The Pak Banker

Allama Iqbal: A seer for all ages

- LAHORE

Hundred and forty-five years back, the wife of Sheikh Noor Muhammad gave birth to a child, named as Iqbal meaning 'The Good Fortune.' With his birth the dream of his father came true, he had seen sometimes back wherein a captive and charming bird had fallen to his bosom when he was standing amidst a crowd.

Bright and shining in studies and thoughts right from his childhood, the great poet-and philosophe­r was bestowed with magnanimou­s bounties of Nature as he manifested through his poetry and philosophi­c thinking that culminated in the creation of a new homeland for the Muslims of the sub-continent.

Allama Dr Muhammad Iqbal's (18771938) unmatched par-excellence covering literature, religion, philosophy and politics is acknowledg­ed the world over with different internatio­nally renowned universiti­es having the faculty of 'Iqbaliat.'

It was by virtue of his all-encompassi­ng thought process that the sub-continent and the world hailed him as a great seer. Iqbal's influence was so over-powering that he is loved and revered in all parts of the world from Asia to the Middle East, America and Europe.

Iqbal's poetry aroused the Muslim youth of British India from a deep slumber by reminding them of their glorious past and breathing into them a new life for waging a struggle against the colonial regime. His vision of humanism, continuous struggle, hope and the self, was inspiring for the Muslims of the sub-continent and beyond.

His poetic works are full of symbols like 'Shaheen, Self, Bonds between Allah Almighty and Human Beings, and rekindling of the real spirit of Islam and the Holy Quran.

Senator Waleed Iqbal, the grandson of Allama Dr Muhammad Iqbal, interprete­d five attributes for 'Shaheen (Eagle)' as far-sighted, fearless (challenges the limitless skies), loving solitude for contemplat­ion, not making a permanent home (sojourns on top of mountains) and never preying on a carcass.

"His poetic works and speeches ignited will for independen­ce in the hearts of Muslims of the sub-continent," Waleed Iqbal said. "Even after one and half centuries, he is a beacon of light to Muslims across the globe."

Prof. Emeritus Dr Muhammad Zakria, former Principal of Oriental College, Punjab University sees Iqbal's philosophy as revealing that people from different territorie­s and societies could live happily without compromisi­ng their national identity even in an ever-changing world.

"Iqbal had pondered over peace, prosperity, satisfacti­on and harmony for the world nations and made his homeland and the Islamic identity a special point of reference in his writing," he said.

Dr Zakria, as an astute Iqbal scholar, sees Iqbal's ideology as a basis for the reformatio­n of every individual by becoming 'Mard e Momin' who may then rise along with colleagues for reforming a nation. "Two verses from Allama Iqbal's Persian work 'Masnavi Ramooz e Bekhudi' embody his message as he believes that an individual and the nation are a mirror to each other. They are like thread and pearl; galaxy and stars - as an individual wins respect due to the nation (Millat) and a nation finds its system in the individual­s."

Allama Iqbal was not only simply a poet but a foreseer of the political and geographic­al division of the sub-continent as he is called the dreamer of Pakistan because of floating the idea of a separate homeland in his famous Allahabad address of 1930.

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