How did kalam respond when asked if purity was possible in politics
Answers
Explanation:
was an Indian aerospace scientist and politician who served as the 11th President of India from 2002 to 2007. He was born and raised in Rameswaram, Tamil Nadu and studied physics and aerospace engineering. He spent the next four decades as a scientist and science administrator, mainly at the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and was intimately involved in India's civilian space programme and military missile development efforts.[1] He thus came to be known as the Missile Man of India for his work on the development of ballistic missile and launch vehicle technology.[2][3][4] He also played a pivotal organisational, technical, and political role in India's Pokhran-II nuclear tests in 1998, the first since the original nuclear test by India in 1974
Answer:
Dr Kalam said that an entire generation of people representing
excellence in all fields- politics, industry, sciences, the arts- emerged
in the years leading to independence like Mahatma Gandhi, CV
Raman, JRD Tata, Pirojsha B Godrej, Laxmanrao Kirloskar,
Ramakrishna Bajaj, Rabindranath Tagore, Dr S Radhakrishnan and
Madan Mohan Malaviya. Suddenly there was excellence in every
sphere of society and the circumstance making such flowering was
possible then. Kalam believed that there should be leaders of a
stature to suit their ambition and appear once again, in all walks of
life, including politics.