*The secular condolence ceremony for Homi Bhabha of which no photographs
were found has remained firmly etched in the scientists’ memory, and the
religious one was forgotten.*

On 24 January 1966, Homi Bhabha, physicist and founder of India’s nuclear
programme, died in a plane crash. The Kanchenjunga — a Boeing 707 aircraft
— had crashed into the Glacier des Bossons of Mont Blac at 4,807 metres.
Bhabha was on his way to Vienna to attend an Advisory Committee meeting of
the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Conspiracy theories about the crash being triggered by a bomb circulated
then, as they do even today. But how was the news received in the two
institutions he founded in Mumbai? With deep distress and a numbing sense
of disbelief that remains even now, decades after the event.

The institute had organised a condolence meeting almost immediately. And
those who attended it recalled that Professor Rustom Choksi spoke. He was a
member of the Tata Trust as well as the Council of the Tata Institute of
Fundamental Research (TIFR), which Bhabha had founded in 1945. The
resolution that was passed spoke of Bhabha’s patriotism, his leadership and
his efforts “to build with unremitting toil and exalted vision that nobler
India in which skilled technology in the service of man would give to the
lowliest among us the beginnings of a decent life”. These fine sentiments
perhaps served to hold in check the intense anguish that many of those
present felt.

In 2002, when I began the task of putting together the archives of TIFR,
the condolence meeting and Choksi’s speech was what most of the older
scientists and administrators of the institute remembered until I found a
set of photographs. These striking black-and-white photographs depicted a
Parsi Uthamna ceremony in progress. On closer look, the ceremony seemed to
be taking place right at the foot of the staircase of TIFR’s library with
everyone watching from the colonnade space outside.

The secular condolence ceremony of which no photographs were found had
remained firmly etched in memory and the religious one had been forgotten.

Among the scientists, there seemed to be a slight sense of embarrassment
about the religious ceremony being performed inside the hallowed portals of
a science institute. Almost as if there was a schism between the two worlds
that the two ceremonies represented. When pressed, many of the scientists
told me that the Parsee ritual was only held to honour the wishes of
Bhabha’s mother (who was also the daughter of Ruttonbai and Framji Panday),
Meherbai. She was close to many of the scientists at the institute. What
came as a surprise was that she was close to some of the workers too who
went to see her regularly and who met her even after Bhabha’s death.

As G.V. Vasudevachar, Bhabha’s laboratory assistant who had moved from IISc
Bangalore to TIFR in 1945, recalled, Meherbai had said, “Vasu, Homi told me
he would be back soon. Now he won’t come back.”

Indeed, the personal dimensions of the institution-building came through
sharply in many recollections. But institutional memory had replaced such
personal stories with official narratives about science and nationalism. In
1967, an exhibition on the life of Homi Bhabha was put together by his
institute and displayed at Royal Society London. Later, this exhibition was
put up in the auditorium foyer of TIFR. The auditorium was named the Homi
Bhabha Auditorium and inaugurated by then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi on 9
November 1968.

What lurked beneath such objective acts of institutional commemoration was
the fact that Bhabha’s death had triggered inconsolable grief that was
individual, subjective and only privately expressed.

Unnoticed by the world outside, another incident, deeply significant to the
life of the institution, was passed over in silence. Bhabha’s office at
TIFR was never occupied by the directors who succeeded him. I learnt from
Professor M.G.K. Menon, who became the director when Bhabha died, that he
had felt emotionally unprepared to occupy the space where he had worked
with Bhabha. Menon’s successors too had a similar response. The office
remained unoccupied until Professor S.S. Jha became director in 1997.

Bhabha’s office with its furniture was moved into a museum-ised space in
the auditorium foyer. Thus, 31 years after his death, Bhabha’s office on
the 4th floor of TIFR was once again occupied by the director of TIFR.
Bhabha’s desk, the bookshelves, his Eero Saarinen Tulip chair could now be
viewed through the enclosing glass wall, evoking a strong and haunting
absence.

