Dubai: Institutional Dinner and Farewell

March 29, 2008

919.jpg After a busy four day trip to the United Arab Emirates, which included the historic opening of the Ismaili Centre Dubai, Mawlana Hazar Imam departed from Dubai today. He was bid farewell at the Royal Terminal of the Dubai International Airport by His Highness Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum on behalf of the Ruling Family, as well as leaders of the UAE Jamat.

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Source:
TheIsmaili.Org

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Opening Ismaili Centre
MHI UAE Pictures – Part II
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MHI at Ismaili Centre
Aga Khan opens Ismaili centre in Dubai
Aga Khan opens Ismaili Centre, first for Middle East
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Ismaili Centre Dubai

March 29, 2008

Opening Ismaili Centre

March 28, 2008

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Link : http://www.theismaili.org


The Ismaili Centre Dubai — Fact Sheet

March 28, 2008

dubaicentrefactsheet

This new Centre is itself a profoundly spiritual place. Its defining symbolism is inspired by the Fatimid tradition — stretching back over 1000 years and widely shared with sister traditions throughout the Islamic world — from Baghdad to Bokhara. This building exists fundamentally as a place for peaceful contemplation, but one that is set in a social context. It is not a place to hide from the world, but rather a place which inspires us to engage our worldly work as a direct extension of our faith.
— His Highness the Aga Khan at the Opening Ceremony
of the Ismaili Centre Dubai, 26 March 2008

Objective:
The Ismaili Centre Dubai was conceived with the objective to promote search for mutual understanding, which remains essential to assuring peace and stability. The Centre will offer facilities for lectures, presentations, seminars and conferences relating to the Aga Khan Development Network’s areas of activity in social, economic and cultural endeavour. It will also host recitals and exhibitions that will serve to educate wider publics about the breadth of Islam’s heritage. Like its functions, the Centre’s architecture will reflect our perception of daily life whose rhythm weaves the body and the soul, man and nature into a seamless unity. Like the other Ismaili Centres established in London, Vancouver and Lisbon, the Ismaili Centre Dubai will reflect a mood of humility, forward outlook, friendship and dialogue.
The Land:
The site of the Ismaili Centre Dubai located at Oud Metha, was a gift of the Ruling Family of Dubai presented by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates and Ruler of Dubai, to His Highness the Aga Khan on the occasion of the Silver Jubilee in 1982. His Highness the Aga Khan and His Highness Sheikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, President of Dubai Civil Aviation Authority and Chairman of Dubai Airports and Emirates Airline Group laid the foundation stone in 2003.
Spaces:
The Ismaili Centre Dubai is a complex of creative spaces for contemplative, cultural, educational and recreational purposes, designed to encourage understanding and the sharing of wisdom from a plurality of perspectives. Its courtyards, gardens and watercourses, amidst myriad interlinking interiors on multiple levels, propose an integrative harmony of tradition and timelessness. It also incorporates an Early Learning Centre.
The Aga Khan Early Learning Centre:
The Aga Khan Early Learning Centre (ELC) located at the ground level will offer a broad, holistic early childhood educational programme to children on a secular and non-denominational basis at the highest international standards of excellence. Drawing on the vast experience of the Aga Khan Education Services which operates over 300 schools worldwide, the ELC will have an intake capacity of 225 children and will offer early childhood programmes that will be culturally relevant, dual medium (Arabic and English) and pluralistic in approach. The ELC is scheduled to open in early 2009.
The Architect:
Rami El Dahan and Soheir Farid of El Dahan & Farid Engineering Consultants from Cairo, Egypt. The firm is especially experienced in vernacular Architecture and the use of locally available construction materials, and techniques including training programs for Architects and masons as well as Rehabilitation Projects, restoration of Historical and old buildings. The architects have drawn on the insights of their mentor, the late Hassan Fathy, renowned in the twentieth century for his building in clay and for his “architecture for the people.”
Contractor:
Transemirates Contracting Company
Construction Materials:
The building is built primarily in Aleppo limestone; practically each piece being precision cut before assembly. From the brickwork in the domes, the marble interiors and tiles inlaid in the water channels, to the carved, shaped or assembled hardwood floors, fittings and furnishings, the range and placement of materials, and elaborately patterned doors and masharabiyya (latticework) testify to rare artisanal detail and celebrate a sharing of talent.
Area Details:
Total Area of Ismaili Centre:
13 000 m2Total Area of Dubai Park:
3 000 m2Total Built Up Area:
183 874.51 ft2

