Wings of fire - Sir APJ ABDUL KALAM Wings of fire | Page 42
Dreamers
D
uring his frequent visits to Thumba, Prof. Sarabhai
would openly review the progress of work with the entire
team. He never gave directions. Rather, through a free
exchange
of views, he led us forward into new terrain which often
revealed an unforeseen solution. Perhaps he was aware
that though a particular goal might be clear to himself, and
he could give adequate directions for its accomplishment,
his team members might have resisted working towards a
goal that made no sense to them. He considered the
collective understanding of the problem the main attribute
of effective leadership. He once told me, “Look, my job is to
make decisions; but it is equally important to see to it that
these decisions are accepted by my team members.”
In fact, Prof. Sarabhai took a series of decisions that
were to become the life-mission of many. We would make
our own rockets, our own Satellite Launch Vehicles (SLVs)
and our own satellites. And this would not be done one-by-
one but concurrently, in a multi-dimensional fashion. In the
development of payloads for the sounding rockets, instead
of getting a certain payload and then engineering it to fit
into the rocket, we discussed the matter threadbare with
the payload scientists working in different organ-izations
and at different locations. I may even say that the most
significant achievement of the sounding rocket programme
was to establish and maintain nation-wide mutual trust.
Perhaps realising that I preferred to persuade people to
do as they were told rather than use my legitimate authority,
Prof. Sarabhai assigned me the task of providing interface
support to payload scientists. Almost all physical
laboratories in India were involved in the sounding rocket
programme, each having its own mission, its own objective
and its own payload. These payloads were required to be
integrated to the rocket structure so as to ensure their
proper functioning and endurance under flight conditions.
We had X-ray payloads to look at stars; payloads fitted with
radio frequency mass spectrometers to analyse the gas
composition of the upper atmosphere; sodium payloads to
find out wind conditions, its direction and velocity. We also
had ionospheric payloads to explore different layers of the
atmosphere. I not only had to interact with scientists from
TIFR, National Physical Laboratory (NPL), and Physical
Research Laboratory (PRL), but also with payload
scientists from USA, USSR, France, Germany and Japan.
I often read Khalil Gibran, and always find his words full
of wisdom. “Bread baked without love is a bitter bread that
feeds but half a man’s hunger,”—those who cannot work
with their hearts achieve but a hollow, half-hearted success
that breeds bitterness all around. If you are a writer who
would secretly prefer to be a lawyer or a doctor, your written
words will feed but half the hunger of your readers; if you
are a teacher who would rather be a businessman, your
instructions will meet but half the need for knowledge of
your students; if you are a scientist who hates science, your
performance will satisfy but half the needs of your mission.
The personal unhappiness and failure to achieve results
that comes from being a round peg in a square hole is not,
by any means, new. But there are exceptions to this like
Prof. Oda and Sudhakar, who bring to their work a personal
touch of magic based upon their individual character,
personality, inner motives, and perhaps the dreams
crystallized within their hearts. They become so emotionally