Tashkorgan
IMPORTANT NOTE: As a follow up, please see Ali Karim’s excellent travelogue Silk Road Travelogue By Ali Karim: (4) Scenes from Tashkurgan and an Encounter with an Ismaili Family, and the Drive to Northern Hunza on the Iconic Khunjerab Pass. Karim states that the Jamatkhana in Tashkorgan has remained closed for the past 2 years – Ed.
Tashkorgan is a vibrant market town nestled amongst the Pamir Mountains in China’s Xinjiang province. The town is situated at an altitude of 3,600 meters (11,811 ft) on the borders of both Afghanistan and Tajikistan, and close to the border of Kyrgyzstan and Pakistan. The town has a market for sheep, wool and woollen goods, particularly carpets, and is surrounded by orchards.
The majority population in the town are ethnic Tajiks and most people speak Sarikoli. There is also a village of Wakhi speakers. Chinese and Uyghur are also spoken. Today Tashkorgan is on the Karakoram Highway which follows the old Silk Road route from China to Pakistan. Tashkorgan is a recommended overnight stop for road travellers from China to Pakistan in order to have the best chance of crossing the snow-prone Khunjerab Pass in daylight. Thus decent accommodation is available in the town. For example, the Crown Inn on Pamir Road has positive reviews at Trip Advisor.
Tashkorgan is home to an Ismaili Jamatkhana. The town of approximately 30,000 people also has an art and culture centre in which a huge room is dedicated to the Ismailis of the region, their faith and culture. The centre is open to all and has Ismailis as tour guides. An entry in Wikipedia on Muslim Groups in China notes that the “Shia Chinese Muslims are mostly Ismailis including Tajiks of Xinjiang of the Tashkorgan and Sariqul areas of Xingjiang.”
We are very pleased to share the following small but fascinating collection of photographs of the Ismaili Jamatkhana in Tashkorgan. They were taken with a simple Sony digital camera. The last two photos are of an Ismaili home and the town’s arts and culture centre.
(Please click photos for enlargements)
The Jamatkhana
~~~~~~
~~~~~~
~~~~~~
~~~~~~
~~~~~~
~~~~~~
An Ismaili Home in Tashkorgan
~~~~~~
The Culture and Art Centre of Tashkorgan
~~~~~~
Date article posted on Simerg: February 23, 2011
Date last updated: July 29, 2017.
Photos: Nuram and Rhett A. Butler. Copyright.
(Photos may not be reproduced without written consent from Nuram and Rhett A. Butler of Mongabay.com)
~~~~~~~~~~
Sign-up for blog subscription at top right of this page. Share this article via the Share option below.
We welcome feedback/letters from our readers. Please use the LEAVE A REPLY box which appears below. Your feedback may be edited for length and brevity, and is subject to moderation. We are unable to acknowledge unpublished letters.
Please visit the Simerg Home page for links to articles posted most recently. For links to articles posted on this Web site since its launch in March 2009, please clickWhat’s New.
Thank you for sharing the photographs.🙂🙂
Can anyone please provide CURRENT CIRCUMSTANCES of this Jamatkhana, others in China, as well as the plight of the ISMAILIS, IF any, in 2020, under the persecution of the Chinese government , of the Muslims?
Firoza Shariff nee Lalani,
Toronto, Canada
August 8, 2020.
Great news. May Allah protect all Ismailis around the world.
I love to visit that place, kindly if any jamati tour to visit china jk inform me i am interested to visit also.
Regards
Moiz Mansoor Ali
Thanks for the wonder and and fascinating articles and for informing us about the Jamatkhana in china. I remember our old jamatkhana buildings in Sidhapur district in India.
A beautiful Jamatkhana indeed!
Very nice place and a beautiful jamatkhana.
Thanks to Allah, I am an Ismaili
Ya Ali Madad
Dost Mohammad Khan,
Chitral, Pakistan,
Ya Ali Madad,
I am a Shia Imami Ismaili Muslim from Hyderabad India. I am immensely happy to find this page. My husband and I are shifting to China, Beijing. Can anybody please provide me with the address of the Beijing jamatkhana, if there is one there?
Thanks
In 1993 I was fortunate enough to offer my khidmat to teachers and pupils in Hunza Valley where I stayed for some 5 months, visiting about 6-7 places to help with Spoken English as this could increase confidence in schools with English as the medium of instruction. My farthest north point was a day’s trip right up to Khunjearab Pass taken by my host family. Because I was on Pakistan side, even if there were Ismailis on the border from China, I missed my fellow brothers and sisters. This article jogs my memory of that unique experience in my journey of life. Not just visit to Hunza but living with the people there is a remarkable soul-lifting experience that can change one’s spiritual perspective on Pluralism that Mowlana Hazar Imam upholds.
Tashqurgan is close Hunza Valley just next to the Pakistan-China border. Its 4 to 5 hours away from hunza by bus, and I often visit through the border as I am from Hunza.
Tashqurgan is 130 km and one and half hour from Khunjerab Hunza.
