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The Fathers of Indian Nuclear and Space Technology

Chanakyaa

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The Indian Space and Nuclear Advancements need no introduction. Today we have achieved a Fantastic Level of Achievements in Space an Nuclear Arena, which has only been possible because of a supreme effort and inputs made by the most patriotic lads of Mother India.

I Dedicate This Thread to the These ....

Fathers of Indian Space and Nuclear Technology

Dr. Homi J. Bhabha , FRS ( Fellow of the Royal Society)


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The Father of Indian Nuclear Programme​

Full credit for the establishment of India's nuclear research program, and its nuclear weapons program, must be given to Dr. Homi Jehangir Bhabha, a man who throughout his life dominated both the scientific and policy spheres of India's nuclear affairs, first bringing the Indian nuclear program to life and then setting its priorities and direction.

Bhabha was born in 1909, of a wealthy well connected Parsi family. Bhabha's uncle was Sir Dorab Tata (married to Bhabha's father's sister), son of the founder of the powerful Tata group. Bhabha grew up in Mumbai (formerly Bombay) while his father was inspector general of education in Mysore.

In 1927, at age 18, Bhabha sailed to England to study engineering at Cambridge.


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He soon decided that his true interest was in nuclear physics, a field then flowering with Cambridge as one of its centers. Bhabha received a Ph.D. in physics from Cambridge University in 1935, studying the physics of cosmic rays.

While in Europe he met many of the greatest physicists of the day, who would later play major roles in the US-UK wartime atomic weapon programs -- among them Niels Bohr, James Franck, and Enrico Fermi. Bhabha was well respected within the international physics community, and has left his name associated with the phenomenon of Bhabha electron scattering.

One of Bhabha's friendships at Cambridge would later play a prominent role in the development of India's nuclear program - his friendship with his rowing teammate W.B. Lewis, later chairman of the Canadian Energy Programme.





Higher education and research at Cambridge

Bhabha's father understood his son's predicament, and he agreed to finance his studies in mathematics provided that he obtain first class on his Mechanical Sciences Tripos exam.


Bhabha took the Tripos exam in June 1930 and passed with first class.Afterwards, he embarked on his mathematical studies under Paul Dirac, the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics who would later be awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics with Erwin Schrödinger in 1933 "for the discovery of new productive forms of atomic theory",.

At the time, the laboratory was the center of a number of scientific breakthroughs. James Chadwick had discovered the neutron, John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton transmuted lithium with high-energy protons, and Patrick Blackett and Giuseppe Occhialini used cloud chambers to demonstrate the production of electron pairs and showers by gamma radiation.

During the 1931–1932 academic year, Bhabha was awarded the Salomons Studentship in Engineering. In 1932, he obtained first class on his Mathematical Tripos and was awarded the Rouse Ball travelling studentship in mathematics. With the studentship, he worked with Wolfgang Pauli in Zürich, Enrico Fermi in Rome and Hans Kramers in Utrecht.


Bhabha learned of the discovery of fission while abroad. He returned to India in 1939, taking the post of Reader in Theoretical Physics at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) in Bangalore under Nobel laureate Sir C.V. Raman.



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Bhabha showed an immediate visionary interest in nuclear technology, apparently independently detecting the existence of the Manhattan Project during the war by noticing the absence of publications from the leading physicists with which he was acquainted.

In March 1944, even before the successful achievement of a chain reaction became publicly known, Bhabha wrote a proposal to the Tata Trust that led to the establishment of an institute for nuclear research in India.

This institute, the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) named for Bhabha's uncle, was created on 19 December 1945 in Mumbai with Dr. Bhabha as its Director. And so from the very outset, only four months after Hiroshima and years before India became an independent nation, Bhabha was already in command of India's nuclear future. And so he remained until the moment of his death over 20 years later.

Bhabha was acquainted with India's first Prime Minister Jawarhalal Pandit Nehru, having met him on the voyage home in 1939. After Nehru became the new nation's first leader Bhabha was entrusted with complete authority over all nuclear related affairs and programs and answered only to Nehru himself, with whom he developed a close personal relationship. All Indian nuclear policy was set by unwritten personal understandings between Nehru and Bhabha.


From the outset Bhabha's plans for India where extraordinarily ambitious. In April 1948 Nehru agreed to legislate at Bhabha's request the Atomic Energy Act in the Constituent Assembly, creating the Indian Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC).

On 3 January 1954 the IAEC decided to set up a new facility - the Atomic Energy Establishment, Trombay (AEET), later to become the "Indian Los Alamos". On 3 August 1954 the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) was created with Dr. Bhabha as Secretary. This department answered directly to the Prime Minister and has continued to do so down to the present day.

