakh to the south. The predominantly rural population is scattered across a high mountainous landscape. Subsistence agriculture is practised by around 80% of the population, while the other 20% are engaged in services and small trades.

Chitor Khand Local Support Organization, Ghizer districtThe Northern Areas have had a different development trajectory than the rest of Pakistan, particularly due to its constitutional status as a Federally Administered region and its geographic location. “All this makes it pertinent to have input from the target population, that is, the youth, so that it can inform programmes to improve its quality of life. For that purpose, it is essential to engage with the grassroots and reflect upon the present status and future prospects of the young people”, notes Dr Abbas. The completed questionnaires and focus group feedback, together with the one-to-one interviews with cultural professionals, are intended to contribute to a clearer understanding of young people in the Northern Areas. The study seeks to highlight their observations and aspirations on ways in which to lead a successful life.

Dr Abbas lecturing at Karakoram International UniversityDuring his fieldwork, Dr Abbas also visited the Karakoram International University (KIU), established in Gilgit in 2002, as the first university in Pakistan’s Northern Areas. There he lectured to Business Administration students on building youth capacities locally. He also gave a talk to KIU’s Social Science faculty on Approaches


More @ >>> http://iis.ac.uk/view_article.asp?ContentID=110702


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