Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Reaching for the stars with feet firmly on the ground

- dr_manjugupta@icloud.com The writer is a Gharaunda-based gynaecolog­ist

Dr Manju Gupta

This is my favourite story and it never fails to impress. It’s an account of the day I put words in the mouth of Potus, the President of The United States! It was 2003, and news of the Columbia space shuttle crash was trickling in. In those heady days of the newly discovered 24x7 news, channels were going berserk, trying to outdo each other. Their single-minded agenda was to reel in more viewers and increase their TRP by adding a new angle to the story.

Since Kalpana Chawla was my senior and my daughter was a student in the same school, we went to attend the condolence meeting. When we reached the school, we were amazed by the number of media vans parked outside. The real circus was happening within where dozens of mediaperso­ns were interviewi­ng just about anyone who could provide a sound byte.

An old teacher introduced me as Kalpana’s contempora­ry and suddenly my value soared. Half a dozen microphone­s were shoved in my direction and I was asked to recount my time with her. I clarified that I was two years junior to her and new to the school so I rarely ever interacted with her. They asked me anything I remembered about her. All I could recall was her hanging from a tyre in the porch of her house in an effort to gain height.

Another instance I recounted was how she had offered to make a night sky for a geography exhibition when a classroom was turned into a miniature landscape. Her friend and she had painstakin­gly stuck stars on black charts, making constellat­ions on the ceiling. I added my own observatio­n that in hindsight it seemed that she had always been fascinated by the cosmos. The reporters greedily lapped up this story and I was repeatedly introduced as Kalpana’s friend. I kept correcting them that I wasn’t a friend and hardly knew her but this tiny detail went unnoticed.

After the condolence meeting, I left to see patients in my hospital. A few hours later, a correspond­ent from CNN came looking for me and said he wanted to put me on a live news cast to the US. He wanted me to narrate the night sky story. I was a bit nervous. I’m not good at rehearsed lines. If someone asks me the same question twice, I try to recall words I had used earlier, which makes me stammer.

My cold feet slowly warmed up when I reached the venue. I was expecting a big studio with fancy lights and a big production crew. I was simultaneo­usly disappoint­ed and relieved to see that CNN was operating with a tiny threemembe­r crew out of a small room in a Connaught Place hotel.

I was interviewe­d by American journalist Paula Zahn! After I fumbled through the mandatory geography project story, she asked me how KC would be remembered. I recounted how she had repeatedly expressed gratitude to her school, her engineerin­g college and even the tiny flying club in her hometown. She had shared her success and good fortune with her alma mater and had arranged sponsorshi­ps for two students to visit NASA every year. And then in a moment of heightened inspiratio­n I said, “Her greatest quality was that when she reached for the stars, she kept her feet firmly on the ground.”

I could see that I had floored Ms Zahn with this somewhat cheesy comment but its impact was to go much further.

That evening while paying homage to the departed astronauts, the then President, George W Bush, used my line, attributin­g it to KC’s friend. I was too ecstatic to explain that I wasn’t a friend, just a puny junior. Sometimes, the devil is not in the details!

AN OLD TEACHER INTRODUCED ME AS KALPANA CHAWLA’S CONTEMPORA­RY AND SUDDENLY MY VALUE SOARED. HALF A DOZEN MICROPHONE­S WERE SHOVED IN MY DIRECTION

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