Shauq se rāh-e-mohabbat kī musībat jhel le Lazzat-e-sahrā-navardī dūrī-e-manzil meiñ hai Rahrav-e-rāh-e-mohabbat rah na jaanā raah meiñ Kārvāñ apnā abhī tak pehlī hī manzil meiñ hai Vaah-e-qismat paañv kī ai jo.ab kuchh chaltī nahīñ Le tere himmat ke charchā ghair ki mahfil mein hai Sarfaroshī kī tamannā ab hamāre dil meñ haiĭekhnā hai zor kitnā bāzū-e-qātil meiñ haiĪi shahīd-e-mulk-o-millat main tere upar nisār Manmohan Singh in his Budget Speech of 1992, on the floor of Lok Sabha. The first line of the poem was recited by Dr. It has also been associated with the younger generation of inter-war freedom fighters such as Ashfaqullah Khan, Bhagat Singh and Chandrashekhar Azad. The poem was immortalised by Ram Prasad Bismil, an Indian freedom fighter, as a war cry during the British Raj period in India. Khuda Bakhsh Library has preserved the original copy and page of his diary containing this poem written by him and the corrections done by his mentor Shad Azimabadi. It was first published in journal "Sabah", published from Delhi. In 1921 Bismil wrote this poem, following the Jallianwala Bagh massacre and other atrocities by the British colonialists.
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