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Why We Don't Need an Islamic Art Museum

(Especially not courtesy the Aga Khan and Stephen Harper)

by Sumayya Kassamali

The Aga Khan receives "honorary Canadian citizenship" from Stepher Harper (May 28, 2010)
The Aga Khan receives "honorary Canadian citizenship" from Stepher Harper (May 28, 2010)

On May 28, the Aga Khan, spiritual leader of the world's 15 million Ismaili Muslims, and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper were in Toronto to celebrate the foundation of North America's first Islamic Art museum. The grandiose project is part of a multi-million dollar development in the Don Mills and Eglinton area, set to include an Ismaili religious centre, the self-titled Aga Khan Museum, and vast gardens linking the two. The Museum will display Islamic art and artifacts said to date back up to 1400 years, primarily drawn from the Aga Khan’s private collection and ranging from miniatures to manuscripts to textiles.

Yet for all its palatable rhetoric around promoting diversity and cultural harmony, the Aga Khan Museum demands some closer scrutiny.  

To start with, the $300 million price tag on the privately funded project begs the immediate question: who is paying for this? A community notorious for its secrecy, Ismailis in Canada are among the richest citizens of the country, with famous names including former Conservative MP Rahim Jaffer and current CEO of Rogers Nadir Mohamed. In fact, a 2006 BC Business profile of the Ismaili community described it as almost “too good to be true”, listing BC’s richest Ismaili families including luxury hotel owners, mineral resource developers, real-estate moguls and more, many worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Ismailis are required to give 5 – 12% of their annual income to the Aga Khan, who is then said to allocate the funds to various non-profit ventures (concrete facts are hard to come by with the intense privacy restrictions – Ismaili centres are among the only Muslim places of worship in the world that are not open to outsiders).

Referred to as “His Highness” by global dignitaries, the Aga Khan IV is a billionaire tycoon who, alongside his status as a religious leader, is also the top breeder of thoroughbred horses in France, owns a bank in Pakistan, plantations in Kenya, and a chain of luxury hotels together with his private jet and massive walled estate in Chantilly, France – making his personal wealth estimated at over $15 billion. Publicly renown as a philanthropist, he individually oversees the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), one of the largest private development networks in the world. The AKDN employs over 70,000 paid staff and runs hospitals, universities, and similar public projects alongside private economic ventures claiming to promote development by “strengthening the role of the private sector” across the global south.

While there is no shortage of reasons to critique the globalized development industry that has seen many profit immensely off of poverty, it is worth pointing out that since 2001, the AKDN has focused much of its efforts in Afghanistan, where it currently operates as a primary partner of CIDA and USAID. Although framed as "aid" organizations, both CIDA and USAID have in fact been central to the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, enriching their own state corporations in the process (a full 44% of CIDA’s aid is tied to the purchase of Canadian goods and services), encouraging collaboration with the occupiers by conditionally distributing aid to those who assist the forces, and skewing public opinion in support for the war. Nor are CIDA and USAID the AKDN’s only international state partners – Israeli IsraAID has also proudly noted their close relationship in endeavors such as a 2005 joint health provider training in Kenya.

But it is not only the unnecessary extravagance, indirect corporate financing, and disturbing ties of the AKDN that should make one pause when it comes to the new museum. The opening of Canada’s first Islamic Art Museum is also happening in the context of significant state repression of the Muslim community in Canada and a global onslaught of Islamophobic wars, governments, and popular movements. Canada has been no stranger to this, evident in the legitimization of the invasion of Afghanistan by claiming the need to “save” oppressed Afghani women; the controversies around Shari’a Law in Ontario; Herouxville and the Reasonable Accommodation debates in Quebec; the five Muslim security certificate detainees, all but one now released (on strict conditions of house arrest) after years of later-deemed unconstitutional detention; the refusal to bring home Omar Khadr, Guantanamo Bay's youngest prisoner and only Western citizen despite global calls to do so; the ongoing trials of the Toronto 18, charged with allegations of terrorism despite a paucity of publicized evidence and the revelation of an RCMP informant heavily compensated to incite the young men involved; and the government’s explicit instruction to Syria and Egypt to torture numerous Muslim Canadians, of which Maher Arar is the most famous. And these are just the better-known examples.

Yet, Stephen Harper would like us to know that he does not hate Muslims and is committed to peace and diversity – after all, both he and notorious Canadian Immigration Minister Jason Kenney were present to launch the new museum and heap praise upon the Aga Khan and the initiative. Why the seeming disconnect?

