Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Whetstone of Iblis and the Wound of Kashmir

 بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

There are passages that decorate memory, and there are passages that put the conscience on trial.

This passage from Iqbal’s Jāvidnāmah belongs to the second kind.

It begins with a question that every thinking believer has felt at some point. Why is evil made attractive? Why is Satan allowed to exist? Why are we asked for obedience while temptation is given colour, fragrance, argument, and music?

Zinda Rūd asks Hazrat Shah Hamadan with almost painful honesty:

اَز تُو خَواهَم سِرِّ یَزْدان را کِلید
طاعَت اَز ما جُست و شَیطان آفَرید

I seek from you the key to God’s secret. 

He asked obedience from us, and created Satan.

This is not disbelief. It is not rebellion. It is the cry of a soul that wants to understand the moral shape of the world. Iqbal is too serious a believer to pretend that evil is a small question. He brings the question into the presence of a saint.

The Whetstone

Shah Hamadan’s answer is one of the most powerful images in Iqbal:

خویش را بَر اَهرَمَن بایَد زَدَن
تُو هَمَه تیغ، آن هَمَه سَنگِ فَسَن

One must strike oneself against Ahriman. 

You are all sword; he is all whetstone.

This is the answer.

Not friendship with evil.

Not fascination with evil.

Not making excuses for evil.

Struggle.

The devil is ruin if he becomes our companion. He is beauty if he becomes the opponent against whom the self is sharpened. This is why Iqbal says that the one who knows himself can create benefit even out of harm.

The temptation itself is not good. But the resistance can become good. The fire is dangerous, but a soul that passes through it may come out purified, disciplined, and more awake.

Kashmir: Beauty with a Wound Inside It

Then the poem turns suddenly to Kashmir.

This turn is not accidental. Iqbal moves from the personal trial of evil to the public trial of oppression. A soul can be tested. A people can be tested. A person can lose his selfhood. A nation can also lose its selfhood.

Iqbal looks at Kashmir and sees beauty. The mountains. The chinars. The clouds over the valley. The rivers. The sunset. Nishat. The spring.

But he refuses to let beauty become a narcotic.

This is the danger with Kashmir. People look at it and say: how beautiful. Iqbal looks at it and says: how wounded.

The flowers are there, but the people are in pain. The colour is there, but the wage is in another’s hand. The river is there, but its fish is on another’s hook. The land is there, but the people have become strangers in their own homeland.

اَز خودی تا بی‌نَصیب افتاده‌است
دَر دیارِ خود غَریب افتاده‌است

This is one of the most painful diagnoses in Iqbal.

A people deprived of khudī become foreigners at home.

They may still possess houses, names, songs, crafts, customs, and memories. But if they do not possess themselves, then something central has been taken away.

When Spring Is Not Enough

The bird in the poem says that this spring is not worth even a small coin.

This is not contempt for beauty. It is refusal to let beauty hide humiliation.

Spring is not enough when a people are sold.

Flowers are not enough when dignity is lost.

Scenery is not enough when the soul has been pushed out of its own house.

That is why the lines about Kashmir’s sale are so piercing:

دِهقان و کِشت و جوی و خیابان فُروختَند
قَومی فُروختَند و چِه اَرزان فُروختَند

They sold the peasant, the field, the stream, the avenues. They sold a people, and how cheaply they sold them.

Here Iqbal is not merely remembering an event. He is judging a moral failure. Land can be transferred on paper. Power can sign documents. Money can change hands. But no document can make the sale of a people morally clean.

The Soul That Is Spent Becomes Light

گَر نِگَه‌داری، بِمیرَد دَر بَدَن
وَر بِفِشانی، فُروغِ اَنجُمَن

If you hoard it, it dies in the body

If you scatter it, it becomes the light of the assembly.  

Shah Hamadan then gives another lesson. The body is dust. The soul is a noble jewel.

If we hoard the soul, it dies inside the body. If we spend it for Truth, it becomes light.

This is the opposite of our ordinary fear.

We think life is preserved by being protected at all costs. Iqbal says that a life protected from all sacrifice may become a dead thing. A life given for Allah, for Truth, for justice, for the honour of the soul, becomes alive in another way.

This is not love of death. Islam does not teach love of death as an escape from responsibility. It teaches that life is a trust, and that a trust must not be spent on cowardice, vanity, appetite, and silence before falsehood.

