A Discovery of Deep Truth at Kilimanjaro’s Summit: Recalling a Fifty-Year-Old Outward Bound Adventure

Mount Kilimanjaro Tanzania Simerg essays and letters by Karim H Karim
Mount Kilimajaro. Photograph: Chris 73 / Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1792658
Karim H Karim and Aga Khan High School Nairobi students
Students from Aga Khan High School, Nairobi, who attended the Outward Bound Mountain School of East Africa in 1973 and 1974. From left, Karim H. Karim, (author of this piece), Mahmud Mitha, Nashir Abdulla, and Amin Ahmed. Photograph: Karim H. Karim collection.
Outward Bound badge (left) with the motto “To Serve to Strive and Not to Yield" and Outward Bound pin. Photographs: Karim H. Karim collection.
Outward Bound badge (left) with the motto “To Serve to Strive and Not to Yield” and Outward Bound pin. Photographs: Karim H. Karim collection.
Tanzania map (Shaded Relief), 2003, Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection.
Tanzania map (Shaded Relief), 2003, Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection. Simerg has added an annotation — the location of Mt Kilimanjaro in Tanzania is shown with an orange diamond. The mountain is very close to the Kenya border. The approximate distance from the small town of Loitokitok (not shown) in Kenya, where the Outward Bound Mountain School of East Africa was located, to Kilimanjaro is 140 km. Please click on map for enlargement.
Kilimanjaro climb, Group photo of the Nelion Patrol, with Karim H. Karim sitting at the bottom left. Photograph: Karim H. Karim Collection.
Group photo of the Nelion Patrol, with Karim H. Karim sitting at the bottom left. Photograph: Karim H. Karim collection.
Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania, Library of Congress LOC : Matson (G. Eric and Edith) Photograph Collection, Simerg Karim Karim article
Snow-capped Kibo peak of Kilimanjaroat left with the Mawenzi peak at right, picturedin 1936 from a landing ground near Moshi, Tanzania (then Tanganyika). The plane was en route to Arusha. Photograph: Matson (G. Eric and Edith) Photograph Collection, US Library of Congress.
This image taken by EO-1’s Advanced Land Imager (ALI) on Jan. 20, 2017, shows snowcap of the volcanic Mount Kilimanjaro Tanzania Karim Karim article simerg
This image taken by EO-1’s Advanced Land Imager (ALI) on Jan. 20, 2017, shows snowcap of the volcanic Mount Kilimanjaro. Photograph: NASA’s Earth Observatory.
3-D perspective view of Mount Kilimanjaro
This 3-D perspective view of Mount Kilimanjaro was generated using topographic data from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM), a Landsat 7 satellite image, and a false sky. The topographic expression is vertically exaggerated two times. Landsat has been providing visible and infrared views of the Earth since 1972. Date Acquired: February 21, 2000 (Landsat 7).
Outword Bound Mountain School Kenya, Karim Karim Kilimanjaro climb certificate, simerg

_______________________

Karim H Karim Chancellor’s Professor at Carleton University., Kilimanjaro clim, Essays and Letters Simerg
Karim H. Karim

6 thoughts on “A Discovery of Deep Truth at Kilimanjaro’s Summit: Recalling a Fifty-Year-Old Outward Bound Adventure

  1. Excellent Article – Brought back many memories of the Outward Bound experience… Thanks for Sharing

  2. My dearest Malik Bhai & Dr. Karim.

    What a wonderful trip down memory lane! I have read and reread this article thrice. I too had that dream of going to Outward Bound school in Loitokitok and climbing Kili when I was eighteen, but that dream did not materialize then, but NEVER died.

    In 1998 ( when I was 51), I attended The Canadian Outward Bound Wilderness School in Georgian Bay, Ontario and climbed Kili in Aug 2000. We took the Marangu route and made it to “Uhuru Peak” at sunrise. Kibo to Uhuru Peak was the hardest, but most memorable. Never let a dream die…

    Love, Light & Cheers Muslim Harji
    “PRAYER WITHOUT ACTION IS JUST NOISE”

  3. Beautifully written article. Although Nairobi is my home town I did not know much more than sheer name ‘Mount Kilimanjaro’. What a shame!

    Professor Karim was and surely is a brave adventurous person. He has made me realize how good the Agha Khan has been to the world by providing opportunities to improve personal skills.

    Many thanks Professor Karim for enlightening me about the great mountain and the energetic individuals who tackle difficult assignments. Well done SIR and many thanks for sharing such in informative experience. I wish I had attended the Agha Khan school rather than the Duke of Gloucester school to take advantage of the opportunities to know how to tackle difficult challenges of the world.

    Many thanks again Professor Karim.

  4. This posting in Simerg allows me the opportunity
    to pay tribute of a different kind to Professor
    Karim H. Karim who is a humble outstanding
    scholar of Ismaili Studies, of which I have been a
    student most of my life. Therefore I have followed,
    with utter reverence, admiration and respect, the
    works of both Ismaili and non-Ismaili authors. Last
    year, he kindly accepted my invitation to join me
    and members of my family for a private luncheon
    to host Professor Faisal Dewji of Oxford University
    during his visit to Vancouver.

    Professor Karim is a fellow alumnus of Columbia
    University, and I am blessed to be in his academic
    shadow. Recently, I shared with him and a few others
    my intention and itinerary to travel in the footsteps
    of Mawlana Rumi, Shams Tabrez, and our Pirs of
    Satpanth, immediately following an IIS course in
    Tunisia entitled ‘In the Footsteps of the Fatimids’,
    conducted by the renowned scholar and expert in
    Fatimid studies, Professor Shainool Jiwa (of IIS and
    Edinburgh University), of which he was very
    encouraging and supportive.

Leave a reply to Muslim Harji Cancel reply