As you will have gathered, I am firmly convinced that better knowledge of the Muslim world can overcome distrust and therefore that city has been a strategic choice. While some North American museums have significant collections of Muslim art, there is no institution devoted to Islamic art. In building the museum in Toronto, we intend to introduce a new actor to the North American art scene. Its fundamental aim will be an educational one, to actively promote knowledge of Islamic arts and culture. What happens on that continent, culturally, economically and politically, cannot fail to have worldwide repercussions – which is why we thought it important that an institution capable of promoting understanding and tolerance should exist there.
The museum will also belong to the large Muslim population living in Canada and the USA. It will be a source of pride and identity for all these people, showing the inherent pluralism of Islam, not only in terms of religious interpretations but also of cultural and ethnic variety. Furthermore, the museum will show, beyond the notoriously politicised form of Islam which now tends to make headlines, Islam is in reality an open-minded, tolerant faith capable of adopting other people’s cultures and languages and making them its own. There is no doubt whatsoever that the Muslims of North America will play an important role in the development of states and populations within the Ummah.
– His Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan
Closing Address, “Musée-Musées” Round Table Louvre Museum, Paris, France October 17, 2007
Watch the YouTube video as you read the quotes to enjoy the full context of the remarks.
[8:28] = Refers to time on YouTube video that His Highness makes the above remarks.
An inside peek of the new Aga Khan Museum
Click the image to view the video

Published on Jan 7, 2014
Christopher Hume discusses the new Ismaili centre under construction at Wynford Drive and the Don Valley Parkway.
Click the image below to view a video montage of the Ismaili Centers around the world
Click the image to view a video montage of the buildings, gardens, and detailed architecture of the Ismaili Centres in Burnaby, Dubai, Dushanbe, Lisbon, and London.
Courtesy of TheIsmaili.org