Provided Parking Area:
166 car park spaces

Functional Spaces:
Main Entrance Foyer; Aga Khan Early Learning Centre; Social Hall; Congregational Hall; Ismaili Community and Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) Institutional Offices; main courtyard; Aga Khan Scouts and Guides Group Offices; Parking.

TheIsmaili.Org


Press Release: Aga Khan Opens The Middle East’s First Ismaili Centre

March 28, 2008

dubaicentrepressrelease 26 March 2008 – DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — His Highness the Aga Khan, Spiritual Leader of the Shia Ismaili Muslims, today officially opened an Ismaili Centre in Dubai – the fast growing metropolis of the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The Ismaili Centre Dubai is the fourth such institution in the world and the first in the Middle East. The opening ceremony was attended by His Highness Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum and His Highness Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan — senior members of the ruling families.

Speaking at the opening ceremony, the Aga Khan hailed Dubai as a truly cosmopolitan city and global crossroads that thrives on diversity.

“The Dubai ethic is one that honours a generous exchange of knowledge and ideas, that welcomes the opportunity to learn from others, that celebrates not only our historic identities but also our open horizons,” he said.

“The ethic of exploration and interconnectedness is one that is deeply shared by the Ismaili Community,” said the Aga Khan. “It is an ethic, in fact, that is firmly rooted in our faith — a value system which grows from spiritual roots,” he added.

TheIsmaili.Org


MHI UAE Pictures – Part II

March 27, 2008

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link: http://www.theismaili.org

Part I


Mohammed launches Dubai Creek cultural project

March 27, 2008

Sheikh Mohammed at the launch ceremony

UAE Vice President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum launched the Dubai Creek cultural project today. The project is expected to transform the UAE, especially Dubai, into an international hub for culture.

Dubai Culture and Arts Authority Chairman Sheikh Majid bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum delivered a speech at the launch ceremony, which was held at Sheikh Saeed’s House in Shindagha. He said the project was in line with Dubai Strategic Plan 2015 and that it would preserve the UAE’s heritage.

Sheikh Mohammed looked over a model for the opera house that will be a central feature of the project. The project will include 10 museums, 9 libraries, 14 theatres, 7 institutes for arts and culture and 11 art galleries. Sheikh Mohammed said he was proud of the project, which will stretch from Shindagha to the creekside of Business Bay.

The ceremony was attended by Dubai Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Dubai Deputy Ruler Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the Aga Khan, who is the spiritual leader of the Ismaili Muslims, and other sheikhs, ministers and senior officials.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008


MHI at Ismaili Centre

March 27, 2008

DUBAI (AFP) – The Aga Khan, spiritual leader of the world’s Shiite Ismaili Muslims, on Wednesday inaugurated an Ismaili cultural centre in the Gulf emirate of Dubai, the first of its kind in the Middle East.

The Ismaili Centre, which houses a library and will host conferences and an early childhood education programme, will serve as “a place for peaceful contemplation,” he said at the inauguration ceremony.

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Member of the Shiite Muslim Ismaili sect welcome their spiritual leader, the Agha Khan (C), during the opening ceremony of the Dubai Park. The Aga Khan, spiritual leader of the world’s Shiite Ismaili Muslims, on Wednesday inaugurated an Ismaili cultural centre in the Gulf emirate of Dubai, the first of its kind in the Middle East.(AFP/Karim Sahib)
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Aga Khan opens Ismaili centre in Dubai

March 26, 2008

First Published 2008-03-26


Aga Khan opening Ismaili Centre
Aga Khan opens Ismaili centre in Dubai
22-million-dollar Centre is fourth in the world for the 15-million-strong Ismaili community.
DUBAI – The Aga Khan, spiritual leader of the world’s Shiite Ismaili Muslims, on Wednesday inaugurated an Ismaili cultural centre in the Gulf emirate of Dubai, the first of its kind in the Middle East. The Ismaili Centre, which houses a library and will host conferences and an early childhood education programme, will serve as “a place for peaceful contemplation,” he said at the inauguration ceremony.

