Aga Khan calls for cultural diversity

August 23, 2007

Thursday, 23rd August, 2007

By Carol Natukunda

HIS Highness the Aga Khan has called upon Ugandans to embrace cultural diversity, saying it is the way forward in the era of globalisation.

“People are learning from people different from them. This has evolved because of the technology. It builds a culture of strength rather than harmful decisions. There is a rich diversity of language, faith and social identities.

“Cultural diversity should be a profound source of strength for this country. Embrace the abundant pluralism and commitment to achieve global excellence,” His Highness added.

The Aga Khan said institutions like Makerere University could be used to emphasise pluralism. “When we invest in education, we are investing in people.”

He made the remarks while hosting President Yoweri Museveni and his wife Janet to a banquet at Serena Kampala Hotel on Wednesday.

Present were President Francois Bozize of the Central African Republic, former Mozambique president Joaquim Chissano, Prime Minister Apolo Nsibambi, several Cabinet ministers and politicians.

The spiritual leader of the Ismaili Muslims has been in Uganda for a five-day visit as part of the celebrations to mark his Golden Jubilee.

Museveni congratulated the Aga Khan upon his 50 years of leadership and his development initiatives.

Referring to former President Idi Amin’s dictatorial regime, Museveni assured the Ismaili community that: “You should not be worried.

Nothing will happen again. What happened (then) was that we were not in control. What happened in the past will not be repeated.

“Amin was a colonial sergeant. He was trained by the British. But Ugandans got rid of him,” Museveni said, drawing applause from the audience.

Museveni explained that the Government had encouraged investors to return and rehabilitate their property.

“You (the Aga Khan) are most welcome and we value your contribution. We have a huge investment area, almost the size of India and with a big population which is growing.

“Invest in an economy which will be big in the coming decades.”
Bozize invited the Aga Khan to invest in his country, which he said had a lot of potential in agriculture, mining and forestry.

He also hailed Museveni for his good leadership, saying it had won him global admiration and respect.

The New Vision


Aga Khan Academy to educate needy students

August 23, 2007
Aga Khan Academy to educate needy students
JAN AJWANG & WALTER WAFULA
KAMPALAEXCEPTIONAL but needy students in Uganda will have access to education of international standards of excellence once the Aga Khan Academy Kampala is commissioned.A foundation stone that marked the beginnings of the $50 million project was laid yesterday in Munyonyo on the southern outskirts of Kampala by His Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan and Vice President Gilbert Bukenya.
“As students seek to enter the academies’ programme, they will be judged on merit, not by their financial resources,” the Aga Khan said.

GOOD START: His Highness The Aga Khan (L) and VP Bukenya celebrate after laying a foundation stone for the academy in Munyonyo yesterday. Photo by Stephen Wandera

The academy will offer primary and secondary education and will be guided by the International Baccalaureate (IB) Programme, an internationally recognised curriculum renowned for its multi-disciplinary and integrated approach to learning.

The IB is accepted by more than 1,700 of the best universities in the world and is known for its academic excellence and promotion of pluralism.

The academy will also provide professional development of teachers to sustain the programme. The academy programme in Uganda will first focus on training of teachers ahead of the opening of the school.

The academy will be one of a network of 18 other academies in 14 countries in Asia and Africa which will be developed over the next 15 years. Only two international schools offer the IB diploma as an option to A-levels in Uganda.
They are International School in Uganda and Aga Khan High School at Shs1.5 million per term for three terms.

The academy, located on the shores of Lake Victoria, will occupy 44 acres of land including an island donated by Ugandan businessman Amirali Karmali, also known as Mukwano.

The Aga Khan said that the site is ideal for promoting what he called “environmental pluralism” to accompany the appreciation for cultural pluralism amongst students and teachers.

The academy, which is under the Aga Khan Education Services, is an independent project from the currently existing Aga Khan Schools.
The academy launch came a day after the Aga Khan broke ground to start construction of the Bujagali hydropower project in Jinja.

The Aga Khan’s visit to Uganda is part of an international tour to celebrate his Golden Jubilee as spiritual leader of the Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims.
He said that the academy will complement the power project in building Uganda’s future.
“I noted … that lasting economic growth will be self-destructive if it is not matched by the growth of the power supply,” he said.

“The same thing is true in the world of human resources, where people supply the power. If economic growth propels us down a road for which our future leaders are not prepared, then we will never sustain our advances. This is why so many of the long-term investments we have been making, throughout the developing world, are investments in education.”

President Yoweri Museveni, who was represented by Prof. Bukenya, said the ceremony is a significant milestone in another of the Aga Khan’s important contributions in the development of human resource in Uganda.
“I am glad to note that the celebration of this Golden Jubilee in Uganda is not mere jamboree, but instead lines with significant development projects -the Aga Khan Academy and the Bujagali hydropower project,” Mr Museveni said in his speech read by the vice president.

