Former president and the great Indian
scientist Abdul Kalam don’t need any introduction. India felt proud to elect
him as the president. He is the inspiration and role model of Indians, mostly
children. As a scientist and as a leader, his work is innovative. Avul Pakir
Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam, usually referred to as APJ Abdul Kalam was born on
15th October, 1931 in Rameswaram, Madras Presidency, British India. After graduating
in Physics from St. Joseph's College in Tiruchirapalli, Abdul Kalam graduated
with a diploma in the mid-1950s from Madras Institute of Technology
specializing in Aeronautical Engineering . As the Project Director, he was
deeply involved in the development of India's first indigenous Satellite Launch
Vehicle (SLV-III). As Chief Executive of Integrated Guided Missile Development
Programme (IGMDP), he also played a major role in developing many Indian
missiles including Agni and Prithvi.
He was the chief scientific adviser to Prime
Minister and secretary of Department of Defense Research & Development from
July 1992 to December 1999. Pokhran-II nuclear tests were conducted during this
period, and were associated with Kalam although he was not directly involved
with the nuclear programme at that time.
Kalam’s interest includes development in
the fields of science and technology. He proposed a research programme for
developing bio-implants. He is a supporter of open source software over
proprietary solutions and believes that the use of open source software on a
large scale will bring the benefits of information technology to more people.
Ever since Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam became
the President of India (July 25, 2002), he spearheaded a socio-economic movement
of igniting the young minds with positive thoughts and of propagating the
"Developed India by 2020" vision with constructive mission modes.
PURA (Providing Urban Amenities in Rural Areas) is the major component of President's Dream for a developed India. It
differs from the conventional ideas of economic development of rural areas in
many ways, such as visions for: a comprehensive and composite rural
development, government investment at urban levels in rural programmes, reverse
rural-urban migration, the prerequisite quality infrastructure, supportive modern
industry, investment in social and commercial service, and private enterprise
initiative.
PURA habitat design depends upon the infrastructural ring road
linking a loop of villages and the interfacing of four interconnected aspects:
physical, electronic, knowledge, and economic—to enhance rural prosperity. The
model should enable proper selection of village clusters and deployment of the
youth in different areas of rural development to make this programme a reality.
Under PURA, President Kalam envisages
self-sustaining rural clusters which are well-connected by roads and fibreoptic
cables for high-bandwidth telecommunication. PURA aims to provide ―knowledge
connectivity‖ through education, vocational, and entrepreneurial training for
farmers, craftsmen, etc. It also aims to improve healthcare and sanitation
facilities in these village clusters. The project aims at creating economic
opportunities outside the cities by providing urban infrastructure and services
in rural hubs, such as electricity to each household, roads, potable drinking
water, telecom services, proper healthcare, and education. Abdul Kalam felt the
scheme can also address the problem of rural poverty.
According to Kalam's plan, the PURA
communities must run as economically viable businesses financed and managed by
entrepreneurs, local people, and small-scale industrialists. This is because
they involve education, healthcare, power- generation, transport and management.
Dr. Kalam spoke of 4 types of PURAs – Plain terrain PURA, Coastal PURA, Hill
PURA, and Desert PURA. He emphasized on the fact that energy was what drove the
rural economy and hence it was important to explore energy options such as
solar, wind, bio-fuel, bio-gas, energy from municipal waste, etc.
Kalam has written several inspirational
books, most notably his autobiography Wings of Fire, aimed to motivate the Indian
youth. Another one of his books, Guiding Souls: Dialogues on the Purpose of
Life reveals his spiritual side. He wrote several poems in Tamil as well. It
has been reported that there is considerable demand in South Korea for translated
versions of books written by him.
