Simerg Photo Blog Updates: Kitengela Sculptures, The Aga Khan’s Work at a Glance, Bagamoyo and Tashkorgan Jamatkhanas, and South Dakota’s Colossal Faces

A stunning view of the Indian Ocean from the roof-top of the Bagamoyo Jamatkhana. Please click for home page of Simerg’s Photo Blog. Photo: Shariffa Keshavjee, Nairobi, Kenya. Copyright.

The following posts have been added to Simerg’s new photo blog since September 21, 2012. They are revised versions of photo essays that appeared on this website previously.

The Nairobi Aga Khan Hospital’s Kitengela Sculptures
“Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet”
Rare Photos of His Highness the Aga Khan’s Visits to Kenya and Pemba
5 Colossal Faces in the Black Hills of South Dakota
His Highness the Aga Khan’s Work at a Glance
A Journey to the Bagamoyo Jamatkhana
An Ismaili Jamatkhana in China

2007 Aga Khan Golden Jubilee Flashback: The Launching of the Bujagali Dam; now set to open Monday October 8, 2012 for Uganda’s 50th anniversary

The Daily Monitor of Uganda reports that President Museveni and His Highness the Aga Khan will formally commission the $860 million (Shs2.1 trillion) Bujagali Hydro Power Project in Jinja on Monday, October 8, 2012. “Construction has come to completion. The new chapter is exciting for us, we are thrilled…” Mr Bill Groth, the Bujagali Energy Ltd’s resident construction manager, said ahead of the commissioning. The Monitor adds that ten regional leaders who are attending the country’s jubilee celebrations are expected to grace the opening ceremony. The foundation ceremony of the dam was laid on August 21, 2007 during the Golden Jubilee celebrations of His Highness the Aga Khan. During that ceremony, the 49th Ismaili Imam noted: “The laying of this foundation stone is indeed an historic moment. The project we celebrate today is an unprecedented endeavour.” 

Bujagali Dam will be officially opened on Monday October 8, 2012 by His Highness the Aga Khan and President Museveni to mark Uganda’s 50th Independence Anniversary. A report by Arne Doornebal for Radio Netherlands noted that since the long-awaited Bujagali Dam started producing 250 megawatts in June 2012, power cuts have fallen sharply. Photo: Bujagali Energy Limited.

REPEATING AND RENEWING AN ANCIENT STORY

By His Highness the Aga Khan

“Everywhere in the world today, people are searching for ways to reduce the threat of global warming both by limiting greenhouse gas emissions and by fighting the blight of deforestation. The key to both efforts is to move away from plant and fossil fuels, and to depend instead on renewable energy sources. Hydro electric power fulfills that goal. It is “clean” energy – advancing sustainable development while minimizing its environmental impact.

“If this were not the case, we would not have taken up this project, and we could not have attracted such a wide range of public-minded supporters to join in this endeavour. We feel deeply that environmental goals and development goals must be part of a Complementary Agenda – we can serve one set of goals only if we also serve the other. We are proud that the Bujagali project advances that Complimentary Agenda.

“From the very beginnings of civilization, the use of water – intelligently, respectfully, and creatively – has been at the very center of human concerns. The Nile River itself has been a great source and sustainer of life for thousands of years. Today, we repeat and renew that ancient story once again as we lay this Foundation Stone – and thus signal the opening of a new era in African history.” —  Excerpts from a speech made by His Highness the Aga Khan on August 21, 2007

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CLICK ON PHOTO TO WATCH A SHORT VIDEO OF THE FOUNDATION CEREMONY

August 21, 2007: His Highness the Aga Khan and His Excellency President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, lay the foundation stone for the Bujagali Hydropower Project, Jinja. The US$ 770 million project is the country’s first private hydroelectric power project, and is expected to significantly lower the price of electricity in Uganda. The plant is also one of the largest independent power plants in sub-Saharan Africa. – Photo: AKDN/Gary Otte

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Bujagali related articles at external websites:

Radio Netherlands – Bujagali Dam keeps the lights on in Uganda
The Daily Monitor, Uganda – Bujagali to be commissioned officially today (October 8, 2012)

