I think you're looking for some mechanism, similar to the ones found in the higher level languages as in python (introspection), or C# (reflections). C doesn't provide this kind of insight from the runtime, not even the variable names are existing in the bytecode - so basically it's not possible and doesn't make any sense in the terms of the way how C works.
I don't know if that helps, but one thing you could do is to statically (so in the compilation time, not while it's running!) populate char* and create variable with the same name, given that the value of the string is a proper name for the variable (Naming convention for C/C++). You can achieve that by defining a proper macro (#define your_macro(...) code_to_populate_char_and_declare_variable
), but I cannot see any point in doing so.