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Monday 25 July 2011

IQBAL ON JIHAD

fatwa  hai   shiekh  ka  ye   zmana   qalam  ka  hai
dunya    main   rahy     nahi    ab     talwar    kargar
Lekin     Jnab      shiekh    ko  maloom     kia   nahi
masjid    main ab  ye  waaz  be sood  hai  be  asar
taigho Tfang  ab daste  muslman main  hai  kahan
ho   bhi  to  dil   mout    ki    Lzzat   se   bay   khbar
kafir  ki  mout   say    bhi    Lrazta  ho    jis  ka    dil
kehta   hai  isay  kon  k  muslman  ki     mout   mer
taleem   is     ko      chahiay     tarke      jihad       ki
dunya  ko  jis  k  panja a  khoneen   say  ho  khtar
batil   ki   faalo    fer     ki      hifazt       k      wastay
europe    zrah   main  doob   gia   dosh  ta    kmar
haq say  agar gharz  hai  to zaiba  hai  kia ye baat
Islam   ka    muhasiba  europe  say    der     guzar.

Friday 22 July 2011

IQBAL ABOUT DEMOCRACY

      IQBAL ABOUT DEMOCRACY
YEH  RAAZ  JO  IK  MARDE FRANGI     NE  KIA   FAASH 
HER  CHND  KE  DANA  ISAY  KHOLA  NAHI       KARTAY
JAMHURIAT    IK  TARZE  HAKUMAT  HAI  KE  JIS   MAIN
BANDON  KO GINA KARTAY  HAIN  TOLA  NAHI  KARTAY.

Wednesday 20 July 2011

phool

                                   phool       
phool  ki   ptti   se  cut  sakta   hai  heeray  ka  jigar 

mard-e-nadan  per kalame  narmo  nazuk  be  asar                                                                                         

Saturday 2 July 2011

ALLAMA IQBAL's LIFE

Allama Iqbal, great poet-philosopher and active political leader, was born at Sialkot, Punjab, in 1877. He descended from a family of Kashmiri Brahmins, who had embraced Islam about 300 years earlier.
Iqbal received his early education in the traditional maktab. Later he joined the Sialkot Mission School, from where he passed his matriculation examination. In 1897, he obtained his Bachelor of Arts Degree from Government College, Lahore. Two years later, he secured his Masters Degree and was appointed in the Oriental College, Lahore, as a lecturer of history, philosophy and English. He later proceeded to Europe for higher studies. Having obtained a degree at Cambridge, he secured his doctorate at Munich and finally qualified as a barrister.
He returned to India in 1908. Besides teaching and practicing law, Iqbal continued to write poetry. He resigned from government service in 1911 and took up the task of propagating individual thinking among the Muslims through his poetry.

By 1928, his reputation as a great Muslim philosopher was solidly established and he was invited to deliver lectures at Hyderabad, Aligarh and Madras. These series of lectures were later published as a book "The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam". In 1930, Iqbal was invited to preside over the open session of the Muslim League at Allahabad. In his historic Allahabad Address, Iqbal visualized an independent and sovereign state for the Muslims of North-Western India. In 1932, Iqbal came to England as a Muslim delegate to the Third Round Table Conference. In later years, when the Quaid had left India and was residing in England, Allama Iqbal wrote to him conveying to him his personal views on political problems and state of affairs of the Indian Muslims, and also persuading him to come back. These letters are dated from June 1936 to November 1937. This series of correspondence is now a part of important historic documents concerning Pakistan's struggle for freedom.
On April 21, 1938, the great Muslim poet-philosopher and champion of the Muslim cause, passed away. He lies buried next to the Badshahi Mosque in Lahore.

Guest Writer Ahmed