The one who finds himself is no longer owned by fear.

Kingship Cannot Be Bought

The last movement of this passage is political. Zinda Rūd asks: what gives the throne and crown their validity?

Shah Hamadan’s answer is severe. Rule rests either on the consent of peoples or on force. But tribute is morally due only to the authority that belongs to the people’s own moral order, or to the brave, self-sacrificing leader who carries both strength and tenderness.

Then Iqbal gives the sentence that should be written over every false throne:

می‌توان ایران و هِندوستان خَرید
پادشاهی را زِ کَس نَتوان خَرید

Iran and Hindustan may be bought. 

Kingship cannot be bought from anyone.

This is not only about old kings. It is about every age.

Power can buy land.

Power can buy officials.

Power can buy newspapers, slogans, titles, ceremonies, and silence.

But power cannot buy moral legitimacy.

The Cup of Jamshid cannot be bought from the shop of a glassmaker. If someone buys such a cup, it is only glass. And glass knows one craft: breaking.

Iqbal — The Kashmir Section

Muhammad Iqbal · Jāvīd Nāma

The Kashmir Dialogue

Zinda Rūd, Shāh Hamadān, and the lament of Ghani Kashmiri

Persian Transliteration Translation & Reflection
Zinda Rūd asks about evil, Satan, and obedience
اَز تُو خَواهَم سِرِّ یَزْدان را کِلید
طاعَت اَز ما جُست و شَیطان آفَرید
az to khwāham sirr-e Yazdān rā kalīd
ṭā‘at az mā just o Shayṭān āfarīd
From you I seek the key to God's secret: He asked obedience from us and created Satan.Zinda Rūd begins with the old moral question: why is the tempter present if obedience is required?
زِشت و ناخُوش را چُنان آراستَن
دَر عَمَل اَز ما نِکویی خواستَن
zesht o nā-khwush rā chunān ārāstan
dar ‘amal az mā nikū'ī khwāstan
To make the ugly and unpleasant appear so adorned, and then to ask goodness from us in action.Evil is not always presented as ugly. Often it comes dressed in attraction.
اَز تُو پُرسَم این فُسون‌سازی کِه چِه
با قِمارِ بَد‌نِشین بازی کِه چِه
az to porsam īn fusūn-sāzī ke che
bā qimār-e bad-nishīn bāzī ke che
I ask you: what is this spell-making? What is this gambling-game with a bad companion?The bad companion is the satanic presence that turns the moral test into a dangerous game.
مُشتِ خاک و این سِپِهرِ گِردگَرد
خود بُگو می‌زیبَدَش کاری کِه کَرد
mosht-e khāk o īn sepehr-e gerd-gard
khod begū mī-zībadash kārī ke kard
A handful of dust, and this circling sky; tell me yourself, does such a deed befit Him?The human being is small before the cosmos, yet given a test that shakes the soul.
کارِ ما، اَفکارِ ما، آزارِ ما
دَست با دَندان گَزیدَن کارِ ما
kār-e mā, afkār-e mā, āzār-e mā
dast bā dandān gazīdan kār-e mā
Our actions, our thoughts, our torment; biting our hand with our teeth is our work.Human thought can become regret, and regret can become a form of punishment.
Shāh Hamadān answers: evil can sharpen the self
بَنده‌ای کَز خویشتَن دارَد خَبَر
آفَریند مَنفَعَت را اَز ضَرَر
banda-ī kaz khwīshtan dārad khabar
āfarīnad manfa‘at rā az zarar
The servant who knows himself creates benefit out of harm.This is the beginning of Iqbal's answer: self-awareness changes the meaning of trial.
بَزم با دیو اَست آدم را وَبال
رَزم با دیو اَست آدم را جَمال
bazm bā dīv ast ādam rā wabāl
razm bā dīv ast ādam rā jamāl
Companionship with the demon is ruin for man; battle with the demon is man's beauty.The devil is not there to be befriended. He is there to be resisted.
