AKU Convocation 2013

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AKU Convocation 2013

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The Aga Khan Announces the Aga Khan University’s Expansion into Liberal Arts At a Historic Convocation

Karachi, Thursday, 19th December, 2013 - His Highness the Aga Khan, founder and Chancellor of the Aga Khan University, today outlined an ambitious global vision for the University’s expansion into liberal arts and announced the creation of seven new graduate schools across two continents that will work in areas of particular relevance to developing societies.

Addressing the University’s 2013 convocation ceremony, which marked 30 years since the school was granted its charter in Pakistan, the Aga Khan praised the AKU’s record of success and excellence in the fields of healthcare and education as well as its geographic expansion to East Africa but he also stressed the growing importance of liberal arts in meeting the challenges of the future.

“The Liberal Arts, I believe, can provide an ideal context for fostering inter-disciplinary learning, nurturing critical thinking, inculcating ethical values, and helping students to learn how to go on learning about our ever-evolving universe,” he said.

The Aga Khan said the university’s new liberal arts focus will help it shape new leaders for the future in a world where forces of civil society will play an increasingly important role especially in often volatile environments in the developing world.

“In places where government has been ineffective, or in post-conflict situations, civil society has demonstrated its potential value for maintaining, and even enhancing, the quality of human life,” he said, noting that civil society requires leaders who possess not only well-honed specialized skills, but also a welcoming attitude to a broad array of disciplines and outlooks. “This is why we believe that an investment in Liberal Arts education is also an investment in strengthening civil society,” he emphasised.

The ceremony was also attended by His Excellency Dr Ishrat Ul Ebad Khan, Governor of Pakistan’s southern Sindh Province and the province’s Chief Minister, Syed Qaim Ali Shah. Princess Zahra Aga Khan, the Aga Khan’s daughter, and a member of the University’s Board of Trustees was also present.

Speaking at the occasion, the Governor paid tribute to the Aga Khan for his inspiring leadership, strategic vision and his profound commitment to humanity. “His contributions in our country and beyond to education and development to improving the human condition and above all to the ideals of excellence and the values of public service, social responsibility and human compassion, are for us to follow and emulate,” he said. In his speech, AKU President Mr Firoz Rasul, who has led the school’s expansion over the past 8 years, urged the graduates to be the leaders of change their society so desperately needs: “At the core of leadership lies a restless desire to accomplish that which has never been done before, and the willing assumption of responsibility for the success of others. Today, there is one other trait that a leader must possess: the conviction that the pursuit of knowledge is key to progress,” he said.

“Regrettably, in the Muslim world, this conviction has seemed less important or prominent in recent decades. It was not always the case,” he added.

In his address, the Aga Khan emphasized that throughout history, success in the Muslim world has always been associated with pursuit of knowledge and education. “Whenever and wherever it may have been, in the Middle East, or South, or Central Asia, or Northern Africa, the most brilliant periods in Islamic history were marked by an expansive quest for intellectual excellence,” he said.

A total of 367 students were officially awarded degrees during the ceremony today (Thursday), including graduands from the School of Nursing and Midwifery, the Medical College the Institute for Educational Development and the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisation in the United Kingdom.

The occasion marked a number of other key milestones, including three decades since the graduation of the first class of the School of Nursing, the 25th anniversary of the first graduating class of the Medical College, the 20th anniversary of AKU’s Institute for Educational Development, and the 10th anniversary of the University’s Examination Board.

The historic convocation ceremony drew over 4,000 guests – one of the largest convocation gatherings in recent times. The participants included the Board of Trustees, faculty, students and supporters of the University from around the world.

The Convocation also saw four highly respected members of the University honoured for their achievements and contribution to the success of the institution.

The Aga Khan used the opportunity to show his appreciation to the numerous donors while he inaugurated new facilities on the Karachi campus including the Aamir Kanji Gardens and the Jenabai Hussainali Shariff Building. He also toured the new wing of the Labour and Delivery Ward of the Aziz Valimohammed building and visited the construction site for the Centre of Innovation in Medical Education.
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Speech by His Highness the Aga Khan at the Aga Khan University Convocation Karachi

19 December 2013

His Excellency, Dr Ishrat Ul Ebad Khan, the Governor of Sindh;
His Excellency, Qaim Ali Shah, the Chief Minister of Sindh;
Acting Chairman, Dr Robert Buchanan and Members of the Board of Trustees;
President Firoz Rasul;
Provost, Deans, Faculty and Staff of the University;
Members of the Diplomatic Corps;
Members of the National and Provincial Assemblies;
Parents, supporters and distinguished guests;
and Graduands:

As Salaam–o-Alaikum

It is truly a great pleasure for me to celebrate this milestone moment with all of you today. It is a significant time for our University and for this country.