Mahmood Mamdani’s 2004 book Good Muslim, Bad Muslim opens by presenting a thesis: in contemporary political discourse, there is a clear division between the “good” Muslims – the peace-loving, open-minded, well-educated, secular-leaning, patriotic citizens – and the “bad” – the dogmatic, conservative, sexist, homophobic, likely-violent haters of the West and democracy (who often also happen to be non-citizens, poor, and bearded or veiled). With the elaborate Aga Khan Museum set to be located in an area with one of the highest proportions of lower-income Muslims in Canada, serving more to gentrify the neighbourhood than to support the resident community, it is thus unsurprising that Toronto Star reporter Christopher Hume says of the project, “Unlike most such religious/culture centres that have appeared recently in these parts, this one looks to the future, not the past”. His division of “past” and “future” is especially telling, as the bad Muslims are always stuck somewhere behind, backwards and obstinately refusing to get with the civilized times.

It is no great surprise then that the Canadian government is so ready to support the Aga Khan’s latest project. As noted above, the Canadian Ismaili community is often upheld as an example for immigrant integration and success: “In the last three decades they’ve built some of B.C.’s biggest companies, raised stacks of cash for good causes and quietly joined the golf and country club set”, writes BC Business. In September 2009, the Ismaili Centre in Burnaby even partnered with VANOC to host an “Olympic Truce Dialogue” led by the Canadian Governor General. While the 75,000 strong Canadian Ismaili community is in actuality diverse in socioeconomic status and ethnicity, its public face is dominated by an elite all too willing to position themselves as model minorities. Such are the good Muslims – as Hume notes about those who pushed to host the project in Toronto, these are "immigrants" who do not only take from Canada, but can give a museum back (reminding readers that the brown-skinned still remain perpetual outsiders, despite even this level of dedication to the state).

But what exactly will this museum bring us? An appreciation of a once-glorious Islamic past; of a civilization now frozen in monuments? It might be worth reminding ourselves of the central role of Canadian museums in the ongoing colonization of indigenous communities, taking traditions that have been systematically attacked for generations to then be displayed in exhibitions and violently erased into history. “Look!”, these museums can claim. “There were once totem poles, and we settlers have preserved them so well!” 

Just as Canadian history museums do not address the realities of colonization, an Islamic Art museum will not address Islamophobia. It will not bring Omar Khadr back from Guantanamo Bay, it will not shift the unwaveringly pro-Israel stance of the Conservative government, and it will not change the systemic, legislated racism that permeates Canada at all levels.

As for those of us whose Muslim communities are on the other side of this celebratory moment – those whose mosques are vandalized, whose religious scholars are regularly interrogated by state officials, whose youth are infiltrated by informants, whose charities are barred from operating – we don’t need a multi-million dollar museum. We need an end to Canadian support for war and occupation, an end to the policing of our communities, an end to surveillance and complicity in torture, an end to anti-Muslim legislation. And to Stephen Harper and the Aga Khan: we reject your glorification of a state that does not exist for our protection, and your pride in the close cooperation between your two institutions of power. The tradition of Islam is one of struggle, with submission only to God – and our struggles against what you represent are far too real to ever be placated by ancient artifacts.

 


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sumayya (Sumayya Kassamali)
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Comments

Need for Immigration reforms a must

Canadians recognize, the threat of terrorism and a need for immigration reform which is much needed though opposed by some special interest groups, while many Asylum seekers end up to be productive contributors, There is a concern Canada's welfare system itself could be jeopardized, There is a huge back log of applicants waiting to get into Canada.

A lot has been made about about Canadian Racism and Racist laws by the author, I would like people to address the the immigration law that discriminates in violation of Charter rights, based on color or race, Now there may be criticism of extra ordinary measures taken against terrorism that looks at Muslims suspiciously, I recall seeing an interview on CBC given by Agakhan talking about terrorism and how it is wrong to paint all Muslims with Bin Ladin brush, honestly the author and her friends are barking up the wrong tree when it comes to Agakhan and Ismaili

The Author presents a collection of articles with a central theme Ismailis prefer to maintain a level of privacy,And all media was barred from their spiritual gathering in Vancouver, and conveniently ignores that the Agakhan has given lots of interviews and he has been accessible to the Media, in country that recognizes the separation of Church and religion, It is disappointing to see an attempt to continually to disparage the Ismaili community and faith by the author and her friends, There are really good people and their are bad people and opportunist attack on Agakhan and Canada is what the article reads like from lower level of consciousness and a hateful person

Dinesh

Ummm...Uh oh

From your name, you are obviously a muslim ... so what, are you jealous?

Maybe if it was people like you who stopped writing articles like this and opened their eyes to greeting Islam openly in forms with everyone, we wouldn't have war and ignorant citizens like you around.

Anyways, write as much hate as you want, the museum's still going up, and will be as beautiful as ever. And I truly hope that everyone, muslim and non muslim, will be brought together in any capacity. Because I'm tired of war and I'm tired of stubborn, naive, and ignorant people. 

There's no need to hate, and writing this article in my eyes makes you just as much a follower of someone like Osama Bin Laden, you shouldn't hate anyone. Jews, Christians, Muslims, whoever. Just stop hating, it's immature and just unnecessary.

 

GROW UP   

 

antiracist racism

The author should have been more tactful before publishing this article. She could have gotten her point across without inadvertently and naively picking on the Ismaili community (the tone and rhetoric of the piece make this clear enough.) She sounds a bit like Celine rambling on about the racial inferiority jews. I think Harper is an idiot, and I would never dance with that dunce, but come on. A museum with miniatures and Islamic art. Evolutionary movement is more productive than the 'revolutionary' tactics (if they can be called that) of left winged, university educated, Djarum smoking Muslims. What if the community center that is opened creates a space for radical left-winged Muslims like yourself? Maybe you could try to work in the community centre? If you want to lead people, or do productive work in our communities, you have to come up with a more creative solution than "I'm an anticapitalist." I understand the Mamdani argument, but this piece does not convince. We need to come together as Canadian Muslims, not create these stupid separate camps....that's precisely what Harper wants.

 

A fellow Muslim

 I see my earlier comment is

 I see my earlier comment is no longer here but to the author: do you see how much support you are getting for your article? NONE!

mr richardson

please get your underwear out of a knot. your previous comment is above. if you don't like what you read here there are plenty of wonderful alternatives that will likely please you, like the national post and macleans magazine.

Good Luck

Dawn Paley,

As a contributing editor  you probably recognize there is a tactical side to social activism than simply being rude.I will take my $50.00 donation elsewhere, I am on the left of the left who has fought for the rights of Farm workers of B.C in the 70's and actively engaged in human rights debate. I was insulted by the article. I have heros for social activism like Ghandhi, Martin Luther King, Rosa parks. Without  vision and sound editorial leadership, how do you expect people to get on your side, with such attitude.

I wish media coop success as alternative media,  it is unfortunate a community that real cares about just society with a record of humanitarian work promoting peaceful co-existense is aleinated by unfair criticism.

