Showing posts with label Iqbal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iqbal. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Iqbal Day Today

9th November is celebrated throughout Pakistan as the birthday of Dr Muhammad Iqbal, commonly known as Allama Iqbal. Born in 1877 at Sialkot, studied at the famous Government College Lahore, obtained his PhD from the Munich University, this poet philosopher was the man who dreamt of a separate state to be carved out of the British India to be the homeland of the Muslims. Later in 1934, Rehmat Ali, a student at Oxford coined the word PAKISTAN.



Due to hectic efforts and the driving force of motivation of Dr Iqbal, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, also widely known as the Quaid-e-Azam, led the struggle under the flag of All India Muslim League to realize the dream of Iqbal and win a homeland for the Muslims of the Indian subcontinent on 14 August 1947.



As a poet philosopher, Iqbal’s audience was the Muslim youth of then British India. In his writings, he addressed and exhorted them to stand up and boldly face life's challenges. The central theme and main source of his message was the Qur'an. His poetry and philosophy, written in Urdu and Persian, stress the rebirth of Islamic and spiritual redemption through self-development, moral integrity, and individual freedom. His many works include "The Secrets of the Self"; a long poem; "A Message from the East" and "The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam". His Persian poetry is still being taught in Iran and is known as Iqbal Lahori.



The sufferings of the Muslims, specially in the Balkans, after the World War I, the end of the Ottoman Empire and sufferings of the Muslims of the Indian sub-continent and the unjust attitude towards them from the British and Hindus compelled Iqbal to enter the politics and was elected to the Punjab provincial legislature in 1927. He became the president of the all India Muslim League in 1930. In his historic Allahabad Address the same year, Iqbal visualized an independent and sovereign state for the Muslims of North-Western India. He said, "I would like to see the Punjab, North-West Frontier Province, Sind and Balochistan amalgamated into a single State. Self-government within the British Empire, or without the British Empire, the formation of a consolidated North-West Indian Muslim State appears to me to be the final destiny of the Muslims, at least of North-West India."



To boost the morale of the youth, which he referred to as Uqaab (Eagle), he wrote:



Tundi-e-bad-e-mukhalif say na gabhra ay uqaab



Yeh to chalti hay tujhay ooncha uranay kay liye



(O’ Eagle, don’t be afraid of the opposing winds, these are blown to make you fly higher)



Iqbal set the Pakistan movement in motion and steered it to the path of success, both through his political acumen and meaningful poetry. It was a big blow to the movement when he died in 1938, nine years before his dream of an independent Pakistan could realize.



Much research has been carried out on Iqbal’s poetry. But it would be unjust not to mention the name of famous German scholar Annemarie Schimmel (1922-2003), who is remembered and revered for her lifelong research on the life and poetry of Iqbal. Her book Gabriel’s Wing– A Study into the Religious Ideas of Sir Muhammad Iqbal (1963, rpt. 1989) is still the finest specimen of her insight in Iqbal studies and Islamic thought in general. This is testified by the fact that from among a large number of books written in the major languages of the world, Gabriel’s Wing was declared as the best work on Iqbal studies, in the international languages, for the period 1947-1981. Apart from these works she was the author of hundreds of articles and dozens of books on Iqbal and Islam. She also funded the Annemarie Schimmel scholarship for Women Studies in Pakistan.



Related Reading:Dr Allama Muhammad Iqbal (Pakistanpaedia)

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Landmarks and Parks of Tehran

I stopped short of discussing landmarks and the beautiful parks of Iran in my last post as it was getting out of my hand. I never wanted to prolong it any further, lest the interest of the readers was lost.

At that time, the best landmark of Tehran was the Azadi Square (top right in the photo). Actually its name was Shahyad Tower, when it was built to commemorate the 2,500th anniversary of the once great Persian Empire in the Shah of Iran’s reign. After the Islamic Revolution in 1979, its name was changed to Azadi (freedom) Tower. Beautifully lit at night, it can be seen from miles apart. Whenever driving at night, it always served as beacon for direction keeping. Now I hear that another impressive tower by the name of Milad Tower has been added to Tehran’s skyline, which overshadows the Azadi Tower to an extent. But I really cannot comment on it any further as I haven’t seen it except in photographs, in which it looks impressive and pragmatic.