Bhabha personally recruited and sponsored many of the principal players in the successful efforts to develop and test nuclear weapons such as Homi Sethna, P.K. Iyengar (hired 1952), Vasudev Iya, and Raja Ramanna -- hired by Bhabha in 1949 and given a J.N. Tata scholarship at King's College in London.

Ramanna confirms that Bhabha planned from the very outset to establish an Indian nuclear weapons capability. Bhabha told Ramanna during that period that

"We must have the capability. We should first prove ourselves and then talk of Gandhi, non-violence and a world without nuclear weapons."





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With Albert Einstein​



Although Nehru founded the non-aligned movement, and generally promoted disarmament efforts, his biographer S. Gopal stated in 1997 that Nehru actually opposed complete abolition of nuclear weapons [Chengappa 2000, pg. 83], and supported Bhabha's plans for developing an Indian nuclear weapons option.

In 1955 Bhabha's personal relationsip with Lewis was instrumental in the program to build Cirus, the Canadian heavy water reactor - ostensibly for peaceful research but desired by India for its potential as an ideal system for producing weapons grade plutonium, a capability later exploited.

The power that Bhabha held is no where more sharply illustrated by the fact that in the wake of China's first nuclear test PM Lal Bahadur Shastri, Nehru's successor, found it necessary to align his policies with the preferences of Dr. Bhabha, and secure his personal endorsement to withstand legislative and public criticism.

The earlier pattern of Bhabha and the Prime Minister privately setting Indian nuclear policy, which had been established under Nehru, continued under Shastri. This pattern had disastrous results in 1966 when PM Shastri died of a heart attack, on 11 January 1966, and just two weeks later on January 24, a day after Shastri's successor Indira Gandhi was sworn in as Prime Minister, Dr. Homi Bhabha was killed while on a trip to Europe when the plane in which he was flying collided with Mount Blanc. India's impressively large nuclear establishment was suddenly left without any plan or policy to give it direction.

On 12 January 1967 Prime Minister Indira Gandhi renamed the Atomic Energy Establishment, Trombay -- India's premier nuclear center, and weapon development laboratory -- to be the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC).


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Message for youth​
Bhabha's life is an example of pursuing individual passion with a national perspective and purpose.

If he chose, he could have gone abroad after the second world war and pursued his scientific research and perhaps, could have even won Noble prize in physics. But, he chose to stay back to serve the country. He channelized all his scientific pursuits to develop scientific institutes with an aim to serve the society.

He blended his individual vision and passion with that of the Country. Today, we have world class institutes and the Departments like Atomic Energy and Space, thanks to Bhabhas foresight and vision.

Thus, his life message to all of us is do pursue the passion of your life but with a vector or direction of serving the country and making it proud with your contributions

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"I know quite clearly what I want out of my life. Life and my emotions are the only things I am conscious of. I love the onsciousness of life and I want as much of it as I can get.

But the span of one's life is limited. What comes after death no one knows. Nor do I care. Since, therefore, I cannot increase the content of life by increasing its duration, I will increase it by increasing its intensity.

Art, music, poetry and everything else that consciousness I do have this one purpose - increasing the
intensity of my consciousness of life".


H.J. Bhabha
 
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Dr. Vikram Sarabhai


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Fathther of The Indian Space Programme​

Vikram Sarabhai was born on 12 August 1919 in the city of Ahmedabad , Gujarat State in western India. The Sarabhai family was an important and rich Jain business family. His father Ambalal Sarabhai was an affluent industrialist and owned many mills in Gujarat. Vikram Sarabhai was one of the eight children of Ambalal and Sarla Devi.

To educate her eight children, Sarla Devi established a private school on the lines of the Montessori method, propounded by Maria Montessori, which was gaining fame at that time.

As the Sarabhai family was involved in the Indian freedom struggle, many leaders of the freedom struggle like Mahatma Gandhi, Motilal Nehru, Rabindranath Tagore and Jawaharlal Nehru used to frequent the Sarabhai house. This is said to have greatly influenced the young Vikram Sarabhai and played an important role in the growth of his personality.

Sarabhai matriculated from the Gujarat College in Ahmedabad after passing the Intermediate Science examination. After that he moved to England and joined the St. John's College, University of Cambridge. He received the Tripos in Natural Sciences from Cambridge in 1940.


With the escalation of the Second World War, Sarabhai returned to India and joined the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore and began research in cosmic rays under the guidance of Sir C. V. Raman, a Nobel Prize winner.

He returned to Cambridge after the war in 1945 and was awarded a PhD degree in 1947 for his thesis titled Cosmic Ray investigation in Tropical Latitudes.


