The Isma'ili Muslims, a major sect of Shi'i Islam, form a community
that is intriguing in its deterritorialized social organization.
Informed by the richness of Isma'ili history, theories of
transnationalism and globalization, and firsthand ethnographic
fieldwork in the Himalayan regions of Tajikistan and Pakistan as
well as in Europe, Jonah Steinberg investigates Isma'ili Muslims
and the development of their remarkable and expansive
twenty-first-century global structures.
Led by a charismatic European-based hereditary Imam, Prince Karim
Aga Khan IV, global Isma'ili organizations make available an
astonishing array of services--social, economic, political, and
religious--to some three to five million subjects stretching from
Afghanistan to England, from Pakistan to Tanzania. Steinberg argues
that this intricate and highly integrated network enables a new
kind of shared identity and citizenship, one that goes well beyond
the sense of community maintained by other diasporic populations.
Of note in this process is the rapid assimilation in the
postcolonial period of once-isolated societies into the intensively
centralized Isma'ili structure. Also remarkable is the Isma'ilis'
self-presentation, contrary to common characterizations of Islam in
the mass media, as a Muslim society that is broadly sympathetic to
capitalist systems, opposed to fundamentalism, and distinctly
modern in orientation. Steinberg's unique journey into remote
mountain regions highlights today's rapidly shifting meanings of
citizenship, faith, and identity and reveals their global
scale.