Wednesday, May 20, 2026

The Sacrifice That Teaches Nearness

 بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

There are acts of worship that we explain too quickly. We name them, classify them, assign them a legal category, debate their conditions, and then imagine that we have understood them.

But some acts of worship are not merely rules.

They are schools.

The sacrifice of Eid al-Adha is one of those schools.

It teaches us what nearness means. It teaches us what gratitude looks like when it leaves the tongue and enters the hand. It teaches us that worship is not sentiment alone, nor is it spectacle. It is prayer. It is restraint. It is remembrance. It is meat placed in the hands of others. It is the ego made smaller before Allah.

The Qur’an gives the whole matter in one brief command:

فَصَلِّ لِرَبِّكَ وَٱنْحَرْ

So pray and sacrifice to your Lord alone.
— Sūrat al-Kawthar, 108:2

This is the order. Prayer first. Sacrifice after. And both for your Lord. Not for tribe. Not for custom. Not for social pressure. Not for display. Not for the annual theatre of who bought what. Not for the market of religious self-importance.

For Allah.

Uḍḥiyah, Qurbānī, Hady

The Arabic word most precise for the Eid sacrifice is uḍḥiyah — أُضْحِيَة.

It is connected to ḍuḥā, the bright forenoon, because this sacrifice belongs to the day of Eid after the prayer, in the light of the morning. Al-Qāḍī explained that it was named uḍḥiyah because it is done in the ḍuḥā, the rising part of the day.

That itself is a lesson.It is worship done in the light, after ṣalāh, with the Name of Allah, and with food  moving toward family, neighbours, the needy, and the forgotten.

Then there is qurbānī.

This is our Persian-Urdu word, and it is a beautiful word. It comes from Arabic qurbān, from the root q-r-b, the root of nearness. The Qur’anic Arabic Corpus lists qurbān as sacrifice and also gives forms of the same root meaning drawing near, coming close, and nearness.

So qurbānī is not merely slaughter.

It is an attempt at qurb.

Nearness.

Nearness to Allah through obedience. Nearness to the poor through feeding. Nearness to the Sunnah through imitation. Nearness to Ibrāhīm عليه السلام through surrender. Nearness to the Messenger of Allah ﷺ through love.

Then there is hady — الهَدْي.

Hady is not the same as uḍḥiyah. Hady is the sacrificial offering connected especially to Hajj and ʿUmrah. In Sūrat al-Baqarah, Allah speaks of offering what is easy of sacrificial animals and not shaving the head until the hady reaches its place of slaughter. The root h-d-y is also the root of guidance, gift, and leading, and the Qur’anic Arabic Corpus lists hady as a noun form from this root.

So the three words carry three shades.

Uḍḥiyah reminds us of the liturgical morning of Eid.

Qurbānī reminds us of nearness.

Hady reminds us of the offering sent toward the sacred rites of Hajj.

Words matter.

A civilization is carried in its words. When we lose the meanings of words, we often keep the action but lose the light inside the action.

The Qur’anic Theology of Sacrifice

Sūrat al-Ḥajj opens the meaning further.

Allah says that He appointed for every community a sacrificial rite so that they may mention the Name of Allah over what He provided them.

So the animal is not the centre.

The Name of Allah is the centre.

The provision is from Allah. The life is from Allah. The permission is from Allah. The gratitude returns to Allah.

Then Allah says:

فَكُلُوا۟ مِنْهَا وَأَطْعِمُوا۟

Eat from it, and feed…

The Qur’an commands eating and feeding together. It speaks of feeding the one who asks and the one who does not ask.

This is important.

Some people turn religion into private spirituality. Others turn it into public performance. The Qur’an refuses both reductions.

Eat. Feed. Remember Allah. Be grateful.

Then comes the deepest correction:

لَن يَنَالَ ٱللَّهَ لُحُومُهَا وَلَا دِمَآؤُهَا وَلَـٰكِن يَنَالُهُ ٱلتَّقْوَىٰ مِنكُمْ

Neither their meat nor their blood reaches Allah. Rather, it is your taqwā that reaches Him.
— Sūrat al-Ḥajj, 22:37

This one verse should be placed over every Eid market, every butcher’s shop, every family WhatsApp group, every conversation where qurbānī becomes status.

The meat does not reach Allah. The blood does not reach Allah. Your taqwā reaches Him. This does not make the sacrifice meaningless. It saves the sacrifice from being misunderstood.

The act matters. But the act must carry surrender.

The Two Rams of the Prophet ﷺ

In the South Asian tongue we often say dumba or domba.

The Arabic term in the Prophetic reports is kabsh — كَبْش — a ram.

Two rams are kabshayn in the hadith wording: كَبْشَيْن.

Anas ibn Mālik رضي الله عنه narrates that the Prophet ﷺ sacrificed two rams, described as amlah and aqran — light-coloured or white with markings, and horned. He placed his foot on their sides, mentioned the Name of Allah, said the takbīr, and slaughtered them with his own blessed hand.

The phrase is:

كَبْشَيْنِ أَمْلَحَيْنِ أَقْرَنَيْنِ

Two horned, light-coloured rams.

If one wants a more specific Arabic expression for the South Asian fat-tailed dumba, one could say kabsh dhū alyah — a ram with a fat tail. But the Sunnah wording is simply kabshayn.

Why two?

Not because every Muslim household must slaughter two.

That would be to misunderstand the Sunnah.

One report in Ibn Mājah says that when the Prophet ﷺ offered two rams, one was on behalf of his Ummah — those who testified to Allah’s oneness and to the Prophet’s conveying of the message — and the other was on behalf of Muḥammad ﷺ and the family of Muḥammad ﷺ. The report is graded ḥasan in the edition cited.

Muslim also records the beautiful duʿāʾ of the Prophet ﷺ over the sacrifice:

بسم الله، اللهم تقبل من محمد وآل محمد ومن أمة محمد
In the Name of Allah. O Allah, accept from Muhammad, the family of Muhammad, and the Ummah of Muhammad.

This is love.

The Messenger of Allah ﷺ did not forget his Ummah even at the moment of sacrifice. His worship was not individualism. His nearness included us. That is why the two rams should not be read as luxury. They should be read as mercy. 

One for his blessed household. One for the Ummah.

The Prophet ﷺ was teaching us that the head of a house worships with his family in mind, and the leader of an Ummah worships with his people in mind.

But the ordinary household does not need two. Abū Ayyūb al-Anṣārī رضي الله عنه was asked how the sacrifice was done in the time of the Messenger of Allah ﷺ, and he said that a man would sacrifice one sheep for himself and the people of his household; they would eat from it and feed others.

That is the balance.

Do not make the Sunnah small.

Do not make it burdensome either.

The Sunnah Order of Eid

The Sunnah order is clear.

Pray first. Then slaughter.

The Prophet ﷺ said that whoever slaughtered before the Eid prayer should slaughter another in its place. In another narration, he said that whoever had slaughtered before the prayer had done something before its proper time.

This teaches us that sincerity alone is not enough.

Timing matters. Form matters. Obedience has a shape.

A person may say, “But I meant well.”

The Sunnah replies: mean well, and follow the order.

The first act of the day is not meat. The first act is ṣalāh. Then comes the sacrifice.

Then comes eating.

The Prophet ﷺ would not eat on Eid al-Aḍḥā until he had prayed. Tirmidhī records the narration that he would eat before going out on Eid al-Fiṭr, but on Eid al-Aḍḥā he would not eat until he had prayed.

This is not a legalistic hunger. It is spiritual sequencing.

On Eid al-Fiṭr, we eat before prayer to show that Ramaḍān has ended and fasting that day is not allowed.

On Eid al-Aḍḥā, we delay the first taste until after prayer, and where possible, from the sacrifice itself.

The day begins with worship.

Then the table is opened.

Even appetite is trained.

The Ten Days of Dhul Hijjah

The sacrifice is not an isolated event.

It is the crown of ten days.

Allah swears by the ten nights in Sūrat al-Fajr, and many early commentators understood them to refer to the first ten nights of Dhul Hijjah.

