Iqbal and the Babi-Baha'i Faith =============================== Exported from Holy-Writings.com on 2026-06-18 1 clipping 1. Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Annemarie Schimmel, Iqbal and the Babi-Baha'i Faith, bahai-library.com. ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Iqbal* and the Babi-Baha'i Faith Annemarie Schimmel E very reader of Iqbal's magnum opus, the Javfdnama (published in Lahore epic, Tahirih's song: J/J,1 ~/, ' . ., ,: I. 1932), has been delighted to read in one of the most prominent places this 1/; ( ~ ; r_ ~ ~ J ~•iI) rJ, But one also wonders why the poet introducJd ~~hirih among the three immor- tal spirits whom he meets in the Sphere of Jupiter, that is J:Iallaj, Ghalib, and Tahirih Qurratu'l-'Ayn. During his flight through the heavens, which is admin- istered by Maulana Rumf, the poet reaches the various spheres in which heaven- ly beings abide and discusses with them problems of life and death, of religion and politics. It is in the Falak-i mushtari that the poet sees three spirits, called by him pakbaz, "those who have given away everything" for their ideals, three people in whose breasts a fire is raging that can bum the whole world. ~1)✓~~~;:j~ J /.. / ,,, . This description certainly applies to J:Iallaj, the martyr-mystic of Baghdad, and to Tahirih, but it is difficult to find the reason for also introducing Ghalib, the poet of Delhi whose Urdu Divan had become such a treasure for every lover of the Urdu language. However, Ghalib appears in this context in connection not with his superb poetry but rather with another important theological prob- lem, a problem concerning the possible continuation of prophetship after * Muhammad Iqbal (d. 1938) was one of the more influential Muslim thinkers of the first half of the twentieth century. He was a scholar taking a degree at Cambridge in 1923, a poet, and a philosopher. He wrote in English, Persian, and Urdu. 112 THE BAHA'I FAITH AND ISLAM Mul]ammad. Mul]ammad had been called, in the Qur'an, the "Seal of the Prophets" (khritam al-nahiyin). About the year 1829, Indian Muslim theologians discussed the question of whether or not God can create another Mul]ammad if God should create another world. Ghalib's verse written at that occasion states that wherever a new world arises, there would be also ral;matan Ii' 1- '6Iamin, a prophet sent as "mercy for the Universe" (Qur'an 21:107). This verse consti- tutes the focal point of Ghalib's appearance in Iqbal's description of the Sphere of Jupiter-that is, he is called as a timid witness of the possibility of a continu- ation of revelation; as someone who knows that behind the surface of a poetic statement of this kind there may be hidden the borderline of "infidelity," and this can be interpreted as pertaining to the appearance of a religious movement that is based on the concept of such a "continuation of revelation." Iqbal describes the three spirits as wearing tulip-colored garments-for in Persian and Turkish poetic imagery the tulip has been regarded as the flower of suffering and martyrdom. Thus, both I:Iallaj and Tahirih show the secret of their martyrdom in their red garments, which remind the poet of the blood they shed as witnesses to the truth or to their unshakable faith; therefore, he sees their faces likewise radiating an inner fire, the fire of fearless love. The three noble spirits, as he describes them, are in a state of glow and fever from the day of the primordial covenant where they imbibed the wine of divine love, and they appear to him still intoxicated by their own songs of passion. In such words, Iqbal expresses his amazement at their sight. But his mystical guide, Maulana Rumi, consoles him and at the same time admonishes him not to lose himself completely by gazing at them but rather to be quickened by the fiery melodies of their song. And he tells his disciple: Have you never seen fearless longing? Then look! Have you never seen the power of this wine? Then look! Ghalib and I:Iall