‘Vedanta Brain and Islam Body’:
Dr A P J Abdul Kalam
Swami Narasimhananda
At the Temple at Ramakrishna Mission, New Delhi
S
itting at the door of his house, that
little boy would watch his father going out
on his daily morning walk to visit his coconut grove. Walking alongside a mosque and a
temple, his father would go through narrow lanes
into the broader roads leading to the grove. In the
calm and serene settings of the morning hours,
walking amidst birds lying from the seashore, his
father used to probably silently tell his prayers. He
used to go to the grove and bring some coconuts
home and that little boy had delicacies prepared
by his mother with lots of coconut put in them.
hat boy also saw many people come to his
father for help. Apparently, he cured the sick,
allayed the fears of the worried, and brought
PB October 2015
succour to the lives of many. Intrigued, the boy
asked his father once: ‘Why do these people
come to you? And what do you really do for
them?’1 His father replied: ‘Whenever human
beings ind themselves alone, as a natural reaction, they start looking for company. Whenever
they are in trouble, they look for someone to
help them. … Every recurrent anguish, longing
and desire inds its own special helper. For the
people who come to me in distress, I am but a
go-between in their efort to ward of demonic
forces with prayers and oferings’ (ibid.).
hat boy grew to become Dr A P J Abdul
Kalam and the words of his father were etched
in his heart. He brought help and solace to
597
Prabuddha Bharata
Morning Walk As the
President of India
countless across the world. At the ripe age of
eighty-two, Kalam used to begin his days with a
walk. He tells about his mornings:
Every morning I savour the sight of the new
sun, the benign light in the sky before the sun
appears, the cool breeze and the sweet call of
the birds. I understand how this short time of
the day binds us to nature. Each morning is different in the way the elements come together
for that day. It is a little drama nature puts up
only for us, and I can’t stop marvelling at it. …
I oten ind myself in diferent cities and towns
in the mornings because of my travels, but the
early morning peace and calm is the same everywhere. Wherever I am, I can ind a tree that is
great with age, where birds dwell and go busily about their day with the new dawn, whose
leaves wave gently to me in the morning breeze.
It may be a warm day or a bitterly cold misty
morning when my breath fogs the air in front of
me, but this time away from the cares and worries that the rest of the day will invariably bring
means so much to me.
At my home in Delhi there is a grand old Arjuna tree. Somehow my feet always pull me towards it when I walk in my garden. It is usually
laden with honeycombs and is home to hundreds of birds, especially parrots. he dignity,
beauty and stature of this tree brings memories
of my father to mind and I even have silent conversations with it (7–8).
A son had truly learnt from his father.
598
Early Years
Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam was born
on 15 October 1931 in a middle-class Tamil family to Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Marakayar and
Ashiamma, in Dhanushkodi in Rameswaram
District of Tamil Nadu, famous for the temple
of Lord Shiva. His father had a small boat-building business and a coconut grove. He also used to
own a ferry for transporting Hindu pilgrims to
and from between Rameswaram and Dhanushkodi. He was the imam of the local mosque and
did not have much formal education. Kalam’s
mother was a homemaker. Kalam’s ancestors
were wealthy traders and landowners owning
large tracts of lands and numerous properties.
heir main business was trading supplies between
the mainland and the island and to and from Sri
Lanka. his led to the family title ‘Mara Kalam
Iyakkivar’ meaning ‘wooden boat steerers’, which
title changed form to ‘Marakier’ or ‘Marakayar’.
Kalam was the youngest of ive siblings. he
eldest was a sister, Asim Zohra. She was followed
by Kalam’s three elder brothers, Mohammed
Muthu Meera Lebbai Marakayar, Mustafa Kamal,
and Kasim Mohammed. We get a glimpse of Kalam’s childhood from the following account:
Abdul had a materially and emotionally secure
childhood. Being the youngest in the family he
was pampered a lot. His neighbours remember
him as an introvert interested in reading. In
the environment that he grew up books were
a scarce commodity. Mr S T R Manickam, his
neighbour who encouraged him to read books,
says, ‘I used to have a library and Kalam was always there. He used to read everything he could
lay his hands on.’