Ya Ali Madad
I hope to visit this Jamatkhana in the near future when I go to Hunza. Need to know from someone how far it is from Hunza and what is the best time to visit it.
There is no visa/letter required to go from Hunza to Tashqurgan???
Please see Ali Karim’s piece https://simergphotos.com/2017/02/13/after-and-amazing-silk-road-journey-to-xinjiang-and-hunza-seasoned-and-intrepid-globetrotter-ali-karim-offers-traveling-tips/ and write to him at the email address he has provided or visit his facebook page.
Nice piece of information indeed. My grandmother, late Tajul Nisa spent her early childhood years in Tashkurgan with her late father, Mr. Fateh Ali Khan( famous as Munshi Fateh Ali khan), who happened to be the ambassador to China from Hunza State for more then a decade. She had some great memories to share related to this place which still echo in my ears when where I recall her story telling from of my childhood days. One interesting part was how her father introduced the Ismailis practices in the region. It must have been part of his obligation as a diplomat or maybe at his own initiative to keep the Ismaili teachings alive in that part of China. He ended up
facing a hard time at a jail as was the case with other prominent religious figures from Hunza. I salute those brave ones who kept the Ismaili torch alive during communist rule. Hopefully I will be able to share some of my grandmother’s stories that relate to Tashkurgan.
Its almost 12 hrs from Hunza.
Belated reply to your posting. He must have been a great man. Hope you are carrying the torch for the family.
Ya Ali MAdad
Epic! wonderful, great piece of knowledge.
Thanks
Thanks for the information. I often visit China but haven’t come across any Ismaili. It would be good to know the location of Tashkorgan in relation to other larger cities nearby. Any information would be welcome. I am from
Surat City Gujrat. Ya Ali madad
I am thrilled to see such wonderful Jamatkhana. I must visit this place in my life. I am from India.
Unfortunately if you are holding an Indian passport you cannot visit this place.
Really very much pleased to know about Jamatkhanas in China!
For the first time I have seen a jamatkhana photo in China. A very informative piece. Thank you, simerg.com.
Great article and pictures. Now that there is a pak-china agreement for a tunnel worth $18b it will be easy to visit this jamatkhana.
It is my hope that during my current visit to China where I have come to study, I will try to visit Tashkorgan and see the Jamatkhana as well as meet my brothers and sisters.
Zeeshan Shoukat Ali Gulwani
Jingzhou, Hubei, China
Mashallah mere mawla ke murid aur mere mawla ka gharye jamatkhana yehi to murid murshid ke pyar ki nishani he. Mawla bapa bless all ismailis
Ya Ali Madad
rukshana
Whenever I read about Muslims in China in media, I thought about Ismailis in China. I heard a little about Ismailis in China. This is the first time I am seeing a Jamatkhana in China.Thanks to simera.com for providing this information on Ismailis in China.
I have been many times to China and never seen like a Jamatkahana. Next time, I shall try and visit the town and visit the jamatkahana.
Ya Ali Madad
If anyone wants see more pictures of the jamatkhana and jamat in China, please visit my Facebook page. I shall be posting more pictures later.
Thank you
Yahya Bakhtyar
One should create an Ismaili map with population and other related information. So it would be easier for Ismaili travellers to locate and have connections with higher authorities like Ismaili Councils and other social cultural organisations so not to miss important centres of their interest to visit. Thank you for sharing to know new geography and history of Ismailis in China and its neighbouring areas.
Superb and amazing. Love to go there and visit via the Silk and scenic route. Previously there was a desire to visit and now an urge, a purpose, a destination. To see the beauty of the hearts of the Ismailies in China. I pray that my wish be fulfilled.
I am planning to visit China in October 2011. I would love to connect with any Ismailis who live there. Please write to email molalani@sympatico.ca.
It is fantastic to learn about our people in China; one day I will go see for myself.
Does anyone knows how many Ismailis are there in the region?
Recently, I went to a presentation and discussion session at Darkhana in London, UK at the launching of Farhad Daftary’s latest book. There, in the discussion period, the moderator had raised the question of the number of Ismailis in the world. So I questioned Mr Daftary and the panel on the global number and speciifcally the number of 15 million which has been talked about for many decades now. To my mind it seems highly over-estimated. We went through country by country and the Chinese Ismaili leader on the panel said there were 32,000 in China according to their records. In my youth, we were always told that there were “millions of Ismailis in China”.
Farouk Jamal
Vancouver
In 1976, the editor of Ismaili Mirror, Pakistan, had an opportunity to interview Babajan Gafurov, an eminent academician of Tajikistan and ask him how many Ismailis there were in the Soviet Union and his response was: “I assess almost 50,000 Ismailis live in Tajikistan.” He then went on to mention the prominent positions Ismailis were holding in public life. See interview excerpts in Ilm, Volume 1, Number 3, page 16. The visits by Mawlana Hazar Imam to Tajikistan over the past 15 years suggest a higher number. It would be interesting to come up with a more reliable figure of the size of the Jamat around the world, but this may take some time to establish. Sadly, we don’t even appear to have the precise size of the Jamat in Canada. I think this is very easy for the Council to establish but we come up with numbers ranging from 60,000 to 90,000 judging by the reports that have appeared in the media! This is an important exercise to carry out, especially in countries where numbers can be accounted for with a very minor discepancy.
