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Allama Iqbal's son Javed Iqbal was born in the Iqbal Manzil on 5 October 1924. [4] Javed Iqbal spent his childhood in Lahore but never entered Iqbal Manzil again. Allama Iqbal's other son Aftab Iqbal resided in Karachi for the better part of his life. Allama Iqbal also had a daughter named Munira Iqbal.
Allama Iqbal with his son Javed Iqbal in 1930. Iqbal married four times under different circumstances. [36] His first marriage was in 1895 when he was 18 years old. His bride, Karim Bibi, was the daughter of Khan Bahadur Ata Muhammad Khan, a leading civil surgeon and fellow Punjabi-Kashmiri based in Gujrat. [37]
Justice Nasira Iqbal's (daughter-in-law of Allama Iqbal) house was raided by 8 Punjab policemen at 02:00 am. The police jumped over the walls to enter her house without a warrant to arrest her son Walid Iqbal (PTI Senator). She was quoted as saying that, "This happens where anarchists are in power". [10]
He is a maternal grandson of the poet and literary scholar Allama Iqbal and nephew of Javed Iqbal. [4] His paternal grandfather, Mian Amiruddin, was the first Muslim Lord Mayor of Lahore. Salahuddin is a distant relative of the Taseer family, from which the ex-Governor of Punjab Salman Taseer came. [citation needed]
Javed Iqbal was born in Sialkot, Punjab, British India on 5 October 1924 [2] to Allama Muhammad Iqbal and his second wife, Sardar Begum. His mother died when he was 11, and his father died in 1938 when he was 14.
The Javed Manzil or the Allama Iqbal Museum is a monument and museum in Lahore, Pakistan. [1] Muhammad Iqbal lived there for three years, and died there. [2] It was listed as a Tentative UNESCO site, and was protected under the Punjab Antiquities Act of 1975, [3] and declared a Pakistani national monument in 1977.
Allama Muhammad Iqbal. Sir Muhammad Iqbal also known as Allama Iqbal (1877–1938), was a Muslim philosopher, poet, writer, scholar and politician of early 20th-century. He is particularly known in the Indian sub-continent for his Urdu philosophical poetry on Islam and the need for the cultural and intellectual reconstruction of the Islamic community.
Iqbal Cyber Library. "The Mysteries of Selflessness, English translation of Rumuz-e-Bekhudi by AJ Arberry". Iqbal Academy Pakistan. "Secrets and Mysteries, English translation of Asrar-o-Rumuz by RA Nicholson & AJ Arberry". Iqbal Cyber Library. Related Websites. Official Website of Allama Iqbal Archived 21 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine