Mapping a Pluralist Space in Ismaili Studies
杏吧原创 Centre for the Study of Islam hosted the second international Ismaili Studies conference “Mapping a Pluralist Space in Ismaili Studies” on March 9 and 10, 2017 in Richcraft Hall at 杏吧原创 University.
The conference was a major success, bringing together 63 speakers from 12 countries and another 150 participants from across Canada. Audience members included professors and students, religious education teachers, community members from across Canada, and Ism膩士墨l墨 institutional leaders.
Missed the overbooked event? Find excerpts from opening remarks, keynote by Prof. Homi Bhabha, music workshop, followed by slideshow of select photos from at 杏吧原创 University’s Centre for the Study of Islam. The proceedings have also been uploaded here.
Mapping a Pluralist Space in Ismaili Studies
杏吧原创 Centre for the Study of Islam听hosted the second international Ismaili Studies conference 鈥Mapping a Pluralist Space in Ismaili Studies鈥听辞苍听March 9 and 10, 2017听in Richcraft Hall at 杏吧原创 University.
The conference was a major success, bringing together 63 speakers from 12 countries and another 150 participants from across Canada. Audience members included professors and students, religious education teachers, community members from across Canada, and Ism膩士墨l墨 institutional leaders.
Missed the overbooked event? Find excerpts from opening remarks, keynote by Prof. Homi Bhabha, music workshop, followed by slideshow of select photos from at 杏吧原创 University鈥檚 Centre for the Study of Islam. The proceedings have also been uploaded here.

The Keynote Address by Homi K. Bhabha of Harvard University, titled 鈥Thoughts on Diasporic Cosmopolitanism,鈥 weaved together the ethics of communication, intercultural translation, the moral imagination, and migration. Bhabha spoke about the liminality and cosmopolitanism of migrants鈥 lifeworlds; empowerment as an invitation to experiment with newer self-identifications; the negotiation of community interest under conditions of migratory displacement; cultural ambivalence and the splitting of minority identities in encounters with others; the relational sense of cultural value; thinking on the ongoing presence of the past-in-present rather than the polarity of tradition versus modernity; and the memories which a people chooses to commemorate and to forget.
Hussein Janmohamed of the University of Toronto took an interdisciplinary approach to mapping pluralist spaces. His Music Workshop: 鈥O Canada! Intersections, Counterpoint, and Harmony Through Choral Dialogue 鈥 An Interactive Workshop鈥 addressed issues of migration, racial discrimination, cross-cultural engagement, and integration through the medium of music. The workshop concluded with the singing of a five part intercultural devotional soundscape incorporating melodies from First Nations, Buddhist, Jewish, Christian and Muslim traditions.
ISC2017 also featured the new The Ugandan Asian Archive exhibit with a sample of items housed at the 杏吧原创 University Library. Artifacts included clippings from Canadian and British newspapers scrapbooks, a hand written logbook recording the arrival of teach plane in Montreal, and the Canadian destinations of the Ugandan Asian refugees who went on to settle across the country. The collection offered insights on the Asian expulsion from Uganda.

There were various panels discussing issues regarding Migration and Diaspora studies at the conference:
- Digitizing Resources. The papers in this session dealt with the digitizing of Ismaili historical and religious resources in diaspora, particularly in Canada.
- Migration, Borders, Politics addressed the influence of globalization and migratory movements on the engineering of a new pan-Ismaili identity discourse.
- Ugandan Asian Expulsion explored the geo-political and historical context of Idi Amin鈥檚 expulsion decree and the subsequent resettlement of Ugandan Asians in Canada; the 杏吧原创鈥檚 MacOdrum Library鈥檚 rationale for capturing the history of diaspora groups through its holdings; and the use of oral histories at the Library鈥檚 Archives and Research Collections to enhance its collections.
- 19th & 20th Century Ismaili History in Africa. Papers dealt with the engagement of diasporic Indian Ismailis with African societies and the recording of this experience in literature.
- Identity, Practice and Participation in Canada addressed the evolution and transformation of Ismaili identity in Canadian contexts.
- Religious Education. One of the papers dealt with the challenges of Ismaili religious education in the Canadian immigrant context.
All photos taken at the second international Ismaili Studies conference by 杏吧原创 Centre for the Study of Islam.