Good Luck

1. Tycoons eh? It's funny how

1. Tycoons eh? It's funny how the fruit of peoples hard work is suddenly called to question on such an issue of no relevance. So what if there are wealthy people in the community those are businesses that have been brought from the ground to where they are now. Personally I live just above the line of poverty according to Canadian standards and am a student too. I worked my way from a much worse position. 2. The community is for a large part self supporting as the money from the annual income goes back to the community for mosque upkeep, hall rentals for make-shift mosques, and community support. 3. Get your facts straight, Ismaili Centres including the Centre for pluralism and the Delegation building in Ottawa, are open to the public, except during prayer and religious ceremonies (I believe that sacred rites are not for public sight-seeing and should be kept for people that understand them). 4. For God's sake, the Aga Khan's personal life and his spiritual life are 2 different matters just like a person's personal and work and spiritual life are all seperate, Ismaili's have only and only a spiritual bond with their leader. 5. The schools, universities, parks amongst other development projects in 3rd world countries are the work of Aga Khan Development Network. The Aga Khan Development network holds share in other projects such as telecommunications, airlines, hotel industry, media in the name of development and job creation. The support that has been given, whether social, economic or political has been of great important to those contries where they exist. You are most welcome to contact those projects to find out. For more information on the AKDN see www.akdn.org. Instead of looking at what role AKDN's partners have played, try digging up the role of the AKDN itself in those affected areas you mention and look at the impact of the services they provide. Don't forget FOCUS, Aga Khan Foundation's work in Central Asia and the rural support programs as well as the Mountain people's support programs. Look at the University of Central Asia as well as the Aga Khan University and Aga Khan Education Services that has done nothing short of promote diverse education and not discrimate on race or gender. What about the Ismaili community's contribution to poverty stricken areas on Africa through the North American wide Partnership Walk? You seem to be focusing so much on it's ties that you are forgetting to look at it's work. Remember back to the days of IDI AMIN and look up how thousands of Asians regardless of race or gender or religion where saved thanks in part to efforts of the Aga Khan. Opening a public space such as this, I think creates a sense of unity not only within the muslim community but those that use the space. Personally, I know people who have seen Islam in a very negative light, as well as muslims who have been tormented in the days following 9/11 but this is a sign of peace and community that regardless of color it belongs to Canada. Viewing the museum as a greater chance for more of the Western world to learn about and appreciate Islam. If anything that should count for a lot in itself. There were no homes in the area that were destroyed or pulled down in the process either. Even though the conclusion of the article raises some neat points, it begs the question, with such smart people like the author out there, why on Earth are we waiting for our governments and leaders to act? All we do is criticize their efforts when on the other hand it is we the people of Canada and the world who should be making a bigger effort to do our part in promoting tolerance and justice and unity. Intelligent people like the article's author and the commenters should have already gotten cracking on this say... i don't know... yesterday? By going to one or two sources that are uneducated about the happenings or wish not to divulge information that they do not understand is again a gross generalization. That was Douglas Todd's thoughts, Sumayya, what are yours? This is not to glorify the Aga Khan or his institutions, it is simply to encourage people to go out and educate themselves on the fact that, like Princess Diana and Mother Teresa, there are people doing good. No one ever criticized Princess D. Why? She had millions? She did work in communities? She wore fancy dresses costing thousands? These are not hard earned pounds but part of tax payers money. With all due respect, I don't see the monarch running a global institution of proven results yet Princess D was never scrutinized, only worshipped?! Why? Sumayya you have raised some great points towards the end of the article. Food for thought but going back to the purpose of the museum, I don't think this applies. That conclusion should be directed at someone more deserving like the 3 levels of government in Canada where corruption and poverty are pushed to the back burner and that yet exist in mind blowing proportions. It applies more for instance to the use of TAX PAYERS money being used to create an artificial lake and park at the Direct Energy Centre or the closures of businesses for the G8/G20 summits that are hindering a city and practically grinding it slowly to a halt in the name of creating a name for Canada! or the short change on Transit in Toronto or First Nations people's rights are all being ignored. That is where your aguement is valid not to an institution whose purpose will be recalled and kept in memory every time it is mentioned as the start of building bridges between communities in the World especially the western world. Look closely into the work of the AKDN once more. COntact the agencies/institutions themselves and get real answers. I wish to end my argument applauding you Sumayya on your effort to exercise free speech and in the process stirring up discussion of this kind. It's definitely great to see this kind of forum.

Sumayya Kassamali

Dear Sumayya, Excuse me but i can see where your Hatred and bias against the Aga Khan and the Ismailis is coming from.....I have been informed by a member of the Shia Ithna Asheri community who happens to be my friend and colleague. He says he personally knows your family. It is a worst kept secret of the Hatred that the Ithna Asheri community carries for the ismailis vis a vis the Zanzibar episode. Tell me i am wrong.

 Did anyone question where the money came from (probably The islamic republic of IRAN) whe the Ithna Asheris built the multipurpose arena in North Toronto? Why is it that you have such disdain against the Ismailis? I happen to know, and so should your readers. You have stooped to a new low in journalism. It is a pity that you have successfully carried out into the new generation  the hatred so enshrined in your community against the ismailis and Aga Khan in particular.

Sumayya Kassamali

Dear Sumayya, Excuse me but i can see where your Hatred and bias against the Aga Khan and the Ismailis is coming from.....I have been informed by a member of the Shia Ithna Asheri community who happens to be my friend and colleague. He says he personally knows your family. It is a worst kept secret of the Hatred that the Ithna Asheri community carries for the ismailis vis a vis the Zanzibar episode. Tell me i am wrong.

 Did anyone question where the money came from (probably The islamic republic of IRAN) whe the Ithna Asheris built the multipurpose arena in North Toronto? Why is it that you have such disdain against the Ismailis? I happen to know, and so should your readers. You have stooped to a new low in journalism. It is a pity that you have successfully carried out into the new generation  the hatred so enshrined in your community against the ismailis and Aga Khan in particular.

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