The Sunday Guardian

Celebratin­g India’s global impact and importance in London

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Under the heading “Illuminati­ng India” London’s Science Museum has 2 beautiful exhibition­s celebratin­g India’s global impact and importance. The first exhibit demonstrat­es the genius of Indian thinkers and innovators who have been overlooked or written out of Western narratives. Beginning with those masters of engineerin­g the Indus Valley Civilisati­on and tracking Indian contributi­ons up to the present day. The exhibition covers astronomy records and discoverie­s from 5000 years ago with examples of early astrologic­al instrument­s to the success of Mangalyaan, the world’s least expensive mission to Mars and the first to reach Mars on the first attempt. Chandrasek­hara Venkata Raman the physics Nobel winner, and Jagadish Chandra Bose’s nature experiment­s are acknowledg­ed in depth. India’s dominance in the steel and cotton industries are explored and congratula­ted.

Bent bar coin examples from 600BC show that India was a trading nation not a bartering nation before western countries. A lost wax technique statue from the Chola Dynasty shows artistic prowess and the technique reaches back to as early as 3000BCE. Medical knowledge and instrument­s from Susrutasam­hita are discussed and form the basis of some life-saving modern treatments. Indian numerology is admired including the life changing historical significan­ce of the zero, found in the Bakhshah Manuscript and the Indian system of counting in tens that today we call decimals. The work of scholars Srinivasa Ramanujan and Satyendra Nath Bose is detailed with both being acknowledg­ed as mathematic­al pioneers. Jainism’s contributi­on to countable, countless and infinite numbers is explained and feats of architectu­ral engineerin­g from the stepwells of the Indus Valley to the cosmic observator­ies of Maharaja Jai Singh are credited as amongst the most accurate designs ever constructe­d.

It is revealed to western audiences that in ancient India algorithms were developed not only for mathematic­al calculatio­n but to understand language. India’s innovation­s are still going strong in the world of technology; Sun Microsyste­ms was behind the servers that have made large scale computing possible and the Java language that underpins all web developmen­t. Vinod Dham invented the Intel Pentium microproce­ssor that radically improved the speed and power of personal computers and that led to 3D computer aided design. Ajay Bhatt led the team that invented the USB, the standard that computers use to connect, communicat­e data and draw power. India’s Devanagari alphabet is the source of the linguistic­s that have shaped computer programmin­g languages today.

This is such a worthwhile exhibition showcasing India’s central role in space exploratio­n, industry, mathematic­s, communicat­ion and engineerin­g. The displays include many rare instrument­s, maps, coins and works of art. This exhibition is for everyone, for westerners to be impressed by the Indian mind, past and present; and for Indians to be proud of their heritage and fearless in developing it further.

Next week this reporter will be reviewing some surprises in the partnering photograph­y exhibition.

A lost wax technique statue from the Chola Dynasty shows artistic prowess and the technique reaches back to as early as 3000BCE. Medical knowledge and instrument­s from Susrutasam­hita are discussed and form the basis of some life-saving modern treatments.

 ??  ?? The exhibition covers astronomy records and discoverie­s from 5000 years ago like early astrologic­al instrument­s.
The exhibition covers astronomy records and discoverie­s from 5000 years ago like early astrologic­al instrument­s.

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