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: At last the silent tongue of Hijaz has announced to the ardent ear
the tiding That the covenant which had been given to the desert-dwelles is going
to be renewed vigorously: The lion who had emerged from the desert and had toppled
the Roman Empire is as I am told by the angels, about to get up again (from his
slumbers.)
You the dwelles of the West, should know that the world
of God is not a shop (of yours). Your imagined pure gold is about to lose it standard
value (as fixed by you). 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. 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 youngmen 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. It should be stressed that Iqbal felt he had received
a spiritual message in 1907 which even to him was, at that juncture, not clear.
Its full import dawned on him later. The verses quoted above show that Iqbal had
taken a bold decision about himself as well. Keeping in view that contemporary
circumstances, he had decided to give a lead to the Muslim ummah and bring it
out of the dark dungeon of slavery to the shining vasts of Independence. This
theme was repeated later in poems such as "Abdul Qadir Ke Nam," "Sham-o-Sha'ir,"
"Javab-i Shikwa," "Khizr-I-Rah," "Tulu-e Islam"
etc. He never lost heart. His first and foremost concern, naturally, were the
Indian Muslims. He was certain that the day of Islamic resurgence was about to
dawn and the Muslims of the South Asian subcontinent were destined to play a prominent
role in it.
Iqbal, confident in Allah's grand scheme and His aid, created a new world and
imparted a new life to our being. 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." Many verses in Iqbal's poetry are prompted by a similar
impulse. A random example, a ghazal from Zabur-i Ajam published in 1927 illustrates
his eepseated belief: The
Guide of the Era is about to appear from a corner of the desert of Hijaz. The
carvan is about to move out from this far flung valley. I have observed the kingly
majesty on the faces of the slaves. Mahmud's splendour is visible in the dust
of Ayaz. Life
laments for ages both in the Ka'bah and the idol-house. So that a person who knows
the secret may appear. The laments that burst forth from the breasts of the earnestly
devoted people. Are going to initiate a new principle in the conscience of the
world. Take this harp from my hand. I am done for. My laments have turned into
blood and thatn blood is going to trickle from the strings of the harp.
The five couplets quoted above are prophetic. In the first couplet Allama Iqbal
indicates that the appearance of the Guide of the Era was just round the corner
and the Caravan is about to start and emerge from "this" valley. Iqbal
does not say that the awaited Guide has to emerge from the centre of Hijaz. He
says he is going to appear from a far flung valley. For the poet the desert of
Hijaz, at times, serves as a symbol for the Muslim ummah. This means that Muslims
of the Indian sub-continent are about to have a man who is destined to guide them
to the goal of victory and that victory is to initiate the resurgence of Islam.
In the
second couplet, he breaks the news of the dawn which is at hand. the slaves are
turning into magnificent masters. In the third couplet he stresses the point that
the Seers come to the world of man after centuries. He himself was one of those
Seers. In the fourth couplet he refers to some ideology or principle quite new
to the world which would effect the conscience of all humanity. And what else
could it be, if it were not the right of self-determination for which the Muslims
of the sub-continent were about to struggle. After the emergence of Pakistan this
right became a powerful reference. It erved as the advent of a new principle and
continues to provide impetus to Muslims in minority in other parts of the world
such as in the Philippines, Thailand and North America.
In the fifth couplet Iqbal indicates that he would die before the advent of freedom.
He was sure that his verses which epitomized his most earnest sentiments would
stand in good stead in exhorting the Muslims of the sub-continent to the goal
of freedom.
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