The President said the student-centred approach to learning and internationally recognised curriculum that the academy will provide is an important tool in the orientation of East Africa towards globalisation.

Prof. Mahmood Mamdani, a political scientist whose latest book deals with challenges of university education at Makerere University, said the academy has the potential of being a landmark because it is devoted to promoting excellence amongst underprivileged students.

“It does not assume that excellence is confined to only those who can afford education but is actually found amongst the vast majority in the population who today cannot afford education,” Prof. Mamdani said.

Today marks the end of the Aga Khan’s 12- day tour of East Africa where he has left several social and economic investments worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

http://www.monitor.co.ug/news/news08237.php


Aga Khan winds up his East Africa tour

August 23, 2007

Aga Khan winds up his East Africa tour

Story by JEFF OTIENO in UGANDA
Publication Date: 8/23/2007
The Aga Khan Wednesday completed the tour of the East African region by launching a multi-million shilling academy in Uganda.

The inauguration of the project, costing upwards of $50 million, makes Uganda  the latest member of  a group of 14 countries ear-marked to host a network of academies in Africa and Asia.

The academy will be a prototype of the Aga Khan Academy in Mombasa built four years ago, chosen as the model of all the 18 institutions to be constructed in  the next 15 years, under the Aga Khan Development Network.

It was the second project to be inaugurated in Uganda, after the launch of the $772-million-plus Bujagali hydropower project, the largest privately-funded electricity generation venture in East Africa.

Speaking at the inauguration ceremony held in Munyonyo, the Aga Khan said the academies will constitute an inter-related community of learning where students and teachers shared ideas and insights.

“Some, like the first Academy in Mombasa, will be on ocean-side settings, others will be built on high mountain environments, desert terrain or forested areas or as in Kampala at the side of a beautiful lake,” said  the Imam (spiritual leader) of the Shia Ismaili Muslims.

The inauguration of projects in the East African region is part of the golden jubilee celebrations of the Aga Khan, who recently completed 50 years as the Imam of the Ismaili community living in all the continents.

The Aga Khan said the academies will teach the international baccalaureate programme, which, he added, will enable students combine a cosmopolitan spirit with strong sense of cultural identity.  The Imam, who performed a foundation stone-laying ceremony, together with Uganda’s Vice President Gilbert Bukenya, said students admitted at the 18 institutions will be judged on merit and not by their financial resources.

“As students leave this programme, they will move onto quality universities and then to positions of social leadership,” he told guests, who included representatives from the public and private sectors.

Prof Bukenya, who represented President Yoweri Museveni, thanked the Aga Khan for his generous contribution in the country’s economic and social development.

http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=1&newsid=105040


Aga Khan Launches Academy

August 23, 2007

Carol Natukunda and Peter Kaujju
Kampala

The Aga Khan Development Network is to set up an international academy worth $50m (about sh87b) in Munyonyo, a Kampala surburb.

His Highness the Aga Khan and Vice-President Prof. Gilbert Bukenya yesterday laid a foundation stone at the 44-acre plot overlooking Lake Victoria. The land was donated by business tycoon Amirali Karmali popularly known as Mzee Mukwano.

Speaking at the ceremony, the Aga Khan called for the need to ensure life skills in educational institutions, rather than what he described as “indoctrination.”

“Education, in the past, has often been a matter of indoctrination – advancing the demands of dogma instead of the disciplines of reason.

“What is required today, in my view, is an educational approach which is the polar opposite of indoctrination – one that nurtures the spirit of anticipation and agility, adaptability and adventure.

He told guests that in an age of increasing change, the most vital thing a student could learn was how to go on learning.

The academy, the Aga Khan said, was one of the planned 18 Aga Khan academies expected to be set up in 14 countries around the world in the next 15 years.

He said the academies would increase access to education based on an international baccalaureate curriculum. The first academy was inaugurated in Kenya in 2003.

The international curriculum, noted the Aga Khan, would honour world-class standards and respect cultural diversity.

“Its approach is to help students combine a cosmopolitan spirit on the one hand, with a strong sense of cultural identity on the other. And is that not one of the secrets to success and fulfillment in our rapidly globalising world?” he asked.

“Everyone, everywhere, faces the challenge of engaging productively and creatively in the global arena of action and ideas, while also respecting the unique character of family roots and cultural traditions.

“The curriculum will encourage its students to practice intellectual humility; recognising that what they do not know will always be greater than what they know – and launching an ardent, lifelong search for the knowledge they will need,” the Aga Khan said.

The spiritual leader of the Ismaili Muslims also commended Uganda as a centre of learning and pledged support to the education sector.

“Uganda is the home of great international institutions like Makerere University, a traditional source of indigenous African leadership. Today, the Government is making a commendable steps to universal education.

