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Allama Iqbal & Falsafa e Hayat

Allama Iqbal & Falsafa e Hayat

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Allama Iqbal & Falsafa e Hayat / Description

علامہ اقبال کے افکار کا مرکزی نقطہ خودی ہے جسے ان کا فلسفہ حیات کہنا چاہیے۔ اقبال کا انسان کامل اطاعت الہٰی سے تربیت پاتا ہے اور اوصاف الٰہی سے متصف ہوتا ہے۔

Allama iqbal ne zindgi aur mot k falsafa ko teen nuqta w nazar se peesh kya hy yani is k teenon pehluon ko bare ahsan treqe se ujagar farmaya hy.

Muhammad Jamil-ud-Din Siddiqui Allama Iqbal ka Falsafa Zindgi aur Maut: Az Roe Hadees-e-Pak wa Quran-e-Hakeem.

Sir Muhammad Iqbal Kt (Urdu: محمد اقبال; 9 November 1877 – 21 April 1938) was a South Asian Muslim writer philosopher Scholar and politician whose poetry in the Urdu language is considered among the greatest of the twentieth century and whose vision of a cultural and political ideal for the Muslims of British-ruled India was to animate the impulse for Pakistan. He is commonly referred to by the honorific Allama (from Persian: علامہ romanized: ʿallāma lit. 'very knowing most learned').
Born and raised in Sialkot Punjab in an ethnic Kashmiri Muslim family Iqbal completed his B.A. and M.A. at the Government College Lahore. He taught Arabic at the Oriental College Lahore from 1899 until 1903. During this time he wrote prolifically. Among the Urdu poems from this time that remain popular are Parinde ki faryad (A bird's prayer) an early meditation on animal rights and Tarana-e-Hindi (The Song of Hindustan) a patriotic poem—both poems composed for children. In 1905 he left for further studies in Europe first to England where he completed a second B.A. at Trinity College Cambridge and was subsequently called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn and then to Germany where he received a Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of Munich. After returning to Lahore in 1908 he established a law practice but concentrated on writing scholarly works on politics economics history philosophy and religion. He is best known for his poetic works including Asrar-e-Khudi – after whose publication he was awarded a knighthood Rumuz-e-Bekhudi and the Bang-e-Dara. In Iran where he is known as Iqbāl-e Lāhorī (Iqbal of Lahore) he is highly regarded for his Persian works.

Iqbal regarded Rumi as his Guide and Ashraf Ali Thanwi as the greatest living authority on the matter of Rumi's teachings. He was a strong proponent of the political and spiritual revival of Islamic civilisation across the world but in particular in South Asia; a series of lectures he delivered to this effect were published as The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam. Iqbal was elected to the Punjab Legislative Council in 1927 and held a number of positions in the All India Muslim League. In his 1930 presidential address at the League's annual meeting in Allahabad he formulated a political framework for Muslims in British-ruled India. Iqbal died in 1938. After the creation of Pakistan in 1947 he was named the national poet there. He is also known as the "Hakeem-ul-Ummat" (The Sage of the Ummah) and the "Mufakkir-e-Pakistan" (The Thinker of Pakistan). The anniversary of his birth (Yom-e Welādat-e Muḥammad Iqbāl) 9 November used to be a public holiday in Pakistan until 2018. Abul Hasan Ali Hasani Nadwi wrote Glory of Iqbal to introduce him to the Arab world.

Muhammad Iqbal's The Call of the Marching Bell (بانگِ درا bang-e-dara) his first collection of Urdu poetry was published in 1924. It was written in three distinct phases of his life. The poems he wrote up to 1905—the year he left for England—reflect patriotism and the imagery of nature including the Urdu language patriotic "Saare Jahan se Accha" and "Tarana-e-Milli" ("The Song of the Community"). The second set of poems date from 1905 to 1908 when Iqbal studied in Europe and dwell upon the nature of European society which he emphasised had lost spiritual and religious values. This inspired Iqbal to write poems on the historical and cultural heritage of Islam and the Muslim community with a global perspective.

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