[Congressional Record Volume 164, Number 47 (Monday, March 19, 2018)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E337]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                    WELCOMING THE AGA KHAN TO TEXAS

                                 ______
                                 

                       HON. EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON

                                of texas

                    in the house of representatives

                         Monday, March 19, 2018

  Ms. EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON of Texas. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to 
recognize a man who has dedicated his life in service to humanity. It 
is my pleasure to welcome His Highness the Aga Khan IV, the 49th 
hereditary Imam of the world's 20 million Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims, 
to my home state of Texas in celebration of his Diamond Jubilee.
  The ethics of compassion and care, tolerance and equality, 
selflessness and service center His Highness' deeply held belief in and 
practice of the Muslim faith. Particularly in recent years, the Aga 
Khan has pledged his voice to articulate the values of peace, 
generosity and brotherhood that unquestionably compose the core of 
Islam. He often says his obligations to his community and to humankind 
are inseparable. This has driven the Aga Khan to call on us to 
celebrate our differences of religion, culture, language and ethnicity 
as evidence of humanity's great beauty. Our inherent diversity, he 
says, should propel humankind to embrace pluralism.
  Ismaili Muslims have a deep connection to Texas, the DFW Metroplex 
and myself. For more than a decade, I have partnered with the Ismaili 
Muslim community to host the Youth Summit and Diversity Dialogue, which 
we held first in 2007 during the Aga Khan's Golden Jubilee. It brings 
together students from my district with youth of all backgrounds to 
think critically about the challenges we can address through global 
citizenship. The program brings to light the positive impact young 
Ismaili Muslims make on the world around them.
  Alongside his role as Imam, the Aga Khan has established many global 
humanitarian organizations, one of which is the Aga Khan Development 
Network. The AKDN promotes human dignity and self-sustaining growth by 
administering education and healthcare in many of the most impoverished 
and isolated parts of the developing world. Three of the most 
distinguished AKDN projects are the Aga Khan Academies, which offer 
world-class educations to children in remote, school-deprived regions. 
When I visited the Aga Khan Academy in Nairobi, Kenya in 2015, I was 
emotionally struck by the undeniable love of humankind evident in the 
AKDN's work to help those children reach their full potential. It 
became clear to me that the driving force behind each of the Aga Khan's 
endeavors is his desire to foster progress and peace through hope. For 
hope, he says, is the most powerful source of human motivation.
  It is this spirit, born of the example of the Aga Khan, which led 
2,500 Ismaili Muslim volunteers to help their neighbors in Houston 
recover from the devastation triggered by Hurricane Harvey last August. 
For this selfless generosity, they were presented one of the five 
Points of Light awards by the flve living former presidents. The 
Ismaili Muslim community's response to the unsounded call of duty 
exemplifies their unrelenting effort to serve humanity at large.
  Mr. Speaker, His Highness the Aga Khan--through his work, rooted in 
the Muslim faith--is a testament to Islam being a religion of both the 
intellect and humility, of both tradition and progress. The celebration 
of the Aga Khan's Diamond Jubilee is a monumental occasion for Ismaili 
Muslims across the world. I wish to congratulate the American Ismaili 
Muslim community and convey to His Highness the Aga Khan that he and 
the values of tolerance, diversity and pluralism that Ismaili Muslims 
uphold will always be welcome in the United States of America.

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