خویش را بَر اَهرَمَن بایَد زَدَن
تُو هَمَه تیغ، آن هَمَه سَنگِ فَسَن
khwīsh rā bar Ahraman bāyad zadan
to hama tīgh, ān hama sang-e fasan
One must strike oneself against Ahriman. You are all sword; he is all whetstone.The satanic test can sharpen the human self when the human being refuses surrender.
تیزتَر شو تا فَتَد ضَربِ تُو سَخت
وَرنه باشی دَر دو گیتی تیرَه‌بَخت
tīztar show tā fatad zarb-e to sakht
warna bāshī dar do gītī tīra-bakht
Become sharper, so your blow falls hard; otherwise you will be dark-fortuned in both worlds.The answer is not complaint. The answer is sharpening.
Zinda Rūd turns to Kashmir
زیرِ گَردون آدم آدم را خَوَرَد
مِلَّتی بَر مِلَّتی دیگر چَرَد
zīr-e gardūn ādam ādam rā khwarad
millatī bar millatī dīgar charad
Under the sky, man devours man; one nation grazes upon another.The poem moves from inner evil to social oppression.
جان زِ اَهلِ خِطّه سوزَد چون سِپَند
خیزَد اَز دِل نالَه‌هایِ دَردمَند
jān ze ahl-e khiṭṭa sūzad chūn sipand
khīzad az dil nāla-hā-ye dardmand
My soul burns for the people of that land like rue-seed on fire; cries of pain rise from the heart.Kashmir is not scenery here. It is pain.
زیرَک و دَرّاک و خُوش‌گُل مِلَّتی‌ست
دَر جَهان تَردَستیِ او آیَتی‌ست
zīrak o darrāk o khush-gul millatī-st
dar jahān tar-dastī-ye ū āyatī-st
They are a clever, perceptive, beautiful people; their skill is a sign in the world.Iqbal praises Kashmiri intelligence, beauty, and craftsmanship.
ساغَرَش غَلطَنده اَندَر خونِ اوست
دَر نَیِ مَن نالَه اَز مَضمونِ اوست
sāgharash ghaltanda andar khūn-e ūst
dar nay-e man nāla az mazmūn-e ūst
Their cup rolls in their own blood; the lament in my reed comes from their story.The poet's song is carrying a wounded people.
اَز خودی تا بی‌نَصیب افتاده‌است
دَر دیارِ خود غَریب افتاده‌است
az khudī tā bī-naṣīb oftāda ast
dar diyār-e khod gharīb oftāda ast
Since they have been deprived of selfhood, they have become strangers in their own homeland.This is Iqbal's great diagnosis: the loss of selfhood becomes exile at home.
دَستمُزدِ او بِه دَستِ دیگران
ماهیِ رودَش بِه شَستِ دیگران
dastmozd-e ū be dast-e dīgarān
māhī-ye rūdash be shast-e dīgarān
The wage of their hands is in others' hands; the fish of their river is on others' hook.Labour and natural wealth are taken by others.
کاروان‌ها سویِ مَنزِل گام‌گام
کارِ او ناخوب و بی‌اَندام و خام
kārvān-hā sū-ye manzil gām-gām
kār-e ū nā-khūb o bī-andām o khām
Caravans move step by step toward the destination; their work remains poor, shapeless, and raw.Others are advancing; the oppressed community has been left disordered.
اَز غُلامی جَذبَه‌هایِ او بِمُرد
آتَشی اَندَر رَگِ تاکَش فُسُرد
az ghulāmī jazba-hā-ye ū bemurd
ātashī andar rag-e tākash fosurd
Through slavery their passions died; the fire in the vein of their vine grew cold.Bondage kills courage before it kills the body.
تا نَپِنداری کِه بودَست این‌چُنین
جَبهَه را هَمْوارَه سُودَست این‌چُنین
tā napindārī ke būda-st īn-chunīn
jabha rā hamvāra sūda-st īn-chunīn
Do not think they have always been like this, always rubbing their forehead in submission.The present humiliation is not their nature.
دَر زَمانی صَف‌شِکَن هَم بودَه‌است
چیرَه و جان‌باز و پُردَم بودَه‌است
dar zamānī ṣaf-shikan ham būda ast
chīra o jān-bāz o pur-dam būda ast