Referring to the hydroelectric energy project at Bujagali, the Aga Khan said this was another key step in building Uganda’s future.

“I noted, there, that lasting economic growth will be self-destructive if it is not matched by the growth of the power supply.

“The same thing is true in the world of human resources, where people supply the power. If economic growth propels us down a road for which our future leaders are not prepared, then we will never sustain our advances.”

In a speech read by Bukenya, President Yoweri Museveni thanked the Aga Khan agency for its development initiatives. He said the challenge was to train job creators, not job seekers and called for career guidance in schools.

All Africa


Speech by MHI at Foundation Stone Laying Ceremony of Aga Khan Academy

August 23, 2007

http://www.akdn.org/speeches/2007Aug22.htm

Speech by His Highness the Aga Khan

Remarks by His Highness the Aga Khan at the
Foundation Stone Laying Ceremony of the Aga Khan Academy
Kampala – 22 August 2007

Your Excellency Vice President Professor Gilbert Bukenya
The Right Honourable Speaker

The Right Honourable Prime Minister
Your Worship the Mayor
Honourable Ministers
Excellencies
Distinguished Guests

It is a very great joy for me to be here today, and I am most grateful to the Vice President – and all of you – for joining us. This is indeed a special celebration – in a truly magnificent setting.

Let me extend, at the very start, my heartfelt thanks to the person who made this beautiful site available for the building of a new Aga Khan Academy. He is Amirali Karmali, known affectionately throughout Uganda as Mzee Mukwano. We are most deeply grateful to Amirali and his family for their extraordinary generosity.

I know I speak for everyone here in describing this gift as a truly inspiring one.

The Quran tells us that signs of Allah’s Sovereignty are found in the contemplation of His Creation – in the heavens and the earth, the night and the day, the clouds and the seas, the winds and the waters. I am confident that future generations of students and teachers – who will come to this Academy from around the region and around the world – will feel a profound sense of inspiration as they look out on this superb landscape.

As you have heard, the new Academy in Kampala will be one of 18 Academies in 14 countries which will be developed over the next 15 years. Together, they will constitute an inter-related community of learning – exchanging students and teachers, sharing ideas and insights. And they will also share a variety of environmental experiences. Some, like the first Academy at Mombasa, will be in ocean-side settings, other will be placed in high mountain environments, still others will be built in desert terrains or forested areas – or, as in Kampala, at the side of a beautiful lake. As our students and teachers experience these remarkable surroundings, I hope they will develop what I would call a sense of “environmental pluralism”- to accompany the appreciation for cultural pluralism which we will also hope will be one of the programme’s hallmarks.

As you know, these ceremonies are part of my Golden Jubilee observances. I have welcomed this anniversary year as an opportunity to think back over the past half century – to reflect on the challenges we have faced, the goals we have met, and the lessons we have been learning. In this process, I will be traveling to places which have been of particular importance for me, and for the Ismaili community, and it is most appropriate that Uganda is among the first of these visits.

As I make these journeys, I am also announcing a number of new projects – including this Academy in Kampala. This is in keeping with our tradition on Jubilee occasions of honoring the past by seizing the future – and at the same time, making new plans in an historical context.

A strong commitment to learning has been at the very root of Ismaili and Islamic culture, going back to the first Imam of the Shia Muslims, the fourth Caliph, Hazrat Ali ibn Abi Talib, and his emphasis on knowledge. The tradition was renewed over many centuries in many places by the Abbasids, the Fatimids, the Safavids – the Mughals, the Uzbeks and the Ottomans. During his Imamat, my late Grandfather started some 300 schools in this region. The Academies Programme is thus planted in rich historic soil.

This is a time of exciting dreams and for our Academies programme – as we begin the long process of identifying sites, developing partnerships, and designing campuses. This will be an intricate and demanding process, but we undertake it with a certain confidence. That confidence was re-inforced, I might note, by the excellent scores which our first class of Academy graduates, in Mombasa, have just achieved on their International Baccalaureate exams.

One of the central precepts of the International Baccalaureate Programme is to honour world-class standards, while also respecting cultural diversity. In this respect, its approach mirrors that of the Aga Khan Academies – to help students combine a cosmopolitan spirit on the one hand, with a strong sense of cultural identity on the other.

And is that not one of the secrets to success and fulfillment in our rapidly globalising world? Everyone, everywhere, faces the challenge of engaging – productively and creatively – in the global arena of action and ideas, while also respecting the unique character of family roots and cultural traditions.

As students seek to enter the Academies programme, they will be judged on merit, not by their financial resources. As students leave this programme, they will move on to quality universities – and then to positions of social leadership. We expect many of our Kampala graduates to become pillars of Ugandan public and private institutions, a homegrown cadre of leadership.

