Remembering Iqbal and his message of change

Posted on November 9, 2007
Filed Under >Raza Rumi, People, Poetry, Politics
312 Comments
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Raza Rumi

God, You created the night, I made the lamp
You created the earth, I made earthen pot out of it
It is me who created the mirror out of stone
It is me who made elixir out of poison


Today Pakistan celebrates Allama Iqbal’s birth anniversary with the usual lip-service. The key messages of Iqbal seem to have been lost in the maze of officialdom. This is further exacerbated by the hijacking of Islam and politics by vested interests, not to mention the recent events that have shook us all. Iqbal opposed exploitation, Mullahism, emphasised the principle of movement in Islamic thought; and highlighted “Ijtehad” (re-interpretation) of Islamic teachings through a modern parliamentary framework. Alas, all of that is nearly forgotten.
For instance he was clear about the layers of exploitation:

The world does not like tricks and
Of science and wit nor, their contests
This age does not like ancient thoughts,
From core of hearts their show detests.

O wise economist, the books you write
Are quite devoid of useful aim:
They have twisted lines with orders strange
No warmth for labour, though they claim.

The idol houses of the West,
Their schools and churches wide
The ravage caused for, greed of wealth
Their wily wit attempts to hide

The questions that Iqbal raises in his poetry are universal and deal with the larger issues of Man’s relationship with God and the Universe. This is why his poetry does not address any particular group, but the entire Muslim Ummah. He has inspired Muslims with the realization of life and urged them for self-reform and self-actualization by searching for their khudi or self.

After centuries of stagnation, Iqbal was a voice for reformation within Islam. Shah Walliullah had tried to open the debate but Iqbal represented the twentieth century consciousness of modern Muslims. Iqbal is therefore known across the Muslim world, widely read and quoted. Pity that in the homeland that he dreamt of talking of ijtehad threatens many a fatwa mongers. In Zarb-e-Kalim, he sings:

Your prayer cannot change the Order of the Universe,
But it is possible that praying will alter your being;
If there is a revolution in your inner Self
It will not be strange, then, if the whole world changes too

In the famous series of lectures – The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam – Iqbal held:

“….but since things have changed and the world of Islam is to-day confronted and affected by new forces set free by the extraordinary development of human thought in all its directions, I see no reason why this attitude (finality of legal schools) should be maintained any longer. Did the founders of our schools ever claim finality for their reasoning and interpretations? Never. …The teaching of the Qur’an that life is a process of progressive creation necessitates that each generation, guided but unhampered by the work of its predecessor, should be permitted to solve its own problems.”

Maulana Rumi and Iqbal communicated a shared message: de’dan day’gar amuz, shan’idan day’gar amuz (learn to see and think in a new way). As Suroosh Irfani writes eloquently, this

“message sums up an outlook of life as a forward assimilative movement, even as one remains rooted in an Islamic heritage. Indeed, the message arose in a historical context when old certainties were crumbling and the new were struggling to be born: Rumi lived at a time when the Muslim world was traumatised by Mongol invasions, while Iqbal’s was a time of awakening of the colonised masses that eventually led to the independence of India and Pakistan.”


What Pakistan appears today is not the dream that Iqbal articulated for a separate homeland for Muslims of India. The extremists waving their flags on government buildings and propagating a version of Islam that Iqbal resisted, while the peaceful activists are behind bars. I digress: The vision of the Quaid for a modern, democratic Pakistan where rule of law was to prevail has also been undermined. Somehow, I have been thinking of Habib Jalib – wish he was alive today – here are a few verses by him from a poem entitled Youm-i-Iqbal:

Log uthte hain jab tere ghareebon ko jagane
Sab shehar ke zardar pahunch jaate hain thane
Kehte hain yeh daulat hamein bakhshi hai khuda ne
Farsudah bahane wahi afsaane purane
Ai shair-e mashriq! Yehi jhute yehi bad zaat
Peete hain laoo banda-e mazdoor ka din raat

When we arise to wake the poor, the have nots
A beeline to the police station they make, these wealthy sots
They say that God this wealth to them allots
Oh these trite excuses, oh these dusty plots
Night and day the working men’s blood they suck, o poet of the East
These congenital liars, with the vileness of a beast

(Translated by fowpe sharma and Urdu transliteration by Hasan Abdullah)

It is time to reclaim Iqbal and save him from the clutches of forces that have been attempting to maintain the status quo; and promote obscurantism. His vision starts from the self and then reaches for the society and the Universe.

References:

1. A Reader’s Words
2. Allama Iqbal dot com
3. Farzana Hassan
4. Revolutionary Democracy
5. Title Photo by Abro

Related ATP Post: Owning Mohammad Iqbal

312 responses to “Remembering Iqbal and his message of change”

  1. Rafay Kashmiri says:

    Pak tea House

    Its not only between rich and poor you can
    go further pls.

    Jis khait say dehqa’n ko muyassar na ho rozi
    us khet kay har khosha-e-gandum ko jala

    @ Wasim Arif/other Pakistan

    you have ruined the sher and en plus its irrelevant.

  2. Utho! meri duniya keh ghareebon ko jagaa do
    kaakh-e-umraa key dar-e-deewar hila do

  3. Raza Bhai,

    Excellent post as usual, I recall that the Allama never smiled in any of his portraits because he said he could not do so as he never felt joy because his people were in chains of poverty and injustice. Today we are in the same predicament, when will we as a nation rise together and create a Pakistan we can be proud of, one that lives and breathes the Allama

  4. JMA says:

    Although I am never in favour of military rule but I do agree with anjaan that the general has done some good for the country as opposed to the thugs and thieves (BB and Sharif), obviously now the human greed came into play and the matter of so called “kursi”that no one wants to leave. Atleast Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto had a vision for the people of Pakistan and the whole muslim world but Miss Bhutto is a total disgrace to Pakistan and to her fathers good name….and Lets make sure that she never return to the power….

  5. Rafay Kashmiri says:

    Samad Saheb,

    As you said you are not Islamic scholar, but the
    impression i get from you is that Islam needs revision
    or re-interpretation so that it becomes ‘progressive’
    and “dynamic”, and that ” Iqbal” wished or
    wanted that way, I would humbly suggest you to
    please refer :

    Sura 3 ayat 7 of Al Quran.

    1.5 Billion Muslims and same amount of
    interpretations ? its suspicious ?

    Iqbal never ever wanted Islam to be “progressive”
    style Leninist, marxist, Maoist, or even socialist,

    Mazdoor Kisaan and Musaawat is not at all
    an invention or monopoly of leftists.

    You can, very easily, seperate the “human interpretations”
    from the Quranics and Prophetics.

    Even many “experts” of Iqbal have very corrupt
    interpretations, they call themselves ” Iqbalists”.

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