Srijan Pal Singh who was
with Kalam Saab during his last day, writes a heartfelt eulogy which I thought
was worth sharing heart emoticon
What I will be
remembered for.. my memory of the last day with the great Kalam sir...
It has been eight hours
since we last talked – sleep eludes me and memories keep flushing down,
sometimes as tears. Our day, 27th July, began at 12 noon, when we took our
seats in the flight to Guhawati. Dr. Kalam was 1A and I was IC. He was wearing
a dark colored “Kalam suit”, and I started off complimenting, “Nice color!”
Little did I know this was going to be the last color I will see on him.
Long, 2.5 hours of
flying in the monsoon weather. I hate turbulence, and he had mastered over
them. Whenever he would see me go cold in shaking plane, he would just pull
down the window pane and saw, “Now you don’t see any fear!”.
That was followed by
another 2.5 hours of car drive to IIM Shillong. For these two legged trip of
five hours we talked, discussed and debated. These were amongst hundreds of the
long flights and longer drives we have been together over the last six
years.
As each of them, this
was as special too. Three incidents/discussions in particular will be “lasting
memories of our last trip”.
First, Dr. Kalam was
absolutely worried about the attacks in Punjab. The loss of innocent lives left
him filled with sorrow. The topic of lecture at IIM Shillong was Creating a
Livable Planet Earth. He related the incident to the topic and said, “it seems
the man made forces are as big a threat to the livability of earth as
pollution”. We discussed how, if this trend of violence, pollution and reckless
human action continues we will forced to leave earth. “Thirty years, at this
rate, maybe”, he said. “You guys must do something about it… it is going to be
your future world”. Our second discussion was more national. For the past two
days, Dr. Kalam was worried that time and again Parliament, the supreme
institution of democracy, was dysfunctional. He said, “I have seen two
different governments in my tenure. I have seen more after that. This
disruption just keeps happening. It is not right. I really need to find out a
way to ensure that the parliament works on developmental politics.” He then
asked me to prepare a surprise assignment question for the students at IIM
Shillong, which he would give them only at the end of the lecture. He wanted to
them to suggest three innovative ways to make the Parliament more productive
and vibrant. Then, after a while he returned on it. “But how can one ask them
to give solutions if I don’t have any myself”. For the next one hour, we
thwarted options after options, who come up with his recommendation over the
issue. We wanted to include this discussion in our upcoming book, Advantage
India.
Third, was an experience
from the beauty of his humility. We were in a convoy of 6-7 cars. Dr. Kalam and
I were in the second car. Ahead us was an open Gypsy with three soldiers in it.
Two of them were sitting on either side and one lean guy was standing atop,
holding his gun. One hour into the road journey, Dr. Kalam said, “Why is he
standing? He will get tired. This is like punishment. Can you send a wireless
message that he may sit?” I had to convince him, he has been probably
instructed to keep standing for better security. He did not relent. We tried
radio messaging, that did not work. For the next 1.5 hours of the journey, he
reminded me thrice to see if I can hand signal him to sit down. Finally, realizing
there is little we can do – he told me, “I want to meet him and thank him”.
Later, when we landed in IIM Shillong, I went inquiring through security people
and got hold of the standing guy. I took him inside and Dr. Kalam greeted him.
He shook his hand, said thank you buddy. “Are you tired? Would you like
something to eat? I am sorry you had to stand so long because of me”. The young
lean guard, draped in black cloth, was surprised at the treatment. He was lost
words, just said, “Sir, aapkeliye to 6 ghantebhikhaderahenge”.
After this, we went to
the lecture hall. He did not want to be late for the lecture. “Students should
never be made to wait”, he always said. I quickly set up his mike, briefed on
final lecture and took position on the computers. As I pinned his mike, he smiled
and said, “Funny guy! Are you doing well?” ‘Funny guy’, when said by Kalam
could mean a variety of things, depending on the tone and your own assessment.
It could mean, you have done well, you have messed up something, you should
listen to him or just that you have been plain naïve or he was just being
jovial. Over six years, I had learnt to interpret Funny Guy like the back of my
palm. This time it was the last case.
“Funny guy! Are you
doing well?” he said. I smiled back, “Yes”. Those were the last words he said.
Two minutes into the speech, sitting behind him, I heard a long pause after
completing one sentence. I looked at him, as he fell down.
> We picked him
up. As the doctor rushed, we tried whatever we could. I will never forget the
look in his three-quarter closed eyes and I held his head with one hand and
tried reviving him with whatever I could. His hands clenched, curled onto my
finger. There was a stillness on his face and those wise eyes were motionlessly
radiating wisdom. He never said a word. He did not show pain, only purpose was
visible.
> In five minutes
we were in the nearest hospital. In another few minutes the Doctors indicated
the missile man had flown away, forever. I touched his feet, one last time.
Adieu old friend! Grand mentor! See you in my thoughts and meet in the next
birth.
As I turned back, a
closet of thoughts opened.
Often he would ask me,
“You are young, decide what would you like to be remembered for?” I kept
thinking of new impressive answers, till one day I gave up and resorted to
tit-for-tat. I asked him back, “First you tell me, what will you like to be
remembered for? President, Scientist, Writer, Missile man, India 2020, Target 3
billion…. What?” I thought I had made the question easier by giving options,
but he sprang on me a surprise. “Teacher”, he said.
Then something he said
two weeks back when we were discussing about his missile time friends. He said,
“Children need to take care of their parents. It is sad that sometimes this is
not happening”. He paused and said, “Two things. Elders must also do. Never
leave wealth at your deathbed – that leaves a fighting family. Second, one is
blessed if one can die working, standing tall without any long drawn ailing.
Goodbyes should be short, really short”.
Today, I look back – he
took the final journey teaching, what he always wanted to be remembered doing.
And, till his final moment he was standing, working and lecturing. He left us,
as a great teacher, standing tall. He leaves the world with nothing accumulated
in his account but loads of wishes and love of people. He was successful, even
in his end.
Will miss all the
lunches and dinners we had together, will miss all the times you surprised me
with your humility and startled me with your curiosity. Will miss the lessons
of life you taught in action and words, will miss our struggles to race to make
into flights, our trips, our long debates. You gave me dreams, you showed me
dreams need to be impossible, for anything else is a compromise to my own
ability. The man is gone, the mission lives on. Long live Kalam.
Your indebted student,
Srijan Pal Singh.
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