René Burri Burial of Aga Khan III, leader of the Ismailis, founder and first president of the League of Indian Muslims who died on July 11, 1957. Shortly before his death, the Aga Khan III chose a location on
(...) the West Bank of the Nile as his final resting place. The location was highly symbolic, for centuries earlier the Aga Khan’s ancestors had founded the Fatimid dynasty with its capital in Cairo. The Fatimids represented one of the apogees of Muslim culture, being patrons of the arts, architecture, literature, pluralism and scientific endeavors, all fields that were equally dear to the Aga Khan III and Om Habibeh. Immediately after her husband's death, she oversaw the building of a mausoleum, a task that took 16 months and the help of architect Farid El-Shafie and contractor Hassan Dorra. Town of Aswan, Egypt. 1959. © René Burri | Magnum Photos