As Chancellor, I am delighted, first of all, to extend my warmest congratulations to our graduands and to your families. Bravo! We wish you enormous success in your future careers, knowing that your success will be a mark of our success.

I earnestly hope, however, that you will not think of this convocation as a farewell ceremony. We look forward, rather, to your continuing participation in University life. Perhaps, like many graduates, you may become members of our faculty or senior staff as time goes by, or participants in continuing education programmes or alumni groups, or sponsors of special programmes, including scholarships for students of promising ability but scarce material resources.

As graduands you will be joining an illustrious family of earlier graduates. Many of our alumni are here today and I am pleased to extend to them, as well, my heartfelt greetings. When you first came as students to AKU, you did not know us and we did not know you, and yet we came to have great faith in one another. And you have fully justified that faith, using your education for good and great purposes.

The academic heart of the University, of course, is our Faculty, and I know I speak for all of you in paying special tribute to them today. The exemplary devotion of our Faculty, both to their students and to their disciplines, is the bedrock on which our University is built.

Another constituency that I am proud to salute today are the donors who have shared the goals of this young institution, and have assisted it so much in their accomplishment. University success stories down through history, in the Islamic world and the West, have depended, inevitably, on a variety of external resources, and we are indebted to those who have provided such resources for AKU. Those resources, let me add, include not only material gifts, but also the great gifts of time and knowledge that so many contribute to our progress.

The University’s Management, of course, also deserves special thanks, as it works daily to coordinate our energies and sustain our functioning, not only here in Karachi, but, uniquely, on multiple international campuses.

Finally, let me mention the immense good fortune we have enjoyed through the work of our distinguished Trustees. From the start, they have been leaders of exceptional competence and dedication, bringing to us the fruit of their distinctive personal experiences, as well their wise global perspectives. Each of our trustees over the past thirty years has left a lasting imprint on the University.

All of you from these and other constituencies have provided the energies and the talents, the dreams and the discipline, that drive this institution forward. And, as we go forward, we will take continuing strength from one another.

At the same time, on a day like this, we can also take renewed strength from our past, and from a great legacy of Islamic accomplishment in pursuing educational excellence.

That legacy has long been an inspiration to me, even from the time when I succeeded my grandfather as Imam in 1957, when I was a University student at Harvard. That’s some time ago!

My grandfather, Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah Aga Khan, was deeply aware of Islam’s rich intellectual heritage. Of equal significance, he was also convinced of the enormous importance of higher education for the future of the Ummah around the world.

He had engaged personally in developing educational opportunities for Muslims in pre-partition India – and was largely responsible for creating Aligarh University. He saw that effort as fulfilling a tradition going back one thousand years, to the role of his predecessors, the Fatimids, in founding the Azhar University and the Dar ul-Ilm in Cairo, known through the ages as the “House of Knowledge.”

He knew as well about other great Muslim institutions of scholarship and culture which flourished over many centuries, serving the whole of the Ummah and much of the known world, engaging the most advanced thinking from many cultures, ethnic groups and faith communities.

It was true of the Fatimids 1,000 years ago and of the Abbasids in Baghdad even earlier. It was true of the Mughal Emperor Akbar in the 16th century as well as the Ottoman Sultans, including Mehmed the Conqueror and Sulayman the Magnificent. And there were many others; the Safavid ruler Shah Abbasin Sifahan in Iran, and the great Timurid Sultan, Ulugh Beg, who built the world’s greatest observatory in Samarkand. You have just heard about some of the great intellects who flourished under these auspices.

Whenever and wherever it may have been, in the Middle East, or South, or Central Asia, or Northern Africa, the most brilliant periods in Islamic history were marked by an expansive quest for intellectual excellence.

It was this tradition that I inherited from my grandfather – and it was not a static tradition, but one that was built around the power of new knowledge and the great adventure of learning how to go on learning.

Now, of course, we also know that institutions of higher learning are very costly. We know, too, that as the industrialised world grew economically, and as the Ottoman empire faded, prominent centres of knowledge emerged most rapidly in the West. Meanwhile, universities in the Muslim world, with some exceptions, generally tended to tread water.

It was this situation that confronted us as we began to plan AKU. We had high hopes, but, to be candid, we also felt some trepidation. Was higher education still a central pillar around which to build the quest for human development? Were the costs justifiable when compared to other priorities? If we went forward, could we find appropriate allies, including a distinguished faculty? Would graduates emigrate to developed societies - rather than staying to serve their home communities?

