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Allama Muhammad Iqbal

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Title: Allama Muhammad Iqbal


1
Allama Iqbal
2
Brief Life Sketch
  • Muhammad Iqbal (1877-1938) is one of the
    preeminent writers of the Indo-Pakistan
    subcontinent. Indeed, the attention he has
    received from numerous writers, translators, and
    critics from Western as well as Islamic countries
    testifies to his stature as a world literary
    figure. While his primary reputation is that of a
    poet, Iqbal has not lacked admirers for his
    philosophical thought. He has in fact been called
    the most serious Muslim philosophical thinker of
    modem times.

3
  • The frequently used appellation of
    poet-philosopher is thus well deserved. The
    hyphen in the phrase is all-important Iqbals
    poetry and philosophy do not exist in isolation
    from each other they are integrally related, his
    poetry serving as a vehicle for his thought.
    Iqbal wrote poetry in Urdu and Persian, and
    several collections in each language exist. In
    the following page a life-sketch of Iqbal is
    followed by a brief treatment of some of the
    major themes and literary features of his poetry.

4
  • Iqbal was born in Sialkot, in the present-day
    province of the Punjab in Pakistan, in 1877. He
    received his early education in that city, where
    one of his teachers was Mir Hasan, an
    accomplished scholar who commanded a knowledge of
    several Islamic languages. Mir Hasan gave Iqbal a
    thorough training in the rich Islamic literary
    tradition. His influence on Iqbal was formative.
    Many years later (1922), when the English
    governor of the Punjab proposed to the British
    Crown that Iqbal be knighted in acknowledgment of
    his literary accomplishments, Iqbal asked that
    Mir Hasan also be awarded a title. To the
    governors remark that Mir Hasan had not authored
    any books, Iqbal responded that he, Iqbal, was
    the book Mir Hasan had produced. Mir Hasan
    received the title of Shams al-Ulama (Sun of
    Scholars).

5
  • For higher education Iqbal went to Lahore (1895),
    where he enrolled in Government College, getting,
    in 1899, an MA in philosophy he had already
    obtained a degree in law (1898). In Lahore, a
    major center of academic and literary activity,
    Iqbal soon made a name for himself as a poet. One
    of the teachers of Government College Iqbal
    admired most was Sir Thomas Arnold. Arnold, too,
    had great affection for Iqbal, he helped Iqbal in
    his career as a teacher and also encouraged him
    to undertake several research projects. When
    Arnold returned to England in 1904, Iqbal wrote a
    touching poem in which he expressed his resolve
    to follow Arnold to England. The very next year,
    in fact, Iqbal left for study at Cambridge. His
    choice of Cambridge was probably dictated by the
    fact that Cambridge was reputed for the study not
    only of European philosophy but also of Arabic
    and Persian. In his three years of stay abroad,
    Iqbal obtained a BA from Cambridge (1906),
    qualified as a barrister at Londons Middle
    Temple (1906), and earned a PhD from Munich
    University (1908).

6
  • After returning to Lahore in 1908, Iqbal taught
    philosophy at Government College for a few years.
    In 1911 he resigned from government service and
    set up legal practice. Meanwhile he continued to
    write poetry in Urdu and Persian, Asrar-i Khudi
    (Persian) was published in 1915. Translated into
    English as The Secrets of the Self (1920) by
    Professor Reynold Nicholson of Cambridge, the
    book introduced Iqbal to the West. Asrar-i Khudi
    was followed by several other volumes Rumuz-i
    Bikhudi (1918), Payam-i Mashriq (1923), Bang-i
    Dara (1924), Zabur-i Ajam (1927), Javid Namah
    (1932), Musafir (1936), Zarb-i Kalim (1937), and
    Armaghan-i Hijaz (1938, posthumously). Iqbal
    wrote prose also. His doctoral thesis, The
    Development of Metaphysics in Persia, was
    published in 1908, and his Reconstruction of
    Religious Thought in Islam (with a 7th chapter
    added to the original set of six lectures, first
    published in 1930), in 1934. Many of Iqbals
    poetical works have been rendered into foreign
    languages, including English, German, Italian,
    Russian, Czechoslovakian, Arabic, and Turkish.
    His works have also spawned a vast amount of
    critical literature in many languages.

7
  • Iqbal often uses a series of images to convey a
    thought, producing a cumulative effect. In
    Fatimah bint -Abdullah, for example, he uses no
    fewer than four images to express the idea that,
    even in its present age of decadence, the Muslim
    Community can produce individuals of exceptional
    caliber
  • O that our autumn-stricken garden had
  • A flower-bud like this!
  • O that in our ashes would be found, O Lord,
  • A spark like this!
  • In our desert is hidden many a deer still.
  • In the spent clouds lies dormant still
  • Many a flash of lightning.
  • Iqbal is capable of writing biting satire. Two
    examples are Give Me Another Adversary, in
    which Satan argues that he deserves a better
    rival than Adam, and Scorpion Land, which
    criticizes slave mentality.

