Abstract
This study examines the dynamics of Western civilization and culture through the intellectual lens of Allama Iqbal and Akbar Allahabadi, two seminal thinkers who critically engaged with the socio-cultural transformations of the modern age. The article begins by clarifying the conceptual foundations of civilization (tahzeeb) and culture (saqafat), outlining their historical evolution, essential components, and the distinctions that separate their domains. Civilization is explored as the collective expression of material progress, institutional development, and social organization, while culture is treated as the spiritual, moral, aesthetic, and intellectual fabric of a society. Against this theoretical backdrop, the paper defines Western civilization and culture, highlighting the forces of industrialization, rationalism, secularism, and individualism that shaped the modern West. The core of the study investigates how Iqbal and Akbar Allahabadi responded to Western modernity. Both thinkers acknowledged certain strengths of the West—such as discipline, scientific inquiry, and organizational efficiency—recognizing their potential value for the Muslim world. However, their larger critique centered on the moral, spiritual, and cultural disruptions caused by blind imitation of Western norms. Iqbal emphasized the reconstruction of the Muslim self, advocating selective appropriation of Western knowledge while retaining Islamic metaphysical and ethical foundations. Akbar Allahabadi, through satire and socio-political commentary, exposed the contradictions of colonial modernity and cautioned Muslims against losing their identity to Western cultural dominance. Together, their perspectives present a balanced framework—one that neither rejects the West wholesale nor accepts it uncritically. The article concludes that the thought of Iqbal and Akbar provides a meaningful intellectual model for contemporary Muslim societies striving to navigate globalization. Their insights offer a pathway for harmonizing modern progress with cultural authenticity, ensuring that development does not come at the cost of spiritual and moral erosion.
Author(s):
Ph.D Scholar, Dept. of Iqbal Studies, Islamia University, Bahawalpur
Pakistan
Farah Noreen
Instructor UrduGovt. Graduate College of Commerce, Bahawalnagar
Pakistan
- shafughati@gmail.com
- 03336385721
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Iqbal Studies, Islamia University, Bahawalpur
Pakistan
Details:
| Type: | Article |
| Volume: | 42 |
| Issue: | 1 |
| Language: | Urdu |
| Id: | 6a4414a025154 |
| Published | June 30, 2026 |
Copyrights
| Journal of Research (Urdu) uses Creative Commons license Authors, retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal. |
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