The Prophet ﷺ said:

No good deeds done on other days are superior to those done on these first ten days of Dhul Hijjah.

The Companions asked, “Not even jihād?”

He replied, “Not even jihād,” except for a man who goes out with himself and his wealth and returns with nothing.

This is astonishing.

These are not empty calendar days. They are days in which ordinary deeds become weighty.

Prayer becomes weightier.

Charity becomes weightier.

Dhikr becomes weightier.

Fasting becomes weightier.

Service becomes weightier.

Repentance becomes weightier.

Kindness becomes weightier.

The same deed, done in these days, carries another brightness.

So do not reduce Dhul Hijjah to the animal.

The animal is the final public sign. But the ten days are a private training before the public sign.

Fasting

Fasting belongs naturally to these days.

The strongest emphasis is the fast of Yawm ʿArafah for the non-pilgrim. The Prophet ﷺ was asked about fasting the Day of ʿArafah, and he said that it expiates the sins of the previous year and the coming year.

This is Allah’s generosity.

One day.

Two years of forgiveness.

But again, this is not a mechanical transaction. Fasting is not a coin dropped into a machine of reward. Fasting is hunger that teaches need. It is restraint that teaches mastery. It is silence in the body so that the soul can hear.

A person who fasts ʿArafah should come out of it softer, not more self-impressed.

More repentant.

More grateful.

More aware that Allah’s mercy is wider than his own small record of good deeds.

One may also fast during the first nine days, according to one’s ability and school of practice, with special care not to fast the day of Eid itself. The larger principle is certain: righteous deeds in these days are beloved to Allah.

Dhikr and Takbīr

The Qur’an says that people should mention the Name of Allah on appointed days over what He has provided them of sacrificial animals.

The tongue must not be absent from these days.

The heart may be distracted. The house may be busy. The arrangements may be many. But the tongue must keep returning:

الله أكبر
لا إله إلا الله
الحمد لله

Bukhārī records that ʿUmar رضي الله عنه would say takbīr in his tent at Minā so loudly that the people in the masjid heard him and said takbīr, and the people in the marketplace also said takbīr, until Minā trembled with takbīr. Ibn ʿUmar رضي الله عنهما would say takbīr in those days behind the prayers, in his tent, while sitting, and while walking.

This is not noise.

It is orientation.

The marketplace hears Allahu Akbar.

The tent hears Allahu Akbar.

The road hears Allahu Akbar.

The body hears Allahu Akbar.

The ego hears Allahu Akbar.

And when the ego hears it enough, perhaps it finally believes it.

Not Cutting Hair or Nails

There is also a quieter Sunnah for the one who intends to offer the sacrifice.

Umm Salamah رضي الله عنها narrated that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ said that when the month of Dhul Hijjah begins and a person intends to sacrifice, he should not cut his hair or trim his nails until he has offered the sacrifice.

The person who is not in iḥrām still receives a small echo of restraint. He is not a pilgrim, but he is not spiritually absent from the pilgrims. He remains in his city, his house, his work, his ordinary life — but his body carries a sign that these days are not ordinary.

Do not cut. Wait. Hold back. Let even your hair and nails remind you that something is coming.

The Khulafāʾ Rāshidīn

The practice of the Rightly Guided Caliphs teaches us another kind of wisdom.

Bukhārī records that Ibn ʿAbbās رضي الله عنهما prayed Eid with the Messenger of Allah ﷺ, Abū Bakr, ʿUmar, and ʿUthmān رضي الله عنهم, and all of them prayed before delivering the khuṭbah.

So the public order remained.

Prayer first.

Khuṭbah after.

Sacrifice after prayer.

But with Abū Bakr and ʿUmar رضي الله عنهما, we find something especially subtle. Reports preserved by al-Bayhaqī and discussed by al-Nawawī say that they would sometimes not offer the uḍḥiyah publicly out of fear that people would think it was obligatory. Al-Nawawī mentions that the report from Abū Bakr and ʿUmar was narrated by al-Bayhaqī and others with a ḥasan chain.

This is leadership.

They protected the legal meaning of the Sunnah.

Sometimes a leader teaches by doing.

Sometimes a leader teaches by not letting people confuse Sunnah with farḍ.

This is very different from our age.

We often turn Sunnah into pressure, pressure into culture, culture into competition, and competition into silent cruelty toward those who cannot afford to keep up.

Abū Bakr and ʿUmar رضي الله عنهما understood the people.

They knew that public religious practice can easily become misunderstood when done by those in authority.

So they guarded the Ummah from confusion.

As for ʿAlī رضي الله عنه, there is a report in Tirmidhī that he would sacrifice two rams, one for the Prophet ﷺ and one for himself, saying that the Prophet ﷺ had instructed him. But that report is graded weak in the cited edition, so it should be mentioned with caution and not made the foundation of the discussion.

This too is a lesson.

Love must be joined to carefulness.

Not every moving report can bear the weight of law.

What the Sacrifice Is Trying to Make in Us

The uḍḥiyah is not about blood.

The Qur’an has already closed that misunderstanding.

It is about taqwā.

It is about learning that what we possess is not really ours.

It is about taking provision from Allah, mentioning Allah’s Name over it, eating from it with gratitude, feeding others with dignity, and remembering that the path to Allah is not made of claims but of surrender.

There is a reason the sacrifice is tied to Ibrāhīm عليه السلام. He obeyed when obedience tore through the heart. And Allah made him an imam.

The sacrifice on Eid is not asking most of us to place our dearest human love on an altar. We are not Ibrāhīm عليه السلام. But it is asking us a smaller version of the same question:

Can you give up something?

Can you obey before you fully understand?

Can you place Allah above appetite, above wealth, above display, above the need to be seen?

Can you let your worship feed someone else?

Can you remember that the meat does not reach Allah?

Can you remember that the taqwā does?

The Simple Order

So the order is simple.

Enter the ten days with seriousness.

Increase good deeds.

Fast if you can, especially ʿArafah if you are not in Hajj.

Fill the house with takbīr, taḥmīd, and tahlīl.

If you intend to offer the sacrifice, hold back from cutting hair and nails until it is done.

On Eid, pray first.

Do not rush the sacrifice before the prayer.

Slaughter in the Name of Allah.

Say Allahu Akbar.

Eat from it.

Feed others.

Do not turn it into display.

Do not turn it into burden.

Do not turn it into a meat festival without remembrance.

Do not turn it into a legal argument without beauty.

The Qur’an says:

Neither their meat nor their blood reaches Allah. Rather, it is your taqwā that reaches Him.

That is the heart of the matter.

Everything else is arrangement.

The animal is sacrificed once.

But the ego must be sacrificed again and again.

May Allah make these ten days days of repentance, generosity, remembrance, and nearness. May He accept our prayer, our sacrifice, our fasting, our feeding, and our restraint. May He save us from religious vanity and give us the quiet taqwā that reaches Him.


Tuesday, May 19, 2026

A quatrain misattributed on the Hamdan Naqshband connection

رُباعی

در مدح و فراق حضرت شاہ ہمدان امیر کبیر میر سید علی ہمدانی از تصنیف حضرت خواجہ بہاءالدین نقشبندی بخاری قدس اللہ سرہ العزیز ۔ وقت رحلت شاہ ہمدان

(A quatrain in praise of, and on the parting/passing of, Hazrat Shah Hamadan Amir Kabir Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani — composed by Hazrat Khwaja Bahā'uddīn Naqshband Bukhārī (may Allah sanctify his secret) at the time of Shah Hamadan's passing.)