8
IQBAL AND PAKISTAN MOVEMENT
  • Although his main interests were scholarly, Iqbal
    was not unconcerned with the political situation
    of the, country and the political fortunes of the
    Muslim community of India. Already in 1908, while
    in England, he had been chosen as a member of the
    executive council of the newly-established
    British branch of the Indian Muslim League. In
    1931 and 1932 he represented the Muslims of India
    in the Round Table Conferences held in England to
    discuss the issue of the political future of
    India. And in a 1930 lecture Iqbal suggested the
    creation of a separate homeland for the Muslims
    of India. Iqbal died (1938) before the creation
    of Pakistan (1947), but it was his teaching that
    "spiritually ... has been the chief force behind
    the creation of Pakistan."

9
  • Iqbal joined the London branch of the All India
    Muslim League while he was studying Law and
    Philosophy in England. It was in London when he
    had a mystical experience. The ghazal containing
    those divinations is the only one whose year and
    month of composition is expressly mentioned. It
    is March 1907. No other ghazal, before or after
    it has been given such importance. Some verses of
    that ghazal are
  • Your civilization will commit suicide with
    its
  • own daggers.
  • A nest built on a frail bough cannot be
  • durable.
  • The caravan of feeble ants will take the rose
  • petal for a boat
  • And inspite of all blasts of waves, it shall
    cross
  • the river.
  • I will take out may worn-out caravan in the
  • pitch darkness of night.
  • My sighs will emit sparks and my breath will
  • produce flames.

10
  • For Iqbal it was a divinely inspired insight. He
    disclosed this to his listeners in December 1931,
    when he was invited to Cambridge to address the
    students. Iqbal was in London, participating in
    the Second Round Table Conference in 1931. At
    Cambridge, he referred to what he had proclaimed
    in 1906
  • I would like to offer a few pieces of advice to
    the young men who are at present studying at
    Cambridge ...... I advise you to guard against
    atheism and materialism. The biggest blunder made
    by Europe was the separation of Church and State.
    This deprived their culture of moral soul and
    diverted it to the atheistic materialism. I had
    twenty-five years ago seen through the drawbacks
    of this civilization and therefore had made some
    prophecies. They had been delivered by my tongue
    although I did not quite understand them. This
    happened in 1907..... After six or seven years,
    my prophecies came true, word by word. The
    European war of 1914 was an outcome of the
    aforesaid mistakes made by the European nations
    in the separation of the Church and the State.

11
  • Building upon Sir Sayyid Ahmed's two-nation
    theory, absorbing the teaching of Shibli, Ameer
    Ali, Hasrat Mohani and other great Indian Muslim
    thinkers and politicians, listening to Hindu and
    British voices, and watching the fermenting
    Indian scene closely for approximately 60 years,
    he knew and ultimately convinced his people and
    their leaders, particularly Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad
    Ali Jinnah that
  • "We both are exiles in this land. Both longing
    for
  • our dear home's sight!"
  • "That dear home is Pakistan, on which he harpened
    like a flute-player, but whose birth he did not
    witness."

12
  • Allama Iqbal in his letter of March 29, 1937 to
    the Quaid-i Azam had said
  • While we are ready to cooperate with other
    progressive parties in the country, we must not
    ignore the fact that the whole future of Islam as
    a moral and political force in Asia rests very
    largely on a complete organization of Indian
    Muslims.
  • According to Allama Iqbal the future of Islam as
    a moral and political force not only in India but
    in the whole of Asia rested on the organization
    of the Muslims of India led by the Quaid-i Azam.

13
  • The "Guide of the Era" Iqbal had envisaged in
    1926, was found in the person of Muhammad Ali
    Jinnah. The "Guide" organized the Muslims of
    India under the banner of the Muslim League and
    offered determined resistance to both the Hindu
    and the English designs for a united
    Hindu-dominated India. Through their united
    efforts under the able guidance of Quaid-I Azam
    Muslims succeeded in dividing India into Pakistan
    and Bharat and achieving their independent
    homeland. As observed above, in Allama Iqbal's
    view, the organization of Indian Muslims which
    achieved Pakistan would also have to defend other
    Muslim societies in Asia. The carvan of the
    resurgence of Islam has to start and come out of
    this Valley, far off from the centre of the
    ummah. Let us see how and when, Pakistan prepares
    itself to shoulder this august responsibility. It
    is Allama Iqbal's prevision.

14
  • Allama Iqbal died in 1938 was buried outside
    Badshahi Masjid in Lahore. His tomb is now
    visited by hundreds of devotees everyday. He did
    not live to see his separate nation come into
    being, but he was a great influence on other
    Muslim and Non-Muslim leaders and after his
    Jinnah talked of how Iqbals poetry immortal as
    it is, is always there to guide us and inspire
    us.

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Allama Iqbals Pictures
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Thank You !
  • Ibrahim Muhammad
  • Nouman Khawar
  • Arsalan Ahmed
  • Muhammad Salman
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