In September, 1942, Vikram Sarabhai married Mrinalini Sarabhai, a celebrated classical dancer of India. The wedding was held in Chennai without anyone from Vikram's side of the family attending the wedding ceremony because of the ongoing Quit India movement led by Mahatma Gandhi.

Vikram and Mrinalini had two children - Kartikeya and Mallika. Vikram Sarabhai allowed considerable freedom to Mrinalini to develop her own potential. Reportedly, they had a troubled marriage relationship[1]. According to biographer Amrita Shah, Vikram Sarabhai had void in his personal life he sought to fill it by dedicating himself to applying science for social good.

His daughter Mallika Sarabhai is winner of Padma Bhushan, India's third highest civilian honor for the year 2010. She is also a renowned dancer herself and has been awarded the Palme d'Or.


Vikram returned to an independent India in 1947. Looking at the needs of the country, he persuaded charitable trusts controlled by his family and friends to endow a research institution near home in Ahmedabad. Thus, Vikram Sarabhai founded the Physical Research Laboratory (PRL) in Ahmedabad on November 11, 1947.

He was only 28 at that time. Sarabhai was a creator and cultivator of institutions and PRL was the first step in that direction. Vikram Sarabhai served of PRL from 1966-1971.




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Indian Space Program

The establishment of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) was one of his greatest achievements. He successfully convinced the government of the importance of a space programme for a developing country like India after the Russian Sputnik launch. Dr. Sarabhai emphasized the importance of a space program.

"There are some who question the relevance of space activities in a developing nation. To us, there is no ambiguity of purpose. We do not have the fantasy of competing with the economically advanced nations in the exploration of the moon or the planets or manned space-flight."

"But we are convinced that if we are to play a meaningful role nationally, and in the community of nations, we must be second to none in the application of advanced technologies to the real problems of man and society."

Dr. Homi Jehangir Bhabha, widely regarded as the father of India's nuclear science program, supported Dr. Sarabhai in setting up the first rocket launching station in India.



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This center was established at Thumba near Thiruvananthapuram on the coast of the Arabian Sea, primarily because of its proximity to the equator. After a remarkable effort in setting up the infrastructure, personnel, communication links, and launch pads, the inaugural flight was launched on November 21, 1963 with a sodium vapour payload.

As a result of Dr. Sarabhai's dialogue with NASA in 1966, the Satellite Instructional Television Experiment (SITE) was launched during July 1975 - July 1976 (when Dr.Sarabhai was no more).

Dr. Sarabhai started a project for the fabrication and launch of an Indian Satellite. As a result, the first Indian satellite, Aryabhata, was put in orbit in 1975 from a Russian Cosmodrome.

Dr. Sarabhai was very interested in science education and founded a Community Science Centre at Ahmedabad in 1966. Today, the Centre is called the Vikram A Sarabhai Community Science Centre.

He led the family's 'Sarabhai' diversified business group.

His interests varied from science to sports to statistics. He set up Operations Research Group (ORG), the first market research organization in the country.

Dr Vikram Sarabhai established many institutes which are of international repute. Most notable among them are IIMs (Indian Institute Of Management) which are considered world class for their management studies.

Also he helped establishing PRL (Physical Research Laboratory) which is doing commendable job in R&D in Physics. Dr Vikram Sarabhai setup ATIRA (Ahmedabad Textiles Industrial Research Association) which helped the booming textiles business in Ahmedabad. He also setup CEPT (Center for Environmental Planning and Technology). Not stopping with all these he went ahead and setup BMA (Blind Men Association) which helps visually challenged people with necessary skills and support.


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Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam

Former President of India
&
Father of Indian Missile Programme


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This eminent scientist and engineer has also served as the 11th President of India from the period 2002 to 2007. APJ Abdul Kalam is a man of vision, who is always full of ideas aimed at the development of the country. He firmly believes that India needs to play a more assertive role in international relations.



Kalam's father was a devout Muslim, who owned boats which he rented out to local fishermen and was a good friend of Hindu religious leaders and the school teachers at Rameshwaram. APJ Abdul Kalam mentions in his biography that to support his studies, he started his career as a newspaper vendor. This was also told in the book, A Boy and His Dream: Three Stories from the Childhood of Abdul Kalam by Vinita Krishna. The house Kalam was born in can still be found on the Mosque street in Rameshwaram, and his brother's curio shop abuts it. This has become a point-of-call for tourists who seek out the place.