    از بزمِ طرب بادہ گُساراں رفتند

 وز قیدِ جنوں سلسلہ داراں رفتند 

نے کوہ کنے ماند و نہ مجنوں صفتے

 ما با کہ نشینیم کہ یاراں رفتند 


اَزْ بَزْمِ طَرَبْ بادَہ‌گُساراں رَفْتَنْد
وَزْ قَیْدِ جُنوں سِلْسِلَہ‌داراں رَفْتَنْد
نَے کوہ‌کَنے مانْد و نَہ مَجْنوں‌صِفَتے
ما با کِہ نِشینیم کِہ یاراں رَفْتَنْد 



Az bazm-i ṭarab bāda-gusārān raftand
W-az qayd-i junūn silsila-dārān raftand
Nay kūh-kan-ē mānd u na Majnūn-ṣifat-ē
Mā bā ki nishīnīm ki yārān raftand

From the assembly of joy, the wine-drinkers (of gnosis) have departed; 
And from the bondage of (divine) madness, the masters of the chain (of saints) have gone. 
No mountain-carver (Farhād) remains, nor any Majnūn-like lover — 
With whom shall we now sit, for the beloved companions have all departed?

Word-by-word breakdown
Line 1: اَزْ بَزْمِ طَرَبْ بادَہ‌گُساراں رَفْتَنْد
az (از) — from
bazm-i ṭarab (بزمِ طرب) — assembly of joy / mirth
bāda-gusārān (بادہ‌گُساراں) — wine-drinkers, wine-quaffers (plural)
raftand (رفتند) — they have gone / departed

Line 2: وَزْ قَیْدِ جُنوں سِلْسِلَہ‌داراں رَفْتَنْد
w-az (وز = و + از) — and from
qayd-i junūn (قیدِ جنوں) — the bondage / fetter of madness
silsila-dārān (سلسلہ‌داراں) — chain-holders, masters of the spiritual chain (plural)
raftand (رفتند) — they have gone

Line 3: نَے کوہ‌کَنے مانْد و نَہ مَجْنوں‌صِفَتے
nay (نے) — neither (literary form of na)
kūh-kan-ē (کوہ‌کَنے) — a mountain-carver (the -ē is the yā-yi waḥdat, "a/an"); alludes to Farhād
mānd (ماند) — remained
u (و) — and
na (نہ) — nor
Majnūn-ṣifat-ē (مجنوں‌صفتے) — one of Majnūn's nature; a Majnūn-like one

Line 4: ما با کِہ نِشینیم کِہ یاراں رَفْتَنْد
mā (ما) — we
bā ki (با کہ) — with whom
nishīnīm (نشینیم) — shall we sit (1st person plural subjunctive of nishastan)
ki (کہ) — for, since
yārān (یاراں) — beloved companions, friends
raftand (رفتند) — have departed

A note on attribution: the manuscript ascribes this rubāʿī to Khwāja Bahā'uddīn Naqshband Bukhārī, composed on the occasion of Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani's passing (786 AH / 1384 CE). This is a traditional attribution found in several Kashmiri and Central Asian hagiographic sources, though the historical relationship and chronology between the two saints is debated among scholars. But I would not cite that as the original classical reference. The strongest literary trail is:

غزالی مشهدی، دیوان غزالی مشهدی / آثارالشباب، غزل ۲۵۴.

One source connected to the edited Dīvān gives the opening as:

 از بزمِ طرب باده‌گساران همه رفتند / از کوی جنون سلسله‌داران همه رفتند 

and explicitly identifies it as Dīvān-i Ghazālī, ghazal 254. Another later citation to the printed edition gives Dīvān-i Ghazālī Mashhadī / Āthār al-Shabāb, ed. Ḥusayn Qorbānpūr Ārānī, Scientific and Cultural Publications, ghazal 254, though with the variant از بزم جهان. A scholarly note in IranNamag also treats Bahār’s famous poem as an echo of Ghazālī Mashhadī’s earlier ghazal and cites Ṣafā’s Tārīkh-i adabiyyāt-i Īrān, quoting the first two couplets from British Museum MS Add. 25.023.

So, the honest conclusion is that this exact wording is a transmitted / popular quatrain-form variant; the reliable original literary reference is Ghazālī Mashhadī’s ghazal 254. The specific phrase
وز قیدِ جنون is not the best-attested literary reading; the stronger Ghazālī reading is از کویِ جنون. The Naqshband attribution is weak, especially because Encyclopaedia Iranica notes that many poems attributed to Bahā’ al-Dīn Naqshband are “almost certainly” not genuinely his.

Exact text, normalized and diacritized


اَز بَزْمِ طَرَب، بادَه‌گُساران رَفْتَنْد
وَز قَیْدِ جُنون، سِلْسِلَه‌داران رَفْتَنْد

نَی کوه‌کَنی مانْد و نَه مَجْنون‌صِفَتی
ما با کِه نِشینیم، کِه یاران رَفْتَنْد

Transliteration

Az bazm-i ṭarab, bādah-gusārān raftand
V-az qayd-i junūn, silsilah-dārān raftand

Nay kūh-kanī mānd u na Majnūn-sifatī
Mā bā ki nishīnīm, ki yārān raftand

Smooth modern English translation

The wine-drinkers have left the feast of joy;
the chain-bearing lovers have gone from madness’s bond.

No mountain-carving Farhād remains,
nor anyone with the soul of Majnūn.

With whom shall we sit now,
when the friends themselves are gone?

A small note on meaning:
کوه‌کنی points to Farhād, the lover who carved through the mountain; مجنون‌صفتی means “one of Majnūn’s kind,” a lover driven beyond ordinary reason; سلسله‌داران are the chained lovers or holy madmen, not “lineage-holders” here.

 

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

For the Shoreless Sea: Iqbal’s Rebuke of Spiritual Smallness

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

There are poems that decorate the imagination, and there are poems that discipline it.

This ghazal of Iqbal, from بالِ جبریل, belongs to the second kind. Rekhta lists it under Allama Iqbal and marks it as belonging to Bāl-e-Jibrīl; its eight couplets move like a complete spiritual map: human dignity, love, struggle, largeness, leadership, simplicity, and the hidden song of the soul. (Rekhta)

Iqbal begins with a refusal:

نَہ تُو زَمِیں کے لِیے ہے، نَہ آسْماں کے لِیے 

جَہاں ہے تِیرے لِیے، تُو نَہیں جَہاں کے لِیے

You were made neither for the earth nor for the sky.
The world was made for you; you were not made for the world.

This is not a slogan of arrogance. It is a summons to remember one’s station.

Iqbal is not saying that the human being is master because he has no Master. That would be the modern mistake. He is saying that the human being must not become a slave to the very world that was placed beneath his moral responsibility. The Qur’an says that Allah has honoured the children of Adam and carried them on land and sea, granting them dignity above many created things. (Quran.com) It also says that the human being carried the amānah, the trust, which the heavens, the earth, and the mountains declined to bear. (Quran.com)

So when Iqbal says, “The world is for you,” he is not giving permission for greed, conquest, consumption, or heedless domination. He is restoring proportion. The world is not your god. It is your field. It is your school. It is your test. It is your arena of service, struggle, beauty, and worship.

And when he says, “You are not for the world,” he is warning us against the deepest humiliation: that the one honoured by Allah should reduce himself to appetite, career, status, tribe, market, screen, or dust.

The modern world keeps telling the human being: you are for production, you are for consumption, you are for the economy, you are for the algorithm, you are for the nation-state, you are for your résumé.

Iqbal replies: no.

You are not for the world.

The world is for you.

But you are for Allah.

The Qur’an states the final telos with complete clarity: “I did not create jinn and humans except to worship Me.” (Quran.com) That is why Iqbal’s opening is not secular humanism. It is Qur’anic anthropology set to verse.

Then he turns to the inner constitution of the human being:

یِہ عَقْل و دِل ہیں شَرَر شُعْلَۂ مُحَبَّت کے 

وُہ خار و خَس کے لِیے ہے، یِہ نَیْسْتاں کے لِیے

Reason and the heart are sparks from the flame of love:
one is for thorns and straw, the other for the reed-forest.

This is one of the most important corrections in Iqbal’s poetry. He is not anti-reason. He does not throw عقل away. He places it in its proper genealogy. عقل and دل are both sparks of محبت. Both arise from love, but they do not have the same reach.