There was a time when they too broke battle-lines; they were dominant, brave, and full of breath.Iqbal remembers a lost heroic energy.
کوه‌هایِ خَنگ‌سارِ او نِگَر
آتَشین دَستِ چِنارِ او نِگَر
kūh-hā-ye khang-sār-e ū negar
ātashīn dast-e chinār-e ū negar
Look at its snow-white mountains; look at the fiery hands of its chinars.Kashmir's beauty is alive with white peaks and red leaves.
دَر بَهاران لَعل می‌ریزَد زِ سَنگ
خیزَد اَز خاکَش یکی طوفانِ رَنگ
dar bahārān la‘l mī-rīzad ze sang
khīzad az khākash yakī ṭūfān-e rang
In spring, rubies pour from stone; from its soil rises a storm of colour.The flowers appear like jewels emerging from rock.
لَکّه‌هایِ اَبر دَر کوه و دَمَن
پَنبَه‌پَران اَز کَمانِ پَنبَه‌زَن
lakka-hā-ye abr dar kūh o daman
panba-parān az kamān-e panba-zan
Patches of cloud over mountain and meadow, like cotton flying from the carder's bow.Iqbal turns a village craft into a sky-image.
کوه و دَریا و غُروبِ آفتاب
مَن خُدا را دیدَم آنجا بی‌حِجاب
kūh o daryā o ghurūb-e āftāb
man Khudā rā dīdam ānjā bī-ḥijāb
Mountain, river, and sunset; there I saw God without veil.The beauty of Kashmir becomes a witness to divine beauty.
با نَسیم آوارَه بودَم دَر نِشاط
«بِشنَو اَز نَی» می‌سُرودَم دَر نِشاط
bā nasīm āvāra būdam dar Nishāt
“bishnaw az nay” mī-sorūdam dar nishāt
I wandered with the breeze in Nishat; in joy I sang, "Listen to the reed."There is a play on Nishat Garden and joy, and also an allusion to Rūmī's reed-song.
Rūmī's alluded couplet
بِشنَو اَز نَی چون حِکایَت می‌کُنَد
وَز جُدایی‌ها شِکایَت می‌کُنَد
bishnaw az nay chūn ḥikāyat mī-konad
waz judā'ī-hā shikāyat mī-konad
Listen to the reed, how it tells a tale; how it complains of separations.Iqbal hears Kashmir through the old voice of separation.
The bird and the lament of Ghani Kashmiri
مُرغَکی می‌گُفت اَندَر شاخسار
با پَشیزی می‌نِیَرزَد این بَهار
murghakī mī-goft andar shākhsār
bā pashīzī mī-niyarzad īn bahār
A little bird in the branches was saying: this spring is not worth a penny.Beauty without freedom has lost its worth.
لالَه رُست و نَرگِسِ شَهلا دَمید
بادِ نَوْروزی گِریبـانَش دَرید
lāla rost o nargis-e shahlā damīd
bād-e naw-rūzī girībānash darīd
The tulip grew, the dark-eyed narcissus bloomed; the New Year wind tore open its collar.Spring is present, but grief has torn the garment.
عُمرها بالید اَزین کوه و کَمَر
نَستَر اَز نورِ قَمَر پاکیزَه‌تَر
‘umr-hā bālīd azīn kūh o kamar
nastar az nūr-e qamar pākīza-tar
For ages, from these mountains and passes, wild roses grew purer than moonlight.The corrected reading is nastar, the wild rose.
عُمرها گُل رَخت بَربَست و گُشاد
خاکِ ما دیگر شِهابُ‌الدّین نَزاد
‘umr-hā gul rakht bar-bast o goshād
khāk-e mā dīgar Shihāb-ud-Dīn nazād
For ages flowers came and went; our soil bore no second Shihab al-Din.The land still produces flowers, but not a leader of that old stature.
نالَهٔ پُرسوزِ آن مُرغِ سَحَر
داد جانَم را تَب و تابِ دِگَر
nāla-ye pursūz-e ān murgh-e saḥar
dād jān-am rā tab o tāb-e digar
The burning lament of that dawn-bird gave my soul another fever and agitation.The bird's cry awakens the poet's pain.
تا یکی دیوانَه دیدَم دَر خُروش
آن‌کِه بُرد اَز مَن مَتاعِ صَبر و هوش
tā yakī dīvāna dīdam dar khurūsh
ān-ke bord az man matā‘-e ṣabr o hūsh
Then I saw a madman crying out, one who took away from me the goods of patience and sense.Truth sometimes speaks in the voice of holy madness.
بِگْذَر زِ ما و نالَهٔ مَستانه‌ای مَجوی