Let me also underscore at this point Uganda’s own history as a centre of learning – the home of great international institutions like Makerere University, a traditional source of indigenous African leadership. Today, the Government of Uganda is making a commendable commitment to universal public education. It is a time of renewal in Ugandan education, and we hope the Aga Khan Academy in Kampala will contribute to that process.

Just yesterday, we marked another key step in building Uganda’s future as we laid the foundation stone for a new hydroelectric energy project in Bujagali. I noted there that lasting economic growth will be self-destructive if it is not matched by the growth of the power supply.

The same thing is true in the world of human resources, where people supply the power. If economic growth propels us down a road for which our future leaders are not prepared, then we will never sustain our advances.

This is why so many of the long-term investments we have been making, throughout the developing world, are investments in education. They have ranged from Madrasa programmes for early childhood development, to primary schools in disadvantaged communities, to leadership training programmes and scholarships for promising young professionals. At the tertiary level, we have recently launched the University of Central Asia. This is an international agreement between Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan and the Ismaili Imamat to create a new institution of higher learning specialised in mountain societies. And, as you may know, we are also planning to expand the Aga Khan University – founded almost 25 years ago in Pakistan – and now an active presence in nine different countries. Just this week, the Aga Khan University announced its plans for a new Faculty of Health Sciences in Nairobi, as well as a major new East African campus in Arusha.

All of our initiatives are built around a pragmatic, experience-based, and innovative approach to education – an effort to refresh and replace narrower approaches which have sometimes mis-served the developing world. Education, in the past, has too often been a matter of indoctrination – advancing the demands of dogma instead of the disciplines of reason.

What is required today, in my view, is an educational approach which is the polar opposite of indoctrination – one that nurtures the spirit of anticipation and agility, adaptability and adventure.

To this end, the Academies curriculum will encourage its students in the practice of what I would call “Intellectual Humility, “ recognizing that what they do not know will always be greater than what they know – and launching an ardent, lifelong search for the knowledge they will need. In an age of accelerating change, the most important thing any student can learn is how to go on learning.

Let me touch briefly, on two particular features of the Academy vision. The first is its emphasis on the training of teachers. We plan to create on our campuses a series of Professional Development Centres, devoted to “educating the educators,” and to pedagogical research. On the Kampala campus, in fact, we will begin with teacher education – establishing the Professional Development Centre, even before we enroll the students. We will put the horse before the cart, where it should be. We are confident that good teachers and best practices will radiate out from this Centre into the wider world of education.

A second feature is our emphasis on the value of a residential campus, where students not only learn together but also live together. I have noted a recent study by The World Bank which found that the quantity of time or money spent on education was less important than the quality of specific educational experiences. Extraordinary teachers and exceptional companions are the key to such experiences.

The final point I would emphasize today, above all else, is our uncompromising commitment to Quality– in every aspect of the Academy experience. Our hallmark will be quality students, quality instructors, quality facilities – an unwavering devotion to world-class standards. Let the day be long past when some could excuse mediocrity by saying that it was “good enough for Africa”.

The particular challenge of the Aga Khan Academies will be to provide an exceptional education for exceptional students. We cannot claim that they will directly provide a major proportion of tomorrow’s leaders – or tomorrow’s teachers. But we believe they can help – as centres of energy and influence for the entire educational enterprise.

We look forward to working with the government and the people of Uganda as we pursue these great objectives. I know we will all remember this important ceremony at this beautiful place as a special moment in this process. Again, we are most grateful to all of you for sharing it with us.

Thank you.

http://www.akdn.org/speeches/2007Aug22.htm


Aga Khan to Build Uganda’s First Aga Khan Academy

August 23, 2007

Aga Khan to Build Uganda’s First Aga Khan Academy

22 August 2007

(View related articles)

 

_DSC0084_GaryOtte_th His Highness the Aga Khan lays the foundation stone for the Aga Khan Academy, Kampala in the presence of His Excellency Professor Gilbert Bukenya, Vice President of the Republic of Uganda. Looking on is Salim Bhatia, Director of the Academies Unit.
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_DSC0113_GaryOtte_th His Highness the Aga Khan and His Excellency Professor Gilbert Bukenya, Vice President of the Republic of Uganda, walk towards the reception area to meet dignitaries and high achievers following the foundation stone-laying ceremony of the Aga Khan Academy Kampala. The Academy will be built on a 44 acre plot on the shores of Lake Victoria, some 18 km from the centre of Kampala.
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His Highness the Aga Khan and His Excellency Vice President Professor Bukenya, meet with Dorcus Inzikuru, Olympic Gold Medallist, at the foundation stone-laying ceremony.

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_GJO0196_GaryOtte_th His Excellency Professor Gilbert Bukenya, Vice President of the Republic of Uganda, makes a speech on behalf of His Excellency the President, Yoweri Museveni. The President commended the Aga Khan’s commitment to the development of Uganda.
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Photo credit: AKDN/Gary Otte