Reason can burn thorns and dry straw. It is useful. It clarifies, distinguishes, measures, protects, and orders. Without reason, love may become sentimentalism or chaos. But reason alone often works in small combustions. It lights the heap before it. It calculates the immediate. It secures the manageable.

The heart is different. The awakened heart carries a fire that can set the نیستاں aflame. The commentary glosses نیستاں as a forest of reeds or bamboo-like stalks, and this matters because the image is not of a candle, but of a whole world of dry, waiting life ignited by one spark. (Iqbal Rahber)

The tragedy of modern education and modern culture is not that they teach reason. The tragedy is that they often teach a reason detached from love, a cleverness without warmth, a technique without adab, a literacy without light. Such reason may produce tools, but it cannot produce direction. It may build systems, but it cannot heal the soul. It may solve problems, but it cannot tell us what kind of human being is worth becoming.

Iqbal then removes another illusion:

مَقامِ پَرْوَرِشِ آہ و نالَہ ہے یِہ چَمَن 

نَہ سَیْرِ گُل کے لِیے ہے، نَہ آشِیاں کے لِیے

This garden is a place where sighs and cries are nurtured;
it is not for wandering among flowers, nor for building a nest.

The world is a garden, yes, but not merely a garden of leisure. It is a place where آہ and نالہ are cultivated. These are not the cries of hopelessness. They are the sounds of a soul being trained.

There is a kind of sigh that is only complaint. But there is another sigh that is prayer before it becomes words. There is a cry that is weakness, but there is also a cry that is the first crack in the prison of heedlessness. Iqbal’s chaman is not a picnic ground. It is a place of tarbiyah.

He does not deny the flowers. He denies that the flowers are the purpose.

He does not deny the nest. He denies that the nest is the destination.

This is a very subtle point. Islam is not a religion of ugliness, nor is Iqbal a poet of contempt for beauty. The rose, the garden, the song, the breeze, the colour of dawn—these are all part of the spiritual vocabulary of our civilization. But beauty becomes dangerous when it makes us forget the journey. Comfort becomes dangerous when it becomes an excuse for spiritual sleep. The nest becomes a cage when the bird forgets the sky.

Then comes the great image of largeness:

رَہے گا راوِی و نِیل و فُرات میں کَب تَک 

تِرا سَفِینَہ کِہ ہے بَحْرِ بےکَراں کے لِیے

How long will your boat remain in the Ravi, the Nile, and the Euphrates?
Your vessel was made for the shoreless sea.

This is one of Iqbal’s most powerful rebukes of smallness.

The Ravi, the Nile, and the Euphrates are not insignificant rivers. They carry geography, memory, civilization, and history. But Iqbal’s point is precisely that even noble rivers are too narrow if they become the final horizon. The commentary explains سفینہ as a boat and بحرِ بیکراں as a vast sea without a visible shore. (Iqbal Rahber)

How long will you remain enclosed by inherited boundaries?

How long will you mistake your river for the ocean?

How long will your imagination be provincial when your soul was made for vastness?

This is not merely about geography. A person can live in a small town and possess an oceanic soul. Another may travel the world and remain trapped in a puddle of ego. Ravi, Nile, and Euphrates can also be names for our familiar securities: our small ambitions, our sectarian reflexes, our institutional loyalties, our cultural comfort, our little victories, our predictable circles of praise.

Iqbal asks: is this all?

A vessel made for the shoreless sea should not spend its life circling a familiar bank.

Then the poem turns from the individual to the community:

نِشانِ راہ دِکھاتے تھے جو سِتاروں کو 

تَرَس گَئے ہیں کِسی مَرْدِ راہ داں کے لِیے

Those who once showed the stars the way
now long for a man who knows the path.

This is Iqbal’s sorrow for the Ummah.

It is not cheap nostalgia. It is not the sentimental claim that everything in the past was pure and everything in the present is decay. Iqbal’s lament is more precise. A people who once possessed orientation have lost their way. Those who once taught others how to navigate now wait for someone to guide them.

The image is devastating. Stars are symbols of guidance. Travellers look at stars to find their path. But here, the people once showed the stars the way. That is, their inner compass was so luminous that even the signs of guidance seemed guided by them.

Now they are waiting.

Waiting for a مردِ راہ داں.

A man who knows the road.

But Iqbal does not leave us in lament. He immediately tells us what such a guide requires:

نِگَہ بُلَند، سُخَن دِل نَواز، جاں پُرسوز 

یَہی ہے رَخْتِ سَفَر مِیرِ کارواں کے لِیے

A lofty gaze, speech that wins the heart, and a soul burning with feeling—
these are the provisions needed by the leader of the caravan.

This is one of the finest descriptions of leadership in modern Muslim poetry.

Not noise.
Not branding.
Not mere administrative efficiency.
Not anger.
Not clever slogans.
Not the intoxication of being followed.

Iqbal gives three provisions.

First: نگہ بلند — a lofty gaze. The leader must see beyond the immediate. A leader without height of vision merely manages decline. He may be busy, but he is not guiding. He may issue instructions, but he is not opening horizons.

Second: سخن دل نواز — speech that enters the heart. This is not flattery. It is speech with warmth, clarity, mercy, and moral resonance. Some people speak truth in a way that wounds unnecessarily. Others speak gently but empty the truth of its force. The true guide speaks with both fidelity and tenderness.

Third: جاں پرسوز — a soul filled with burning. Without inner fire, leadership becomes bureaucracy. Without pain for the people, leadership becomes vanity. Without sincerity, eloquence becomes performance.

The commentary rightly reads this couplet as a continuation of the previous one: Iqbal is describing the qualities of the real guide who can take a people back toward their destination. (Iqbal Rahber)

Then Iqbal adds something almost mischievous:

ذَرا سِی بات تھی اَندِیشَۂ عَجَم نے اِسے 

بَڑھا دِیا ہے فَقَط زِیبِ داستاں کے لِیے

It was only a simple matter,
but the imagination of Ajam enlarged it merely to decorate the tale.

This couplet is sharper than it first appears.

Iqbal is saying: these things are not as complicated as we have made them. The qualities of a guide are simple. A lofty vision. Heart-touching speech. A soul that burns. But the decorative imagination takes simple truths and turns them into elaborate systems, ornamental abstractions, and theatrical discourse.

Every age has its own اندیشۂ عجم.

Sometimes it is over-philosophizing. Sometimes it is academic jargon. Sometimes it is institutional consultancy language. Sometimes it is the endless production of frameworks, rubrics, metrics, dashboards, and strategic documents to hide the absence of real vision, real tenderness, and real spiritual fire.

The matter was simple.

We made it complicated because simple truths demand action.

A complicated theory can be admired from a distance. A simple truth has to be obeyed.

This is why Iqbal’s critique is so relevant. We often inflate the story because we do not want to carry the burden of the meaning. We decorate the tale because we are afraid of the road.

Then the ghazal ends with one of Iqbal’s boldest self-descriptions:

مِرے گُلُو میں ہے اِک نَغْمَۂ جِبْرَئِیل آشُوب 

سَنْبھال کَر جِسے رَکھا ہے لامَکاں کے لِیے

In my throat there is a song powerful enough to shake Gabriel;
I have kept it safe for the world beyond space.

This is not ordinary poetic pride.

Iqbal is not saying, “Listen to me because I am famous.” He is saying that there is a نغمہ hidden in the throat, a song not meant merely for the marketplace of applause. The commentary explains this final couplet as Iqbal’s claim that his voice contains a hidden melody preserved for the future, one whose power could even move Jibrīl عليه السلام. (Iqbal Rahber)

The phrase جبرئیل آشوب is astonishing. Jibrīl is the angel of revelation, the carrier of divine message to the Prophets. To imagine a song that could stir Jibrīl is to imagine speech charged with a force beyond ordinary art. It is poetry as spiritual eruption.

But the final word is even more important: لامکاں.

Not for the bazaar.
Not for applause.
Not for the court.
Not for the academy.
Not for the small rivers of reputation.
For
لامکاں.

