Aga Khan Urges Educators to Embrace Pluralism and Diversity in Teaching

April 18, 2008

18 April 2008, Atlanta, Georgia - His Highness the Aga Khan, Imam (Spiritual leader) of the Ismaili Muslims, today said in addition to traditional subjects, schools across the world must teach pluralism – a capacity to see those from different backgrounds as equals.

Delivering the Peterson lecture at the annual meeting of the International Baccalaureate programme in Atlanta, the Aga Khan cautioned that a pluralistic outlook is not an in-born skill and that it must be acquired through education.

“Experience tells us that people are not born with the innate ability nor the wish to see the Other as an equal individual in society,” he said. “Pluralism is a value that must be taught,” he added.

The Spiritual Leader of the Shia Ismaili Muslims, an ethnically and linguistically diverse community spread across five continents, emphasized the importance of cultural diversity in an increasingly globalized world that at times poses a threat to cultural identities. He also warned that the quest for identity can lead to exclusion. “The quest for identity can become an exclusionary process – so that we define ourselves less by what we are FOR and more by whom we are AGAINST.”

“I believe that the coexistence of these two surging impulses – what one might call a new globalism on one hand and a new tribalism on the other – will be a central challenge for educational leaders in the years ahead. And this will be particularly true in the developing world with its kaleidoscope of different identities,” he added.

He said that challenge will be taken up by the Aga Khan Development Network’s ambitious new project to create over the next decade a network of 18 Academies that will provide quality education to exceptional students of all backgrounds in 14 developing nations. Students will be selected based on merit, irrespective of their ability to pay. The Academies will also provide an extensive professional development outreach program for teachers from other government and not-for-profit schools in the region.

“The Academies have a dual mission: to provide an outstanding education to exceptional students from diverse backgrounds, and to provide world-class training for a growing corps of inspiring teachers,” said the Aga Khan.

“As we work together to bridge the gulf between East and West, between North and South, between developing and developed economies, between urban and rural settings, we will be redefining what it means to be well educated,” he stated.

The Aga Khan praised the International Baccalaureate’s education philosophy. “The IB program incarnates a powerful idea, the confidence that education can reshape the way in which the world thinks about itself,” he said.

He emphasized that the Academies’ program, based on the curriculum of the International Baccalaureate, will include dual-language instruction in English and the local language. “English will enable graduates to participate fully on an international stage, while mother-tongue instruction will allow students to access the wisdom of their own cultures,” he said.

The Aga Khan said that pluralistic education is as important in the West as it is in the developing world. He proposed that the International Baccalaureate community of educators work together with the Aga Khan Academies to build a bridge between the developing world and the developed world, between North and South, and between the Muslim world and the West.

“Together, we can help reshape the very definition of a well educated global citizen. And we can begin that process by bridging the learning gap which lies at the heart of what some have called a clash of civilizations, but which I have always felt was rather a clash of ignorances,” he said.

“In the years ahead, should we not expect a student at an IB school in Atlanta to know as much about Jomo Kenyatta or Muhammad Ali Jinnah as a student in Mombasa or Lahore knows about Atlanta’s great son, the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr.?,” asked the Aga Khan.

Earlier in the day, the Aga Khan met with Georgia’s Governor Sonny Perdue. Georgia is the fourth and the last leg of the Aga Khan’s 9-day tour of the United States that also included Texas, California and Illinois. This year marks half a century since the Aga Khan succeeded his grandfather, Sir Sultan Muhammad Shah, as the Spiritual Leader of the Shia Ismaili Muslims. He is marking the Golden Jubilee by visiting Ismaili communities throughout the world and by announcing new development initiatives.

Source : AKDN


Excerpt of speech by His Highness the Aga Khan at North Atlanta High School

April 18, 2008

Aga Khan visits Georgia to promote education program

By ERRIN HAINES – Associated Press Writer – Ledger-Enquirer.comAccess North GeorgiaFort Mill TimesWMGT.commacon.comMySanAntonio.comAtlanta Talk Radio WGST

Related content: Aga Khan Academies.

ATLANTA –
The Aga Khan, billionaire philanthropist and spiritual leader of 20 million Muslims worldwide, ended an eight-day tour of the U.S. on Friday in Atlanta by stressing the importance of understanding, tolerance and global citizenship in education – especially in developing countries.