He always used to eat, with his mother sitting on the loor. His decision to become a
vegetarian was partly due to his inancial constraints—but later on, he cultivated it as a habit.
Kalam believes that he has inherited honesty
and self-discipline from his father, while faith
PB October 2015
‘Vedanta Brain and Islam Body’: Dr A P J Abdul Kalam
in goodness and kindness is the trait inherited
from his mother. …
He began his schooling at ‘Samiyar’ school
in Rameshwaram. Sivasubramania Iyer, his science teacher, was a Brahmin with a very conservative wife. he rebel in Iyer, tried to break
social barriers for people of varying backgrounds to mingle easily. One day, he invited
Kalam home for a meal. His wife was horriied
by the idea of a Muslim boy being invited to
dine in her ritually pure kitchen. She refused
to serve Kalam in her kitchen. Sivasubramania Iyer didn’t get angry nor was disturbed.
Instead, he himself served Kalam and sat beside to eat his meal. His wife watched the conduct standing behind the kitchen door. While
Kalam was to leave, Iyer invited him to join
for dinner again the next weekend. When
Kalam visited his house next week, his wife
took Kalam inside her kitchen and served him
food there itself.2
Just like the morning walks and the rising
birds, Kalam was inluenced by the sea. Probably that was where he got his broadness from.
He recounts:
Living on the island of Rameswaram while I
was growing up, the sea was an important part
of our lives. Its tides, the lapping of the waves,
the sound of trains passing on the Pamban
Bridge, the birds that always circled the town
and the salt in the air are sights and sounds that
will always remain linked with my memories
of childhood. Apart from its sheer presence
around us, the sea was also a source of livelihood for our neighbours and us. Almost every
household had some connection with the sea,
whether as ishermen or as boat owners.3
Kalam had his irst lessons in engineering
through his father’s boat-building business:
My father, looking to supplement his not very
substantial income, decided to start a ferry
business. He started building the boat that we
needed for this himself, on the seashore.
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21
Watching the boat come to life from pieces
of wood and metal was perhaps my irst introduction to the world of engineering. … Long
pieces of wood were cut into the required shape,
dried, smoothened and then joined together.
Wood ires seasoned the wood that made up
the hull and the bulkheads. Slowly the bottom,
then the sides and the hull began to form in
front of our eyes. Many years later, in my work,
I would learn how to make rockets and missiles.
Complex mathematics and scientiic research
would be the bedrock of those engineering marvels. But that boat coming up on a seashore,
which would take pilgrims and ishermen back
and forth … who is to say it was not as important or momentous in our lives then? (14–5).
Young Kalam’s childhood was not without
phases of tribulation. One fateful year, the boat
Kalam so lovingly saw coming up, was washed
away in a ierce cyclone. His father’s resilience
motivated him:
My father’s stoicism is what saw us through this
crisis too. … Cyclones and storms struck us again
and again. I even learnt to sleep through them.
Many years later, in 1964, when I was no longer
living in Rameswaram, a massive cyclone struck.
his time, it carried away a part of the landmass
of Dhanushkodi. A train that was on Pamban
Bridge at the time was washed away with many
pilgrims inside. It altered the geography of the
area, and Dhanushkodi became a ghost town,
never really recovering its former character. …
My father lost his ferry boat once more in
that storm. He had to rebuild his business yet
again. I could not do much to help him practically, for I was far removed from that world.
But when I struggled to give shape to the Satellite Launch Vehicle (slv) rocket, or the
Prithvi and Agni missiles, when countdowns
and take-ofs were disrupted, and our rocket
launch sites situated by the Arabian Sea and
Bay of Bengal in humba and Chandipur were
rained upon, I always remembered the look on
my father’s face the day ater the storm. It was
599
Prabuddha Bharata
22
an acknowledgement of the power of nature,
of knowing what it means to live by the sea
and make your living from it. Of knowing that
there is a larger energy and force that can crush
our ambitions and plans in the blink of an eye,
and that the only way to survive is to face your
troubles and rebuild your life (17–8).
