Showing posts with label Dr Iqbal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr Iqbal. Show all posts

Monday, August 27, 2007

Purification of heart

Everyone sees the unseen in proportion to the clarity of his heart, and that depends upon how much he has polished it. Whoever has polished it more sees more — more unseen forms become manifest to him.

If you are irritated by every rub, how will you be polished?
[Jalal al-din Mohammed Rumi]


beautiful saying .. reminds me of sher from Alama Iqbal that i think i have already blogged before on this site ...

Tu bacha bacha ke na rakh isey
tera aaina hai woh aaina
jo shakista ho to aziz-tar hai
nigaah-e-aaina-saaz mein ...
[Dr Mohammed Iqbal ]

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Couplet of the day ..

Alama Iqbal sahab ka ek bohot hii khoobsurat sher hai ...

Tu bacha bacha ke na rakh issey
tera aaina hai wo aaina
ke shikasta ho to aziz tar hai
nigaah-e-aaina saaz mein

Its a beautiful expression , when a person walks on the true path ..walks on the path shown by the almighty .. he has to give up.. he learns to give up on his desires ...his wants ... the right path is not always the easy path ... but dont loose heart ... even though you have to give up desires at time .. even though you bow down for the happiness of others .... but the heart which derives pleasure from giving and not always wanting ... jo jhuknaa jaanta hai woh khuda ko zyaada pyaara hota hai .. and Iqbal has put this so beautifully in the above sher...

Gurbaani mein isi bhaav par ek khoobsurat panktii hai ...
"KarooN vinanti suno mere meeta
sant tehal kii vela
Ihan khat chalo har laha
aage basan suhela"

Amal aur Ilm (Action and Knowledge)

I have heard some beautiful thoughts on Amal and Ilm ..I fee that sharing this on a blog might help others to be aware of this differnce also

Alama Iqbal ka ek bohot khoobsurat sher hai ...
Amal se zindagi bantii hai jannat bhi jahannam bhi ,
Ye khaaki apni soorat mein na noori hai na naari hai ..

ke insaani zindagi kii behtari ke liye sirf ilm zaroori nahi .. ilm ho jaana aasaan hai , magar us par amal karna mushkil hai ...and most of the people including me have this big problem that we know but we dont implement ..Iska ek bohot achchha example jo ki society mein aam milta hai woh ye ke cigerette ke packets par surgeon general kii warning likhi hoti hai phir bhi ek baRi taadaad mein log cigerette smoking nahi chhoD paate ...

Agar ilm hai to amal kyun nahi hai ? Iskii bohot baRi wajah hai imaan.. faith .. insaani fitrat mein ekhlaas kii zarurat .. imaan kii ek khaasiyaat hoti hai ke isey banaane ke liye mehnat kii zarurat hoti hai .. kahin suna tha ke imaan kii mehnat ek uphill task hai ..
if you are not striving to go up ... gravity will pull you down

Infact amal ke bina ilm hona ek liability hai ...
sometimes ignorance is bliss
Agar kisi ko kisi baat ka ilm hi na ho to muafi maangi jaa sakti hai .. ilm ho , gyaan ho ... to insaan ke paas nafarmaani ka ... amal na karne ka excuse bhi nahi hota ....

In fact ilm ekattha karna .. ekhlaas kii baatien parhna .. samajhna .. us par discussions karnaa aasaan hota hai .. un par amal karna mushkil .. magar amal ke bina ye baatien sirf lafaazi hoti hain ... zehani aaiyaashi ...

Is baar Atlanta ke samagam mein Babaji ne bhi is mauju par ek line quote kari thi ke ..
boloN ke nakshoN mein amaloN ke rang bhar de

English mein is baat par ek famous muhawara hai ke ...
"Dont only talk your talk but Walk your talk" ...

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Consciousness of God

Is it true that we normally remember God only in time of problems and worries ?

Kabir Ji have so rightly said ..
Dukh Mein Simran Sab Kare, Sukh Mein Kare Na Koye
Jo Sukh Mein Simran Kare, Tau Dukh Kahe Ko Hoye

translated to:
(In anguish everyone prays to Him, in joy does none
To One who prays in happiness, how sorrow can come
On the similar thoughts, there is a beautiful couplet by Mughal emperor Baadshah Bahadur Shah zafar
"Zafar aadmi usko na jaaneya ga
Ho voh kaisa bhee sahib-e-fahm-o-Zakaa
Jisey Aish mein yaad-e-Khuda na rahaa
Jisey taish mein kaauf-e-Khuda-na-rahaa.."

kisi ne iska english mein bohot hii khoobsurat rhyming tarjuma kiya hai ...
"Zafar, know him not as man
However, wise, sage or benign
Who in his pleasures forgets his God
And in his anger, wrath divine."