بِگْذَر زِ شاخِ گُل کِه طِلِسمی‌ست رَنگ و بوی
begzar ze mā o nāla-ye mastāna-ī majūy
begzar ze shākh-e gul ke ṭilismī-st rang o būy
Pass us by; do not seek a drunken lament from us. Pass by the rose-branch, for colour and fragrance are only a spell.Beauty can become a veil over pain.
گُفتی کِه شَبنَم اَز وَرَقِ لالَه می‌چَکَد
غافِل! دِلی‌ست این‌کِه بِگِرید کِنارِ جوی
goftī ke shabnam az varaq-e lāla mī-chakad
ghāfil! dilī-st īn-ke begiryad kenār-e jūy
You said dew drips from the tulip's petal. Heedless one, it is a heart weeping by the stream.Nature is being read as sorrow.
این مُشتِ پَر کُجا و سُرودِ این‌چُنین کُجا
روحِ غَنی‌ست ماتَمیِ مَرگِ آرزوی
īn mosht-e par kojā o sorūd-e īn-chunīn kojā
rūḥ-e Ghanī-st mātamī-ye marg-e ārzūy
What is this handful of feathers beside such a song? It is Ghani's spirit mourning the death of desire.The bird becomes the soul of Ghani Kashmiri.
بادِ صَبا اَگَر بِه جِنیوَا گُذَر کُنی
حَرفی زِ ما بِه مَجلِسِ اَقوام بازگوی
bād-e ṣabā agar be Jenevā gozar konī
ḥarfī ze mā be Majlis-e Aqvām bāz-gūy
O morning breeze, if you pass through Geneva, carry a word from us to the League of Nations.The private lament becomes an appeal to the world.
دِهقان و کِشت و جوی و خیابان فُروختَند
قَومی فُروختَند و چِه اَرزان فُروختَند
dehqān o kisht o jūy o khiyābān forūkhtand
qawmī forūkhtand o che arzān forūkhtand
They sold the peasant, the field, the stream, the avenues; they sold a people, and how cheaply they sold them.This is among Iqbal's sharpest lines on Kashmir's political wound.
Shāh Hamadān on body, soul, and sacrifice
با تُو گویم رَمزِ باریک ای پِسَر
تَن هَمَه خاک اَست و جان والاگُهَر
bā to gūyam ramz-e bārīk ey pesar
tan hama khāk ast o jān wālā-guhar
I tell you a subtle secret, my son: the body is all dust, but the soul is a noble jewel.The discussion now turns from national pain to spiritual courage.
جِسم را اَز بَهرِ جان بایَد گُداخت
پاک را اَز خاک می‌بایَد شِناخت
jism rā az bahr-e jān bāyad godākht
pāk rā az khāk mī-bāyad shinākht
The body must be melted for the sake of the soul; the pure must be distinguished from clay.Matter must serve meaning.
گَر بِبُری پارَهٔ تَن را زِ تَن
رَفت اَز دَستِ تُو آن لَختِ بَدَن
gar beborrī pāra-ye tan rā ze tan
raft az dast-e to ān lakht-e badan
If you cut a piece of flesh from the body, that lump of body is lost from your hand.Physical loss is ordinary loss.
لیکِن آن جانی کِه گَردَد جَلوَه‌مَست
گَر زِ دَست او را دِهی، آیَد بِدَست
līkin ān jānī ke gardad jalwa-mast
gar ze dast ū rā dehī, āyad be-dast
But the soul that becomes intoxicated with divine radiance, if you give it from your hand, comes back into your hand.Sacrifice for the Real is not loss.
جَوهَرَش با هیچ شَی مانَند نیست
هَست اَندَر بَند و اَندَر بَند نیست
jawharash bā hīch shay mānand nīst
hast andar band o andar band nīst
Its essence resembles nothing; it is in bondage, and yet not in bondage.The soul is in the body but not owned by the body.
گَر نِگَه‌داری، بِمیرَد دَر بَدَن
وَر بِفِشانی، فُروغِ اَنجُمَن
gar negah-dārī, bemīrad dar badan
var befishānī, furūgh-e anjuman
If you hoard it, it dies in the body; if you scatter it, it becomes the light of the assembly.A life spent for truth becomes light.
چیست جانِ جَلوَه‌مَست ای مَردِ راد؟
چیست جان دادَن زِ دَست ای مَردِ راد؟
chīst jān-e jalwa-mast ey mard-e rād?
chīst jān dādan ze dast ey mard-e rād?
