Wings of fire - Sir APJ ABDUL KALAM Wings of fire | Page 54
Electrical and mechanical integration work was going on
with a significant phase difference—both in time and in
space. There was little effort to bring together the disparate
work on electrical and mechanical integration. Prof.
Sarabhai spent the next hour in re-defining our tasks, and,
in the small hours of the morning, the decision to set up a
Rocket Engineering Section was taken.
Mistakes can delay or prevent the proper achievement
of the objectives of individuals and organizations, but a
visionary like Prof. Sarabhai can use errors as
opportunities to promote innovation and the development of
new ideas. He was not especially concerned with the
mistake in the timer circuit, least of all with pinning the
blame for it. Prof. Sarabhai’s approach to mistakes rested
on the assumption that they were inevitable but generally
manageable. It was in the handling of the crises that arose
as a consequence that talent could often be revealed. I later
realised by experience, that the best way to prevent errors
was to anticipate them. But this time, by a strange twist of
fate, the failure of the timer circuit led to the birth of a rocket
engineering laboratory.
It was my usual practice to brief Prof. Sarabhai after
every Missile Panel Meeting. After attending one such
meeting in Delhi on 30 December 1971, I was returning to
Trivandrum. Prof. Sarabhai was visiting Thumba that very
day to review the SLV design. I spoke to him on the
telephone from the airport lounge about the salient points
that had emerged at the panel meeting. He instructed me to
wait at Trivandrum Airport after disembarking from the
Delhi flight, and to meet him there before his departure for
Bombay the same night.
When I reached Trivandrum, a pall of gloom hung in the
air. The aircraft ladder operator Kutty told me in a choked
voice that Prof. Sarabhai was no more. He had passed
away a few hours ago, following a cardiac arrest. I was
shocked to the core; it had happened within an hour of our
conversation. It was a great blow to me and a huge loss to
Indian science. That night passed in preparations for
airlifting Prof. Sarabhai’s body for the cremation in
Ahmedabad.
For five years, between 1966 to 1971, about 22
scientists and engineers had worked closely with Prof.
Sarabhai. All of them were later to take charge of important
scientific projects. Not only was Prof. Sarabhai a great
scientist, but also a great leader. I still remember him
reviewing the bi-monthly progress of the design projects of
SLV-3 in June 1970. Presentations on Stages I to IV were
arranged. The first three presentations went through
smoothly. Mine was the last presentation. I introduced five
of my team members who had contributed in various ways
to the design. To everybody’s surprise, each of them
presented his portion of the work with authority and
confidence. The presentations were discussed at length
and the conclusion was that satisfactory progress had been
made.
Suddenly, a senior scientist who worked closely with
Prof. Sarabhai turned to me and enquired, “Well, the
presentations for your project were made by your team
members based on their work. But what did you do for the
project?” That was the first time I saw Prof. Sarabhai really
annoyed. He told his colleague, “You ought to know what
project management is all about. We just witnessed an
excellent example. It was an outstanding demonstration of
team work. I have always seen a project leader as an
integrator of people and that is precisely what Kalam is.” I
consider Prof. Sarabhai as the Mahatma Gandhi of Indian