Does it makes us wonder why remembering God brings happiness in lives ?.. He does not need any endorsements ..then does our remembering him makes him happy ? and in turn he bestows happiness on us ??

My thinking is that we need to remember God not because he wants us to remember him but because of our own happiness. Remembering God means believing in his existence .. having faith .. when you believe in that supreme power you know that things in the universe are not chaotic ..your life and its events are not just a big sequence of mere coincidences . That there is a master plan behind the events .. we might not have the long term vision or the wisdom to comprehend it ..but having faith in God gives us power to accept the events in our life .. Good or bad ...

And 'Acceptance' is the key to 'happiness' in life . Flowing with the flow is so much easier than trying to swim against the river current. Granted, that it is probably easier to accept the Good things than bad episodes... In the begining a person has to practice this 'acceptance' by remembering God and bowing down to supreme will .. with constant reminders it becomes part of your nature .
In Gurmukhi this state is called 'sehaj bhaav' .. In Islaam its called 'Taqwaa' .. Or you can just call it 'Consiousness of God'
.It is to be constantly aware of God's omnipresence and a reminder of our relationship and responsibility to God as his creation.

Writing this just reminded me of a beautiful serenity prayer from Niebuhr that most of us have heard at one point or other in our lives...but which so beautifully wraps up this thought
God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Religion and Philosophy

A thought provoding excerpt taken from "The Reconstruction of Religious thought in Islam" by Dr Mohammed Iqbal

"The spirit of philosophy is one of free inquiry. It suspects all authority. Its function is to trace the uncritical assumptions of human thought to their hiding places, and in this pursuit it may finally end in denial or a frank admission of the incapacity of pure reason to reach the Ultimate Reality. The essence of religion, on the other hand, is faith; and faith, like the bird, sees its ‘trackless way’ unattended by intellect which, in the words of the great mystic poet of Islam, ‘only waylays the living heart of man and robs it of the invisible wealth of life that lies within’. Yet it cannot be denied that faith is more than mere feeling. It has something like a cognitive content, and the existence of rival parties— scholastics and mystics— in the history of religion shows that idea is a vital element in religion. Apart from this, religion on its doctrinal side, as defined by Professor Whitehead, is ‘a system of general truths which have the effect of transforming character when they are sincerely held and vividly apprehended’. Now, since the transformation and guidance of man’s inner and outer life is the essential aim of religion, it is obvious that the general truths which it embodies must not remain unsettled. No one would hazard action on the basis of a doubtful principle of conduct. Indeed, in view of its function, religion stands in greater need of a rational foundation of its ultimate principles than even the dogmas of science. Science may ignore a rational metaphysics; indeed, it has ignored it so far. Religion can hardly afford to ignore the search for a reconciliation of the oppositions of experience and a justification of the environment in which humanity finds itself. That is why Professor Whitehead has acutely remarked that ‘the ages of faith are the ages of rationalism’. But to rationalize faith is not to admit the superiority of philosophy over religion. Philosophy, no doubt, has jurisdiction to judge religion, but what is to be judged is of such a nature that it will not submit to the jurisdiction of philosophy except on its own terms. While sitting in judgement on religion, philosophy cannot give religion an inferior place among its data. Religion is not a departmental affair; it is neither mere thought, nor mere feeling, nor mere action; it is an expression of the whole man. Thus, in the evaluation of religion, philosophy must recognize the central position of religion and has no other alternative but to admit it as something focal in the process of reflective synthesis. Nor is there any reason to suppose that thought and intuition are essentially opposed to each other. They spring up from the same root and complement each other. The one grasps Reality piecemeal, the other grasps it in its wholeness. The one fixes its gaze on the eternal, the other on the temporal aspect of Reality. The one is present enjoyment of the whole of Reality; the other aims at traversing the whole by slowly specifying and closing up the various regions of the whole for exclusive observation. Both are in need of each other for mutual rejuvenation. Both seek visions of the same Reality which reveals itself to them in accordance with their function in life. In fact, intuition, as Bergson rightly says, is only a higher kind of intellect."