Allama Iqbal was a great minstrel- champion and active political leader born in Sialkot, Punjab, in 1877. He descended from a family of Kashmiri Brahmans, who had embraced Islam about 300 times before.
Allama Iqbal entered his early education in the traditional Madrassa. latterly he joined the Sialkot Mission School, from where he passed his matriculate examination. In 1897, he attained his Bachelorette of trades Degree from Government College, Lahore. After Two times, he secured his Masters Degree and was appointed in the Oriental College, Lahore, as a speaker of history, gospel, and English. He latterly progressed to Europe for advanced studies. Having attained a degree from Cambridge, he secured his doctorate at Munich and eventually good as a counsel.
He returned to India in 1908. Besides tutoring and practicing law, Iqbal continued to write poetry. He abnegated from government service in 1911 and took up the task of propagating individual thinking among the Muslims through his poetry.
He abominated injustice, His kick, first made in the name of India, continued in the name of Islam; From numerous of the beautiful runes given below is one” If You Had Not Come I Would Have Had” If You Had Not Come I Would Have Had If you hadn’t come I would have had no occasion for contention But what disinclination in making the pledge was? Your runner bared every secret O Lord! What fault of Man in this was? You honored Your nut in the full assembly How alert Your eye in the middle of the elatedness was! True!
By 1928, his character as a great Muslim champion was solidly established and he was invited to deliver lectures at Hyderabad, Aligarh and Madras. These series of lectures were latterly published as a book” The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam”. In 1930, Iqbal was invited to preside over the open session of the Muslim League at Allahabad. In his major Allahabad Address, Iqbal visualised an independent and autonomous state for the Muslims of North-Western India. In 1932, Iqbal came to England as a Muslim delegate to the Third Round Table Conference. In after times, when the Quaid had left India and was abiding in England, Allama Iqbal wrote to him conveying to him his particular views on political problems and state of affairs of the Indian Muslims, and also prevailing him to come back. These letters are dated from June 1936 to November 1937. This series of correspondence is now a part of important major documents concerning Pakistan’s struggle for freedom. On April 21, 1938, the great Muslim minstrel- champion, and champion of the Muslim cause, passed away. But he’ll always be present in compendiums ‘ hearts due to his beautiful poetry. He lies buried coming to the Badshahi Mosque in Lahore