Apart from this, there are many museums and cultural centers. A number of erstwhile royal palaces have now been converted into tourists sites (though expensive items, paintings and furniture has been removed) and are centre of attraction of anyone visiting Tehran, and so for us as well. These palaces included the Golestan Palace, Niavran Palace and Saadabad Palace. The famous Peacock Throne of the kings is placed in the Golestan Palace. We also “roamed” in the vast green lawns of Niavran Palace, where once tourists like us could not even dream of entering. Beside palaces, there are a number of museums that include the Carpet Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art, Quran Museum and Painting Museum. Carpets are the specialty of Iran and one can see the most expensive, exotic, minutely woven and ultra big carpets displayed in the Carpet Museum, which was closer to the Park-e-Laleh. The Art Museum had some masterpieces from Picasso and Van Gogh, said to have been chosen by Empress Farah Deeba.

Teheran has wide roads and “Utu-baans – a Persian translation of the German Autobahn.” Beside many others, there were two that would interest us Pakistanis. These were the Bozarg Rah-e-Muhammad Ali Jinnah (Muhammad Ali Jinnah Expressway – the founder of Pakistan), and Iqbal Lahori Street in Eastern Tehran (the national poet of Pakistan Dr Allama Muhammad Iqbal had his initial poetic work written in Persian and is still revered as a great poet in Iran and his poetry is taught in schools and colleges. Although born in city of Sialkot, he had his higher education from Government College Lahore, where he was on the faculty later on as well. Perhaps for this association, he is known as Iqbal Lahori in Iran).

If I am allowed to say that Tehran is nothing without its parks, I may not be very wrong. Besides Park-e-Laleh (that I mentioned in my previous post) there are more than 800 small, medium and large scale parks spread all over Tehran, of which Park-e-Millat, Park-e-Niavran and Jamshediah Park are the major ones. I along with my family was a regular visitor of Park-e-Laleh and Park-e-Millat.




Almost on every Sunday, like most of the Tehranites, I would also take my family to either of these two parks to spend the day. And the best thing was that despite being visited by thousands of visitors, there would be no litter left behind by anyone. That’s something unbelievable. There were some fine restaurants in these parks where one could enjoy the traditional Iranian cuisines. Park-e-Millat is the largest of all parks in Tehran. In the imperial times, Park-e-Millat was known as the Shahansahi Park (the Imperial Park). There is a big lake which looks majestic at sun sets, with the reflection of Alborz Mountains. There were boats to enjoy the lake rides. The park has elaborate amusement facilities for the visitors which includes skating lanes, snack bars and coffee shops and a small area with birds in cages. There also is a horseracing club adjacent to the park. I am told that the park has now home to the first musical fountains in Tehran, established in 2008, like that of the Dubai Mall.

Closer to Park-e-Millat is located the Tehran international Fair grounds, where exhibitions of international level are held. I once went with a friend, a geologist from Pakistan who later died in a helicopter crash in Iran, to a book fair and was fascinated to see the interest shown by the Iranians in the books and other AV equipment and aids.

Sandwiched between the Carpet and Contemporary art Museums, Park-e-Laleh (pictured top and bottom left above) was more frequented by us as it was closer to our house. We would walk down to the place in the evenings to enjoy the lush green park with a huge fountain in its centre. There was a Kangaroo at one of its entrances, which is centre of attraction of my sons. No sooner it started to become visible, both of them would leave us and rush towards it and sit in its lap. Chalo Kababs used to be our favourite dinner, followed by delicious coffee ice-cream. On our first snow fall, we rushed to the park and enjoyed the snow fall right there in the open. I would never forget that (though on our way back we found our car to be covered with a heavy sheet of snow and took quite a while to remove it and drive back home).

Well, that’s all for now – but my description of Tehran is far from over. I would write more about people of Tehran in particular and that of Iran in general besides describing the Shehr-e-Baazi (the Sports City) in my next post.


Related Reading:
Isphahan - Nisf-e-Jehan

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Sunday, October 4, 2009

Haddoke, Aggoke and Sialkot


For many Sialkot may sound familiar but not the other two places – but for me these are synonymous to one another and my childhood. I first heard of Haddoke – a small village near Sambrial, Sialkot,  from my mother since she was born there. It was here that she played with her friends, ran behind butterflies and had rides on swings hanging with ropes under tall old trees. It was here that she was brought up and the married to my father. I also came to know of another name – “Palkhu Nala” , a seasonal nullah that flowed near my mother’s village and the people of her village had to cross the muddy water to go to Sambrial or Sialkot and return. So obviously I was overjoyed to pass over the nullah near Wazirabad during my first train journey from Lahore to Rawalpindi – it was something that I heard from my mother. That’s all about Haddoke.