During the Second World War, eight-year
old Kalam contributed his mite to the family income by distributing newspapers. Ater studying
for ive years in Rameswaram Panchayat Primary
School, he went to the Schwartz High School,
Ramanathapuram. In 1950, he joined St Joseph’s
College, Tiruchirappalli in the Intermediate class.
He graduated in science from this college and
entered Madras Institute of Technology, from
where he graduated in aeronautical engineering in
1958. It was his dream to become a ighter pilot in
the Indian Air Force. He missed the selection just
by one rank and this was a great disappointment.
However, he did later ly an Indian Air Force
Sukhoi 30 mki ighter aircrat as the President of
India, in his seventies, in June 2006.
Unfolding of the Career
Kalam was a man made in India. He went abroad
for studies only once in 1963–4 to the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (nasa)
in the US. In 1958, he joined the Defence Research and Development Organisation (drdo)
and served as a senior scientiic assistant. In 1962
he joined the Indian Space Research Organisation (isro). From 1963 to 1982 he worked in
the satellite launch vehicle team at humba near
Trivandrum and became the project director for
Satellite Launch Vehicle (slv) 3. In 1980 he put
the satellite Rohini into orbit and in 1981 he was
awarded the Padma Bhushan. In 1982 he became
the director of drdo and took charge of India’s
integrated guided missile development program.
In 1990 he was awarded the Padma Vibhushan.
600
In 1992 Kalam became the Scientiic Advisor
to the Union Defence Minister of India. In 1994
he became a distinguished fellow of the Institute
of Directors in India. In 1997 he was awarded
the Bharat Ratna, India’s highest civilian award.
In the same year he was awarded the Indira Gandhi Award for National Integration. In 1998 he
directed India’s underground nuclear tests and
was awarded the Veer Savarkar Award. In 2000
he received the Ramanujan Award. On 25 July
2002 he became the eleventh President of India.
In 2007 he was awarded an honorary doctorate
of science by University of Wolverhampton, UK;
the King Charles II Medal by the Royal Society,
UK; and an honorary doctorate of science and
technology by Carnegie Mellon University. In
2008 he was awarded an honorary doctorate of
engineering by the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore; and an honorary doctorate of
science by Aligarh Muslim University. In 2009 he
was awarded an honorary doctorate by Oakland
University; the Hoover Medal by asme Foundation, US, and the International von Kármán
Wings Award by California Institute of Technology, US. In 2010 he was awarded a doctorate
in engineering by the University of Waterloo. In
2011 he received an honorary membership of the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
(ieee). In 2012 he received an honorary doctorate in law from Simon Fraser University. In 2013
he received the Von Braun Award from the National Space Society, US and in 2014, a doctorate of science from Edinburgh University, UK.
Kalam was an accomplished writer and has
written many books: Developments in Fluid
Mechanics and Space Technology, India 2020: A
Vision for the New Millennium, Wings of Fire:
An Autobiography, Ignited Minds: Unleashing
the Power Within India, he Luminous Sparks,
Mission India, Inspiring houghts, Indomitable
Spirit, Envisioning an Empowered Nation, You
PB October 2015
‘Vedanta Brain and Islam Body’: Dr A P J Abdul Kalam
Are Born To Blossom: Take My Journey Beyond,
Turning Points: A Journey hrough Challenges,
Target 3 Billion, My Journey: Transforming
Dreams into Actions, A Manifesto for Change:
A Sequel to India, Forge your Future, Reignited:
Scientiic Pathways to a Brighter Future, and
Transcendence: My Spiritual Experiences with
Pramukh Swamiji.
Kalam had a vision of India becoming a superpower by the year 2020: ‘Five areas have been
identiied, based on India’s core competence, for
integrated action: 1. Agriculture and agro-food
processing … 2. Education and healthcare … 3.
Information and communication technology
… 4. Infrastructure, including electric power …
5. Strategic industries and critical technology.’4
He wanted to meet and talk to more and more
youth and share and discuss his vision.
Kalam had a simple lifestyle and woke up at
6.30 or 7.00 a.m. and went to bed at 2 a.m. He
remained a bachelor and a teetotaller all his life.