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Previous post: Remarkable Tales of Ismaili Women from Shimshal, a Remote Village in the Karakoram

Tales of Ismaili Women of Shimshal – a Remote Village in Pakistan by Pam Henson

“I don’t read or write but I am very interested in animal husbandry and I have always worked hard on the farm. It was my dream for my children to be educated so I worked hard and provided for their education…” — Guljon Bibi

Remarkable Tales of Ismaili Women from Shimshal, a Remote Village in the Karakoram

Please click for Women of Shimshal

This is a fascinating collection of autobiographical tales told by women from the Ismaili village of Shimshal, in the remote Karakoram mountains. On the eastern border of Pakistan, the women of Shimshal live peaceful lives of extreme hardship and good-humoured tolerance.

“Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet” – A Film Created and Produced by Alex Kronemer and Michael Wolfe

Originally aired on PBS to a word-wide audience exceeding 150 million people

“CANDID, THOUGHTFUL AND VISUALLY STUNNING” – Los Angeles Times

Prophet Muhammad (s.a.s) changed world history in 23 years and continues to shape and inspire the lives of more than 1.4 billion Muslims around the world.

Simerg is pleased to make available for its readers around the world a link to the film, Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet, that was originally aired on PBS to a world-wide audience exceeding 150 million people.  The internet age is a blessing of our time that, through outstanding movies such as this, we are able to learn more about the wonderful and noble qualities of  Prophet Muhammad. In his Presidential Address to the Seerat Conference in 1976, His Highness the Aga Khan had asked:

“In the face of this changing world, which was once a universe to us and is now no more than an overcrowded island, confronted with a fundamental challenge to our understanding of time, surrounded by a foreign fleet of cultural and ideological ships which have broken loose, I ask, ‘Do we have a clear, firm and precise understanding of what Muslim Society is to be in times to come?’ And if as I believe, the answer is uncertain, where else can we search then in the Holy Qur’an, and in the example of Allah’s last and final Prophet?”

 His Highness continued:

“The Holy Prophet’s life gives us every fundamental guideline that we require to resolve the problem as successfully as our human minds and intellects can visualise. His example of integrity, loyalty, honesty, generosity both of means and of time, his solicitude for the poor, the weak and the sick, his steadfastness in friendship, his humility in success, his magnanimity in victory, his simplicity, his wisdom in conceiving new solutions for problems which could not be solved by traditional methods, without affecting the fundamental concepts of Islam, surely all these are foundations which, correctly understood and sincerely interpreted, must enable us to conceive what should be a truly modern and dynamic Islamic Society in the years ahead.”

Some of these examples from the Prophet’s life come alive through this ground-breaking PBS film, which takes the viewers from the ancient Arabian sites where Prophet Muhammad’s story unfolded to the homes, mosques, and workplaces of some of America’s estimated seven million Muslims. The Los Angeles Times called the film “a candid, thoughtful, flowing, visually stunning film,” while The Catholic News Service commented that the Prophet’s biography offers viewers fresh insights into the spiritual foundations of Islam.

Simerg is grateful to Daniel Tutt of upf.tv for facilitating the showing of the film though this website. We strongly encourage all the viewers to watch the complete film, if not in one seating then by watching the timed segmented clips which will open at the bottom of the viewing window. We are sure you will enjoy this film. Please click:

Readers who wish to watch a preview of the film and other selected clips before viewing the full-length movie are invited to click http://www.muhammadfilm.tv or on the following image:

Please click for links to full length movie and excerpts

In Gratitude to Hasan-i-Sabbah by Jalaledin Ebrahim

“…[Hasan-i-Sabbah] is officially welcomed by representatives of the Imam because of his referral by the chief dai of Persia. There is no evidence of an official meeting with the Imam of the Time, but there is also no evidence that he does not receive a glimpse of the Imam. But even if that is not possible to substantiate, he certainly has the opportunity to make a pragmatic and sagacious assessment of the Fatimid political system…” Continue reading Thanking Ismaili Historical Figures: Hasan-i-Sabbah

Please click for article

The Siege of Timbuktu by Jocelyne Sambira

“…..The Islam that the scholars of Timbuktu taught the world was (and remains) a profoundly humanist tradition. On humble wooden boards…children learned the words that Muslims believe to be God’s verbatim speech, and with it a deep respect for Him, and His most noble creation, the children of Adam….” says Rudolph Ware in an excellent piece in the Huffington Post. But, as Ware notes, Timbuktu has for some months been under siege from a radical group calling itself  Ansar Dine (“Protector of the Faith”).