Kalam grew up in an intimate relationship with nature, and he says in Wings of Fire that he never could imagine that water could be so powerful a destroying force as that he witnessed when he was thirty three. That was in 1964 when a cyclonic storm swept away the Pamban bridge and a trainload of passengers with it and also Kalam's native village, Dhanushkodi.

Kalam observes strict personal discipline, vegetarianism, teetotalism and celibacy. Kalam is a scholar of Thirukkural; in most of his speeches, he quotes at least one kural. Kalam has written several inspirational books, most notably his autobiography Wings of Fire, aimed at motivating Indian youth.


Another of his books, Guiding Souls: Dialogues on the Purpose of Life reveals his spiritual side. He has written poems in Tamil as well. It has been reported that there is considerable demand in South Korea for translated versions of books authored by him.

Apart from being a notable scientist and engineer, Dr APJ Abdul Kalam served as the 11th President of India from the period 2002 to 2007. He is a man of vision, who is always full of ideas aimed at the development of the country and is also often also referred to as the Missile Man of India. People loved and respected Dr APJ Abdul Kalam so much during his tenure as President that was popularly called the People's President. Read more about the biography of Dr APJ Abdul Kalam here.

APJ Abdul Kalam was born on 15 October 1931 at the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu and received honorary doctorates from about 30 universities globally.


In the year 1981, the Government of India presented him the nation's highest civilian honor, the Padma Bhushan and then again, the Padma Vibhushan in 1990 and the Bharat Ratna in 1997. Before Kalam, there have been only two presidents - Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan and Zakir Hussain - to have received the Bharat Ratna before bring appointed to the highest office in India.


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 recognised 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 defence technology to create state-of-the-art medical equipment and launching tele-medicine projects connecting remote rural-based hospitals to the super-specialty hospital.

A pre-eminent scientist, a gifted engineer, and a true visionary, he is also a humble humanitarian in every sense of the word, it added.

On 13 September 2009, he was a recipient of the International von Kármán Wings Award .


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..

Kalam is the third President of India to have been honoured with a Bharat Ratna before being elected to the highest office, the other two being Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan and Zakir Hussain. He is also the first scientist and first bachelor to occupy Rashtrapati Bhavan.

After his tenure as the president he is now a visiting guest professor at JSS university, Mysore. He has agreed to deliver a minimum of four lectures every year.


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Read on about the life history of Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, who's also the first scientist and bachelor to occupy the seat of the Rashtrapati Bhavan. His perspectives on important topics have been enunciated by him in the book 'India 2020'. It highlights the action plans that will help develop the country into a knowledge superpower by the time 2020. One thing for which he received ample kudos is his unambiguous statement that India needs to play a more assertive role in international relations.

And Dr APJ Abdul Kalam regards his work on India's nuclear weapons program as a way to assert India's place as a future superpower. Even during his tenure as President, APJ Kalam took avid interest in the spheres of India's science and technology.


He has even put forward a project plan for establishing bio-implants. He is also an ardent advocate of open source software over proprietary solutions to churn out more profits in the field of information technology in India.


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Guys... India is Know as India Because of These Great Men.

Look at Bhabha... A was a King who could have Lived the Most Luxurious Life but Gave up everything.. Didnt Married and Deoted Himself to the Nation.

He Gave up his Research... His Personal Life... and These IITs.. TIFR and ISRO are all HIS WORK !... His Initiatives...

And Then Look at Kalam... a Poor Fisherman's Boy Yet Dreamed to Make India a Super Power.. Became President and Even now he Doesnt Have TV!

We are Blessed to Have Them on our Soil...

True Indians ... We Must Try to be Like Them .. if Not Be Like Them.
 
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i m feeling
i m feeling
i m feeling it again the mighty serise. xinix u got us again in love with INDIAN PRIDE
 
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Great posts Xinix..You left Dr. RAJA RAMANNA out.He is also called Father of indian nuclear program..waiting for it..
 
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Dr. RAJA RAMANNA
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“A towering and multi-faceted personality, Dr. Ramanna was always keen to contribute to national development with a sense of mission in any capacity, which was evident in his role as a Union Minister and Member of Parliament. For us in the science and technology community, Dr. Ramanna was always a source of inspiration and a guide.”

A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, The President of India

“Out of the uncertain beginnings in the 1950s, if we have today achieved the status of a “developed country” in nuclear science and technology, it is in large measure a consequence of Dr. Ramanna’s ideals, policies and efforts. He certainly leaves behind the proud legacy of a magnificent edifice of scientific and technological achievements and attainments, particularly towards the country’s energy and national security.”

P. K. Iyengar, former Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, Govt. of India
 
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Great posts Xinix..You left Dr. RAJA RAMANNA out.He is also called Father of indian nuclear program..waiting for it..