I have always wondered about the number of Ismailis in the world too, and they have always mentioned (like you said) that there are few million Ismailis in China and Central Asia. It appears the numbers are too high.
I am imagining right now what would it be like sitting inside that Jamatkhana and praying with our Ismaili Brethren from China. It would be quite an experience.
These are wonderful photographs. I would suggest that a tour should be organized to see all the Jamat Khanas in the remoted locations in Central Asia and China, Tashkorgan included, as well as the Ismaili Centre in Dushanbe.
Perhaps a tour could be organized from Toronto. We should learn more about Chinese Ismailies by going there in person.
Amir Tharani
Scarborough, Toronto, Canada
It was wonderful to learn about our Ismaili brothers and sisters in China. I shall certainly remember them during the forthcoming Didar in Dar-es-Salaam, and hope that they will alo have a Mulaqat with Mawlana Hazar Imam soon.
Karim,
Please do remember us too, Our Toronto Jamat and our Canadian Jamat.
There are so many Jamati members who are in affat, balaa and bimari, please ask Him for Jamati Mushkil Assan.
Tell Him, we do remember Him and we remember Him by saying Ya Ali, Ya Muhammad and Ya Allah, and we pray for His Deedar to Canadian Jamat. Ameen.
I was very pleased to learn about the Jamat Khana in this region of China. I am planning to travel to China from Canada in the near future, and it would be nice to know the best way to reach there from Beijing.
Beautiful and amazing.
It’s great to see these beautiful pictures of a Jamatkhana in China. I go to China very often but have never been to this part.
I’m deeply touched by those who have little contact with their Imam and can show their love in such a sincere way. I live in Shanghai.
Ya Ali Madad Malik.
On my next visit to Shanghai, I would be happy to meet with you. I am often in Asia business related, it would be an opportunity to discuss on many topics. Please do email your contact via Simerg@aol.com.
Learning about the presence of the Jamat in the lap of Pamir and that they practice their faith in one way or another, even though they haven’t seen their Imam for years and years, has been hear-warming and encouraging. This is what faith is all about. Congratulations to them and those who have made us aware about the Jamat. Wishing everyone all the best.
Abdul Rahim
Good to hear about a Jamatkhana in China. I am currently based in China and this information is useful.
It’s great to read about this Jamatkahana and the Jamat in Tashkarghan China. It would be interesting to know how one can get there from Beijing. Best Regards.
Great pictures of the Jamat Khana in Tashkorghan…it is interesting to note that although the Ismailis, in that region, had little contact with the Imam until recently, they have continued to practice thier faith – form may vary, the Essence remains the same….
Thank you
During the recent Rays of Light exhibition, a tour guide told us that there were five Ismaili Jamatkhanas in China.
Mohgul
It has been wonderful to see photos of this Jamatkhana in Tashkarghan, China. Hope to visit there soon.
Exellent. Please try for more photos and information. Thank you
It’s great to see these beautiful pictures of a Jamatkhana in China.
Regards,
K. Damji
Wonderful! I absolutely love it very much. I am myself an Uighur from Kazakhstan and I liked your story. I honestly didn’t know that there was such a city as Tashkorgan until now and that my Uighur brothers live there. May Prince Aga Khan, the Ismaili leader, have good health.
Never knew there was a Jamatkhana in China. I only had information of Ismailis there. It would be interesting from someone who has been there to inform us what is the best way and time to go there.
Excellent. One day I will see this beautiful jamatkhana, Inshallah.
This is the first time I am seeing this Jamatkhana picture. Very nice of you to share it with your readers.
Anwar Allahwala
I am extremely happy and delighted to see the pictures of the Jamatkhana in China. I go to China very often but have never been to this part.
Thank you or sharing the photograhs. I have been to this Jamatkhana on the occasion of Eid.
The Ismailis assembled here perform some very old rituals. In the 1930’s, the late Imam had sent a very special guide line that it was obligation on the Jamat to be loyal to the Government and Country of adoption. On the basis of that guide line, today even the Government Officials quote that “Toojiks [or Tajiks’] love their mother country.” This is often quoted among the educated.
This is due to the guidance of the Imam of the Time. We are thankful to the Imam and its institutions for the time based guidance. I have blood relations across the border, so I know how strong the bonds of Ismailis of China are with the government and country. Of course, this loyalty to the adoption of country is very common with Ismailis around the Globe. The Imam has said something along the lines that we should remain loyal to the country of adoption and to the government which looks after our welfare.
Engr. Baig Ali
Islamabad, Pakistan
Learning about the Ismailis in China has given me immense pleasure. I am proud to be an Ismaili Muslim under the leadership of my beloved Imam, His Highness the Aga Khan.
Mehboob Ali
Gilgit-Baltistan