Wings of fire - Sir APJ ABDUL KALAM Wings of fire | Page 32
interviewers usually display when talking to a young and
vulnerable candidate. Dr Sarabhai’s questions did not
probe my existing knowledge or skills; rather they were an
exploration of the possibilities I was filled with. He was
looking at me as if in reference to a larger whole. The entire
encounter seemed to me a total moment of truth, in which
my dream was enveloped by the larger dream of a bigger
person.
I was advised to stay back for a couple of days.
However, the next evening I was told about my selection. I
was to be absorbed as a rocket engineer at INCOSPAR.
This was a breakthrough a young man like myself dreamed
of.
My work at INCOSPAR commenced with a
familiarization course at the TIFR Computer Centre. The
atmosphere here was remarkably different from that at
DTD&P (AIR). Labels mattered very little. There was no
need for anyone to justify his position or to be at the
receiving end of the others’ hostility.
Some time in the latter half of 1962, INCOSPAR took
the decision to set up the Equatorial Rocket Launching
Station at Thumba, a sleepy fishing village near Trivandrum
(now Thiruvananthapuram) in Kerala. Dr Chitnis of the
Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad had spotted it
as a suitable location as it was very close to the earth’s
magnetic equator. This was the quiet beginning of modern
rocket-based research in India. The site selected at
Thumba lay between the railway line and the sea coast,
covering a distance of about two and a half km and
measuring about 600 acres. Within this area, stood a large
church, whose site had to be acquired. Land acquisition
from private parties is always a difficult and time-
consuming process, especially in densely populated places
like Kerala. In addition, there was the delicate matter of
acquiring a site of religious significance. The Collector of
Trivandrum then, K Madhavan Nair, executed this task in a
most tactful, peaceful and expeditious manner, with the
blessings and cooperation of Right Rev. Dr Dereira, who
was the Bishop of Trivandrum in 1962. Soon RD John, the
executive engineer of the Central Public Works Department
(CPWD), had transformed the entire area. The St. Mary
Magdalene church housed the first office of the Thumba
Space Centre. The prayer room was my first laboratory, the
Bishop’s room was my design and drawing office. To this
day, the church is maintained in its full glory and, at present,
houses the Indian Space Museum.
Very soon after this, I was asked to proceed to America
for a sixmonth training programme on sounding rocket
launching techniques, at the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) work centres. I took some
time off before going abroad and went to Rameswaram.
My father was very pleased to learn about the opportunity
that had come my way. He took me to the mosque and
organized a special namaz in thanksgiving. I could feel the
power of God flowing in a circuit through my father to me
and back to God; we were all under the spell of the prayer.
One of the important functions of prayer, I believe, is to
act as a stimulus to creative ideas. Within the mind are all
the resources required for successful living. Ideas are
present in the consciousness, which when released and
given scope to grow and take shape, can lead to
successful events. God, our Creator, has stored within our
minds and personalities, great potential strength and
ability. Prayer helps us to tap and develop these powers.
Ahmed Jallaluddin and Samsuddin came to see me off
at Bombay airport. It was their first exposure to a big city