Sialkot – located 130 kilometers northwest of the provincial capital Lahore and just miles away from the Indian border, is the "export city" of Pakistan. It exports surgical instruments, sports gear and cutlery. However, unlike public sector based industry, the entire export industry of Sialkot is in the private sector, financed mostly through family savings.  

Now Aggoke – which was once a small village around Sialkot (now grown into a town) – I came to know this place when I read a small love story of this village in once the only digest of Pakistan, “The Urdu Digest”. But it was in 1978, when as a young officer, I was asked to go to Sialkot and make cutlery and crockery for the mess since the president of Pakistan was to visit Sargodha and was to have dinner in our mess. So it was no surprise for me to be happy when going to Sialkot I saw the Haddoke en route, reminding me the nostalgic memory of my past. In Sialkot, I placed the order for the cutlery with one of the leading cutlery manufacturing company and the proceeded to Wazirabad to place order for the crockery. A few days back, I returned to Sialkot to collect the cutlery and crockery from Wazirabad. This was my initial physical contact with Sialkot. But I could not see the city due to shortage of time.

The second time when I traveled to Sialkot, I did it with my family and were mesmerized by the aroma of rice paddies on both sides of the road in area between Gujranwala and Sialkot, which is famous for world famous qualities of rice.  This time I intended to take my grown up kids around for them to see Sialkot. And it was no wonder that I took them to the same cutlery manufacturing company and when I told the owner that I had visited them some three decades ago, he was surprised and flabbergasted. I also took my family to Iqbal Manzil – a place where Dr Sir Allama Muhammad Iqbal, the national poet of Pakistan was born in the late 19th century. 



For me too it was my first visit to this memorable place and I am ever grateful to the curator of the building, who opened the place for us at a very odd time of around 12:30 at night.  Please read my detailed account of visit of Iqbal Manzil from my website Pakistanpaedia. The Sialkot Clock Tower right in the centre of Sialkot Cantonment is yet another landmark of the city. Standing tall for more than a century – dates back to 1876. Sheikh Ghulam Qadir and Seth Rai Bahadur laid its foundation stone. In the company of its four clock faces that still keep track of the passing minutes. It has been renovated many a times but the original structure is not changed.

How Sialkot got into the business of its now thriving sports industry? No one exactly knows, but it is said that during the British rule, a British broke his tennis racquet and, since an immediate replacement was not possible, he asked a local to repair it. The man did a perfect job and the sports goods manufacturing industry took root in Sialkot. Recorded history of the industry goes back to 1895 when the city started becoming famous for its tennis racquets. By 1903, cricket bats were being crafted from imported English willow and exported to different parts of British India and beyond. In 1922, one Mr. Syed was awarded the British Empire Export Award for supplying footballs to the British Army. Over the years the industry grew to include a variety of wood and leather-based sports equipment, and diversified into related industries such as sports apparel and riding equipment and even the Scottish bagpipes. Sialkot was selected to supply footballs for the 1994 and 1998 World Cups. It was once famous as a centre for the manufacture of damascened ware and paper, which dates back to the time of the Mughal Emperor Akbar. Sialkoti paper, also known as “Man Singhi paper” was famous all over the world. Now, besides its three chief products, its also manufactures processed foods, ceramics, embroidery, ready-made garments and musical Instruments. Almost every product is exported to the world.

Going to Sialkot (if not by air) and missing out the Sialkot International Airport would be a great miss, since the most commendable feat of the local industrialist to join hands and build the first privately funded international standard airport. This beautiful airport is 13 kilometers west of Sialkot and is linked by a road to Gujranwala, Wazirabad, Gujrat, Narowal, the Export Processing Zone (EPZ) and the Sialkot Dry Port Trust. It has the longest runway (3.6 kilometers long) in Pakistan. The runway is suitable for larger aircraft like B-747, A-300, B-737 and F-27 aircraft and would cater the needs and requirements of international flights. PIA now operates domestic and international flights directly from here.
 
Photo by me
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