“It is not a place to hide from the world, but rather a place which inspires us to engage our worldly work as a direct extension of our faith,” the Aga Khan said.

The centre is the fourth for the 15-million-strong Ismaili community. Others are in London, Lisbon and Vancouver.

Around one million members of the Shiite sect live in the Middle East.

The 71-year-old Aga Khan, who is based in France and has been the “imam” of the Ismaili community for half a century, said the choice of Dubai as venue was driven by the “diversity” that characterises the city state, which is home to some 1.4 million people, mostly foreigners.

Dubai, one of the seven members of the United Arab Emirates, has become “a truly global crossroads” and “the very embodiment of the global village,” he said.

The inauguration was attended by Sheikh Ahmad bin Saeed al-Maktoum, a member of Dubai’s ruling family and chairman of the city state’s carrier Emirates, and by UAE Higher Education and Scientific Research Minister Sheikh Nahayan bin Mubarak al-Nahayan.

Officials at the centre said it took four years to build and cost 22 million dollars.

“The variety of expressions within Islam is not a curse but a mercy,” said the Aga Khan, referring to various Sunni and Shiite sects.

Up to 8,000 Ismailis, mostly expatriates, live in the UAE. Members of the sect are scattered across the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent and central Asia. Ismailis can also be found in Africa with smaller numbers residing in Europe and the United States.

Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=25051


Aga Khan opens Ismaili Centre, first for Middle East

March 26, 2008

UAE. The Aga Khan, leader of the world’s Ismaili Muslims, this week opened a cultural centre in Dubai for followers of the branch of Shia Islam.

The Ismaili Centre Dubai is the first base for Ismailis in the majority-Sunni Muslim Middle East. The Aga Khan is the 49th hereditary imam, or spiritual leader, of the Ismailis, the second-largest group of Shiites.

“This is a means of establishing a permanent cultural root in one area,” the Aga Khan said today in an interview after opening the centre.

He founded the Geneva-based Aga Khan Development Network, which has established several agencies in Syria and Egypt that focus on microfinance, education and culture to improve local living conditions. Dubai’s Ruler HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al- Maktoum, donated the land for the centre in 1982, a gesture that is a “symbol of the wonderful diversity that characterises Dubai,” the Aga Khan said.

Dubai has become a regional business and tourism destination, attracting expatriates who use it as a base for accessing the rest of the Gulf region.

The role of the Dubai Ismaili Centre, the fourth in the world after London, Lisbon and Vancouver, is to bring together the secular and the spiritual to emphasise the role of “Islam as a thinking, spiritual faith,” according to a statement from the Aga Khan’s secretariat. The United Arab Emirates location includes a prayer hall, as well as a secular pre-school, and will hold conferences and public exhibitions on Islam’s heritage.

“There is a long tradition, certainly in the Emirates, of tolerance and accommodating the practices and beliefs of the immigrant communities,” Anthony Harris, former UK Ambassador to the UAE, said in a Bloomberg interview.

Earlier this month, Qatar opened its first church since pre-Islamic times. Qatar joined Kuwait, the UAE and Bahrain in allowing churches to be built to serve the 70,000 Christians living in the Arabian Peninsula.

The Ismaili Centre’s Egyptian architects, El Dahan & Farid Engineering Consultants, were inspired by the Fatimid Empire in Cairo, which dominates accounts of Ismaili history for about 400 hundred years after the founding of Islam in the seventh century.

“That’s where Ismaili history lies,” Azim Nanji, Professor of Islamic Studies at Stanford University in California and Director of the London-based Institute of Ismaili Studies, said today during a tour of the Centre. “That period in Egypt was such a fertile time for creativity, and this center is a way to bring that ethos back again.”

About 85% of the world’s Muslims are Sunni, while some 15% are from Shia and other minority branches.

Link:  http://www.bi-me.com/main.php?id=18556&t=1&c=33&cg=4