Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji’un
“Surely we belong to God, and to Him we return” — Holy Qur’an, 2:156
“Life is a great and noble calling, not a mean and grovelling thing to be shuffled through as best as we can but a lofty and exalted destiny.” — Mawlana Sultan Mahomed Shah, His Highness the Aga Khan III (1877-1957), 48th Ismaili Imam.
I have learned with deep sadness that Mukhi Vazir Nurdin Gulamhussein Jivraj, originally of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, has passed away in London, UK, at the age of 92.
My memories of the Mukhi (congregation leader in Ismaili Jamatkhana) span many years. They are intertwined with the shared experiences of the UK Ismaili Muslim Jamat (community), particularly during the historic seven-day visit to London by Mawlana Hazar Imam, His Highness the Aga Khan, from September 1 to 7, 1979. This visit, which also saw the foundation laying ceremony of the Ismaili Centre London, a significant event presided over by Lord Soames in the presence of His Highness, holds a special place in our hearts.

Mukhi Nurdin Jivraj was assisted by Kamadia Nizar Dhanani, a name I had known from Dar es Salaam as a cricket player with my dad, Jehangir, on the Young Ismailis team. Our shared love for cricket was a bond that connected us. This bond was further strengthened as Kamadia Nizar played for the Aga Khan Cricket Club in London in the significant 20-20 knockout matches in 1975-76 and became the Kamadia of the London Jamatkhana.
This personal tribute to the late Mukhi Nurdin Jivraj is based on one singularly important incident during the final mulaqat (meeting) on Friday, September 7, 1979, the last day of Mawlana Hazar Imam’s visit to the UK at London’s Olympia Hall. My late mum, Mrs. Merchant (d. January 21, 2021), was on stage duty to recite the Salawat. She had an excellent memory and articulated the incident when we returned home later that evening.
As on previous days, the eagerly awaited Mawlana Hazar Imam’s daily mulaqat with the Jamat commenced with the recitation of Ginan (hymn) verses by our fellow Jamati members who were selected for the recitations by the Ismailia Association judges (the Ismailia Association is now known as the Ismaili Tariqah and Religious Education Board, ITREB).
On that particular final day, Friday, September 7, Hazar Imam began his mulaqat in the morning by performing religious ceremonies and delivering a Farman (guidance or edict) to the Jamat. A Ginan was recited during the morning mulaqat, and everyone designated for the week’s recitations had had their turn.
During the afternoon session, Hazar Imam gave a mulaqat to the volunteers in an adjoining room. He returned to the main hall to bid farewell and bless the Jamat. Of course, everyone expected him to give his final Farman to the Jamat before he left.
However, before doing so, once seated on the stage, Mawlana Hazar Imam turned to Mukhi Jivraj. He unexpectedly requested: “I want Ginan.”
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Unprepared, the Mukhi was startled and didn’t know what to say. He turned to my mum, who was on the stage a few feet away, and said, “Alwaeza, Ginan.” My mum had heard Mawlana Hazar Imam’s request to the Mukhi. She reacted immediately to Mukhi’s call, walking to the front of the stage and asking a youth — Salim Champsi — seated a few metres away to recite a Ginan. Of course, my mum had known him as a good reciter, only that he had not been selected to recite a Ginan during the Jamati mulaqats. He confidently came onto the stage and beautifully recited verses from the iconic and inspiring Ginan Satgur sathe goṭhadi kije, a piece that resonates deeply with the Ismaili community (listen to the Ginan sung by the late Alwaez Shamshudin Bandali Haji HERE. You can hear the same Ginan recited by multiple singers at Ginan Central, a truly informative and educational website).
The recitation was so powerful that it left me with goosebumps and tears in my eyes throughout. The impact of those words in the Ginan was profound. When I met the reciter, Salim Champsi, some 20 years later at the Bayview Jamatkhana in Toronto, he recalled that extraordinary and joyous day and expressed his heartfelt gratitude, saying he would never forget my mum for picking him out of the crowd.
Today, befittingly, I remember this unique incident, which very few people outside my family would know, as my tribute to Mukhi Jivraj with his passing 45 years later. Reflecting on that moment, I am reminded about the importance Mawlana Hazar Imam attaches to our hundreds of years-old traditions. During an evening of Ginan recitation or concert (mehfil) held in Karachi in December 1964, he said:
“I would be surprised if ever such a big Mehfil-e-Ginan has ever been held…many times I have recommended to my spiritual children that they should remember Ginans, that they should understand the meanings of these Ginans and they should carry these meanings in their hearts. It is most important that my spiritual children…hold to this tradition which is so special, so unique and so important to my Jamat…I have been deeply happy tonight, deeply happy because I have seen the happiness in the hearts of my Jamat and this is what makes Imam happy” — Mawlana Hazar Imam, Karachi, December 16, 1964, published by the Ismailia Association for Pakistan.
Indeed, the recitation of the Ginan on September 7, 1979, filled the hearts of thousands with unbounded spiritual happiness and joy.
Of course, the entire UK Jamat will remember the late Mukhi Nurdin Jivraj. I earnestly hope someone will write a detailed tribute to him, highlighting his services to the Jamat and his and his family’s unwavering devotion to the Imam-of-the-Time over the past several decades.
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I fondly remember Mukhi Jivraj for the above incident, which gave the Jamat an excellent and inspiring conclusion to Mawlana Hazar Imam’s and Begum Salimah’s visit to the UK Jamat. The event, as narrated by my mum, was not just inspiring, but truly extraordinary. I can never forget that particular inspirational and happy day in my life.
We express our sincerest condolences to Mukhi Nurdin Jivraj’s family, friends and the Jamats he led and served for years. We pray that his soul may rest in eternal peace. Ameen.
Date posted: January 18, 2025.
Last updated: January 25, 2025 (new photo added).
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