What is the radiance-drunk soul, brave man? What is it to give life from one's hand, brave man?The poem prepares to define true self-giving.
چیست جان دادَن؟ بِحَق پَرداختَن
کوه را با سوزِ جان بِگْداختَن
chīst jān dādan? be-Ḥaqq pardākhtan
kūh rā bā sūz-e jān begdākhtan
What is giving life? To pay it over to the Real; to melt a mountain with the soul's fire.True sacrifice is surrender to Truth, not mere emotional display.
جَلوَه‌مَستی خویش را دَریافتَن
دَر شَبان چون کوکَبی بَرتافتَن
jalwa-mastī khwīsh rā daryāftan
dar shabān chūn kawkabī bartāftan
Radiance-intoxication is to discover oneself, to shine like a star in the nights.Selfhood becomes light in darkness.
خویش را نایافتَن نابودَن اَست
یافتَن خود را بِخود بَخشودَن اَست
khwīsh rā nā-yāftan nā-būdan ast
yāftan-e khod rā be-khod bakhshūdan ast
Not finding oneself is non-being; finding oneself is gifting oneself back to oneself.In Iqbal, khudī is the recovery of the soul's rank before Allah.
هَر کِه خود را دید و غَیر اَز خود نَدید
رَخت اَز زِندانِ خود بیرون کَشید
har ke khod rā dīd o ghayr az khod nadīd
rakht az zindān-e khod bīrūn kashīd
Whoever saw the self and saw no false master besides it carried his belongings out of his prison.This is freedom from servility, not arrogance.
جَلوَه‌بَدمَستی کِه بیند خویش را
خوش‌تر اَز نوشینَه دانَد نیش را
jalwa-bad-mastī ke bīnad khwīsh rā
khush-tar az nūshīna dānad nīsh rā
The one drunk with radiance, who sees himself, finds the sting sweeter than honeyed drink.Pain becomes bearable when it is borne for truth.
دَر نِگاهَش جان چو باد اَرزان شَوَد
پیشِ او زِندانِ او لَرزان شَوَد
dar nigāhash jān chū bād arzān shawad
pīsh-e ū zindān-e ū larzān shawad
In his eyes, life becomes cheap as the wind; before him, his prison begins to tremble.The fear of death loses its rule.
تیشَهٔ او خارَه را بَرمی‌دَرَد
تا نَصیبِ خود زِ گیتی می‌بَرَد
tīsha-ye ū khāra rā bar-mī-darad
tā naṣīb-e khod ze gītī mī-barad
His axe tears through rock until he takes his share from the world.The awakened self acts. It does not merely complain.
تا زِ جان بُگذَشت، جانَش جانِ اوست
وَرنه جانَش یک‌دو دَم مِهمانِ اوست
tā ze jān bogzasht, jānash jān-e ūst
varna jānash yak-do dam mihmān-e ūst
When he passes beyond life, his life truly becomes his; otherwise, his life is only his guest for a breath or two.A clung-to life is temporary. A given life endures.
Zinda Rūd asks about political authority
گُفتَه‌ای اَز حِکمَتِ زِشت و نِکوی
پیرِ دانا نُکتَهٔ دیگر بگوی
gofta-ī az ḥikmat-e zesht o nikūy
pīr-e dānā nukta-ye dīgar begūy
You have spoken of the wisdom of ugly and good; wise elder, tell another subtle point.The conversation moves toward rule and legitimacy.
مُرشِدِ مَعنی‌نِگاهان بودَه‌ای
مَحرَمِ اَسرارِ شاهان بودَه‌ای
murshid-e ma‘nī-nigāhān būda-ī
maḥram-e asrār-e shāhān būda-ī
You have been guide to those who see meaning; you have been confidant of kings' secrets.Shah Hamadan is addressed as one who knows both spirit and power.
ما فَقیر و حُکم‌ران خواهَد خَراج
چیست اَصلِ اِعتِبارِ تَخت و تاج؟
mā faqīr o ḥukmrān khwāhad kharāj
chīst aṣl-e i‘tibār-e takht o tāj?
We are poor, and the ruler demands tribute; what is the basis of the throne and crown's validity?When does authority deserve obedience?
Shāh Hamadān on kingship and legitimate tribute
اَصلِ شاهی چیست اَندَر شَرق و غَرب؟
یا رِضایِ اُمَّتان یا حَرب و ضَرب
aṣl-e shāhī chīst andar sharq o gharb?