For the no-place.
For the realm beyond spatial limitation.
For the horizon where speech is weighed not by popularity, but by truth, beauty, sincerity, and nearness to the Real.

This ending gathers the whole poem.

The ghazal begins by telling the human being that he is not for earth or sky. It ends with a song preserved for the placeless realm beyond both. Between these two poles, Iqbal gives the path: do not become a slave of the world; let reason and heart be illuminated by love; do not mistake the garden for a resting place; take your boat to the shoreless sea; seek and become guides with lofty vision, tender speech, and burning souls; do not bury simple truths under decorative complexity; and preserve within yourself a song worthy of the unseen.

What, then, is the lesson?

Do not live beneath your rank.

This does not mean becoming proud. Pride is itself a fall beneath one’s rank. The arrogant man is not great; he is small in a loud form. The true human being is neither crushed by the world nor intoxicated by himself. He knows that Allah honoured him, but he also knows that he was created for worship. He knows that the world is for him, but he also knows that he is answerable for what he does with it.

Do not make a nest out of a station.

Do not make a river out of the sea.

Do not make cleverness a substitute for love.

Do not make leadership a theatre of ego.

Do not make complexity a veil over simple obligations.

And do not let the song in your throat die unheard because you spent your life pleasing the small rooms of the world.

Iqbal’s ghazal is ultimately a poem of wayfinding. It asks the human being to recover direction. It asks the community to recover guidance. It asks the leader to recover vision. It asks the poet to recover sacred speech. And it asks all of us to recover largeness without arrogance, restlessness without despair, and love without the abandonment of reason.

The world was made for you.

But you were not made for the world.

May Allah give us the courage to leave the narrow river, the humility to carry the trust, the fire to love rightly, and the inner song that belongs not to the marketplace, but to لامکاں.

آمین

Al-Farooq's Dilemma

 بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

One of the most moving incidents in the sīrah is the moment when the Messenger of Allah ﷺ left this world. It is also one of the most misunderstood.

Some people read the reaction of Sayyidunā ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb رضي الله عنه in the most shallow way possible. They say, or at least imply, that he did not understand the Qur’an. Some go further and speak as if he did not understand religion itself. Others, trying to defend him, say that he was simply emotional.

The first view is disrespectful and untenable. The second view is not wrong, but it is incomplete.

Yes, there was grief. How could there not be grief? The Messenger of Allah ﷺ was more beloved to the Companions than their own selves. But ʿUmar’s response was not merely the incoherent cry of a bereaved man. It was grief, but grief joined to a particular expectation, a kind of taʾwīl, and a protective instinct about the unfinished public danger posed by the hypocrites.

The famous report in Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī says that when the Prophet ﷺ passed away, ʿUmar stood and said:

والله ما مات رسول الله ﷺ 

“By Allah, the Messenger of Allah ﷺ has not died.”

Then ʿUmar later explained:

والله ما كان يقع في نفسي إلا ذاك

“By Allah, nothing occurred to my mind except that.”

He expected that Allah would raise the Prophet ﷺ and that he would punish certain men. This is crucial. “Nothing occurred to my mind except that” is not the language of a man issuing a settled creed after calm reflection. It is the language of a heart struck by a thunderbolt, seeing only one possibility in that moment. (Sunnah.com)

But another report gives us the other dimension. When al-Mughīrah رضي الله عنه said that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ had died, ʿUmar said:

إن رسول الله ﷺ لا يموت حتى يفني الله عز وجل المنافقين

“The Messenger of Allah ﷺ will not die until Allah, Mighty and Majestic, destroys the hypocrites.”

This does not mean that ʿUmar believed the Prophet ﷺ would never die. It means that, in that moment, he could not imagine the earthly mission of the Prophet ﷺ ending while the hypocritical danger was still alive. In Bukhārī’s wording, he expected the Prophet ﷺ to be raised and punish certain men; in this fuller wording, those men are identified as the hypocrites. (dorar.net)

This is where the dilemma lies.

ʿUmar رضي الله عنه knew the Prophet ﷺ was human. He knew the Qur’an. He knew death comes to human beings. But in that unbearable hour, his mind was seized by another Qur’anic and prophetic horizon: the Messenger ﷺ as the one through whom Allah had exposed falsehood, destroyed idols, humbled arrogance, defeated external enemies, and unveiled hypocrisy. Could such a Messenger depart while the hypocrites still remained? Could the leader of the Ummah leave before the last dangerous fissure had been sealed?

That was the thought.

It was mistaken. But it was not ignorance of religion. It was a wrong expectation born from love, zeal, and a reading of the mission that had to be corrected by revelation.

Then came Abū Bakr رضي الله عنه.

He entered upon the Prophet ﷺ, uncovered his blessed face, kissed him, and said:

بأبي أنت وأمي، طبت حيا وميتا

“May my father and mother be sacrificed for you. You were pure in life and in death.”

Then he said that Allah would not make him taste death twice. This answered ʿUmar’s expectation directly. The Prophet ﷺ would not return to worldly life, deal with those men, and then die again. The death written for him had come. (Sunnah.com)

Then Abū Bakr رضي الله عنه addressed the people with those immortal words:

من كان يعبد محمدا فإن محمدا قد مات
ومن كان يعبد الله فإن الله حي لا يموت

“Whoever used to worship Muhammad ﷺ, then Muhammad ﷺ has died. And whoever worships Allah, then Allah is Living and does not die.”

Then he recited:

وَمَا مُحَمَّدٌ إِلَّا رَسُولٌ قَدْ خَلَتْ مِن قَبْلِهِ الرُّسُلُ 

أَفَإِن مَّاتَ أَوْ قُتِلَ ٱنقَلَبْتُمْ عَلَىٰٓ أَعْقَـٰبِكُمْ 

وَمَن يَنقَلِبْ عَلَىٰ عَقِبَيْهِ فَلَن يَضُرَّ ٱللَّهَ شَيْـًٔا 

وَسَيَجْزِى ٱللَّهُ ٱلشَّـٰكِرِينَ

“Muhammad is no more than a Messenger; other messengers have passed away before him. If he were to die or be killed, would you turn back on your heels? Whoever turns back will not harm Allah at all, and Allah will reward the grateful.” (Quran.com)

This verse did more than prove that the Prophet ﷺ could die.

It corrected ʿUmar’s deeper assumption.

ʿUmar’s assumption seems to have been: how can the Prophet ﷺ die while hypocrisy remains and while some people may still turn back?

The verse answers: the Prophet ﷺ may die, and then the turning back itself becomes part of the trial. His death is not delayed until every hypocrite disappears. Rather, his death exposes who remains firm and who turns back on his heels. The Messenger ﷺ had completed his trust. The Book remained. The test began.

This is why the accusation that ʿUmar “did not understand the Qur’an” is so poor. It mistakes momentary misorientation for religious incompetence. It takes one of the most painful moments in the life of the Ummah and turns it into a cheap polemic. The Qur’an itself was the correction, and ʿUmar submitted to it immediately. When he heard Abū Bakr recite the verse, he said that his legs could no longer carry him and he fell to the ground, realizing that the Prophet ﷺ had died. (Sunnah.com)

This is the greatness of ʿUmar رضي الله عنه. Not that he never erred. The greatest of human beings after the Prophets can still be overwhelmed. His greatness is that when the Qur’an was placed before him, he did not argue, rationalize, save face, or cling to his first statement. He fell before the truth.

And this is also where the “he was only emotional” explanation falls short.

Emotion was there, but the reports give us more. There was a specific fear concerning the hypocrites. There was a protective instinct. There was a sense that the Prophet’s ﷺ public mission still had unfinished visible work. There was a momentary inability to accept that the Ummah would now have to face its test without his physical presence.

Even more interesting is Sayyidah ʿĀʾishah’s رضي الله عنها evaluation. She said that Allah brought benefit through both speeches: ʿUmar frightened the people, and among them there was hypocrisy, so Allah repelled them by that; then Abū Bakr gave the people insight into guidance and acquainted them with the truth they had to follow. (Sunnah.com)

Subḥānallāh.