The fundamental question, in sum, was whether a new university in the developing world, in this day and age, could achieve sufficient levels of excellence - as measured by global standards - to bring genuine value to those we were committed to serve.

We felt that we answered these questions successfully, but preliminarily if not conclusively, when we began this great adventure. And I think we can fairly say that the University has performed well when measured against our original goals.

Simply in quantitative terms, AKU expanded over the years into eight different countries, opening unique opportunities for combined study in Asia and in Africa. We created two degree or diploma programmes in the 1980’s, two more in the 1990’s, and another 21 programmes since the year 2000, reflecting expanding arcs of knowledge. These programmes have now graduated over ten thousand students.

But this growth in numbers would mean little, in fact it would have been impossible, without an uncompromising commitment to quality.

Happily, as we heard earlier, the quality of AKU’s performance has been widely affirmed, by the Joint Commission, by the World Health Organization, and by governmental and educational bodies in Pakistan and elsewhere. We are proud, too, that our graduates are consistently judged to be among the best when they take licensing exams or apply to other leading institutions, or assume growing career responsibilities.

A key ingredient in this story has been our open-access philosophy, enabling us to enrol students, on merit, from a vast array of backgrounds; some 70 percent of current students receive some form of financial support. And another critical standard, of course, has been AKU’s resolute commitment to social relevance, to addressing real problems and improving the quality of daily life.

For all of these reasons we can say that our recent past, like our distant past, has been one of proud accomplishment. And it is upon these accomplishments that we now seek to build the University’s future.

As we do so, we are sharply aware that the pace of change is accelerating, that our global neighbourhood is shrinking, and that the best prediction about the future is that it is highly unpredictable.

In such a world, creativity and flexibility will be essential to our success.

Our founding blueprint for AKU embraced this understanding and an evolving development process. It called for concentrating, in AKU’s first years, in the fields of healthcare and education, responding to the most pressing national and regional needs. But it also anticipated the University’s expansion into new geographic areas and into new fields of knowledge. In fulfilling that vision AKU has become a multi-campus university, indeed a multi-continental one, launching new programmes in Kenya, in Tanzania and Uganda, countries with significant Muslim populations.

In addition, the Trustees have also embraced a second great challenge - the challenge of becoming a distinguished liberal arts university.

We are planning now to build new undergraduate Faculties of Arts and Sciences, one in Karachi and one in Arusha in Tanzania. We plan to achieve this goal progressively as circumstances and resources allow. Yes, it will be a time-consuming exercise, but our planning has been advancing very quickly indeed.

Again, developing a liberal arts capacity will not only fulfil AKU’s founding vision, but it will also follow in the tradition of the great Islamic Universities of past centuries, and their effort to expand, and to integrate a wide array of knowledge. At that time, of course comprehending the full expanse of knowledge was seen as an achievable goal; today, the explosion of knowledge seems overwhelming. But the knowledge explosion is precisely what makes a liberal arts platform even more valuable. The liberal arts, I believe, can provide an ideal context for fostering inter-disciplinary learning, nurturing critical thinking, inculcating ethical values, and helping students to learn how to go on learning about our ever-evolving universe.

A liberal arts orientation will also help prepare students for leadership in a world where the forces of civil society will play an increasingly pivotal role.

By civil society I mean a complex array of organisations that operate on a private, voluntary basis, but are driven by public motivations. They include institutions dedicated to culture, health, education, and the environment; they embrace commercial, labour, professional, scientific and ethnic associations, as well as institutions of religion and the media. We have seen the growing role of civil society in many places - in the industrialised West, in the developing societies of Africa, and through the Islamic world as well, from Egypt and Tunisia to Iran and Bangladesh.

In places where government has been ineffective, or in post-conflict situations, civil society has demonstrated its potential value for maintaining, and even enhancing, the quality of human life. But civil society requires leaders who possess not only well-honed specialised skills, but also a welcoming attitude to a broad array of disciplines and outlooks.

This is why we believe that an investment in liberal arts education is also an investment in strengthening civil society. And this is also true of another, complementary investment we will be making at AKU – the creation of seven new graduate professional schools.

These schools will work in fields of particular relevance to developing societies. Through their degree programmes, through their research and through continuing education, they will also develop able and ethical leaders who can strengthen the role of civil society among the people we seek to serve.

To guide our planning for these schools, we have set up special Thinking Groups in each of these fields, drawing on global expertise and best-practice experience. Our planning has been deeply enriched by their remarkable analyses.

