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5 - Universalising Aspirations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2015

Soumen Mukherjee
Affiliation:
Presidency University, Kolkata
Justin Jones
Affiliation:
Pembroke College, Oxford
Ali Usman Qasmi
Affiliation:
Lahore University of Management Sciences, Pakistan
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Summary

This article traces the contours of a historical entanglement that characterised the socio-religious life of the worldwide Ismaʿili community in the twentieth century. The setting for this historical process, and the changes that it unleashed, is colonial South Asia and East Africa, where the Indian-origin Khoja Ismaʿilis comprised a diaspora, somewhat akin to the complex composite model put forward by Engseng Ho that informs the present study. The diasporic Khoja Ismaʿili community of the western Indian Ocean rim represents a classic example of the appropriation of the late colonial configurations of capital, cultural and ideational exchange. It is among the diasporic Khoja Ismaʿilis, again, that Ithna ʿAshariya Khoja Ismaʿili secessionism — defying the authority of the Imam and laying the foundations of a Khoja ShiʿA Ithna ʿAshariya community — bore implications probably greater than anywhere else. This, in the process, led the hereditary Imam of the Khoja Ismaʿilis, Sultan Muhammad Shah Aga Khan III (1877–1957; Imam from 1885 to 1957), to resort to taking the first steps in laying down community protocols that over the decades came to define the Khoja Ismaʿili community's relations with the Imamate, while also instilling a new sense of community ethics. An array of coeval historical forces in South Asia and East Africa in late colonial times thus marked the first steps towards the development of an Ismaʿili identity, dovetailing with certain understandings of Ismaʿili ethics of social service and activism under Aga Khan III and thereafter, Shah Karim Aga Khan IV (1936–; Imam since 1957). The transition from Aga Khan III's Imamate to that of Aga Khan IV marked a further expansion of the scope of this project of social service, feeding as it did into grander developmental ventures invoking at once the sophisticated rhetoric of corporate management, academics and policy making, with the Hazir Imam Aga Khan at the apex.

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The Shi‘a in Modern South Asia
Religion, History and Politics
, pp. 105 - 130
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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