ʿUmar’s literal claim was corrected, but even that moment was not useless. Allah used his awe-inspiring force to restrain a dangerous element at a very vulnerable hour. Then Allah used Abū Bakr’s serenity to anchor the believers in the Qur’an.

So the two great Companions were not merely two temperaments. They were two providential functions in one crisis.

ʿUmar was the sword of warning.
Abū Bakr was the lamp of guidance.

ʿUmar shook the hypocritical element.
Abū Bakr steadied the believing heart.

ʿUmar’s love could not bear the departure.
Abū Bakr’s certainty returned love to tawḥīd.

This is not a story of ʿUmar not understanding religion. It is a story of love needing the final discipline of revelation.

The day after the Prophet ﷺ passed away, ʿUmar himself delivered another speech. He said he had hoped that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ would live until he outlived them all, but if Muhammad ﷺ had died, Allah had left among them a light by which they could be guided. He then directed the people to Abū Bakr رضي الله عنه as the one most entitled to manage their affairs. (Sunnah.com)

The fuller wording preserved in Muṣannaf ʿAbd al-Razzāq is even more revealing. ʿUmar said:

فإني قلت مقالة، وإنها لم تكن كما قلت
وإني والله ما وجدت المقالة التي قلت في كتاب الله تعالى
ولا في عهد عهده إلي رسول الله ﷺ
ولكني كنت أرجو أن يعيش رسول الله ﷺ حتى يدبرنا

“I made a statement, and it was not as I had said. By Allah, I did not find the statement I made in the Book of Allah, nor in any instruction the Messenger of Allah ﷺ had given to me. Rather, I had hoped that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ would live until he would outlast us / direct our affair.”

This is public retraction of an inaccurate statement. This is intellectual honesty. This is adab before the Book of Allah. This is a man large enough to admit, before the Ummah, that what he said came from hope, not from proof. (dorar.net)

In our times, many people confuse religious understanding with never being corrected. But the Companions teach us something more subtle and more beautiful. True understanding is not the absence of every initial mistake. True understanding is immediate surrender when the proof becomes clear.

ʿUmar رضي الله عنه was not diminished by Abū Bakr’s correction. He was completed by it.

And Abū Bakr رضي الله عنه did not correct him with humiliation. He corrected the Ummah with the Qur’an. He did not say: “How could you not know?” He did not turn the moment into a contest. He returned everyone to the only foundation that could survive the shock:

Allah lives and does not die.
The Messenger ﷺ is followed, loved, and obeyed.
The Qur’an remains.
The Ummah must not turn back.

There is a delicate lesson here for all of us.

Sometimes love imagines that the beloved must remain in the form in which we knew him. But prophetic love must be greater than attachment to physical presence. The Companions had to learn, in the most painful way, that the Messenger ﷺ had completed his mission, and that their fidelity would now be tested through obedience after his passing.

The real betrayal would not have been weeping.
The real betrayal would have been turning back.

The real confusion was not grief.
The real danger was apostasy, hypocrisy, and collapse.

The real cure was the Qur’an.

So let us be careful before speaking lightly about ʿUmar رضي الله عنه. The one who says he did not understand the Qur’an has perhaps not understood the incident. And the one who says he was merely emotional has only touched the surface.

ʿUmar’s dilemma was this: his heart could not reconcile the Prophet’s ﷺ departure with the continued presence of hypocrisy and the unfinished trials of the Ummah. Abū Bakr’s correction was this: the Prophet ﷺ could depart, and those very trials would become the means by which Allah would distinguish the grateful from those who turn back.

The verse ends with:

وَسَيَجْزِى ٱللَّهُ ٱلشَّـٰكِرِينَ

“And Allah will reward the grateful.”

Perhaps this is why gratitude appears at the end of the verse, not merely patience. The believers were not only asked to endure the Prophet’s ﷺ passing. They were asked to remain grateful for the guidance he had already delivered, the Book he had left among them, and the Lord who never dies.

May Allah be pleased with Abū Bakr, who steadied the Ummah with revelation.

May Allah be pleased with ʿUmar, whose love was corrected by revelation and whose correction became part of his greatness.

And may Allah not deprive us of adab with the Messenger ﷺ, his Companions, and the Book that still calls us back when our hearts are overwhelmed.

آمین


Friday, May 8, 2026

Where the Rose Learned Beauty

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

The poem below is a short Persian naʿt in praise of the Messenger of Allah ﷺ. It is commonly attributed to Mawlānā Nūr al-Dīn ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Jāmī. Sufinama lists it under Jāmī and gives Bayaz-e-Qawwali as its source; Naat Kainaat also gives a common version under ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Jāmī. Because the transmission is mostly devotional and recitational, I would treat it carefully as “attributed to Jāmī,” rather than claiming a secure critical dīwān reference. (Sufinama)

A note for readers: in the transliteration, ā is a long “aa,” ī is a long “ee,” ū is a long “oo,” and kh is like the sound in Khayyām.

1

گُل اَز رُخَت آموختَه نازُک‌بَدَنی را 
بُلبُل زِ تو آموختَه شیرین‌سُخَنی را

Transliteration

Gul az rukhat āmūkhta nāzuk-badanī rā
Bulbul ze to āmūkhta shīrīn-sukhanī rā

English translation

The rose has learned delicate beauty from your face;
the nightingale has learned sweet speech from you.

Brief Explanation

In Persian poetry, the rose is usually the symbol of beauty, and the nightingale is the symbol of song. Here the poet reverses the usual order. The rose is not the teacher of beauty; it is the student. The nightingale is not the source of sweet song; it has learned sweetness from the Messenger of Allah ﷺ.

This is the tenderness of the opening couplet: all beauty in creation is only a borrowed reflection. The rose blooms because it has learned something from his blessed beauty, and the nightingale sings because it has learned something from his blessed speech.

2

هَر کَس که لَبِ لَعلِ تُرا دیدَه، به دِل گُفت

حَقّا که چه خُوش کَنده عَقیقِ یَمَنی را

Transliteration

Har kas ke lab-e laʿl-e turā dīda, be dil guft
Ḥaqqā ke che khush kanda ʿaqīq-e Yamanī rā

English translation

Whoever saw the ruby of your lips said within his heart:
Truly, how beautifully this Yemeni agate has been carved.

Brief Explanation

لَبِ لَعل means ruby-like lips. عَقیقِ یَمَنی refers to Yemeni agate, a precious red stone. The poet imagines the blessed mouth of the Prophet ﷺ as a jewel shaped with perfect beauty.

But this is not merely physical praise. In naʿt, the mouth is also the place of speech, Qur’an, wisdom, mercy, and guidance. The beauty of the lips points toward the beauty of the words that came from them

 

3

خَیّاطِ اَزَل دوختَه بر قامَتِ زیبات

بَر قَدِّ تو این جامهٔ سَروِ چَمَنی را

Transliteration

Khayyāṭ-e azal dūkhta bar qāmat-e zībā-t
Bar qadd-e to īn jāma-ye sarv-e chamanī rā

English translation

The One Who sews pre-eternity has sewn upon your beautiful stature
this robe of garden-cypress grace.

Brief Explanation

خَیّاطِ اَزَل — “the One Who sews pre-eternity” — is a poetic way of referring to the divine act of creation. The poet imagines beauty itself as a garment sewn before time.

The cypress in Persian poetry is a sign of uprightness, elegance, and noble bearing. The image means that even the grace of the garden cypress seems like a robe tailored for the Prophet ﷺ. Created beauty becomes meaningful when it is seen as pointing toward him.

 

4

دَر عِشقِ تو دَندان شکستَند به اُلفَت

تو جامه رَسانید اُوَیسِ قَرَنی را

Transliteration

Dar ʿishq-e to dandān shekastand be ulfat
To jāma rasānīd Uways-e Qaranī rā

English translation

In love for you, teeth were broken in devotion;
and you sent the robe of honor to Uways of Qarn.