These new graduate schools are exciting.

Our new School of Media and Communications is already building capacity in Nairobi to help lift the quality of media industries in the developing world, engaging with new technologies and with appropriately educated proprietors, managers, and practitioners.

The School of Leadership and Management will develop the capacity of its students to guide business organisations, but also social enterprises and civil society institutions amid the complex challenges that face developing countries.

The Leisure and Tourism programme, meanwhile, will focus on the broad tourism value- chain, from public policy to infrastructure to cultural assets, while helping to fill an important research gap in this critical field.

The School of Architecture and Human Settlements, on the other hand, will build enhanced design professionalism, emphasising functionality and cultural sensitivity, in urban and rural environments, recognising the profound impact of the built environment on the quality of life.

The School of Government, Public Policy and Civil Society will prepare and empower professionals to formulate and implement public policies in developing societies, while our new School of Law will focus on subjects such as constitutional devolution, international law, dispute resolution, intellectual and real property, and the management of capital markets.

Finally, a programme in Economic Growth and Development will respond to the particular needs of developing economies, including fields such as agriculture and horticulture, tourism and leisure, the extractive industries, and digital arts and services.

We intend that each of these schools should work closely with our existing faculties, in nursing, medicine and education, while coordinating effectively with our new Faculties of Arts and Sciences, and indeed with one another, sharing perspectives and inter-disciplinary opportunities.

Meanwhile, we also expect to continue our geographic expansion and to build new partnerships with universities in the West, in the East and the Global South.

This is an outline then of what AKU may look like thirty years from now. These will seem to be ambitious goals – some may say they are too ambitious. But I disagree. Our goals were ambitious, after all, back in 1983. And yet, if we could have glimpsed into the future then – if we could have forecast what this day would look like – I think we would have been very happy with the way the story has unfolded.

And so it is that we see ourselves today in the context of a rich historical tradition, and a recent past filled with genuine achievement. For that, I want to express again, to all of you, the deep sense of joy and gratitude that I feel as I join you for this celebration, and as we look together to our challenging, promising future.

Thank you.

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Speech by President Firoz Rasul at AKU Convocation

19 December 2013


Please also see: Press Release, Speech by His Highness the Aga Khan

His Excellency, Dr Ishrat Ul Ebad Khan, Governor of Sindh;
His Excellency, Qaim Ali Shah, Chief Minister of Sindh;
His Highness the Aga Khan, Chancellor of the University;
Acting Chairman, Dr Robert Buchanan and Members of the Board of Trustees;
Provost, Dr Greg Moran;
Deans, Faculty, Staff of the University;
Parents, Supporters and Distinguished Guests;
And most importantly, Our Graduands:

Assalam-u-alaikum and good morning.

Welcome to the 2013 Convocation Ceremony of the Aga Khan University.

This year’s Convocation has special significance, for today we mark the 30th year since AKU was granted its charter, the 30th graduating class of the School of Nursing, the 25th graduating class of the Medical College, the 20th anniversary of the Institute for Educational Development and the 10th anniversary of the AKU Examination Board.

This is truly a day of milestones, and a day of celebration.

Graduands, it is above all you and your achievements that bring us together on this day. We have demanded much of you, and you have proved yourselves equal to every challenge. On behalf of all those assembled here, I congratulate you. I know that in the years ahead you will make this University, your families, your communities and your country very, very proud.

At the outset I would like to express my profound gratitude to the faculty and staff for their commitment to the success of the students, our services and research; to our donors for their unwavering support; to the international donor agencies for their funding and partnership to make an impact on the quality of life of the people we serve; our university partners around the world for their readiness to collaborate for the growth of knowledge; and finally to the government for its encouragement to develop the higher education opportunities in this province and for this country.

Convocation is a time to look back, to all that has brought us to this point, and to look ahead to the fulfillment of our ambitions. It is a time to recognise both individual excellence and the communal investments that enable each one of us to flourish. This day offers us a place to pause and reflect amid life’s onward rush.

As we cast our gaze over the past, present and future, one conclusion is unavoidable: Our world is changing with extraordinary speed. One no longer needs to reach old age to find the world of one’s youth almost unrecognisable. And when we contemplate the future, only this seems assured: That it will be as different from the present as the present is from what came before.

On a day such as this, in a world such as this, it is only natural that we ask how we can navigate the immense challenges we face and seize on the no-less extraordinary opportunities.

My answer is this: By striving each day to help lead our societies create better lives for all in the midst of this unfathomable change.