The Government of India has honoured him
with the nation's highest civilian honours: the Padma Bhushan in 1981 Padma Vibhushan in 1990; and the Bharat
Ratna in 1997 for his work with ISRO and DRDO and his role as a scientific advisor
to the Indian government
On April 29, 2009, he became the first
Asian to be bestowed the Hoover Medal, America's top engineering prize, for his
outstanding contribution to public service. The citation said that he is being
recognized for making state-of-the-art healthcare available to the common man
at affordable prices, bringing quality medical care to rural areas by
establishing a link between doctors and technocrats, using spin-offs of defense
technology to create state-of-the-art medical equipment and launching
tele-medicine projects connecting remote rural-based hospitals to the
superspecialty hospitals. It added that he was a pre-eminent scientist, a
gifted engineer, and a true visionary, who is also a humble humanitarian in
every sense of the word.
On the Republic Day in 1990, Kalam was
conferred the Padma Vibhushan along with Dr. Arunachalam. Though Kalam received
so many awards from various universities, this one is significant because at
that time our nation was celebrating the success of its missile programme.
Towards the end of 1990, Jadavpur University gave him the honour of Doctor of Science.
Kalam was excited to find out that the legendery hero Nelson Mandela also
received the Doctorate along with him. In his acceptance address, Kalam once
again recalled the stalwarts who inspired and guided him in achieving his
missile mission. He justified that rocket mission and missiles are essential
for the security of our nation. He concludes the autobiography with a positive
note that Self Reliance Mission and Technology Vision-2020 will make our
country strong, prosperous and a developed nation.
Kalam‟s positive approach to life elevated
him from Rameshwaram to DSRO, Hyderabad. From there he went to many places, met
many leaders. Ultimately it brought him back to a locale closer home, in
Kerala.
His autobiography clearly reveals Kalam‟s
spiritual moorings even as he worked hard to reach greater heights in his
chosen field of missile technology. He was fully engaged in the development of
technology that is double-edged: it could kill millions even as it could save
millions in times of war. It could help exploring the vast universe and could
even be an instrument for humility in individual lives. His awards were meant
for developing missile technology in the context of India‟s self-defence
against possible and probable war mongering and belligerence from other
nations. In real terms, he was and is on the Wings of Fire which could burn and
destroy and yet would illumine the world and give it the much needed warmth.
Dangerously close to the disastrous effects, Kalam was and is aware that this
dangerous bent could still be used for the benefit and betterment of humanity.
He sounds that this realization was not solely based on reason, but in seeking
spiritual experience and wisdom.
Kalam‟s joining DRDL on June 1, 1982 was a
milestone in his career. Kalam realized that his scientist colleagues were
still haunted by the failure of the Devil Missile. To inspire the scientists
working there, Kalam invited experts from the Indian Institute of Science,
Indian Institute of Technology, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research,
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research and many other educational institutions.
With Defence Minister Venkataraman‟s
initiative, Rs. 388 crores were sanctioned for surface-to-surface weapon system
(Prithvi), the Tactical Core Vehicle (Trishul), the surface to air area defence
system (Akash), the anti-tank missile project (Nag) and the last one Agni
(Fire).
Kalam felt death of
Dr. Bhahm Prakash and Indira Gandhi as a huge loss to scientific community.
With the successful launch of Prithvi, Agni, Nag and Akash, India found a
significant place at the international level. The verb propitiate means “to
receive the goodwill of, to stop from being angry, to appease or reconcile
those in power” (Dictionary New Encyclopedic Edition, 2004).
It is true that
Kalam was blessed with many supporters, admirers and followers in his career as
a missile technologist. His handling of higher authorities was also appropriate
in the context that prevailed/prevails in India. It looks like that the intent
of using the word Propitiation for this section was not only to indicate his
good relations with all around him but it also indicates his total dedication
to his career, goals and spiritual pursuits as a single person.
The second part Creation (1963-1980) deals
with the creation of SLV – 3 and Devil Missile with Kalam‟s achievement of
Padma Bhushan Award.
It is surprising to know the historical
fact from Kalam that Tipu Sultan had 700 rockets and subsystems of 900 rockets
in the battle of Turukhanahally in 1799. Kalam had an overwhelming admiration
and appreciation for Prof. Sarabhai‟s working methodology. Prof. Sarabhai was
optimistic, a hard task master, who often assigned multiple tasks to a single
person. He would try novel approaches and a great leader.