Brief Explanation

This couplet alludes to the popular devotional memory of Uways al-Qaranī. Uways is remembered as one whose love for the Prophet ﷺ was intense, even though he did not meet him physically. The “robe” in the couplet is a sign of acceptance, nearness, and spiritual recognition.

However, it is important to read this line with care. The story of Uways breaking his teeth out of grief is well-known in devotional circles, but it is not authentically established in the primary hadith and sīrah sources. So I would read this couplet as poetry of longing, not as a proof-text or an example to imitate physically. The meaning is love, not self-harm. (SeekersGuidance)

 

5

اَز جامیِ بیچاره رَسانید سَلامی

بَر دَرگَهِ دَربارِ رَسولِ مَدَنی را

Transliteration

Az Jāmī-ye bīchāra rasānīd salāmī
Bar dargah-e darbār-e Rasūl-e Madanī rā

English translation

Carry a greeting from helpless Jāmī
to the threshold of the court of the Messenger of Medina.

Brief Explanation

The poem ends not with pride, but with humility. Jāmī calls himself بیچاره — helpless, poor, needy. After all the rich imagery of roses, nightingales, rubies, agate, cypress, and robes, the poet finally stands at the threshold with only one request: convey my salām.

رَسولِ مَدَنی means the Messenger of Medina. دَرگَه and دَربار evoke a court, but here the meaning is spiritual reverence. The lover does not claim entrance. He stands at the door and sends peace.

 

A variant couplet

Some recited versions, including the Sufinama text, include this couplet instead of the Uways couplet: (Sufinama)

قُربان شَوَم اَزَلی را که زِ قُدرَت

هَمچون تو دُر ساخته یک قَطرهٔ مَنی را

Transliteration

Qurbān shavam Azalī rā ke ze qudrat
Hamchun to durr sākhta yak qaṭra-ye manī rā

English translation

May I be offered for the Pre-Eternal One, whose power
made from a single drop a pearl such as you.

Brief Explanation

Here اَزَلی means the Pre-Eternal One: Allah. The couplet shifts from praise of the Prophet ﷺ to praise of the Creator who fashioned him. The contrast is powerful: from a humble human origin, Allah brought forth such beauty, mercy, guidance, and perfection.

The word دُرّ means pearl. The poet is saying that divine power turned a single drop into a pearl beyond comparison.

A few words that carry the poem

رُخَت — rukhat
Your face, your countenance. In Persian poetry, the face often represents beauty, light, and manifestation.

لَعل — laʿl
Ruby. A classical image for red, luminous beauty.

عَقیقِ یَمَنی — ʿaqīq-e Yamanī
Yemeni agate or carnelian, a precious red stone.

خَیّاطِ اَزَل — khayyāṭ-e azal
The tailor of pre-eternity. A poetic image for divine shaping and creation.

سَروِ چَمَنی — sarv-e chamanī
The garden cypress. A symbol of graceful height and upright beauty.

دَرگَه — dargah
Threshold, court, sacred doorway. In devotional Persian, it often suggests humility before a beloved spiritual presence. 

Reflection

What I find most beautiful in this poem is its first movement: the rose learns, the nightingale learns. Nature itself becomes a student of the Prophet ﷺ.

The poem is short, but its movement is complete. It begins with the beauty of creation, moves through the beauty of prophetic speech and form, passes through the intensity of love, and ends with salām. This is how true praise should end: not in display, but in humility.

Jāmī, or the devotional voice speaking in his name says, “Carry my salām.” That is the adab of the poem. The lover stands far away, but the heart travels to Medina.


Monday, May 4, 2026

When Love Outshines Reason: Understanding Iqbal’s Spiritual Vision

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ



تیری نگاہِ ناز سے دونوں مراد پا گئے
عقل، غیاب و جستجو! عشق، حضور و اضطراب!

Transliteration:
Terī nigāh-e-nāz se donoñ murād pā gaye
‘Aql: ghayāb-o-justajū! ‘Ishq: huzūr-o-iẓtirāb!

Translation :
Through Your gracious glance, both attained what they sought:
Reason, with its absence and search; Love, with its presence and restless longing.

Meaning in Urdu:

غیاب کے معنی اوجھل ہونا یا حضوری سے دور ہونا ہیں، جستجو کے معنی تلاش کے ہیں، حضور کے معنی سامنے آنے یا موجود ہونے کے ہیں، اور اضطراب کے معنی بے چینی اور بے قراری کے ہیں۔ اقبال کہتے ہیں کہ اگر تیرا کرم شامل ہو جائے تو عقل و دانش بھی اپنی مراد پا لیتی ہے اور عشق بھی کامیاب ہو جاتا ہے۔ عقل کا مزاج تلاش اور تحقیق ہے، اس لیے وہ غیاب میں سرگرداں رہتی ہے۔ عشق کا مزاج حضوری اور قرب ہے، اس لیے وہ محبوب کے حضور کا طالب رہتا ہے اور اسی طلب سے بے قرار رہتا ہے۔ آخرکار وہ لوگ بھی جو عقل و دانش کے راستے پر تھے اور وہ لوگ بھی جو عشق کی آگ میں جل رہے تھے، تیری عنایت سے اپنی منزل تک پہنچ گئے۔

Iqbal is saying that when divine favour descends, both intellect and love find fulfillment. Intellect searches for what is hidden, while love longs for direct presence and nearness. Reason moves through inquiry; love moves through restlessness. Yet both, when touched by grace, reach their true purpose.

تیرہ و تار ہے جہاں گردشِ آفتاب سے
طبعِ زمانہ تازہ کر جلوہَ بے حجاب سے

Transliteration:
Tīrah-o-tār hai jahān gardish-e-āftāb se
Ṭab‘-e-zamāna tāzah kar jalwa-e-be-hijāb se

Translation of the couplet:
The world remains dark and gloomy despite the sun’s constant turning;
Renew the spirit of the age with Your unveiled radiance
.

Meaning in Urdu:

تیرہ و تار کے معنی تاریک اور اندھیرے میں ڈوبا ہوا ہے۔ اقبال خدا سے عرض کرتے ہیں کہ سورج کی گردش جاری ہے، دن رات کا نظام بھی قائم ہے، لیکن اس کے باوجود دنیا روحانی اندھیرے میں گرفتار ہے۔ لوگوں کے دلوں میں روشنی کم ہوتی جا رہی ہے، برائیاں بڑھ رہی ہیں اور نیکی کی قوتیں کمزور پڑ رہی ہیں۔ اس لیے اب ضرورت ہے کہ تو پردہ ہٹا کر اپنا جلوہ دکھا دے، تاکہ زمانے کی طبیعت تازہ ہو جائے اور انسان کے سینے تیری روشنی سے منور ہو جائیں۔

Iqbal is not speaking of physical darkness; he is speaking of moral and spiritual darkness. The sun still rises, but humanity remains inwardly dim. He prays for an unveiled divine manifestation that can refresh the age, awaken human hearts, and restore spiritual light to a world losing its moral strength.

تیری نظر میں ہیں تمام میرے گزشتہ روز و شب

مجھ کو خبر نہ تھی کہ ہے علم نخیلِ بے رطب

Transliteration:
Terī nazar meñ haiñ tamām mere guzishta roz-o-shab
Mujh ko khabar na thī ke hai ‘ilm nakhīl-e-be-rutab

Translation:
All my past days and nights are before Your sight;
I did not know that knowledge can be a date-palm without fruit.

Meaning in Urdu:

نخیل کے معنی کھجور کا درخت ہیں، اور بے رطب سے مراد ایسا درخت ہے جس پر پھل نہ ہو۔ اقبال خدا سے کہتے ہیں کہ میرے گزشتہ دن اور رات، میرا ماضی، میری کوششیں اور میری کمزوریاں سب تیری نظر میں ہیں۔ میں عمر بھر علم کے حصول میں لگا رہا، مگر مجھے یہ خبر نہ تھی کہ عشق اور روحانی حرارت کے بغیر علم ایک بے پھل درخت کی طرح ہے۔ ایسا علم سایہ تو دے سکتا ہے، مگر زندگی کا حقیقی پھل نہیں دیتا۔

Iqbal confesses that his entire past is known to God. He spent much of his life in the pursuit of knowledge, but he now realizes that knowledge without love, spiritual warmth, and inner transformation is like a fruitless date-palm. It may look impressive, but it does not nourish the soul.