In a globalised world, change is inevitable, and always just round the corner. Whether it is for good or ill, whether it is change of our choosing or someone else’s, whether we will be its masters or its servants – depends on whether we act as leaders, followers or spectators.

Undoubtedly, leadership requires an array of skills and traits. One must be deeply invested in a discipline, yet broadly educated and able to view problems from a range of perspectives; be an incisive analyst; be a clear communicator; have a strong social conscience; embody the highest ethical standards; inspire the best in others; and understand humanity’s diversity is one of its greatest strengths.

Yet such capacities, while indispensable, are not sufficient. For at the core of leadership lies a restless desire to accomplish that which has never been done before, and the willing assumption of responsibility for the success of others.

Today, there is another trait that a leader must possess: The conviction that the pursuit of knowledge through intellectual inquiry is key to progress.

Regrettably, in the Muslim world, this conviction has seemed less important or prominent in recent decades. It was not always thus. For much of its history, Muslim societies have been at the cutting edge of science and innovation.

In mathematics, from a long list dating back to the eighth century, we might mention al-Khwarizimi, whose name gives us the word “algorithm” and whose work introduced algebra (or Al Jabr) to Europe; al-Khayyam, who made many important discoveries in algebra and geometry; and al-Buzjani, a pioneer in trigonometry. In medicine, we can cite Ibn Sina, known in the West as Avecinna, whose Canon of Medicine was for over five centuries among the world’s most influential medical works. And Ibn al-Nafis, who provided the first-ever description of pulmonary circulation.

Ibn Rushd, otherwise known as Averroes in the West, will be familiar to some as the enormously influential commentator on Aristotle. But we could also mention the astronomer al-Biruni, who in the 11th century argued, in a strikingly modern spirit, that observation and mathematics disproved Aristotle’s physics.

If I draw attention to this history of leadership, it is not to dwell upon its loss, but to assert that an even brighter future is possible. In fact, it is to help lead the way up to that future that AKU was founded.

Today, we can cite many examples of our success.

The Higher Education Commission of Pakistan repeatedly has named AKU as the number one medical university in the country. We now operate the only teaching hospitals in Pakistan and in Africa accredited by the US-based Joint Commission International, which constitutes the gold standard in hospital quality around the world.

AKU’s research leadership is demonstrated by the trust that has been placed in us by world-class institutions and organisations. In recent years, the World Health Organization has accorded our faculty a leading role in forging global agreement on the most important interventions for reducing maternal and child deaths; a global action plan for combatting several key childhood illnesses; a global framework for promoting investments to enhance human development; and global recommendations for the use of community and mid-level health workers to achieve better health for all.

By their actions, both the national and provincial governments of Pakistan have made it clear they view AKU as an essential source of expertise. The Institute for Educational Development has played an important role in the development of the National Education Policy and teacher education reform, aided in the improvement of a number of teacher education institutions and built research capacity at public universities. Our Medical College and School of Nursing and Midwifery have been chosen to help upgrade public-sector medical and nursing schools, while our own nursing curriculum was selected to serve as a template for the national nursing curriculum. The AKU Examination Board was recently commissioned to develop a new course that will enable aspiring educators at 19 universities in Pakistan to implement effective testing and evaluation techniques.

As these examples demonstrate, at AKU we believe that true leaders strive to enable others to fulfill their full potential.

Perhaps the best evidence of our leadership is the track record of our alumni. Throughout Pakistan and many other countries, they are the pointing the way forward.

Our nursing graduates lead many of Pakistan’s nursing schools and serve as chief nurses in several hospitals. Graduates of our Medical College have established new disciplines in Pakistan, such as emergency medicine, while raising standards in many others – every day, lives are saved as a result of this. If the Institute for Educational Development has been influential and effective in raising educational standards, it is to a large extent because of the many alumni who serve on its faculty and in senior academic and management positions in public and private educational systems.

So Graduands, today you take your place among the more than 10,000 doctors, nurses and teachers who have been educated at AKU and gone on to make a difference.

You have all passed many times through the marble portals to our campuses, whose grandeur speaks of the importance of the quest for knowledge. Now, you stand on the threshold of a portal that is not visible to the eye, but which is even more magnificent than those around us: It is the portal to the world itself.