In our piece, with links to the Huffington Post and other articles on the subject, Jocelyne Sambira of AfricaRenewal explains what is going on in Northern Mali’s City of Saints…..”Using hoes, pick-axes and chisels, they [Ansar Dine] hammered away at the two earthen tombs until they were completely destroyed.” Read more….Timbuktu Under Siege.

Djinguereber mosque in Timbuktu. Members of the group Ansar Dine have destroyed some of the mosque’s mausoleums, along with other holy shines in the ancient northern city. Photo: Wikipedia.

Sufi Monuments in Konya and Blagaj, and a Bookshop in Paris by Gulshan Chunara

Rumi’s Tomb in Konya, a Dervish Monastery in Bosnia, and an Iconic Bookstore in Paris

Please click for Gulshan Chunara’s piece on Sufi Monuments and Shakespeare and Company

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Forthcoming:
Thank You Letter to Hasan bin Sabah by Jalaledin Ebrahim, USA

On Simerg’s Photo Blog: Mausoleums of Ismaili Pirs, Karim Master’s Rahe Rast, His Highness the Aga Khan, Alamut, Fatimid Glass, Iran and Jerusalem

Photoblog

Three gold quarter dinars of the Fatimid Imam-Caliph al-Hakim were among the Fatimid objects found in a shipwreck in Turkey. Please visit Simerg’s new photo blog. Click on image. Photo credit: Institute of Nautical Archaeology.

Click Photoblog or on the links shown below

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Forthcoming on Simerg.com

1. Sufi Shrines and a Bookshop in Paris by Gulshan Chunara, England

2. Thank You Letter to Hasan bin Sabah by Jalaledin Ebrahim, USA

3. Thank You Letter to al-Mu’ayyad fi’l-Din al-Shirazi by Jehangir Merchant, Canada

A Six Year Old Girl’s Tender Story from the Diamond Jubilee of His Highness the Aga Khan: “Mawla Fulfilled My Wish” by Sakerkhanu Gulamhusain

The auspicious day for the Didar of Hazrat Imam Sultan Mahomed Shah finally arrived, and words are inadequate to express the joy and thrill that I felt within myself. Students came in turns to present their wonderful recitals before the Jamat. I was dressed in my lovely white dress, and as my name was called out I went up on the stage and stood before the mike to present the poem that I had learnt and practiced so well. Just as I finished my recitation, there was a deafening ovation from the Jamat, accompanied with the resounding claps and shouts of “once more, once more”…..Read More

“Mawla Fulfilled My Wish”

Please click on image for “Mawla Fulfilled My Wish”

A Treasure Trove of Photo Essays from Around the World: A New Blog by Simerg

Simerg is pleased to announce the creation of a separate blog dedicated to photographs and photo essays. While many of the pieces may at first appear (or have appeared) on Simerg.com, an adapted version with a greater emphasis on the photo content will be created in the new sister blog http://simergphotoblog.wordpress.com/.

Click to visit the photoblog

The new blog is being launched with Muslim and Nevin Harji’s highly acclaimed piece about Jerusalem, Ali M Rajput’s unique photos of Alamut, photos of the discovery of Fatimid artefacts in an 11th century shipwreck as well as a photo essay about His Highness the Aga Khan and the Ismaili community. The new blog will be a treasure trove of  superb photos and photo essays from around the world, and will please photo enthusiasts everywhere. Please click on http://simergphotoblog.wordpress.com/ to visit the blog.