Time to Ignite Young Minds
Science has been an important subject of concern for long. With inventions and 
discoveries multiplying rapidly, here are the goals to be achieved for the
nation's growth.
by A.P.J. Abdul Kalam - 13 Sep, 2011
In science, impossible does not exist. Inventions and discoveries are the 
products of constant endeavour by creative minds, envisioning ever-new 
outcomes. With
vivid imagination and consistent effort, the forces of the universe can be made 
to work for an inspired mind. How do we fire up the minds of India's youth who 
are
the foundation for cutting edge research and usher in a renaissance in Indian 
science?
We need a new generation of creative scientists. For that, we need an 
environment for research and challenging missions. Above all, academic 
institutions must
have well-equipped laboratories and professors who have the proven capacity to 
attract youth to science. I have noticed that Indian universities lack a 
research
culture. I believe where there is good research, good teaching is possible; 
where there is good teaching, good research emanates. Hence, I visualise our 
universities
transforming into research-cum-teaching hubs. This calls for the presence of a 
number of renowned research professors on campus to attract bright students. 
Such
a research environment will provide credibility to university departments and, 
in turn, bring in funding by industry and R&D laboratories for research 
programmes and
projects.
For a conducive environment for research the actions of two Nobel laureates who 
have facilitated research in their own unique way are instructive. The first is 
the
culture of magnanimity demonstrated by Norman E. Borlaug. When he was given the 
M.S. Swaminathan Award on March 15, 2005, at the age of 91, in Delhi, he did
not stop at just naming the founding fathers of the Green Revolution in India. 
He recalled with pride the White Revolution. Then came the surprise. He 
identified
scientists in the audience-Sanjay Rajaram, a wheat specialist; S.K. Vasal, a 
maize specialist; and B.R. Barwale, a seed specialist-asked them to rise, 
commended
their contribution to Indian and Asian agriculture and ensured the audience 
cheered. Such magnanimity is what motivates the scientific community and it 
should
spread in all our research institutions.
The second is an incident narrated in G. Venkataraman's book The Big and the 
Small about Sir C.V. Raman. When President Rajendra Prasad invited him to stay 
at
the Rashtrapati Bhavan and receive the first Bharat Ratna award in the last 
week of January 1954, Raman declined and wrote back in polite terms saying that 
he
was unable to make it to the investiture ceremony. He explained that as the 
guide of a student in the final stages of submitting a PhD thesis ahead of the 
January 31
deadline, he felt that he should be with the student until it was completed and 
signed. He gave up the pomp of a glittering ceremony associated with the highest
national honour because he felt his duty required him to be with the student.
Will our experienced scientists inspire research scholars by emulating the 
standards set by such great masters? That is not all. We need a pragmatic 
blueprint for a
revolution in Indian science research and technological applications that offer 
challenging missions to attract youth. For this, there are goals and priorities 
that must
address the national need for growth. Here are the top 10:
Ability to spot talent in the young and the inexperienced. He was a unique find 
for India in the early 20th century-Srinivasa Ramanujan, a hardworking youth who
failed in all subjects except mathematics in the intermediate examination. A 
dockyard officer in then Madras came across a mathematics research paper by the
student. He sent this paper to Professor G.H. Hardy at Cambridge University, 
which led to the discovery of the mathematics legend. Recognition from the Royal
Society of London followed. The Srinivasa Ramanujan Museum at Kumbakonam speaks 
volumes about his genius. Even today, throughout the world, researchers
are trying to solve the challenging mathematical problems postulated by 
Ramanujan. What we need in our country is that both educational and research 
institutions
should have the capacity to spot unique talent wherever it springs up, with or 
without formal qualifications.
Research in the area of forecasting earthquakes hours before, days before and 
even weeks before they strike is of paramount importance. This calls for
multinational and multidisciplinary research on geology, earthquake science, 
earth sciences, nuclear science, electromagne-tism as well as a modelling and
simulation environment using super computers.
In another 20 years, Earth, Moon and Mars will become an integrated economic 
entity. It is essential for India to mount a programme in planetary sciences 
and life
sciences related to different planets.
Today, the cost for orbiting one kilogram in space is nearly $20,000. It is 
essential to work for low-cost access to space, so that orbital costs can be 
reduced to about $2,000 per kg. This will result in more satellite launches, 
our communication transponders in orbit would increase and connect India's 
600,000 villages in a costeffective
manner. In parallel, fibre optic connectivity must reach all panchayats by 2020.
Malaria is again appearing with a vengeance. It is essential for our life 
science scientists to work on the development and deployment of a vaccine to 
combat
multiple malaria vectors in a time-bound manner.
The only way to control and finally eliminate HIV AIDS coupled with 
tuberculosis is by inventing a vaccine. Research and development must be 
intensified towards
this end.
The bulk of India's population lives in its 600,000 villages. Provision of 
urban amenities in rural areas, which envisages provision of physical 
connectivity, electronic
connectivity and knowledge connectivity, will lead to economic connectivity and 
employment generation in multiple skills in rural areas. The Government has 
taken
up the Provision of Urban Amenities in Rural Areas (PURA) programme in nine 
states in a public-private partnership. India needs 7,000 puras. A mission mode
programme has to emerge for completing all 7,000 PURA projects in the next 10 
years.

India Today
As part of an energy independence programme, every state must frame a policy to 
become carbon-neutral by 2030. That means all transportation systems-land, air
and sea-and static power generation systems must switch to electric, biofuel or 
solar power, or a combination of all three. Emulsification technology for 
substituting
petrol and diesel in automobiles and static installations has to be developed. 
With thorium ore available in the country in plenty, we have to design and 
develop large
scale nuclear power plants that run on thorium-fuelled reactors. Intensive 
research is essential to convert thorium into a fissile material for this 
application.
The present trend among young people after Class XII is to take up engineering, 
medicine or management courses because of an assurance of employment. To
attract the best minds to science research at the MSc and doctoral programmes, 
it is essential that an exclusive science cadre is introduced to facilitate a 
career in
well known scientific laboratories and universities.
The nation needs a smart water way grid similar to the Golden Quadrilateral for 
national highways. This would definitely enable low-cost carbon-efficient 
transport of
people and goods across the length and breadth of the country, provide 
year-round irrigation, contain floods and droughts, generate much-needed 
additional power
and also serve as an economic asset with provision for fishing and eco-tourism. 
The water way grid will also serve a strategic purpose in times of war.
This is, at best, a beginning towards becoming a stronger nation, one that is 
concerned about the progress and welfare of its people. There are many more 
areas in
which scientific research programmes and projects are to be initiated for 
economic development. This is our national challenge this century.
The writer is former president of India and an eminent scientist. He received 
the Bharat Ratna in 1997.
Reproduced From

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