What do the forgotten ritual and the unoccupied office tell us about
institutions and their commemorative acts? Forgotten narratives often
linger beneath official ones, that private reflections offer explanations
very different from what are visible, public actions. But they also alert
us to the inability of institutions to acknowledge and express grief and
then engage meaningfully with the legacy that they have inherited.

*Indira Chowdhury heads the Centre for Public History at the Srishti
Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bengaluru. She wrote a book titled
‘Growing the Tree of Science: Homi Bhabha and the Tata Institute of
Fundamental Research’ in 2016.*

*Dear Vada Dasturji Khurshed Dastoor Saheb,*

*I feel that setting up of proper commission to inquire about the actual
cause of his death in a mysterious circumstances  is desirable. You being a
member of minority commission can take up this matter with GOI.*

*Tandorasti*

*Homi*




* By Nikita Roy <http://www.india.com/author/nikita/> Email
<[email protected]> http://www.india.com/buzz/homi
-jehangir-bhabha-death-anniver sary-interesting-facts-about-t
he-father-of-indias-nuclear-pr ogramme-2859559/
<http://www.india.com/buzz/homi-jehangir-bhabha-death-anniversary-interesting-facts-about-the-father-of-indias-nuclear-programme-2859559/>
*


<http://www.india.com/buzz/homi-jehangir-bhabha-death-anniversary-interesting-facts-about-the-father-of-indias-nuclear-programme-2859559/#disqusbox>
[image: homi bhabha]


Homi Jehangir Bhabha, popularly known as the father of Indian Nuclear
Programme was a famous nuclear physicist. He was the founding director of
two renowned research institutes- Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
(TIFR) and Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC). He was born to a rich
Parsi family on October 30, 1909. He was bestowed with many honorary
degrees and awards from many prestigious universities. He is known for his
articles on quantum theory and cosmic rays.

Homi Bhabha graduated from Elphinstone College. He then attended the Royal
Institute of Science until 1927 before joining Cambridge University. In
1933, he received his doctorate in nuclear physics with his paper ‘The
Absorption of Cosmic Radiation’, winning him the Isaac Newton Studentship
in 1934. Today is the death anniversary of the Homi Jehangir Bhabha. To
commemorate the same here are some lesser known and interesting facts about
him:

   1. Many do not know that as a student Homi worked with a Nobel Prize
   winner. Yes, he worked with Niels Bohr in Copenhagen.
   2. He donned many hats. He represented India at many conferences like
   Internation Atomic Energy Agency among others. He was also appointed as
   President of UN conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy.
   3. He was also offered a post in Indian cabinet back then. However, he
   rejected the same and instead acted as adviser (scientific) to former Prime
   ministers of India- Jawaharlal Nehru and Lal Bahadur Shastri.
   4. He received many awards. Bhabha was felicitated with Padma Bhushan
   (1954), Adams Prize (1942) and Fellow of the Royal Society...
   5. Exactly fourteen days before Bhabha’s death, former PM of India, Lal
   Bahadur Shastri died a mystifying death in Tashkent.
   6. He was instrumental in finding out how India can extract power from
   its thorium reserves instead of uranium reserves which were less in
   quantity. This approach was new for all.
   7. He was the one who identified and named the Meson particle. He also
   worked with one of the German Physicists to develop the Cascade theory to
   understand cosmic radiations.
   8. He was not a typical scientist. He loved paintings, classical music,
   and opera among others. He used to live in a huge colonial bungalow in
   Malabar Hills. It was named as Mehrangir.

On January 24, 1996, he died in a mysterious air crash near Mount Blanc.
Some theories claim that he was killed by CIA to paralyze India’s nuclear
programme.  He was on his way to Vienna for a meet of Scientific Advisory
committee. After his death, his brother was the custodian of his property
and he gave away all his paintings, artifacts and furniture to the NCPA.
Later the property of value over Rs 257 crore was sold off to the Godrej
family for Rs 372 crores in 2014 by the NCPA.


​Circulated by,
K.Raman​

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