Satan and Gabriel Justifications
Satan and Gabriel Justifications
Submitted by: Tulip Group (5, 7, 21, 52, 53, 63, 78)
The two parties present polar opposites, one is angel who is tasked with the
noble duty of delivering revelation through the prophets of God throughout the time. The
other party represents the embodiment of evil, a being who occupied a high station with
God as an “honorary angel” for his good deeds in spite of being a Jin but was cast out
for his refusal to follow God’s command to bow to Adam, earning a name synonymous
with evil and a status as the eternal enemy of mankind. This poem is open to multiple
interpretations. Jibreel initiates the conversation with Satan asking him about affairs in
the world of “colour and scent” i.e., the material world. Jibreel recalls a time when reality
was different.
Satan in the poems of Iqbal is a positive character, with all powerful characters,
a reason of activity, one who after his downfall has not been discouraged at all, but has
succeeded in the mission that he took up. This positivity that Iqbal imparts in the
character of Satan is not because of his highness but because of the failure of Human
beings who
succumbed to him. In the poem Satan says: “Ask God, if thou hast the time to ask: /
Whose blood gave colour to Adam’s inglorioustale?
Iqbal’s Satan is calm and not at all worried about the loss of the heavenly
delight. He is not in a mood to rage a war against almighty to take over the fields. He
has forgotten all the bliss that he once enjoyed in the heaven. He is no more concerned
with the status that he once enjoyed when he used to be in the company of Angels and
was considered as the most pious among the Jinns and was made the leader of the
Jinns. Yunus M Sayed remarks:
“Iqbal's Satan has almost forgotten the celestial light. He is intoxicated by his
own dissipation. He derives pride from the fact that he has none else but God as
his enemy. He most certainly prefers to stay in this world of ours than to go back
to Heaven”.