His trip – which also included stops in Texas, Illinois and California – was part of the Shia Ismaili Muslim commemoration of the Golden Jubilee, which marks the Aga Khan’s 50th year as imam of the religious sect.

In his speech at North Atlanta High School, he tried to raise awareness about the Aga Khan Academies, a $1 billion education initiative that will build 18 schools in 14 countries in Africa, Central and South Asia and the Middle East.

The project grew out of a need to develop well-educated, global citizens who would make a difference in their communities, the Aga Khan told the audience.

“Our Academies Program is rooted in the conviction that effective indigenous leadership will be the key to progress in the developing world, and as the pace of change accelerates, it is clear that the human mind and heart will be the central factors in determining social wealth,” he said.

“Too many of those who should be the leaders of tomorrow are being left behind today. And even those students who do manage to get a good education often pursue their dreams in far off places and never go home again.”

The Aga Khan, who was born and educated in Switzerland, is a Harvard-educated businessman who is a descendant of the Prophet Muhammad. In his capacity as imam, he is also chair of the Aga Khan Development Network, a group of private, non-denominational development agencies focused on social, cultural and economic development.

The Aga Khan Academies are an initiative of the network’s Aga Khan Education Services, and under the plan, 18 schools are planned in 14 countries at a cost of about $50 million per school – a commitment of nearly $1 billion. The first school opened in Mombasa, Kenya in 2003, and others are planned in India, Bangladesh, Mozambique, Madagascar, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Tanzania and Uganda.

The academy curriculum is based on the International Baccalaureate program, which is derived from a program rooted in academics, critical thinking, and a respect and appreciation for cultural diversity.

The program is celebrating its 40th anniversary in Atlanta this week and the Aga Khan addressed the organization as its speaker for the Peterson Lecture, named for the program’s first director general.

Previously rooted in Judeo-Christian communities, the Aga Khan Academies represent the first expansion of the IB curriculum into Muslim cultures.

“Squaring the particular with the global will require great care, wisdom, and even some practical field testing, to ensure that it is really possible to develop a curriculum that responds effectively to both the global and the tribal impulses,” the Aga Khan said. “The people with whom we will be dealing will present different challenges than before.”

To that end, there will be an emphasis on inclusion, ethics, global economics, world culture, and comparative political systems, the Aga Khan told the crowd of educators, administrators, followers and observers.

“The failure of different peoples to be able to live in peace amongst each other has been a major source of conflict,” he said. “Pluralism is a value that must be taught … As we work together to bridge the gulf between East and West, between North and South, between developing and developed economies, between urban and rural settings, we will be redefining what it means to be well educated.”

The schools will educate between 750 and 1200 primary and secondary students – with one teacher for every seven pupils – and will be open to exceptional students regardless of their ability to pay. Teacher training centers will also be established ahead of the schools’ openings, where local instructors will be taught the International Baccalaureate curriculum.

The 70-year-old leader – also known as Prince Karim Aga Khan IV – succeeded his grandfather, Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah Aga Khan, at age 20 on July 11, 1957, becoming the community’s 49th imam. Gov. Sonny Perdue also welcomed the Aga Khan to the governor’s mansion on Friday, where the two met privately for lunch.

Ledger-Enquirer.com


Reza Aslan, author of “No god but God” writes about His Highness the Aga Khan

April 18, 2008

The OTHER global religious leader visiting America

Reza Aslan
Author, “No god but God”
CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360 Blog

The media spotlight on Pope Benedict’s first trip to the United States seems to have completely overshadowed the American tour of another global religious leader, the Aga Khan.

The Aga Khan is the spiritual leader of some 20 million Ismaili Muslims. The Ismailis are Shiah who broke off from the main Shiite branch of Islam, known as the Ithna Ashari, or Twelvers, in the middle of the 8th century. Ismailis live primarily in South Asia, while some 300 million Twelver Shia live mostly in Iran, Iraq, and other parts of the Middle East.

The Aga Khan — the title means something like “the Noble Lord” — is believed to be a direct descendant of the Prophet Muhammad. As such, his position among followers is absolute. He has sole authority to interpret the Quran and Islamic law, and his word on both subjects is infallible. But this Aga Khan, the 49th imam in a line that stretches back 13 centuries, is unlike any other spiritual leader.

He is a graduate of Harvard University. His personal worth is estimated to be in the billions. He jaunts around the globe in private jets and yachts. His father, the previous Aga Khan, was once married to Rita Hayworth. In his fitted suits and silk ties, he looks more like a well-aged movie star than a spiritual leader.

But don’t let the clothes and the fabulous riches fool you. The Aga Khan is not only a devout and transcendent man of deep religious faith, he is also one of the most generous philanthropists in the world.

His Aga Khan Development Network is a massive charitable fund dedicated almost entirely to caring for the poor. He runs nearly 200 hospitals. He funds thousands of schools, charities, arts programs, museums, and theaters.

His humanitarian services extend across the globe and, despite being funded almost exclusively by the tithes of his followers, are doled out to people of all faiths, whether Muslim or not.

He is a shining example of a moderate, pluralistic, and modern Muslim leader, which is why it’s a shame that he has come to the U.S. at such an inopportune time. (He is here to celebrate his 50th year as the Aga Khan).

For those of us who are sick and tired of media pundits always asking, “where are the moderate Muslim leaders,” and for those who want to punch something every time Tom Friedman sarcastically wonders why there are no “Muslim Mandela’s” out there, the Aga Khan, and the millions of modernist, democratically minded, reformist, and pluralist Muslims who follow him, are the perfect answer.

Too bad no one is paying attention.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360 Blog


Aga Khan dines with Governor Sonny Perdue

April 18, 2008

ATLANTA, GA (2008-04-18) Today, Governor Sonny Perdue thanked the leader of the largest sect of Shia (she-uh) Muslims for promoting education in Georgia.

The Aga Khan is speaking at an Atlanta high school as part of a US tour.

At the Governor’s Mansion, elected officials helped Perdue welcome Aga Khan. The 50 year-old is the inherited leader of the Shia Ismaili Muslims, a worldwide group of 15 million people. Governor Perdue noted Georgia is home to such Muslims in cities like Fayetteville and Marietta.

PERDUE: His work offers us an example of how people can come together across contemporary divides to help people lead better lives in a safer world.

Aga Khan is speaking to International Baccalaureate students at North Atlanta High School about other IB students he works with in places like Africa and Asia.

KHAN: and we will be trying to build bridges with their institutions so that over a period of years we can develop institutions of global quality based on the knowledge that you will share with us.

Aga Khan’s trip to Georgia helps mark 50 years of partnership between his sect and global governments.

© Copyright 2008, WABE

Source : (PBA) Public Broadcasting Atlanta
Related : His Highness the Aga Khan visits Georgia
Muslim leader Aga Khan arrives in Atlanta Georgia


His Highness the Aga Khan visits Georgia

April 18, 2008

From Georgia Public Broadcasting News.

At the same time the Pope is visiting America, so too is another spiritual leader. Today, His Highness the Aga Khan arrived in Atlanta.The Aga Khan is spiritual leader to more than 15-million Ismaili Shia Muslims worldwide. More than 100-thousand Ismaili live in the U-S, including 20-thousand here in Georgia. More than three dozen supporters were on hand to greet the Aga Khan, as his plane touched down at Charlie Brown Field outside of Atlanta. He was greeted officially by Governor Perdue’s Chief of Protocol. On Friday the Aga Khan will have lunch with the Governor. The trip is part of the Aga Khan’s Jubilee Celebration, commemorating 50 years leading the world’s second largest Shia community.

Georgia Public Broadcasting News


Muslim leader Aga Khan arrives in Atlanta Georgia

April 18, 2008


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 04/17/08

The Aga Khan, head of the world’s 15 million Ismaili Muslims, arrived at Fulton County Airport today to celebrate with his Georgia followers his 50th anniversary as their leader.
A band greeted him with the Ismaili anthem and the U.S. national anthem, and a representative from Gov. Sonny Perdue’s office as well as local politicians were on hand to welcome him.


Source : AJC


MHI Visit to USA – Pictures

April 18, 2008