Failed in my dream of becoming pilot: Abdul Kalam in new book

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August 18, 2013

NEW DELHI: For former President A P J Abdul Kalam, becoming a fighter pilot was a "dearest dream" but he failed to realize it by a whisker as he bagged the ninth position when only eight slots were available in the IAF.

August 18, 2013

NEW DELHI: For former President A P J Abdul Kalam, becoming a fighter pilot was a "dearest dream" but he failed to realize it by a whisker as he bagged the ninth position when only eight slots were available in the IAF.

In his new book "My Journey: Transforming Dreams into Actions", published by Rupa, Kalam, who specialized in aeronautical engineering from Madras Institute of Technology, says he was desperate to pursue a career in flying.

"Over the years I had nurtured the hope to be able to fly to handle a machine as it rose higher and higher in the stratosphere was my dearest dream," he writes.

Out of the two interview calls Kalam got, one was from the Indian Air Force in Dehradun and the other from the directorate of Technical Development and Production (DTDP) at the ministry of defence in Delhi.

While the interview at DTDP was "easy" he recounted that for the Air Force Selection Board, he realized that along with qualifications and engineering knowledge, they were also looking for a certain kind of "smartness" in the candidate.

Kalam bagged the ninth position out of 25 candidates and was not recruited as only eight slots were available.

"I had failed to realize my dream of becoming an air force pilot," he writes.

He says he "walked around for a while till I reached the edge of a cliff" before deciding to go to Rishikesh and "seek a new way forward".

"It is only when we are faced with failure do we realize that these resources were always there within us. We only need to find them and move on with our lives," says Kalam who went on to put his "heart and soul" at his job as the senior scientific assistant at DTDP.

The book is filled with stories of "innumerable challenges and learning" in his years as the scientific adviser when India conducted its second nuclear test, his retirement and dedication to teaching thereafter and his years as President.


Courtesy: PTI