He used to play the Indian classical stringed musical instrument rudra veena.
Glimpses of Divinity
Kalam had a divine spark within him that manifested brightly and ‘ignited’ the minds of millions. His contemplative self oten
manifested and people near him were
awestruck by the ease with which he
could plunge into the depths of his
mind and probably beyond. Two incidents of such manifestation are recounted here. he irst is a memoir by
his secretary, when he was the President of India:
23
in the Study for a few minutes, sitting side by
side on a sofa. I was called in at the end of this
meeting and took Justice Venkatachaliah to his
room. We sat in silence for a while, and then he
said, ‘Mr Nair, this was an experience of a lifetime. I was sitting so close to Dr Kalam and I
could feel sensations of godliness and divinity
reverberating within me. I was nervous. He is
really God’s own man.’
It was something I had begun to feel at times
myself, but I did not say anything.5
Another incident occurred during his visit to
a centre of the Ramakrishna Mission:
I was at Christ College, Rajkot, getting ready
for a function there when there was a call from
Swami Nikhileswarananda of the Ramakrishna
Mission. Swamiji requested me to visit his ashram and I had to agree. Ater the function at
Christ College, I rushed to the ashram. It was
the time for the evening bhajan and so touched
was I by the singers’ serene invocation that I
sat down with them for nearly iteen minutes,
lost in meditation. Here too I felt the same vibrations as I did while meditating at Swami
Vivekanand Hall, Porbandar, the birthplace of
Mahatma Gandhi.6
Kalam had absorbed the essential elements
of the major world religions and his life and
Playing the Rudra Veena
Once the President [A P J Abdul
Kalam] called a former Chief Justice of India, Justice M N Venkatachaliah, from Bangalore for a
consultation. hey were together
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601
24
Prabuddha Bharata
years and years and the … [honour] would be
given to my father too.
602
he next Friday … [the] teacher had been
summoned, and presented himself. … my father
and Sastrygal told him in no uncertain terms
that the scourge of religious divisions, which
was disturbing India’s fabric in other parts of
the country, would not be allowed to grow here.
… [he teacher] promised to rectify the wrong
he had done the very next day. And he did so. …
As far as the fact of my religion is concerned,
from Rameswaram I followed my destiny that
took me into the world of science and technology. I was always a believer in science, but the
PB October 2015
image: Dibyangshu sarkar/aFP/getty
message are a relection of his assimilation and
synthesis of these spiritual truths:
Rameswaram is one of the holiest pilgrimage
spots for many Indians, and the town was almost always full of pilgrims and cousins. he
small local population consisted of mostly
Hindu households, with a sprinkling of Muslims like us, and Christians too. Each community lived in healthy contentment next to the
other. … My father loved to tell us the story of
our great-great-grandfather, who once saved
the idol of the Ramanathaswamy Temple. he
story went that on a certain festival day, the vigraha, or idol, would be taken out of the sanctum sanctorum and carried in a procession
around the temple precincts. he temple has
a number of tanks dotting it, and the idol was
taken around the periphery of these tanks too.
During one such procession, in a sequence of
events … the vigraha fell into the tank. … People
stood rooted in horror, imagining the wrath
of the gods falling upon them very soon. One
person, however, did not lose his presence of
mind—my great-great-grandfather. He leapt
into the tank and retrieved the idol in no time.
he gratitude of the priests and other temple
oicials was overwhelming. Yes, he was a Muslim. And yes, caste and religious purists would
be horriied at the most sacred element of the
temple being handled by someone not authorized to do so, but none of these feelings were
articulated. Instead, my great-great-grandfather
was treated like a hero. … on each such festival
day, the temple would irst honour … my greatgreat-grandfather. his tradition went on for
My father was the imam of the Rameswaram
mosque. … One of his closest friends was the
priest of the Ramanathaswamy Temple, Pakshi
Lakshmana Sastry. … Father Bodal, the priest
of the lone church in the town … was as involved in the welfare of the churchgoers of
Rameswaram as my father and Sastrygal, and
as concerned about the need for harmony and
peace in Rameswaram. … these three learned
men … met every Friday evening, at around
four-thirty, and discussed matters of religion
and the happenings of the town. … the three
men kept each other apprised of anything that
could potentially threaten the peace among
the people and together, they tried to work out
ways of clearing miscommunication or scorching rumours before they assumed dangerous
proportions. … I was then about eight years
old, and studying in the third standard. My best
friends were Ramanadha Sastry, Aravindan and
Sivaprakasan. All of them were Brahmins, and
Ramanadhan, in fact, was Pakshi Lakshmana
Sastry’s son. … we had a new teacher at school.
