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Words of Witness
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In Words of Witness, Hina Khalid offers a comparative exploration of the theologies of Muhammad Iqbal (d. 1938) and Rabindranath Tagore (d. 1941). From their vast writings spanning multiple languag...
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15 October 2026

In Words of Witness, Hina Khalid offers a comparative exploration of the theologies of Muhammad Iqbal (d. 1938) and Rabindranath Tagore (d. 1941). From their vast writings spanning multiple languages, she draws attention to the striking conceptual resonances across their worldviews—particularly their metaphysics, anthropologies, and political philosophies. The book demonstrates how both poets envision the God–world relationship as one of a dynamic “call and response,” and thus situate the finite in unceasing connection with the infinite. For both Iqbal and Tagore, human beings are called upon to become active participants in the divine creativity unfolding throughout the cosmos, and to craft their social and political worlds in modes that reflect as well as enact this sacred artistry.
Price: $97.00
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Publication Date:
15 October 2026
ISBN: 9789004749726
Format: Hardcover
Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941) and Muhammad Iqbal (1877–1938) were two of the leading intellectuals of pre-Independence India and Pakistan, but rarely have they been so carefully studied together as in this impressive book. Noting the distinct but converging Muslim and Hindu frames within which they faced the challenges of their times, Hina Khalid highlights surprising convergences in their theological presuppositions, agendas for action, and educational programs. Moreover, she thereby also restores theology’s relevance amid the cosmic, human, and political realities of our times, exemplifying a comparative theology that is relevant in today’s multi-religious world.
— Francis X. Clooney, SJ, Harvard Divinity School
Witnessing Words is a beautifully crafted work of comparative theology that brings Iqbal and Tagore into sustained and illuminating dialogue. Across multiple languages and genres, Khalid shows how each thinker imagines human existence as a response to the divine call—a metaphysical–anthropological vision shaped by the relational interplay between the infinite and the finite. She leads readers into a genuinely dialogical mode of interpretation, allowing Iqbal and Tagore’s conceptual worlds to refract and enrich one another.”
— James Madaio, Czech Academy of Sciences
Words of Witness fills a major lacuna in the study of modern South Asian thought through a comparative reading of Hindu–Muslim theo-poetic traditions. Focusing on Rabindranath Tagore and Muhammad Iqbal, it offers a groundbreaking analysis of their shared cosmological visions—divine creativity, the relationality of finite and infinite, and a dynamic call-and-response between God and the human being.
— Muhammad U. Faruque, author of Sculpting the Self
— Francis X. Clooney, SJ, Harvard Divinity School
Witnessing Words is a beautifully crafted work of comparative theology that brings Iqbal and Tagore into sustained and illuminating dialogue. Across multiple languages and genres, Khalid shows how each thinker imagines human existence as a response to the divine call—a metaphysical–anthropological vision shaped by the relational interplay between the infinite and the finite. She leads readers into a genuinely dialogical mode of interpretation, allowing Iqbal and Tagore’s conceptual worlds to refract and enrich one another.”
— James Madaio, Czech Academy of Sciences
Words of Witness fills a major lacuna in the study of modern South Asian thought through a comparative reading of Hindu–Muslim theo-poetic traditions. Focusing on Rabindranath Tagore and Muhammad Iqbal, it offers a groundbreaking analysis of their shared cosmological visions—divine creativity, the relationality of finite and infinite, and a dynamic call-and-response between God and the human being.
— Muhammad U. Faruque, author of Sculpting the Self
Hina Khalid, Ph.D. (2024), University of Cambridge, is a scholar of Islamic aesthetics and comparative theology. Her publications have centred around philosophical, spiritual, and literary themes across the Islamic, Christian, and Hindu traditions.