yā riżā-ye ummatān yā ḥarb o zarb
What is the basis of kingship, in East and West? Either the consent of peoples, or war and force.Rule rests either on consent or conquest.
فاش گویم با تُو ای والا مَقام
باج را جُز با دو کَس دادَن حَرام
fāsh gūyam bā to ey wālā-maqām
bāj rā juz bā do kas dādan ḥarām
I tell you plainly, noble one: giving tribute is forbidden except to two kinds of men.Taxation is given a moral test.
یا اُولی‌الاَمری کِه «مِنکُم» شأنِ اوست
آیَهٔ حَق حُجَّت و بُرهانِ اوست
yā ulī-l-amrī ke “minkum” shān-e ūst
āya-ye Ḥaqq ḥujjat o burhān-e ūst
Either to an authority whose rank is "from among you"; the verse of Truth is his proof and argument.Legitimate authority must not be alien to the moral life of the people.
یا جوانمَردی چو صَرصَر تَندخیز
شَهرگیر و خویش‌باز اَندَر سِتیز
yā jawān-mardī chū ṣarṣar tond-khīz
shahr-gīr o khwīsh-bāz andar sitīz
Or to a gallant man, swift-rising like a storm, a taker of cities and one who stakes himself in struggle.The ruler must risk himself, not merely consume others.
روزِ کین، کِشورگُشا اَز قاهِری
روزِ صُلح، اَز شیوَه‌هایِ دِلبَری
rūz-e kīn, kishwar-goshā az qāhirī
rūz-e ṣulḥ, az shīwa-hā-ye dilbarī
On the day of battle, he opens lands by might; on the day of peace, by the ways of heart-winning.True authority needs both strength and tenderness.
می‌توان ایران و هِندوستان خَرید
پادشاهی را زِ کَس نَتوان خَرید
mī-tavān Īrān o Hindustān kharīd
pādshāhī rā ze kas natvān kharīd
Iran and Hindustan may be bought; kingship cannot be bought from anyone.Land may be sold, but sovereignty is not a commodity.
جامِ جَم را ای جوانِ باهُنَر
کَس نَگیرد اَز دُکانِ شیشَه‌گَر
jām-e Jam rā ey jawān-e bā-hunar
kas nagīrad az dukān-e shīsha-gar
O gifted youth, no one obtains Jamshid's cup from a glassmaker's shop.Vision cannot be purchased as an ornament.
وَر بِگیرد، مالِ او جُز شیشَه نیست
شیشَه را غَیر اَز شِکَستَن پیشَه نیست
var begīrad, māl-e ū juz shīsha nīst
shīsha rā ghayr az shekastan pīsha nīst
And if he takes one, his possession is only glass; glass has no craft except breaking.Bought kingship is brittle.
Persian text with diacritics · transliteration · translation and reflection

What Remains

For me, this passage leaves three lessons.

First, evil is not meant to become our companion. It is meant to become the whetstone against which the self is sharpened.

Second, beauty must never be allowed to hide injustice. Kashmir’s mountains, flowers, chinars, and clouds are signs of Allah’s beauty. But if the people are wounded, then beauty itself becomes a witness against oppression.

Third, the soul is not protected by being kept unused. It is protected by being given to the Real. A person, and a people, become alive when they recover selfhood, courage, and moral direction.

Iqbal does not let us remain spectators.

He does not let us admire Satan’s drama. He tells us to sharpen the sword.

He does not let us admire Kashmir’s scenery. He tells us to hear the reed.

He does not let us admire crowns. He asks whether they are legitimate.

And he does not let us admire the soul as an idea. He asks whether we are ready to spend it in the path of Truth.

May Allah give us souls that are not afraid of the whetstone, hearts that can hear the lament of the oppressed, and courage that does not sell truth for glass.

آمین

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