Aga Khan begins anniversary year with call for pluralism
CAIRO — The Aga Khan, spiritual leader of the Ismaili branch of Shiite Islam, opened a year-long jubilee to mark his 60th anniversary leading the community this week with a call for greater respect for pluralism in the Islamic world and action to reduce poverty.
Among Muslim leaders, the Aga Khan holds a unique position. The community he leads as “imam” is not large — about 20 million adherents, compared with the estimates of several hundred million followers of Shiism’s main branch, known as the Twelvers. Sunnis make up most of the 1.5 billion Muslims around the world.
But while other Islamic communities have a fragmented leadership, the 80-year-old, Paris-based Aga Khan is accepted across the Nazari Ismaili community as the “imam,” or spiritual head, giving him a singular status.
His voice is amplified by his wide-scale development programs, funded from his immense wealth and contributions from Ismailis, who are mainly centred in South and Central Asia, but have significant communities in Africa and a small presence in Syria and Lebanon. The Aga Khan Development Network operates in 30 countries, leading health, education and infrastructure programs.
Throughout the Diamond Jubilee year that began Tuesday, the Aga Khan will travel to countries where the network operates to launch new programs to alleviate poverty and increase access to financing for housing, education and childhood development, the network said.
Born Prince Karim al-Husseini in Geneva, he succeeded his grandfather as Aga Khan on June 11, 1957, at the age of 20. He is the 49th Ismaili imam, a line that traces itself back to the Prophet, Muhammad.
It is part of the mandate of the imam to “try to contribute to improving the quality of life of the community and those among whom the community lives,” the Aga Khan told reporters.
Muslims should work on building an “empathetic, welcoming, peaceful and generous” society, he said, calling it “a fundamental ethic of our faith.”
“All those are ethical principles of our faith, they’re very clear,” the Aga Khan said. “So it’s really a question of how we put those principles in place in governance and civil society.”
The focus should be on building quality of life and pluralism — meaning “equity toward all people and backgrounds,” he said.