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Allama Iqbal: a critical perspective

Posted on 29 December 2011 by Tea Server

By Abdul majeed Abid:

“Every generation has its own dreams and vision which it wants to accomplish without interference. Not imitation but freedom is required to build a new world. Therefore, an attempt should not be made to repeat but to make new history. People should be liberated from the shadows and allowed to flourish in a free society. Great leaders should be respected but not worshipped”.
(Dr Mubarak Ali)

Ibne Khaldun, the doyen of Muslim Historians, described History as a science and not an art. He was of the view that History should be objective, not subjective to the historian’s whims or the needs of the hour. The problem with later-day Muslim historians arose when they tried to “glorify” Muslim history and “re-invented” certain personalities as shining examples for the modern Muslims. This historical revisionism was at its peak during the 19th century and early parts of the 20th century.
Dr Mubarak Ali, in his book, “Taareekh ki Daryaft” (Exploring history) provided some glaring examples of historical revisionism from sub-continental history. The most famous religious figures from 15th to 18th century are supposed to be Sheikh Ahmad Sirhindi(also known as Mujaddad Alaf Sani) and Shah Waliullah. According to Dr Mubarak, the hype about  Sheikh Ahmad was propagated by Maulana Manazir Ahsan Gilani and Maulana Abul Kalaam Azad while Shah Waliullah  was “re-invented” by Obaidulah Sindhi as he was searching for someone resembling Karl Marx in the Islamic world. Sheikh Ahmad was made out to be the nemesis of Mughal Emperor Akbar. Another very important source of such revisionism was famous novelist Naseem Hijazi. This trend of bending history according to the time was continued after creation of Pakistan. An “Ideology of Pakistan” was created during the 1960s. The father of that Ideology was designated to be Allama Mohammad Iqbal, poet and philosopher. (For more on the story of creation of this so-called Ideology, I recommend reading the book “Dau Qaumi Nazriya: Aik Taareekhi Jaiza” by Professor Amjad Ali)
As a part of Historical Revisionism, Allama Iqbal’s poetry was used to stir up emotions of Nationalism and Pan-Islamism. Thousands of books have been written on Iqbal, most of them in his praise and very few in critiques. I will try to present some aspects of Iqbal’s poetry that I consider to be erratic and anachronistic.
Iqbal himself can be categorized as a historical revisionist. He remained passionate about Pan-Islamism throughout his life. While the argument that all the adherents of a religious ideology should combine and form one entity is very promising but it is utopian at best. Iqbal, of all people, would have known that since the death of Caliph Usman, Muslims have NEVER been a single entity throughout history. In fact, more Muslims have been killed by other Muslims in the last 1400 years than by people from other faiths.
Iqbal’s idea of an all conquering  “Mard-e-Momin” is not very different from the “Superman” of Neitzche. Allama Iqbal also propagated the idea of Muslim Supermacism i.e. only Muslims deserve to lead the world. This approach has led to a national cultural narcissism.
There is no place for women in Iqbal’s poetry, echoing a patriarchal approach by the esteemed poet. According to Mohammad Haneef, Iqbal wanted Muslim youth to take refuge in Mountains and that Martyrdom should be our ultimate aim. Now that the youth (TTP) has taken up all these endeavors, we can’t even stop them because we always taught them to do so. Interestingly, the most remarkable work done by Iqbal were his lectures titled “Reconstructing Islamic thought”. We do not find any reference to those lectures in mainstream media or textbooks only because they don’t teach anything about following without thinking(Taqleed) rather they slam this approach. There are also many contradictions in Iqbal’s poetry regarding structure of State. Iqbal criticized Democracy, Capitalism and Communism but did not hint at what kind of state he perceived. This issue has been highlighted by Dr Javed Iqbal, Iqbal son, in his autobiography(Apna Garebaan Chaak).Iqbal wrote most of his poetry in either Urdu or Persian, while the majority of Muslim Population communicated in Bengali, Punjabi, Sindhi or Pashto. According to figures collected in 1951, 54.6% people in Pakistan spoke Bengla, 28.4% spoke Punjabi, 7.2% spoke Urdu, 7.1% spoke Pashto while 5.8% spoke Sindhi. Keith Callard, Pakistan: Political Study, George Allen & Unwin, Oxford, 1957, p. 181). We declared Iqbal as our national poet despite the fact that fewer than 8 per cent of Pakistani people spoke Urdu as a first language(1981 national census). Iqbal’s so-called plan for Pakistan(due to which we credit him as the “dreamer/thinker of Pakistan, wrongly because 64 such suggestions had been publicly presented before 1930) did not include East Pakistan which was the hub of Muslim political activity in United India.