Yes. Brother.

I will soon make a thread ( With a differnet Theme ofcourse ..) which would emphasize Dr. Ramanna's Work...
 
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Guys... India is Know as India Because of These Great Men.

Look at Bhabha... A was a King who could have Lived the Most Luxurious Life but Gave up everything.. Didnt Married and Deoted Himself to the Nation.

He Gave up his Research... His Personal Life... and These IITs.. TIFR and ISRO are all HIS WORK !... His Initiatives...

And Then Look at Kalam... a Poor Fisherman's Boy Yet Dreamed to Make India a Super Power.. Became President and Even now he Doesnt Have TV!

We are Blessed to Have Them on our Soil...

True Indians ... We Must Try to be Like Them .. if Not Be Like Them.

The story of the Atomic Energy Commission is a great success story, at least as much as India's IT success story but not acknowledged as such- may because people think it is only about nuclear bombs!
As a matter of fact the vision of the founding fathers, Homi Bhabha included; was quite removed from bombs and rather about other applications. It was more about Fundamental Research, being part of the cutting edge of technology. Though they were realistic to understand that nuclear bombs were a corollary and could become a strategic option to be exercised later.
The technological growth spawned by nuclear research was immense and covered areas like fundamental physics, fundamental chemistry to applications such as metallurgy, instrumentation, food technology and even medical therapy among many others.
Setting it up was no small task, Homi Bhabha did a great job finding able people not just from the scientific and engineering worlds, but even from the Indian Railways who were at the helm of major projects. And he had unstinting support from Jawaharlal Nehru.
Did you know that the Tarapur Power station (TAPS 1) was completed before schedule and well within budget? As a boy, i recall having walked through what eventually became the sealed 'caldera'.
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) is a spin off from the AEC. Later TIFR in turn created IUCAA and the GMRT projects and so on, it was just a huge cascading effect.
BARC is'nt just about reactors and fuel etc. It also had a Gamma Garden where work was done creating new strains of food grains among other things. The first work on irradiation for food preservation was done there; if i'm not mistaken it has been commercially licensed already.
These scientists had other dimensions as well. As has been well documented, Homi Bhabha was a great patron of the arts. It must be in his family, he and his brother J.J. Bhabha have had a major role in setting up the National Center for Performing Arts (NCPA). Perhaps as tribute, the TIFR auditorium is named after Homi Bhabha (quite state of the art). It was inaugurated by Indira Gandhi and the first performance was by M.S. Subbalakshmi- a great concert.
Vikram Sarabhai was another multi-dimensional stalwart. The SITE project created the 'country-wide class room' project which helped create the INSAT series of communication/multipurpose satellites. And Vikram Sarabhai had his non-scientific achievements as well as has been documented. Even NID and IIM-A had inputs from him. Just as an aside; his father Ambalal Sarabhai was owner of Calico Mills and the Chairman of the Millowners association when his daughter Mridula Sarabhai (a gandhian) organised a labour strike against the millowners!
Raja Ramanna's scientific work is well known. But he was also a pianist of some standard- i've heard him play.
Then not to forget some non-scientists; like the Tata family and J.R.D. Tata as well as the Sarabhais who endowed money for the research instituitions.
We just should not forget all this. Compared to this, nukes are nothing; just objects of limited utility.
Just 2 bits-:cheers:
 
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Yeah.. Did I tell you that you are good.. No actually did I ever tell u that you are THE Best????
 
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Quotes for our favorite President :cheers:


"Thinking should become your capital asset, no matter whatever ups and downs you come across in your life."


"Thinking is progress. Non-thinking is stagnation of the individual, organisation and the country. Thinking leads to action. Knowledge without action is useless and irrelevant. Knowledge with action, converts adversity into prosperity."


"When you speak, speak the truth; perform when you promise; discharge your trust... Withhold your hands from striking, and from taking that which is unlawful and bad..."


"What actions are most excellent? To gladden the heart of a human being, to feed the hungry, to help the afflicted to lighten the sorrow of the sorrowful and to remove the wrongs of injured..."


"Away! Fond thoughts, and vex my soul no more! Work claimed my wakeful nights, my busy days Albeit brought memories of Rameswaram shore Yet haunt my dreaming gaze!"


"I will not be presumptuous enough to say that my life can be a role model for anybody; but some poor child living in an obscure place in an underprivileged social setting may find a little solace in the way my destiny has been shaped. It could perhaps help such children liberate themselves from the bondage of their illusory backwardness and hopelessness?.."


"My worthiness is all my doubt His Merit- all my fear- Contrasting which my quality Does however appear "

Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam: Former President of India
 
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