A quarter century ago, a young woman sat where you sit now. Her story was recently recounted in the pages of one of the world’s leading medical journals and newspapers. A member of our Medical College’s first graduating class, she listened, as you are about to listen, to our Chancellor. She heard his message of service, and never forgot it. After pursuing further training at some of the finest institutions in the West – training, I might add, that is now available here at AKU – she returned to her country and her alma mater. Dr Anita Zaidi has since gone on to become one of Pakistan’s most outstanding leaders in the field of paediatric medicine. Many of you have benefitted from her expertise. If I single her out for mention, it is only because of the timeliness of her latest achievement. Just last week, it was announced that she was selected from 550 applicants in 70 countries to receive a $1 million grant to fight child deaths in the fishing village of Rehri Goth.

There are many such examples of extraordinary achievement of our graduates. I urge you to follow in the footsteps of all of our graduates who are working for the betterment of others. I urge you to bear in mind the example of this University, which was founded in the hope that its alumni would serve the interests of all humanity. I urge you to stay connected with your University, so that you and AKU can work together in realizing the vision set out by our Founder.

Today we are deeply honored to have with us a leader who is responsible for the existence of this institution.

In inaugurating AKU three decades ago, our Chancellor observed, and I quote: “Developing a new University into an effective and respected centre of learning demands a far greater span of commitment and time than can ever be available from one man’s views, one man’s resources and the allotted time of one man’s life.”

That is true. And it is also true, as he went on to say on the same occasion: “When a team of climbers assault a mountain, it is inescapable that the leader determines the route, however arduous it may prove.”

Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in welcoming our Chancellor, His Highness the Aga Khan, who has led us to the summit upon which we stand today, and who has never ceased to focus on the still higher peaks that remain to be surmounted.

Thank you!
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tribune.com.pk/story/648024/developing-liberal-arts-capacity-prince-aga-khans-quest-for-intellectual-excellence/


The Express Tribune

Developing liberal arts capacity: Prince Aga Khan’s quest for intellectual excellence

By Noman Ahmed
Published: December 20, 2013

KARACHI:

The great legacy of Islamic accomplishment in pursuing educational excellence had long been an inspiration to His Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan.

And his grandfather, Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah Aga Khan, was deeply aware of Islam’s rich intellectual heritage as well. “He was convinced of the enormous importance of higher education for the future of the Ummah around the world.”

He was addressing Aga Khan University’s 26th graduation ceremony held at its Karachi campus, which also marked the 30th anniversary of its foundation and the granting of its charter in 1983.

The Aga Khan spoke of how great intellectuals flourished during the time of the Fatimids in Cairo – where they found the al Azhar University and Darul Ilm – the Abbasids in Baghdad, the Ottomans and Mughal Emperor Akbar. “The most brilliant periods in Islamic history were marked by an expansive quest for intellectual excellence.”

He pointed out that all the educational institutions built during the peak of Islamic glory were all multi-disciplinary, which is what has inspired him to expand AKU and develop its liberal arts capacity. He announced that AKU is planning to build new undergraduate Faculties of Arts and Sciences, one in Karachi and one in Arusha, Tanzania.

“This new orientation will help prepare students for leadership in a world where the forces of civil society will play an increasingly pivotal role.”

The Aga Khan said that developing a liberal arts capacity will not only fulfil the university’s founding vision, but it will also follow in the tradition of the great Islamic universities of past centuries, and their effort to expand – and to integrate – a wide array of knowledge.

“The liberal arts, I believe, can provide an ideal context for fostering inter-disciplinary learning, nurturing critical thinking, inculcating ethical values, and helping students to learn how to go on learning about our ever-evolving universe.”

While sharing his observations with the audience regarding the areas where the government has been ineffective or in post-conflict situations, the Aga Khan said civil society has demonstrated its potential value for maintaining, and even enhancing, the quality of human life.

He also announced the creation of seven new graduate professional schools across two continents that will work in fields of particular relevance to developing societies, including a School of Media and Communications and a School of Leadership and Management. “This is why we believe that an investment in liberal arts education is also an investment in strengthening civil society,” he explained. “These new graduate schools are exciting!” he said with a smile.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 20th, 2013.
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Aga Khan Uni to have Liberal Arts dept

December 20, 2013

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Our Staff Reporter

KARACHI - His Highness the Aga Khan, founder and Chancellor of the Aga Khan University, on Thursday outlined an ambitious global vision for the University’s expansion into liberal arts and announced the creation of seven new graduate schools across two continents that will work in areas of particular relevance in developing societies.

Addressing the University’s 2013 convocation ceremony, which marked 30 years since the school was granted its charter in Pakistan, the Aga Khan praised the AKU’s record of success and excellence in the fields of healthcare and education as well as its geographic expansion to East Africa but he also stressed the growing importance of liberal arts in meeting challenges of the future.

