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Sir
Alama
Mohammad
Iqbal
(1877–1938)
Allama Dr. Sir Mohammad Iqbal is one of most
outstanding poets, writers, intellectuals and
thinkers of modem times.
Iqbal was born at Sialkot on November 9, 1887.
He held a brilliant academic record. He did his
Masters in Philosophy from Government College,
Lahore and joined there as a lecturer. He left
for Europe in 1905 and studied Philosophy and
Law at the Trinity College, Cambridge,
Lincolin's Inn, London and the Munich
University. He was awarded a 'Ph. D' by the
Munich University.
He retu.med home in 1908 and rejoined service
in the Government College, Lahore. He resigned
after sometime and started practicing Law. He
was elected Member of the Punjab Legislative
Assembly in 1926 for three years. In 1930 Iqbal
was elected President of the Muslim League
session held at Allahabad. In 1931 he attended
the Round Table Conference which met in London
to frame a constitution for India and took
active Part in its various committees.
He was the first to give a concrete shape to the
Muslim aspirations in India for 'a separate
homeland'. In his Presidential Address at the
Annual Session of the All India Muslim League at
Allahbad (1930) he boldly asserted the Muslim
demand for the creation of a Muslim India within
India, and said "I would like to see the Punjab,
the North-West Frontier Province, Sindh and
Baluchistan amalgamated into a single State".
It was Iqbal's fervent appeal which persuaded
the Quaid-e-Azam in 1934 to return from England
and lead the Muslims of the Indo-Pakistan
Sub-continent in their struggle for
constitutional rights and it was in his letters
to the Quaid"e-Azam that he elaborated his
scheme in its political as well as cultural
context. He succeeded in convincing the
Quaid-e-Azam that Pakistan was the only solution
to the Political problems of the Muslims of
India, and it was on the foundations laid by
Iqbal that the Muslim Leageue's historic
Pakistan Resolution of 1940 wa~ ha~rl
He believed, on the one hand, in the
emancipation and freedom of the Muslims of the
Indo-P~istan Sub-continent and on the other, he
argued for the unity of Muslim nations all-over
the world. Iqbal's political philosophy is not
atomistic but organic in that it implied the
formation of an associaiton of the Muslim
countries to betten their own lot and be the
upholder of peace and justice throughout the
World. His verses in Urdu and Persian and his
monumental treatises have been translated into
almost all the important languages of the world
and found wide recognition in Iran, Turkdy,
Egypt, England, France, Germany, Italy, USSR,
etc.
He died on Apri121, 1938 at Lahore and was laid
to rest near Badshahi Mosque. An academy named
after him has been established by the Government
of Pakistan to promote and disseminate the
messages and teachings of Allama Iqbal. |