Remembering
Allama Iqbal
Iqbal's
Motto/Message:
"Dare
And Live!"
*******************
"When
a nation dies,
it
rarely rises from
the
grave!" – Iqbal
*******************
(M.
Javed Naseem)
21st of
April commemorates the death anniversary of one of the greatest
thinkers of the East, the poet-philosopher of Asia Dr. Sir Mohammad
Iqbal, affectionately known in the Sub-continent as Allama Iqbal.
Pakistan was the brain-child of that visionary. He was born on 9th
November, 1877, in Sialkot (Pakistan), and died on April 21, 1938, in
Lahore (Pakistan). His original works are written in Persian, Urdu
and English but have been translated in many languages.
(Note: There was
some confusion about his date of birth in the past but the Government of Pakistan did Pakistan did some research and
declared 9th November, 1877, as the correct date.)
It was Iqbal who
first came up with the idea of 2-nation theory – meaning a separate
homeland for Millions of Muslims of India who were suffering from
discrimination, racism and apartheid at the hands of racist and
extremist Hindus. Those were the nationalist Hindus who didn't follow
their own 'Father of Nation' – Gandhi – and eventually
assassinated him. Today, in the year 2020, Indian Muslims are
suffering the same misery and are being killed ruthlessly.
Iqbal – the
thinker, philosopher, barrister, law-maker, reformer, sufi,
interpreter of the Quran, scholar and a visionary politician , is
also called the "Spiritual Father of Pakistan" for his
contributions to the nation. Iqbal's poems, political contributions,
and academic and scholarly research were distinguished and highly
respected in international forums. He inspired the Pakistan Movement
in the biggest British colony – India. Personalities like him are
born in centuries.
Allama Iqbal's
poetry delivered a universal message of self-esteem, justice, peace
and struggle for righteousness. It brought awareness among Indian
Muslims and guided them on the right path to achieve a closer
relationship with their Creator – Allah, and at the same time
waking them up to take the responsibility of leading the nation to
freedom and salvation. To the seekers of Divine, he suggested to look
inside because the Creation could not be separated from its Creator.
The 'Father of
Nation' – Mohammad Ali Jinnah (Quaid-e-Azam), was a great admirer of
Allama Iqbal. Here's what he said about him in his Iqbal Day's
message in 1943:
“Dare
and Live!”
“Iqbal never
believed in failure. he believed in the superiority of mankind over
all the rest that God created. In fact he was convinced that man is a
collection of all that is best in God’s universe. Only man does not
know himself. Man has but to utilize his great potentialities and to
use them in the right direction for the realization of that “self”
which finds itself so near to God; and Islam is the code which has
prescribed easy ways and means for that realization.”
“Iqbal was not
only a philosopher but also a practical politician. He was one of the
first to conceive of the feasibility of the division of India on
national lines as the only solution of India’s political problem.
He was one of the most powerful though tacit precursors and heralds
of the modern political evolution of Muslim India.
Iqbal, therefore,
rises above the average philosopher, as the essence of his teachings
is a beautiful blend of thought and action. He combines in himself
the idealism of a poet and the realism of a man who took practical
view of things. In Iqbal this compromise is essentially Islamic. In
fact it is nothing but Islam. His ideal therefore is life according
to the teachings of Islam with a motto “Dare and Live.” –
Mohammad Ali Jinnah (The Dawn, March 21, 1943).
Iqbal's
“Javid-nama”
‘Iqbal’s
magnum opus’, writes his biographer S. A. Vahid, ‘is
the Javid Namah. Within a few years of its publication the
poem became a classic, and. one great scholar proclaimed that the
poem will rank with Firdausi’s Shah Namah, Rumi’s
Mathnawi, Sa‘di’s Gulistan and the Diwan of
Hafiz. Nor was this tribute an exaggeration, as subsequent criticism
showed ... In judging a poem we have to consider two things: the
style and the substance. So far as the style is concerned, Javid
Namah belongs to the very first rank of Persian verse. It is
unsurpassed in grandeur of expression, in beauty of diction and in
richness of illustration. As regards theme, the poem deals with the
everlasting conflict of the soul, and by telling the story of human
struggle against sin, shows to mankind the path to glory and peace.
In every line the poet makes us feel that he has something to say
that is not only worth saying, but is also fitted to give us
pleasure. Thus, as regards style as well as theme the poem is a
masterpiece.’
The Javid-nama,
having been frequently reissued in lithograph – the edition on
which the present translation is based was published in 1946 at
Hyderabad (Deccan) – was first translated, into Italian, by
Professor Alessandro Bausani under the title II Poema Celeste
(Rome, 1952). A version in German verse, Buch der Ewigkeit
(Munich, 1957), has come from the pen of Professor Annemarie
Schimmel. A French version, by E. Meyerovitch and Mohammed Mokri, has
the title Le Livre de l’Éternité (Paris, 1962). In 1961 a
translation in English verse was published in Lahore, The
Pilgrimage of Eternity by Shaikh Mahmud Ahmad. The poem has thus
reached a truly international public, and has already taken its
rightful place amongst the modern classics of world literature.
Here's the English
translation of Excerpts from the Persian Javid-nama:
The Divine
Presence
Though Paradise is a
manifestation of Him
the soul reposes
not, save in the vision of Him.
We are veiled from
our Origin;
we are as birds who
have lost our nest.
If knowledge is
perverse and evil of substance
it is the greatest
curtain before our eyes;
but if the object of
knowledge is contemplation
it becomes at once
the highway and the guide,
laying bare before
you the shell of being
that you may ask,
'What is the secret of this display?'
Thus it is that
knowledge smoothes the road,
thus it is that it
awakens desire;
it gives you pain
and anguish, fire and fever,
it gives you
midnight lamentations.
From the science of
the interpretation of the world of color and scent
your eyes and your
heart derive nourishment;
it brings to the
stage of ecstasy and yearning
and then suffers you
like Gabriel to stand.
Zinda-Rud
What law governs the
world of color and scent,
but that water once
flowed returns not to the stream?
Life has no desire
for repetition,
its nature is not
habituated to repetition;
beneath the sky,
reversion is unlawful to life
once a people has
fallen, it rises not again.
When a nation dies,
it rarely rises from the grave;
what recourse has
it, but the tomb and resignation?
The Voice of
Beauty
Life is not a mere repetition of the breath,
its origin is from the Living, Eternal God.
The soul near to Him who said, 'Lo, I am nigh' –
that is to take one's share of everlasting life.
The individual through the Unity becomes Divine,
the nation through the Unity becomes Omnipotent.
(Allama Iqbal's tomb in Lahore/Pakistan), at the door of famous Moghul monument 'Badshahi Mosque'.) |
Life is both transient and everlasting;
all this is creativity and vehement desire.
Are you alive? Be vehement, be creative;
like Us, embrace all horizons;
break whatsoever is uncongenial,
out of your heart's heart produce a new world –
it is irksome to the free servitor
to live in a world belonging to others.
(Courtesy:
http://www.allamaiqbal.com/works/poetry/persian/javidnama/translation/index.htm)
**************
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