Remembering Jamatkhanas: 5 Palace Gate

SPECIAL SERIES: The Jamatkhana – A Place of Spiritual and Social Convergence

5 Palace Gate

Editor’s Note: For almost 3 decades, from the late 1950’s until 1985 when the first Ismaili Centre was officially opened by Britain’s then Prime Minister, The Right Honourable, The Baroness  Thatcher, 5 Palace Gate remained the most famous address for Ismailis visiting the United Kingdom. It gained more prominence in the early 1970’s after the large scale arrival of Ismailis owing to economic hardship in Tanzania and the forced expulsion of the Jamat, along with other Asians from Uganda. Every Ismaili who had lived in London as well as the new arrivals found comfort in this narrow 4 storey iconic building, which contained a Jamatkhana, institutional offices, recreational facilities, a library, classrooms etc. Ismaili Orbit, perhaps the first Ismaili magazine in the Western World, was published here and then later came Ilm  and Ismaili Forum. 5 Palace Gate epitomized efficient usage of space.

Please click on image for article. Centre photo: The complete block, 3 -15 Palace Gate, photographed in 1975 which includes the Jamatkhana at the near end. Photo: London Metropolitan Archives. © City of London.

Just yards away, as one came out of the building, one would cross over to the Kensington Gardens and walk all the way up to the Notting Hill Gate/Bayswater area for delicious Indian food. Stores like Barkers, C & A were minutes away on Kensington Hight Street. The Commonwealth Institute was about a mile away. A “32 flavours” (please note, not “31”) ice cream parlour opened in the late 1970’s about 1/2 a kilometre away, towards Gloucester Road Tube Station and then a small casino a couple of doors away.

Hundreds of stories and experiences can be told about 5 Palace Gate. One of these is expressed by Navyn Naran. She was then only eleven years old but what she says will trigger hundreds of other memories. Please share them with our readers with your feedback or a full-scale article for this special and unique Jamatkhana series that Simerg launched recently. Please click 5 Palace Gate.

A Note to All Our Readers: Please scroll down or click Home page for other recent posts and click What’s New for links to all articles published on this blog since March 2009.

Essays and Letters: Childhood Games by Mohezin Tejani

Essays and Letters

Please click for "Childhood Games." Image shown above is from cover page of Tejani's book "A Chameleon’s Tale."

In celebration of our Second Anniversary, Simerg announces a new section called Essays and Letters. This will be a venue through which we will seek to bring the best writings in fiction, nonfiction, art, film and literature written by Ismaili authors, both new and established in the literary community. Interesting pieces that reflect the diverse voices from the world-wide Ismaili community will be published. It is our hope that this niche will inspire the writer in each of us to make a contribution to this new section. Your contribution should be submitted to simerg@aol.com

We are delighted to launch Arts and Letters with Childhood Games byMohezin Tejani, a globetrotting Ismaili Muslim exiled from Idi Amin’s Uganda.

A Note to All Our Readers: Please scroll down or click Home page for other recent posts and click What’s New for links to all articles published on this blog since March 2009.

Chapter Five of Pir Nasir-i Khusraw’s Wajh-i Din: On the Gateway and Key to Paradise

By the generosity of the Imam of the time, we say that Paradise in truth is the Intellect, and the Gateway of paradise is the Prophet (peace and salutation be upon him) during his time, and his wasi, his rank, and the Imam of the time during his age. The Key to the gateway of paradise is the utterance of the phrase, La ilaha illa Allah, Muhammadan rasul Allah.

This statue of the Ismaili da’i and intellectual giant Pir Nasir Khusraw stands in his memory in Badakhshan. Please click for article.

 Pir Nasir-i Khusraw on the Gateway and Key to Paradise

A Note to All Our Readers: Please scroll down or click Home page for other recent posts and click What’s New for links to all articles published on this blog since March 2009.