According to Kazmi, Iqbal's poetic works like Zabor-e-Ajam were a source of inspiration for many young people who took part in Iran's Islamic revolution in 1979.
"Iranian people place Allama Iqbal in the same category as Rumi or Ferdowsi [Iran's national poet]," she maintained.
Many see Rumi and Iqbal as a connection between not only the literary world but the common people of Turkey and Pakistan.
According to Tehsin Firaqi, a former head of the Urdu department of Punjab University, Iqbal's work inspired many Turkish poets and authors.
Apart from Rumi, he argued, several Turkish and Pakistani authors have equated Iqbal and Mehmet Akif Ersoy, Turkish author and poet of Turkey's national anthem.
Firaqi also recalled that besides his poetry, Iqbal's famous book Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam was also translated into Turkish.