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Old-timers in Thumba, a sleepy fishing village near Thiruvananthapuram, remember a bunch of people who had made St Magdalene Church their home and workplace in the late 1960s. They would stroll on the beach, with a handsome young man in kurta-pyjama telling them how to dream. Occasionally they would fire a rocket that would go up to 60km and fall into the Arabian Sea.
Today's residents of Thumba may not know that the man in kurta-pyjama was Vikram Sarabhai, and his bunch of young scientists included A P J Abdul Kalam, R Aravamudan, B Ramakrishna Rao, D Eswar Das, M R Kurup, M G Mathur and S Nambinarayanan. They went on to deliver on Sarabhai's dream to make India a space-faring nation. The Indian Space Research Organisation's successful Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) is a demonstration of how the next generation of scientists have made the country a space superpower.
"We owe it all to Sarabhai and his mentor Homi Bhabha," says former Isro chairman U R Rao. "They laid the foundation for India's space programme. They were convinced that one day India would make it big in space."
It may not be incidental that India's space programme came out of its atomic energy programme that Bhabha and Sarabhai helped establish, but Sarabhai was clear that space science should have societal applications.
"When remote sensing was unheard of in the country, Sarabhai got us to get into a helicopter and record visuals of wilting coconut trees in Trivandrum. He showed it to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and told her, 'See, a satellite picture can show you much more about agriculture.' He convinced her," Rao recollects.
Nambinarayanan, who pioneered India's liquid propulsion system that is now at the core of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) rocket system, says Sarabhai didn't have to try push hard with the Prime Minister to get the nod for space projects.
"Indira Gandhi had great faith in Sarabhai and would readily make allocations for whatever he asked," Nambinarayanan says. "Sarabhai, born in an aristocratic Gujarati family of businessmen, had no interest in money and dedicated himself to make India go places in space."
Bhabha, a nuclear physicist, found in Sarabhai, an astrophysicist, his successor in both the country's atomic energy and space programmes, but told Sarabhai to give space research priority. Both were educated abroad and had left lucrative job offers to set up great institutions in India. Bhabha founded Tata Institute of Fundamental Research; Sarabhai was the architect of Physical Research Laboratory, the frontrunner of all space labs in India.
Homi Bhabha (Getty Images)
Bhabha and Sarabhai both died young and at the peak of their careers — Bhabha at 57, in a plane crash near Mont Blanc on the Italy-France border in 1966; Sarabhai at 52, found dead in a hotel room in Kovalam in 1971.
"I am happy that the new generation would have made the founding fathers proud," says Rao. "Sarabhai led you like a friend, not a boss. And that will be the way forward for Isro and India."
From a small fishing village to Mars, pioneers saw future - The Times of India
Today's residents of Thumba may not know that the man in kurta-pyjama was Vikram Sarabhai, and his bunch of young scientists included A P J Abdul Kalam, R Aravamudan, B Ramakrishna Rao, D Eswar Das, M R Kurup, M G Mathur and S Nambinarayanan. They went on to deliver on Sarabhai's dream to make India a space-faring nation. The Indian Space Research Organisation's successful Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) is a demonstration of how the next generation of scientists have made the country a space superpower.
"We owe it all to Sarabhai and his mentor Homi Bhabha," says former Isro chairman U R Rao. "They laid the foundation for India's space programme. They were convinced that one day India would make it big in space."
It may not be incidental that India's space programme came out of its atomic energy programme that Bhabha and Sarabhai helped establish, but Sarabhai was clear that space science should have societal applications.
"When remote sensing was unheard of in the country, Sarabhai got us to get into a helicopter and record visuals of wilting coconut trees in Trivandrum. He showed it to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and told her, 'See, a satellite picture can show you much more about agriculture.' He convinced her," Rao recollects.
Nambinarayanan, who pioneered India's liquid propulsion system that is now at the core of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) rocket system, says Sarabhai didn't have to try push hard with the Prime Minister to get the nod for space projects.
"Indira Gandhi had great faith in Sarabhai and would readily make allocations for whatever he asked," Nambinarayanan says. "Sarabhai, born in an aristocratic Gujarati family of businessmen, had no interest in money and dedicated himself to make India go places in space."
Bhabha, a nuclear physicist, found in Sarabhai, an astrophysicist, his successor in both the country's atomic energy and space programmes, but told Sarabhai to give space research priority. Both were educated abroad and had left lucrative job offers to set up great institutions in India. Bhabha founded Tata Institute of Fundamental Research; Sarabhai was the architect of Physical Research Laboratory, the frontrunner of all space labs in India.
Homi Bhabha (Getty Images)
Bhabha and Sarabhai both died young and at the peak of their careers — Bhabha at 57, in a plane crash near Mont Blanc on the Italy-France border in 1966; Sarabhai at 52, found dead in a hotel room in Kovalam in 1971.
"I am happy that the new generation would have made the founding fathers proud," says Rao. "Sarabhai led you like a friend, not a boss. And that will be the way forward for Isro and India."
From a small fishing village to Mars, pioneers saw future - The Times of India