Due to so much diversity in the message of Iqbal, many elements have tried to use his poetry for their own agendas. Mullahs(clergymen), whom Iqbal opposed all his life and actively wrote against, blatantly used Iqbal’s message of Pan-Islamism for their own purposes.
In recent years, Iqbal’s poetry has been used for propaganda-mongering by Glenn Beck of Pakistan, Zaid Hamid who did two shows namely ‘Iqbal ka Pakistan’ and ‘Iqbal the Mysterious’ eulogizing the “mystic” aspects of Iqbal and attributed all kind of supernatural powers to Iqbal.
According to Nadeem Farooq Paracha, writer and blogger, “ I sometimes feel, a non-critical stance towards Iqbal’s work in this country has actually damaged his standing. He was a product of his time and well suited to compliment what was going in the minds of Indian Muslim men in the first half of the 20th century. But was he a visionary? I don’t think so. I don’t think his work is as relevant today as it is made out to be. Certainly not in a post-modern world where the notions of universalism based on certain singular concepts of faith and progress have long crumbled and given way to a healthy respect and need for democracy, pluralism and diversity.”

Despite all the above-stated criticism, I cannot deny the importance of Allama Iqbal as a poet and as a Philosopher. All I am saying is that we need to project a balanced image of Allama Iqbal and refrain from deification a mortal man. We also need an objective approach towards history so that our future generations do not suffer from paranoia as we are. We should also encourage constructive criticism of Iqbal and leave behind the notion that saying anything about Iqbal is akin to blasphemy.

Syndicated from: Pak Tea House

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Nato Attack on Pakistan Army, an overview.

Posted on 30 November 2011 by Tea Server


Nato Air attack on Pakistan Army: Capt Usman n Major Mujahid Shaheed,who got martrydom Last Morning

Pakistan gave the US 15 days to leave the Shamsi airfield. It also
announced that NATO supply routes into Afghanistan will be shut down.
The move comes after NATO troops killed at least 26 Pakistani soldiers
in two separate air strikes in Pakistan. The Shamsi airbase is used by
the CIA to carry out secret operations in the Pakistani desert.

Major Mujahid frm 105 L/C who embraced shahadat in NATO attack on Pakistani checkpost in Salsala Village..


PESHAWAR: Pakistani authorities on
Saturday blocked the NATO supply route to Afghanistan after an attack on
a border checkpost killed at least 24 Pakistani soldiers. The attack by
NATO helicopters on a checkpost located in Mohmand Agnecy killed at
least 24 soldiers and injured 12.

Official sources confirmed the suspension of supplies, adding that
all containers were stopped at the Takhta Baig checkpost in Jamrud
tehsil of Khyber Agency.
“We have suspended the supply and will not let even a single
container move ahead”, the official added. ”Supply trucks are being sent
back to Peshawar.” Takhta Baig is the first checkpost followed by four
more check-posts in the tribal areas and is the shortest possible route
to Afghanistan

War games spotlight China-Pakistan
hype as Pakistan have blocked the supply route to NATO & US Forces
in Afghanistan in protest to NATO raid which killed eight Pakistani
troops.


Uniform of Captain Bilal Zafar Shaheed after being hit by a rocket launcher.
Bilal was from a family credited
with a hundred years of the service in the armed forces; his great grand
father Subedar Lal Khan served in the First World War and won the
George Cross. His grandfather Tajjamal Hussain retired as a Colonel and
his father Zafar Tajammul Abbasi was a Captain in the Pakistan Army.
Capt Bilal’s maternal grandfather was also in the army and his brother
Captain Zarrar is also serving in the army. Rest in peace Capt Bilal
with your family of soldiers