Kalam with his team was assigned the task
of preparing satellite launch vehicle and Rocket-Assisted Take-off-System
(RATO). In 1968 when Prof. Sarabhai paid a visit to Thumba, Kalam asked him to
activate the pyro-system through a timer circuit. Unfortunately the timer did
not work. This incident taught Kalam that the best way to prevent errors was to
anticipate them. The failure of the timer circuit led to the birth of a rocket
engineering laboratory. Kalam regards Prof. Sarabhai as the Mahatma Gandhi of
Indian science who generated leadership qualities in his team and inspired them
with ideas and examples.
Kalam was appointed as the project manager
for SLV and reported directly to Dr. Bhahm Prakash. After taking up the
executive responsibility of implementing the project Kalam had a clear time
schedule for carrying out various works since this project had made great
demands on his time.
In order to lead a team successfully, the
leader should be independent, powerful and influential. Kalam suggests two
techniques in this regard.
On seeing cranes and seagulls soar into
flight into Rameshwaram, Kalam longed to fly in the sky. To realize his dream,
after his B.Sc., he got admission into Madras Institute of Technology (MIT). He
emotionally recalled how his sister Zohara has mortgaged her jewels to pay one
thousand rupees as fees. Since he was very clear in his goal of flying
aircrafts, he opted for aeronautical engineering in his second year.
Kalam recalls three stalwarts who shaped
his professional career. Prof. Sponder taught him technical aerodynamics. He
used to observe Indians‟ failure to discriminate between disciplines and to
rationalize their choices. During the farewell function, Prof. Sponder summoned
Kalam to sit with him in the front for a photograph. Since Prof. Sponder was
sure that Kalam‟s hard work would bring laurels to the teachers in future. Yes,
his prophecy came true. Prof. K.V. Pandalai had opened up the secrets of
structural engineering to him. Prof. Narasimharao taught him theoretical
aerodynamics. These teachers, with their intellectual fervour and clarity of
thought, inspired Kalam to have a serious study of fluid dynamics.
Kalam attended the interview in Air Force
as well as in DTD&P [Air] (Directorate of Technical Development and
Production) of the Ministry of Defence. Upset by not getting selected in his
air force interview, he met Swami Sivananda in the Sivananda Ashram. When Kalam
shared his unfulfilled desire to join the Indian Air Force, Swami Sivananda
looked at him calmly and said to him in a feeble voice :
Desire when it seems from the heart and
spirit, when it is pure and intense, possesses awesome electromagnetic energy
This energy is released into the ether each night as the mind falls into the sleep state
Each morning it returns to the conscious
state reinforced with the cosmic currents. That which has been imaged will
surely and certainly be manifested.
Swami‟s words filled him with confidence
and peace and he collected his appointment order and joined DTD&P as senior
scientific Assistant. In Bangalore, Kalam had the responsibility to make
air-flying machine with his team. Kalam‟s first hover craft was christened
Nandi. Then Kalam was absorbed as a rocket engineer at InCosPAR (Indian
Committee for Space Research).
In 1962, when InCosPAR set up the equatorial Rocket Launching Station at Thumba, Kalam got an opportunity to go to America for a six month training programme on sounding rocket launching techniques at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) work centers. Kalam‟s strong spiritual foundation provided him with enough courage to proceed in his career.
Global Satellite to be named after APJ Abdul Kalam
Memorial to Kalam to come up at his burial site
In 1962, when InCosPAR set up the equatorial Rocket Launching Station at Thumba, Kalam got an opportunity to go to America for a six month training programme on sounding rocket launching techniques at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) work centers. Kalam‟s strong spiritual foundation provided him with enough courage to proceed in his career.
Global Satellite to be named after APJ Abdul Kalam
Memorial to Kalam to come up at his burial site
Dr Abdul Kalam's speech in EU
Keywords: Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, Former President of India, World-renowned Space Scientist, DRDO, ISRO
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