“Liberal Arts, I believe, can provide an ideal context for fostering inter-disciplinary learning, nurturing critical thinking, inculcating ethical values, and helping students to learn how to go on learning about our ever-evolving universe,” he said.

The Aga Khan said the university’s new liberal arts focus will help it shape new leaders for the future in a world where forces of civil society will play an increasingly important role especially in often volatile environments in the developing world.

“In places where government has been ineffective, or in post-conflict situations, civil society has demonstrated its potential value for maintaining, and even enhancing, the quality of human life,” he said, noting that civil society requires leaders who possess not only well-honed specialised skills, but also a welcoming attitude to a broad array of disciplines and outlooks. “This is why we believe that an investment in Liberal Arts education is also an investment in strengthening civil society,” he emphasised.

The ceremony was also attended by His Excellency Dr Ishrat Ul Ebad Khan, Governor of Sindh and the province’s Chief Minister, Syed Qaim Ali Shah. Princess Zahra Aga Khan, the Aga Khan’s daughter, and a member of the University’s Board of Trustees was also present.

Speaking at the occasion, the Chief Minister paid tribute to the Aga Khan for his inspiring leadership, strategic vision and his profound commitment to humanity. “His contributions in our country and beyond to education and development to improving the human condition and above all to the ideals of excellence and the values of public service, social responsibility and human compassion, are for us to follow and emulate,” he said.
In his speech, AKU President Firoz Rasul, who has led the school’s expansion over the past 8 years, urged the graduates to be the leaders of change: “At the core of leadership lies a restless desire to accomplish that which has never been done before, and the willing assumption of responsibility for the success of others. Today, there is one other trait that a leader must possess: the conviction that the pursuit of knowledge is key to progress,” he said.

“Regrettably, in the Muslim world, this conviction has seemed less important or prominent in recent decades. It was not always the case,” he added.

In his address, the Aga Khan emphasised that throughout history, success in the Muslim world has always been associated with pursuit of knowledge and education. “Whenever and wherever it may have been, in the Middle East, or South, or Central Asia, or Northern Africa, the most brilliant periods in Islamic history were marked by an expansive quest for intellectual excellence,” he said.

A total of 367 students were officially awarded degrees during the ceremony today (Thursday), including gradates from School of Nursing and Midwifery, the Medical College the Institute for Educational Development and the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisation in the United Kingdom.

The occasion marked a number of other key milestones, including three decades since the graduation of the first class of the School of Nursing, the 25th anniversary of the first graduating class of the Medical College, the 20th anniversary of AKU’s Institute for Educational Development, and the 10th anniversary of the University’s Examination Board.

The historic convocation ceremony drew over 4,000 guests – one of the largest convocation gatherings in recent times. The participants included the Board of Trustees, faculty, students and supporters of the University from around the world.

The Convocation also saw four highly respected members of the University honoured for their achievements and contribution to the success of the institution.

The Aga Khan used the opportunity to show his appreciation to the numerous donors while he inaugurated new facilities on the Karachi campus including the Aamir Kanji Gardens and the Jenabai Hussainali Shariff Building. He also toured the new wing of the Labour and Delivery Ward of the Aziz Valimohammed building and visited the construction site for the Centre of Innovation in Medical Education.
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pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=227399

Aga Khan University Convocation
Prince Karim reminds Muslims of their glorious past


Irfan Aligi

Friday, December 20, 2013 - Karachi—The Aga Khan University Convocation-2013 was held at the AKU auditorium Thursday. The prestigious event was illuminated by the presence of the Chancellor of the University, Prince Karim Aga Khan, whose speech on the occasion had reminded the glorious past of the Muslim Ummah and present struggle toward the making of the revival of their fervent obsession for the knowledge.

A total of 367 students were officially awarded degrees during the ceremony today (Thursday), including graduates from the School of Nursing and Midwifery, the Medical College the Institute for Educational Development and the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisation in the United Kingdom.

The ceremony was also attended by Dr Ishratul Ebad Khan, Governor of Sindh and the Provincial Chief Minister, Syed Qaim Ali Shah. Princess Zahra Aga Khan, the Aga Khan’s daughter, and a member of the University’s Board of Trustees was also present. Addressing the University’s 2013 convocation ceremony, which marked 30 years since the school was granted its charter in Pakistan, the Aga Khan praised the AKU’s record of success and excellence in the fields of healthcare and education as well as its geographic expansion to East Africa but he also stressed the growing importance of liberal arts in meeting the challenges of the future.

