Wings of fire - Sir APJ ABDUL KALAM Wings of fire | Page 71
into one—what more could I have asked for?
We flew in an Avro aircraft which took around ninety
minutes from Madras to Trivandrum. von Braun asked me
about our work and listened as if he was just another
student of rocketry. I never expected the father of modern
rocketry to be so humble, receptive and encouraging. He
made me feel comfortable right through the flight. It was
hard to imagine that I was talking to a giant of missile
systems, as he was so self-effacing.
He observed that the length to diameter L/D ratio of the
SLV3, which was designed to be 22 was on the higher side
and cautioned me about the aero-elastic problems which
must be avoided during flight.
Having spent the major part of his working life in
Germany, how did he feel in America? I asked this of von
Braun who had become a cult figure in the States after
creating the Saturn rocket in the Apollo mission which put
man on the moon. “America is a country of great
possibilities, but they look upon everything un-American
with suspicion and contempt. They suffer from a deep-
rooted NIH—Not Invented Here—complex and look down
on alien technologies. If you want to do anything in rocketry,
do it yourself,” von Braun advised me. He commented,
“SLV-3 is a genuine Indian design and you may be having
your own troubles. But you should always remember that we
don’t just build on successes, we also build on failures.”
On the topic of the inevitable hard work that goes with
rocket development and the degree of commitment
involved, he smiled and said with a glint of mischief in his
eyes, “Hard work is not enough in rocketry. It is not a sport
where mere hard work can fetch you honours. Here, not
only do you have to have a goal but you have to have
strategies to achieve it as fast as possible.”
“Total commitment is not just hard work, it is total
involvement. Building a rock wall is back-breaking work.
There are some people who build rock walls all their lives.
And when they die, there are miles of walls, mute
testimonials to how hard those people had worked.”
He continued, “But there are other men who while
placing one rock on top of another have a vision in their
minds, a goal. It may be a terrace with roses climbing over
the rock walls and chairs set out for lazy summer days. Or
the rock wall may enclose an apple orchard or mark a
boundary. When they finish, they have more than a wall. It is
the goal that makes the difference. Do not make rocketry
your profession, your livelihood— make it your religion, your
mission.” Did I see something of Prof. Vikram Sarabhai in
von Braun? It made me happy to think so.
With three deaths in the family in as many successive
years, I needed total commitment to my work in order to
keep performing. I wanted to throw all my being into the
creation of the SLV. I felt as if I had discovered the path I
was meant to follow, God’s mission for me and my purpose
on His earth. During this period, it was as though I had
pushed a hold button—no badminton in the evenings, no
more weekends or holidays, no family, no relations, not
even any friends outside the SLV circle.
To succeed in your mission, you must have single-
minded devotion to your goal. Individuals like myself are
often called ‘workaholics’. I question this term because that
implies a pathological condition or an illness. If I do that
which I desire more than anything else in the world and
which makes me happy, such work can never be an
aberration. Words from the twenty-sixth Psalm come to
mind while I work: “Examine me, O Lord, and prove me.”