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For who is he a rind, you?
nor will we accept your secular jinnahs vision
Well if that's what rocks your boat good for you, for me who the hell is he, no body i can relate to, each to their own.
I respect him and his achievements, but i just don't call him my quaid, our quaids are those gallant and brave from the land of mountains, sher shah suri, khushal khan etc etc, that's not disrespect that's freedom of speech and thought.
i am not free to decide for myself who is my quaid?
He died of TB, bit like how Jesus did for all our sins hay?
I have shown respect, yet you disrespect the great khushal khan.
Iqbal: A new beginning, an end to misconceptions
It is a fact that a non-Muslim cannot be head of the administration in a Muslim State, said the leader of the Congress, Sris Chandra Chattopadhya, in the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on March 12, 1949. Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan replied that this was not so.
True to this promise, non-Muslims remained legible for the office of prime minister in all drafts of the constitution produced by the first constituent assembly right up to its dissolution in 1954. Significantly, these drafts always mentioned that Pakistan was an Islamic state, and not a secular state.
On this ground, the founding parents of Pakistan stand in opposition to Iskander Mirza, Ayub Khan and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who promulgated the subsequent constitutions in Pakistan, respectively in 1956, 1962 and 1973. Those constitutions required that the prime minister should be a Muslim. However, the founding fathers of Pakistan had a different concept of an Islamic state.
This is where there is a major difficulty in understanding Allama Iqbal. We tend to presume that when he advocated an Islamic state, it would have meant that non-Muslims could not have equal rights. This leads to three other misconceptions, which need to be dispelled right away.
They are: Iqbal was a secularist in some ways, or a socialist, or that he was opposed to democracy.
MISCONCEPTION ONE: IQBAL SUPPORTED SECULARISM
Due to our misconception of an Islamic state, some of us are led to believe that all references to universal ideals in the poetry and prose of Iqbal amounted to an affirmation of secularism.
The truth is that Iqbal clarified his position on this issue repeatedly, beginning with his groundbreaking paper in 1908:
according to the law of Islam there is no distinction between the Church and the State. (Political Thought in Islam; 1908)
MISCONCEPTION TWO: IQBAL WAS A SOCIALIST
The idea that Iqbal was a socialist was first proposed by a journalist in 1923, and Iqbal refuted it immediately in a public statement. However, since many people believe that socialism and capitalism are the only options available to human mind, they tend to interpret all references to social justice in Iqbals writings as a partial approval of socialism. His position on this issue is best represented by his own words:
Both nationalism [secularism] and atheistic socialism, at least in the present state of human adjustments, must draw upon the psychological forces of hate, suspicion, and resentment which tend to impoverish the soul of man and close up his hidden sources of spiritual energy. (The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam; 1934).
MISCONCEPTION THREE: IQBAL WAS OPPOSED TO DEMOCRACY
The most widespread and bizarre misconception is that Iqbal was opposed to democracy. A few of his verses are lifted out of context and quoted with complete confidence to support this assertion. Of course, the most infamous is the Urdu couplet which could be translated as: Democracy is a form of government in which people are counted but not weighed. Nobody bothers to look up the preceding couplet in the poem, or the footnote, where it is clearly mentioned that Iqbal is quoting a French novelist, Stendhal. Iqbals own opinion on the matter was:
Democracy, then, is the most important aspect of Islam regarded as a political ideal. (Islam as a Moral and Political Ideal; 1909)
THE PROMISE
It may seem to be a contradiction that Iqbal believed in democracy and denounced theocracy, but was also opposed to secularism and socialism.
If this is a contradiction, it is also reflected in the entire history of the Muslim world since 1954 (except some Arab states). Unlike India, Muslim countries have not had smooth runs of democracy despite being free for so long. At the same time, they are equally unwilling to replicate the kind of monarchy introduced in some Arab states by European powers during the First World War.
So what do we want and how can it be achieved?
This is the enigma which Iqbal promises to solve for us. Perhaps that is why he didnt die. He is back.
_________________________________________________________
This is a weekly web feature that will appear on The Express Tribune website.
Khurram Ali Shafique is the author of Iqbal: an Illustrated Biography (2006) and offers online courses in Iqbal Studies for Iqbal Academy Pakistan at Marghdeen Learning Centre.
CHECK IT OUT
Useful resources for Iqbal Studies, including free online versions of the works of Iqbal with English translations, are available on the official website of Iqbal Academy Pakistan.
Iqbal: A new beginning, an end to misconceptions The Express Tribune
Can mods please edit the thread title and put an "I" in the start. Thanks.
Jinnahs Pakistan and ideology stops at indus because his ideology suits people who share genetic and cultural ties with him, we voted for Islam and not jinnah.
People voted for Islam and not jinnah, heck he didn't have any connection to this land, can he outdo people like ahmad shah abdali or sher shah suri or dost Muhammad?. Answer is never.
I am Pakistani but pukhtoon Pakistani, rehman babas and khushal khan khattacks Pakistani and not jinnahs or iqbal Pakistani, heck anything i have in common with them is just religion.
You have your quaid and his visions and ideology, we have ours dating back centuries.
This coming from decendant of an immigrant that moved to Pakistan from India in the name of religion?
Someone who has no connection with these lands but wants to enforce their view.
If we move with Afghanistan or Iran our genetic cousins, am afraid you wontt have country left, so Mr mqm you guys will be just a strip of land.
Regarding education, we don't need your type of education that steals our history and calls it Islamic history.
"Pull out your sword and slay any one, that says Pashtun and Afghan are not one! Arabs know this and so do Romans: Afghans are Pashtuns, Pashtuns are Afghans."
Very true and your kind has no relevance west of the indus, thank the British that you have some identity, before that you know very well.
It is a fact that a non-Muslim cannot be head of the administration in a Muslim State, said the leader of the Congress, Sris Chandra Chattopadhya, in the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on March 12, 1949. Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan replied that this was not so.
Very true and your kind has no relevance west of the indus, thank the British that you have some identity, before that you know very well. Mind you, i can share your pain of no identity now either, rejected, not accepted as one of the own.
[:::~Spartacus~:::];3687909 said:but you dont belong to east of indus river bhai, go back to KPK from karachi, lahore, rawalpindi, faisalabad etc go to kabul, jalalabad, kandahar, tehran, tashkant etc, im not more outsider, you guys dont even have cultural similarity with sindh and punjab, but atleast we share some, you guys are genetically iran, afghanistan, go there, dont come here
who us heading to peshawar, nobody, nothing is there, you guys are coming to east of indus river, go back
which land east of indus river or the west of the indus river?
I don't live east of indus, i live in a land of kohs , but you i feel sorry for a crow amongst peacocks, rejected by every ethnic group of Pakistan, no where to go i understand , even a Palestinian can call something his home but its very difficult in your case, i can see the frustration neck i sympathize with it.