Aga Khan, spiritual leader and billionaire investor, dies

Aga Khan, spiritual leader and billionaire investor, dies

In 1957 at the age of 20, Prince Karim Al-Hussaini inherited the reins of a lineage that claimed descent from the Prophet Muhammad and became the spiritual leader of some 15 million Shia Ismaili Muslims. For much of his life, he remained a paradox. “The Pope of his flock”, he also possessed “fabled wealth”, inhabiting “a world of marvellous chateaux, yachts, jets and thoroughbred horses” – and building “a hugely effective global development network”, observed Vanity Fair in 2013. “Few persons bridged so many divides” between the spiritual and the material quite so “gracefully”.

The late Aga Khan, who has died in Lisbon aged 88, saw no conflict in his position, says The New York Times. An imam, or leader of his faith, was “not expected to withdraw from everyday life”, he once remarked. “On the contrary, he’s expected to protect his community and contribute to their way of life.” His own ability to prosper – he became one of the world’s richest hereditary rulers – was part of this duty. “It was perhaps this placid self-confidence, combined with an inner seriousness of purpose”, that led his grandfather, the Aga Khan III, to bypass his two sons and name his grandson successor, says The Telegraph.

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