… He walked to the front of the class and the
irst people his eyes settled on were Ramanadhan and I. … he demanded to know my name.
When I told him, I was peremptorily told to
gather my things and move to the back row, for
reasons known only to him. I felt sad, even humiliated. … Ramanadhan was in tears. …
‘Vedanta Brain and Islam Body’: Dr A P J Abdul Kalam
spiritual atmosphere of my youth has stayed
with me. I well understand diferent points of
view, particularly about God. I have read and assimilated the knowledge contained in diferent
religious texts—from the Koran to the Gita to
the Holy Bible. Together they have made me a
product of this unique land of ours, a syncretic
creation of the best of our diverse traditions.
And if ever I am asked what it is like to be a
Muslim in the country, I can point to the people
I grew up with—my father, Sastrygal and Father
Bodal, indeed many others like them whom I
met later—who have upheld the religious and
moral standards of our nation. In their own
ways they have contributed to make ours a
country we can justly proclaim to be a multireligious, multi-ethnic nation, where there is
space for each of us to breathe. Yes, we have
deep problems and issures being created daily,
but if the generations to come remember the
stories of people like my great-great-grandfather
and the imam and priest of the Rameswaram of
long ago, I am sure we will continue to survive
and thrive as a secular democracy forever.7
Association with the Ramakrishna Math
and the Ramakrishna Mission
Kalam had associated with the Ramakrishna
Math and the Ramakrishna Mission and was
keen to visit its centres and participate in various programmes. He visited the centre of Ramakrishna Math at Rajkot on 25 December 2001.
He visited Porbandar centre of the Ramakrishna
Mission on 13 February 2002 and spoke in the
youth convention organised by the centre.
As the President of India he visited the Ramakrishna Mission Chennai Students’ Home on
19 June 2003 and interacted with the students
for about one hour. As the President of India,
he visited Belur Math on 1 October 2004, and
met the Revered President Maharaj then, Srimat
Swami Ranganathanandaji. On the same day he
inaugurated the cultural complex adjacent to
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25
Swami Vivekananda’s Ancestral House in Kolkata and addressed the audience.
As the President of India, he inaugurated
Vivekananda Institute of Value Education and
Culture (vivec) at the Porbandar centre of the
Ramakrishna Mission on 12 January 2006. he
Ministry of Rural Development, Government
of India, awarded Nirmal Gram Puraskar to
Lokasiksha Parishad of the Narendrapur centre
of the Ramakrishna Mission in recognition of
the exemplary work done by it for the promotion
of rural sanitation in the country. his award was
handed over by Kalam, the erstwhile President
of India, on 23 March 2006 at New Delhi.
When he was the President, he visited Ramakrishna Math, Bangalore on 31 May 2008 and
released the book A Concise Encyclopaedia of Hinduism, in three volumes, by Swami Harshananda.
He continued to be actively interested in the
programmes of the Ramakrishna Mission even
ater his term as the President of India. As a part
of its silver jubilee celebrations, the Pune centre
of the Ramakrishna Math organised a youth convention on 14 and 15 January 2009, addressed by
Kalam and several other distinguished persons.
At the Madurai centre of the Ramakrishna
Math a devotees’ conference was held on 20
May 2010, which was addressed by Kalam.
At the Belgaum centre of the Ramakrishna
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26
Prabuddha Bharata
Mission, Kalam spoke at meetings organised
in February 2011.