تازہ مرے ضمیر میں معرکہَ کہن ہوا
عشق تمام مصطفی! عقل تمام بُولہب

Transliteration:
Tāzah mere zamīr meñ ma‘raka-e-kohan huā
‘Ishq tamām Muṣṭafā! ‘Aql tamām Bū Lahab!

Translation:
The ancient battle has awakened anew within my conscience:
Love is wholly Mustafa; loveless reason is wholly Abu Lahab.

Meaning in Urdu:

معرکہَ کہن سے مراد وہ پرانی کشمکش ہے جو عشق اور عقل کے درمیان جاری رہتی ہے۔ اقبال کہتے ہیں کہ میرے باطن میں یہ پرانا معرکہ پھر تازہ ہو گیا ہے۔ عشق کی کامل صورت ذاتِ محمد مصطفی ﷺ میں ظاہر ہوتی ہے، کیونکہ وہاں رحمت، قربانی، نور، یقین اور خدا سے کامل تعلق موجود ہے۔ اس کے مقابلے میں وہ عقل جو عشق، وحی اور اخلاقی نور سے خالی ہو جائے، بولہبی بن جاتی ہے؛ یعنی ضد، تکبر، انکار اور مادہ پرستی کی علامت۔ اقبال یہاں عقل کو مطلقاً رد نہیں کرتے، بلکہ اس عقل کو رد کرتے ہیں جو عشق اور ایمان سے جدا ہو کر خود غرضی کا ہتھیار بن جائے۔

Iqbal sees within himself the old conflict between love and mere intellect. True love reaches its highest form in the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, who represents mercy, sacrifice, certainty, and divine nearness. But intellect cut off from love and revelation becomes Abu Lahab-like: proud, barren, and hostile to truth. The target is not reason itself, but reason without spiritual light.

گاہ بحیلہ می برد، گاہ بزور می کشد

عشق کی ابتدا عجب! عشق کی انتہا عجب

Transliteration:
Gāh ba-hīlah mī barad, gāh ba-zor mī kashad
‘Ishq kī ibtidā ‘ajab! ‘Ishq kī intihā ‘ajab!

Translation:
Sometimes it leads by subtle means, sometimes it pulls by force;
Strange is the beginning of love, and strange its end.

Meaning in Urdu:
یہاں پہلا مصرع فارسی انداز میں ہے۔ اقبال کہتے ہیں کہ عشق کا طریقہ عجیب ہے۔ کبھی یہ انسان کو نرمی، تدبیر اور اشاروں کے ذریعے اپنی منزل کی طرف لے جاتا ہے، اور کبھی زور سے کھینچ کر عقل و عادت کے جال سے نکال دیتا ہے۔ عشق کی ابتدا بھی حیران کن ہے اور اس کی انتہا بھی حیران کن۔ یہ انسان کو وہاں پہنچا دیتا ہے جہاں صرف عقل، حساب اور تدبیر اسے نہیں لے جا سکتے۔

Love works mysteriously. At times it guides gently, almost secretly; at other times it seizes the soul and pulls it away from its old attachments. For Iqbal, love frees the human being from dry intellectualism and brings him into a living, active, spiritually charged state.

عالمِ سوز و ساز میں وصل سے بڑھ کے ہے فراق

وصل میں مرگِ آرزو! ہجر میں لذتِ طلب

Transliteration:
‘Ālam-e-soz-o-sāz meñ wasl se baṛh ke hai firāq
Wasl meñ marg-e-ārzu! Hijr meñ lazzat-e-talab!

Translation:
In the world of burning and song, separation is greater than union;
In union, desire dies; in separation, the sweetness of seeking remains.

Meaning in Urdu:

مرگِ آرزو کے معنی خواہش کی موت ہیں، اور لذتِ طلب کے معنی طلب کا لطف ہیں۔ اقبال کہتے ہیں کہ عشق حقیقی کی دنیا میں فراق کو وصل پر ایک خاص برتری حاصل ہے۔ وصل میں محبوب مل جاتا ہے، خواہش پوری ہو جاتی ہے، اور طلب کی بے قراری کم ہو جاتی ہے۔ مگر ہجر میں محبوب کی جستجو باقی رہتی ہے، دل میں تڑپ زندہ رہتی ہے، اور یہی تڑپ عاشق کی اصل زندگی بن جاتی ہے۔

In true love, separation keeps longing alive. Union may satisfy desire, but it can also end the movement of seeking. Separation preserves the ache, the search, the music, and the inner fire. For Iqbal, this restless longing is more life-giving than passive fulfillment. 

عینِ وصال میں مجھے حوصلہَ نظر نہ تھا

گرچہ بہانہ جو رہی میری نگاہِ بے ادب

Transliteration:
‘Ain-e-wiṣāl meñ mujhe hauslah-e-nazar na thā
Garchah bahānah-jū rahī merī nigāh-e-be-adab

Translation:
At the very moment of union, I did not have the courage to look;
Though my bold gaze had long been searching for excuses.

Meaning in Urdu:

بہانہ جو کے معنی بہانے تلاش کرنے والی ہیں، اور نگاہِ بے ادب سے مراد وہ شوخ یا گستاخ نگاہ ہے جو محبوب کو دیکھنے کے لیے بے تاب ہو۔ اقبال کہتے ہیں کہ میری نگاہ عرصے سے محبوب کے دیدار کی خواہش مند تھی، لیکن جب واقعی وصل کا لمحہ آیا تو میرے اندر دیکھنے کا حوصلہ نہ رہا۔ قرب کی عظمت، محبوب کا جلال، اور حضوری کی ہیبت نے مجھے خاموش اور عاجز کر دیا۔ اس طرح دیدار کی خواہش بھی ایک طرح سے ادھوری رہ گئی۔

The lover had long desired to behold the Beloved, and his gaze had been restless and daring. But when the moment of nearness actually arrived, awe overcame him. The line beautifully shows the paradox of spiritual experience: from a distance, longing is bold; in true presence, the soul becomes humble and speechless.

گرمیِ آرزو فراق! شورشِ ہائے و ہُو فراق

موج کی جستجو فراق! قطرہ کی آبرو فراق

Transliteration:
Garmī-e-ārzu firāq! Shorish-e-hā-e-hū firāq!
Mauj kī justajū firāq! Qatra kī ābrū firāq!

Translation:
Separation is the heat of desire; separation is the tumult of cries and sighs;
Separation is the wave’s search; separation is the droplet’s honour.

Meaning in Urdu:

شورشِ ہائے و ہُو سے مراد عاشق کی آہ و فغاں، بے چینی اور فریاد ہے۔ اقبال اس شعر میں کہتے ہیں کہ عشق حقیقی میں فراق ہی وہ کیفیت ہے جو آرزو کو گرم رکھتی ہے، نالہ و فریاد کو زندہ رکھتی ہے، اور طلب کو حرکت دیتی ہے۔ سمندر کی موج اسی لیے بے قرار ہے کہ وہ اپنی الگ حرکت اور تلاش رکھتی ہے۔ اسی طرح قطرے کی آبرو اس وقت تک قائم ہے جب تک وہ اپنی الگ ہستی رکھتا ہے؛ سمندر میں مل کر اس کی انفرادی شناخت ختم ہو جاتی ہے۔ اقبال کے نزدیک انسان کی انفرادیت، خودی اور مسلسل جستجو بہت قیمتی ہیں۔

Separation is the force that keeps desire alive. It creates movement, longing, complaint, and striving. The wave searches because it is restless; the drop has dignity because it still possesses its own distinct being. In Iqbal’s thought, this points toward the value of individuality and selfhood: the human being must not lose himself in passive dissolution, but must remain awake, seeking, and alive.