By MANSOOR LADHA
I have always admired Ali Velshi, an award-winning journalist, host of “Velshi,” Chief Correspondent for MSNBC, and a weekly economics contributor to NPR’s “Here And Now.”
His impressive list of multiple coverage includes U.S. midterm and presidential elections, significant news stories around the globe, which included extensive reporting from Ukraine and across Central and Eastern Europe during the Russian invasion, the Syrian refugee crisis from Turkey and Jordan, the Iran Nuclear Deal in Tehran, the Greek debt crisis in Athens, and the funeral of Nelson Mandela in South Africa. In Minnesota, he was struck by a rubber bullet during the BLM protests.
I was intrigued to read his latest book, Small Acts of Courage: A Legacy of Endurance and the Fight for Democracy. The book chronicles the Velshi family’s association with Mahatma Gandhi, their fight against the beginnings of apartheid in South Africa, and their subsequent move to Kenya where they encountered new forms of discrimination. The narrative then shifts to their immigration to Canada, a country that welcomed them with warmth and acceptance. The book is a powerful exploration of the immigrant experience, resilience, and the fight for democracy. His father came to Toronto in the middle of winter and, as Ali says, “flying from the lush, temperate beauty of Kenya to the snowy, frozen tundra of the Great North.”
When asked why he didn’t turn back, his father replied: “Because the snow was freedom to me. The snow was liberty. It was a new life.”
Despite its bitterly cold weather, Canada welcomed immigrants like him with warmth and acceptance by opening its doors. Canada also provided ample opportunities to Ali’s father, Murad Velshi, who became the first South Asian elected to the Ontario Legislature.

Velshi says that although he was in a predominantly white, largely Protestant society,” he also had problems growing up, adding, “I had to deal with the nagging, persistent feeling of being different, of being an outsider.”
Velshi, an Ismaili Muslim, has a few pages dedicated to the community and their 49th Hereditary Imam, His Highness the Aga Khan, who is directly descended from Prophet Mohamed. He points out in his book that out of 1.6 billion Muslims worldwide, Ismailis number only about 12 million. Velshi argues that the community’s two most important characteristics are (1) its institutional hierarchy and (2) its attitude toward the modern, secular world. “Like the Roman Catholics, Ismailis are a top-down organization, with one important person calling the shots for millions of adherents around the globe.”
Velshi explains the Aga Khan’s advice to his followers on important matters such as promoting civil society, loyalty to countries of adoption, and maintaining their spiritual identity and religious faith. Because of such advice, the Ismaili diasporic communities have become talent-rich, high achievers, and professionals in the West.
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“Through the captivating, compelling story of his immigrant family’s courageous hundred-year plus journey to freedom across five countries and three continents, Ali Velshi distills to its essence the genius that is American democracy and sounds an alarm warning us of the existential threats facing it today. Velshi urges us to subscribe to the democratic process and exercise our muscle of citizenship, lest it atrophy; the growing cynicism over our national politics is a luxury Americans cannot afford at this moment when our democracy is teetering on a knife’s edge.” — J. Michael Luttig, former judge of the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
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As a journalist and author of four published books, I was excited to attend his book launch of Small Acts of Courage in Calgary, which had a packed audience. It was a gratifying event because some of his experiences resembled mine in Tanzania and later in Canada. Both of us had beginnings as student leaders in university and faced discrimination. My experiences are narrated in my book, Memoirs of a Muhindi: Fleeing East Africa for the West, published by the University of Regina Press. Along with my two other publications, the book has been featured on this website as part of its series on books by Ismaili authors.
In Small Acts of Courage, Velshi provides insight and experiences of a family of brown persons living in a black society in South Africa and Kenya and later in a white society in Canada. The book provides a valuable lesson to the first-generation Asians in the West who will see themselves in Velshi’s story, while the diasporic generations born outside East Africa will learn about their parents’ unsustainable situation in South and East Africa and their dispossession, displacement and resettlement in North America and Western Europe.
The book is a must-read for everyone. It is readily available at Chapters-Indigo stores across Canada and can be ordered online at the Indigo and Amazon websites. Other book formats are Kindle and Audio, thus making Ali Velshi’s book easily accessible to readers worldwide.
Daye posted: July 16, 2024.
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Mansoor Ladha is a Calgary-based journalist and author of Memoirs of a Muhindi: Fleeing East Africa for the West, Off the Cuff, and A Portrait in Pluralism: Aga Khan’s Shia Ismaili Muslims. He is currently writing a new book on the Aga Khan, which will be published this summer.














