My mentor and teacher, Akhter Hameed Khan, received the Magsaysay Award nearly three decades ago. It was not in my wildest dreams that I would one day follow in his footsteps to this august ceremony. I learned the art of rural development at his feet in the late fifties and continue to benefit from his vision and deep insight until today. It is to Akhter Hameed Khan that I owe my understanding of the theory and practice of rural development.
In my career of nearly four decades, I have had three benefactors: the Government of Pakistan; the United Nations (particularly UNICEF); and His Highness, the Aga Khan. The last one, with whom I have now been associated for a decade, gave me a long-term perspective and inspired guidance, commitment, and dedication to the cause of eradicating poverty. The Aga Khan evinces a level of interest and gives the kind of support that I have never had before, to do the type of work I want to do for the rural poor. His Highness truly made my dream come true. The decision this month by Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif to extend the Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (AKRSP) to the whole of Pakistan, through a National Rural Support Programme patterned after AKRSP, is a direct result of His Highness's desire that AKRSP develop a replicable model of rural development, as it improves the standard of living of the people of the Northern Areas of Pakistan.
To my colleagues in the Aga Khan Foundation in Geneva, Pakistan, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, I owe special thanks for helping AKRSP in every possible way, as I do to the Aga Khan Development Network and the donors of AKRSP in the governments of Canada, United Kingdom, Netherlands, the European Union, Germany, United States, Norway, and various foundations, namely OXFAM, Konrad Adenauer, and Ford. The Operations Evaluation Department of the World Bank, through its two interim evaluations of AKRSP, gave the program a great impetus and global acceptability.
The support I received from my well wishers in Pakistan and abroad and my erstwhile colleagues in the government of Pakistan, the administration of North West Frontier Province and the Northern Areas, and a score of other agencies contributed tremendously to the development of AKRSP.
However, the people who made AKRSP possible are the workers of the program, who have been performing their duties, over a sustained period of time, with a sense of dedication and sincerity rarely found in most organizations. Their acceptance of the primacy of the village organization and their willingness to listen to and respect the views of the rural poor are the greatest strengths of AKRSP. Above all, it is to the people of the Northern Areas and of the Chitral District of Pakistan that the full credit for the achievements of AKRSP must go. It is they who responded so positively to the terms of partnership offered by AKRSP and fulfilled their obligations of organization, human resource development, and capital formation, the three cardinal principles on which AKRSP is based. It is the workers of AKRSP and the people of the program area who truly deserve the honor the award has bestowed on me.
I am sorry that my wife is not present here to share with me this moment of glory because she has made and continues to make the greatest personal sacrifice to enable me to work in a remote and isolated region, comprising the program area. I wish my daughters Roohi, Afshan, and Shelley and her husband Tim, and my grandchildren Sarah and Amil, were also here. But the one person whom my wife and I miss most on such occasions is our daughter Falaknaz, who died nearly four years ago with her two children in a gas suffocation tragedy at Islamabad. She would have been the happiest to see her daddy receive the Ramon Magsaysay Award, which I accept with the greatest humility and with profuse thanks to the trustees of the Magsaysay Foundation.