The Chancellor of the Aga Khan University outlined an ambitious global vision for the University’s expansion into liberal arts and announced the creation of seven new graduate schools across two continents that will work in areas of particular relevance to developing societies. The Aga Khan emphasized that throughout history, success in the Muslim world has always been associated with pursuit of knowledge and education. Whenever and wherever it may have been, in the Middle East, or South, or Central Asia, or Northern Africa, the most brilliant periods in Islamic history were marked by an expansive quest for intellectual excellence, he said.

In his speech, AKU President Firoz Rasul, who has led the school’s expansion over the past 8 years, urged the graduates to be the leaders of change their society so desperately needs: At the core of leadership lies a restless desire to accomplish that which has never been done before, and the willing assumption of responsibility for the success of others. Today, there is one other trait that a leader must possess: the conviction that the pursuit of knowledge is key to progress, he said.

Speaking at the occasion, the Governor of Sindh paid tribute to the Aga Khan for his inspiring leadership, strategic vision and his profound commitment to humanity. “His contributions in our country and beyond to education and development to improving the human condition and above all to the ideals of excellence and the values of public service, social responsibility and human compassion, are for us to follow and emulate,” he said.
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http://tribune.com.pk/story/647921/the- ... give-back/

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Governor Dr Ishratul Khan talks to His Excellency Prince Karim Aga Khan at AKU convocation on Thursday. PHOTO COURTESY: AKU

The Express Tribune

The torch-bearers: AKU graduates vow to ‘give back’
By Our Correspondent
Published: December 20, 2013

KARACHI:

The 26th convocation of the Aga Khan University (AKU) on Thursday was a special one, as students and faculty celebrated several milestones, including the 30th anniversary of the foundation of the university as well as the silver jubilee of the first graduating batch of its medical college.

The ceremony began with the procession, led by Dr Rafat Jan, director of the midwifery programme at the AKU’s School of Nursing and Midwifery, carrying the university blazon. The graduating students, chief guest Sindh Governor Dr Ishratul Ebad Khan, AKU President Firoz Rasul and the faculty followed as the university’s age-old processional music, composed by Kabir Roy, blared from the speakers.

The university’s chancellor, His Excellency Prince Karim Aga Khan officially opened the celebrations. In his inaugural speech, His Excellency announced plans to establish seven new professional graduate schools pertaining to liberal arts to add to the university’s existing setup.

A total of 367 degrees were conferred on students, who were dressed in the traditional green and white convocation robes, commonly referred to as Jamiapoashs. They were graduating from the School of Nursing and Midwifery, the Medical College, the Institute for Educational Development and the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisation. Seven of the students walked away with doctorates – five in the health sciences and two in education.

Maryam Baqir, who graduated from the AKU’s medical college, summed up the graduates’ feelings in her valedictorian speech. “Let us thank our parents, partners, family members and teachers who enabled us to join the league of individuals who hold the highest principles of medical profession today,” she remarked.

The valedictorian, nevertheless, gave voice to her concerns about living in a society that justified unequal distribution of rights and privileges based on one’s material wealth. “Unfortunately, we, too, are beneficiaries of this skewed system,” said Baqir. “With a sense of humility and guilt, as well as a desire for redemption, we vow to give back to those from whom we took in the first place.”

Tooba Ali, the recipient of the best graduate award in Bachelors of Medicine, was of the opinion that the public sector should come forward with a parallel commitment towards healthcare. “The AKU sets the bar high with emphasis on its world-class curriculum and technique, which should be followed by the others,” Ali told The Express Tribune.

AKU president Rasul said the university that had started from a single campus in Pakistan had now grown to include five campuses and three teaching sites in three different continents — Asia, Europe and Africa. The university boasts over 10,000 alumni in various fields of medicine, nursing, education and liberal arts. “We are proud of the role our graduates play in improving the quality of life of societies in the developing world,” said Rasul.

The graduating students

From the AKU’s medical college, a total of 98 doctors graduated this year. Meanwhile, 14 students received their MSc degrees, including eight in the field of epidemiology and biostatistics, four in health policy and management and one each in clinical research and health professions education. The college also awarded advanced diplomas to 20 students, including 13 in human development and seven in health professions education.

Around 205 students successfully became certified nurses from the AKU’s School of Nursing. Meanwhile, the AKU’s Institute for Educational Development awarded 23 post-graduate degrees in education. Another nine post-graduate degrees were conferred on the students at its Institute for the Study of Muslim Culture.

Honorary doctorate

For being a pioneer in bringing new perspectives to the delivery of university education, the university awarded an ‘honoris causa’ to Shamsh Kassim-Lakha, AKU founding president.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 20th, 2013.
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