JHELUM: Paratroopers hurtling head first out of planes, attack
helicopters strafing a terror training centre and shacks blown to bits
were this week’s latest embodiment of China-Pakistan friendship.
The war games conducted by 540 Chinese and Pakistani soldiers running
around scrubland —the fourth joint exercises since 2006 —were
ostensibly a chance for China to benefit from Pakistan’s
counter-terrorism experience.
There was disappointment that fighter jets were unable to carry out a
bombing raid, with visibility apparently poor, but the exercises were
declared a success in terms of deepening friendship and improving
military cooperation.
But behind the pomp rolled out for the Chinese, complete with slap-up
marquee lunch and bags of presents, the relationship is as
transactional as any other, as China competes with Pakistan’s arch-rival
India for Asian dominance.
And it is far from easy to decipher. “They operate silently so as not
to make any statements in public apart from cliches. So one doesn’t
know what’s happening,” said retired Pakistani general Talat Masood.
China is Pakistan’s main arms supplier, while Beijing has built two
nuclear power plants in Pakistan and is contracted to construct two more
reactors.
But the alliance has been knocked by Chinese accusations that the
separatist East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), which wants an
independent homeland for Xinjiang’s Muslim Uighurs, is training
“terrorists” in Pakistani camps.
Those accusations mirror long-standing concerns from the United
States that Taliban and al Qaeda bases are funnelling recruits to fight
in Afghanistan and hatch terror plots against the West.
During the exercises outside Jhelum, 85 kilometres (50 miles)
southeast of Islamabad, generals watched troops attack, clear and
destroy a mocked-up training camp, while smoking and sipping cups of tea
under a giant tent to keep off winter rays.
Chinese deputy chief of staff Hou Shusen and Pakistan’s army chief
Ashfaq Kayani sat together in the front row, guests of honour incapable
of talking to each other without the help of an interpreter.
“We have done our utmost to eliminate this threat of ETIM and other
extremists for China because we consider honestly that China’s security
is very dear to Pakistan,” Kayani told a news conference after the war
games.
He said that Pakistan had provided intelligence during the 2008
Beijing Olympics and the 2010 Shanghai Expo, and reiterated demands for
closer military cooperation and larger imports of military hardware from
China.
Beijing was instrumental in getting the United Nations and United
States to blacklist ETIM as a terrorist organisation in 2002, but
experts have questioned how much of a threat such a small group of
people really poses.
Pakistani analysts believe members number no more than hundreds and
are fairly dispersed in the remote mountains on the Pakistan-China
border.
Despite that issue, if the language used to describe Pakistan’s
febrile relationship with the United States is that of an unhappy couple
wishing but unable to divorce, then the hyperbole used to describe
China is that of an ecstatic lover.
“Higher than mountains” and “sweeter than honey” were phrases used by
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani when Chinese Public Security Minister
Meng Jianzhu came to town in September, at a time when relations with
the US were at their most difficult in years.
The top US military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, had just accused
Pakistan of colluding with Afghan militants in besieging the US embassy
in Kabul as ties plummeted further after the raid that killed Osama bin
Laden.
But independent China analyst Michael Dillon says that without any
real ideological links, China’s relationship with Pakistan is primarily
strategic, designed to offset its rivalry with India.
“There is a feeling that cooperation with Pakistan on counter-terrorism might be in China’s interests,” he told AFP.
“They’ve got economic domination over Southeast Asia. But South Asia
is another matter. The big rival is India. If they can get close
diplomatically to Pakistan then it can balance the power of India in the
subcontinent,” he said.
Neither can China present an alternative to the US alliance.
But Kayani described China as “very important” to regional stability,
perhaps best seen against a backdrop of Pakistan’s own rivalry with
India.
“It’s not a zero-sum game. You further strengthen your relations with
China, then you increase your importance. You use this as a leverage to
improve your relationship with the US,” said Masood.

اے جذبہ دل گر ميں چاہوں ہر چيز مقابل آجائے
منزل کے لئے دو گام چلوں اور سامنے منزل آجائے
اے دل کي خلش چل يوں ہي سہي چلتا تو ہوں ان کي محفل ميں
اس وقت مجھے چونکا دينا جب رنگ پہ محفل آجائے
اے رہبر کامل چل ديکھو، تيار تو ہوں پر يار رہے
اس وقت مجھے بھٹکا دينا جب سامنے منزل آجائے
ہاں ياد مجھے تم کر لينا آواز مجھے تم دے لينا
اس راہ محبت ميں کوئي درپيش جو مشکل آجائے
اب کيوں ڈھونڈوں وہ چشم کرم ہونے دے ستم بالائے ستم
ميں چاہتا ہوں اے جذبہ غم مشکل پہ مشکل آجائے

They have given their time
They have given their all
For Pakistan that said we made them fall.
Some say this is for power,
Some same this is for the fame.
We need to stop placing any and all the blames.
We have a country that has needs to,
Many lost their lives, and many lost their limbs.
Some lost their minds, and others lost their will.
Some don’t have homes, some don’t have food.
But this is our Pakistan who’s out to do good.
Give to your own, and then think of the world.
Lets fix our backyards before we fix theirs.
Our Pakistan is rich, with many things indeed.
But lets give aid to our people in the time of their needs.
So when you see a Soldier or someone in Uniform,
Please salute or shake their hand, and say JOB WELL DONE.

Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Prevez Kayani and Chinese General Hu
Sho Sen are watching joint war games of Pakistani – Chinese commandos in
Jehlum.
Syndicated from: PAKISTAN DEFENCE BLOG

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Pakistan Army Martyrs Names in NATO Attack

Posted on 26 November 2011 by Tea Server

Following are suspected to be martyred in NATO attack at Pakistan Army.

1. Major Mujahid
2. Capt Usman
3. Havaldar Mushtaq
4. Havaldar Aslam
5. Sipahi Imran
6. Sipahi Abdul Razzaq
7. Sipahi Mazhar
8. Sipahi Tarip
9. Sipahi Nasir Mehmod
10. Sipahi Mujibullah
11. Sipahi Tahir
12. Sipahi Muheem

* This list is not complete and is confirmed by official but it may contain any errors.

Syndicated from: PAKISTAN DEFENCE BLOG

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