The Humane Leader
Kalam was always touched by human sufering
and he did not rest until he could do something
for alleviating the sufering he saw. here are
many memorable instances in his life where his
love for fellow human beings was displayed in its
full force. When he was the President of India,
he was concerned about the living conditions of
the employees of the Rashtrapati Bhavan, the oficial residence of the President of India:
It was the morning of 14 July 2003, 8.40 a.m.
he rax in my oice rang. It was the President
at the other end. ‘Mr. Nair’, the President said,
‘Last night I could not sleep because my bedroom was leaking … .’ I froze. Any other President, and my head would have rolled, though
for no fault of mine. Obviously sensing my
acute embarrassment, the President continued,
as only he could, ‘Don’t worry. I know you will
immediately set things right in my bedroom,
but I am worried about those houses in the
President’s Estate where they may not have a
second bedroom to shit to when the only one
that is available leaks.’ I hurriedly mumbled a
‘Sorry, sir, I shall act just now.’8
On the last day of his life, Kalam was travelling with Srijan Pal Singh, who was his adviser
for six years. Singh recounted the happenings
of the last day through his posting on a social
networking website that was widely circulated
later. Parts of his memoirs are given here:
We were in a convoy of 6–7 cars. Dr. Kalam
and I were in the second car. Ahead of us was an
open gypsy [a popular brand of jeep] 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. his is like punishment. Can you ask
a wireless message to be given 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 [Indian Institute of Management] 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.’9
One day Singh was asked by Kalam:
‘You are young, decide what will you like to be
remembered for?’ I [Singh] 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 (ibid.).
On 27 July 2015, minutes into his lecture on
‘Creating a Livable Planet Earth’ to the students
of iim Shillong, Kalam collapsed, never to revive. To the last moment, he excelled in his cherished role of a teacher.
PB October 2015
‘Vedanta Brain and Islam Body’: Dr A P J Abdul Kalam
27
Aboard the Fighter Aircraft, Sukhoi 30 MKI
Ater the nuclear tests in Pokhran, Kalam
was called ‘he Missile Man’ by the daily Bombay Times. A journalist who calls him a ‘Sadhu
of Science’ writes: ‘He was … nominated to the
nation’s highest oice where he earned the sobriquet of being the “People’s President” with
his humility and accessibility. All this made
Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam a true
Indian icon.’10
Let us remind ourselves of that glorious vision of Swami Vivekananda: ‘I see in my mind’s
eye the future perfect India rising out of this
chaos and strife, glorious and invincible, with
Vedanta brain and Islam body.’11 Was Kalam’s
life something on the lines of what Swamiji
envisioned? We do not know whether Kalam
could completely fulil that dream of Swamiji;
only Swamiji would be able to tell that for
sure. Nevertheless, the life of Dr A P J Abdul
Kalam was a great leap in that direction and a
life worthy of being made into a role model and
emulated for posterity.
P
PB October 2015
References
1. A P J Abdul Kalam, My Journey: Transforming
Dreams into Actions (New Delhi: Rupa, 2013), 6.
2. K Bhushan and G Katyal, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam: he
Visionary of India (New Delhi: APH, 2012), 2.
3. My Journey, 13.
4. A P J Abdul Kalam and A Sivathanu Pillai, Envisioning an Empowered Nation (New Delhi:
Tata McGraw-Hill, 2007), 12.
5. P M Nair, he Kalam Efect: My Years With he
President (New Delhi: Harper Collins, 2011), 122.
6. A P J Abdul Kalam, Ignited Minds: Unleashing
the Power within India (New Delhi: Penguin,
2003), 84.
7. My Journey, 31–41.
8. he Kalam Efect, 135–6.
9. ‘Memories of My Last Day with Dr A P J
Abdul Kalam’ <http://www.abplive.in/incoming/2015/07/28/article665001.ece/Memoriesof-my-last-day-with-Dr-APJ-Abdul-Kalam>
accessed 07 September 2015.
10. Raj Chengappa, ‘Sadhu of Science’, India Today,
40/32 (4–10 August 2015), 42.
11. he Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda,
9 vols (Calcutta: Advaita Ashrama, 1–8, 1989;
9, 1997), 6.416.
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