Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Newsmakers

Indian American inventor, entrepreneur, philanthropist Narinder Kapany left an indelible mark (Book Review)

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Jan, 2022 02:34 PM
  • Indian American inventor, entrepreneur, philanthropist Narinder Kapany left an indelible mark (Book Review)

New Delhi, Jan 13 (IANS) He is considered the "Father of Fibre Optics", one of the seven "Unsung Heroes of the 20th Century" for his Nobel Prize deserving breakthrough that spawned the Internet and is behind devices ranging from endoscopes to high-capacity telephone lines. Yet, the self-effacing Indian American Narinder Singh Kapany, born in the sleepy town of Moga in undivided Punjab devotes just two-and-a-half-pages in his 277-page memoir to this momentous achievement.

Instead, he focuses on his journey as an inventor-entrepreneur encompassing fibre optics communications, lasers, biomedical instrumentation, solar energy and pollution monitoring, registering in the process 120 patents, as also academics e but most importantly as a philanthropist.

Over the past 50 years, the Palo Alto, California, based Sikh Foundation that Kapany founded in 1967 pioneered the display of Sikh Arts at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. It has worked tirelessly to promote and preserve Sikh art, heritage, education, culture, and religion by underwriting, mounting, and/or providing the art for numerous world-class Sikh art retrospectives, museum exhibitions and lecture series from London, to Toronto and the US, including New York City, Washington D.C. (at the Smithsonian for five years, Texas and California, where at San Francisco's Asian Art Museum, Kapany donated the nation's first permanent Sikh gallery.

All this is in addition to four Chairs that the Foundation has underwritten at the Universities of California Santa Cruz, Sana Barbara and Riverside and the California State University East Bay, as also its support for Punjabi language programmes at Columbia, Stanford and the University of California Berkeley.

"Together, we must work toward absolute equality for all, promoting love and charity. This not one way of moving forward; it is the only way," Kapany, who died on December 4, 2020 aged 94, nine months after completing his memoirs, maintains in "The Man Who Bent Light" (Roli Books).

The spark was ignited in high school in Dehradun, where, a teacher told Kapany that light could travel only in a straight line. Determined to prove his teacher wrong, he went on to graduate from Agra University before going to Imperial College to work on a PhD in optics from the University of London.

In 1953, working alongside physicist Harold Hopkins at the Imperial College, Kapany, after a great deal of trial and effort, was the first to successfully transmit high-quality images through fibre bundles, coining the term fibre optics in a 1960 article for Scientific American.

He describes the breakthrough rather modestly:

"On my request, Professor Hopkins appeared in the lab... I (had) affixed a black mask with the cut-out word eFIBRE' to a lens that I had set up in front of the business end of the remaining end remaining (optical glass) bunch and beamed it to a makeshift projection screen on the far wall.

"Well, Kapany, what do you have to show me?

"I pulled up the single chair in the lab, placed it with the best sight line to the screen, and urged him to sit.

"Ready, I asked.

"Yes, yes, he said, feigning impatience.

"I closed the door, shut off all the lights, and in a single, final effort, I switched on the light source. And there it was. On the screen. Like an optometrist's chart but with only a single line of large letters, as clear as it could be: F...I...B...R...E."

Kapany had proved that ultimately, what it comes down to is persistence.

"Doggedness is an important attribute in a field where, by most measures, only a fraction succeed," Kapany writes.

This was an attribute that followed him through his life.

In 1961, Kapany along with his wife moved to Woodside on the San Francisco Peninsula and today one of the wealthiest communities in the US, where he founded Optics Technology Inc. successfully taking it public in 1967. He was the first Sikh Indian to take a company public in Silicon Valley. The San Francisco Examiner, in February 1969, described him as eethe most dashing corporate officer in the area'. Subsequently, he founded Kaptron Inc. in 1973, which was later acquired by AMP Inc.

In between, he was offered the post of Scientific Advisor to then Defence Minister V.K. Krishna, with Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru himself forwarding the recommendation to the UPSC, which made such senior appointments. However, the offer was a year in coming, during which Kapany had moved on.

He was later offered the position of Assistant Secretary for Commerce in the administration of Richard Nixon but this didn't go through as he was known to be uncomfortable with the then US President.

Kapany even had an extended meeting with Daniel Patrick Moynihan when he was named the US Ambassador to India to come on board as his number two

"It was not to be the case, however, and largely, I believe, for the very trepidations he had expressed in our conversation that day: that it was simply too early in modern India's development for a partnership such as ours," Kapany writes.

It's a measure of the man who was posthumously awarded the Padma Vibhushan, India's second highest civilian award, that he has no regrets.

"To the years gone by, I bid a fond farewell. For those yet to come, I welcome them, I embrace them," Kapany wrote in the concluding chapter, titled "In Closing" that he signed off in March 2020.

MORE Newsmakers ARTICLES

The Extraordinary Life of Olympian Balbir Singh Sr.

The Extraordinary Life of Olympian Balbir Singh Sr.
Since he was a child, Singh was destined to play field hockey and become the greatest player to play the sport, winning three Olympic gold medals and setting an Olympic Record and Guinness World Record for scoring the most goals in a game. 

The Extraordinary Life of Olympian Balbir Singh Sr.

Karthik Naralasetty: Socializing Change

Karthik Naralasetty: Socializing Change
Young entrepreneur Karthik Naralasetty’s social media application Socialblood has more than 300 thousand active users across the globe. This much-needed service has created a social space for thousands of potential blood donors and recipients to meet and donate through Facebook. Now, finding an ideal blood donor is just a few clicks away.

Karthik Naralasetty: Socializing Change

Gloving: Create magic with fingers

Gloving: Create magic with fingers

Gloving – a modern dance form which involves the use of fingertip LED lights to accent...

Gloving: Create magic with fingers

Connecting the World: Ajay Bhatt

Connecting the World: Ajay Bhatt
Today, the USB is found in billions of electronic devices all over the world, from webcams to cell phones and memory sticks. It has made computers easy to use, and the credit for it goes to Ajay Bhatt, co-inventor of the USB. The intelligent Indian-American computer architect and Intel Fellow talks about his invention, journey towards success, and the latest generation of the USB that hit the market two months ago.

Connecting the World: Ajay Bhatt

Kat-Katha: Giving Hope to Souls Inside Brothels

Kat-Katha: Giving Hope to Souls Inside Brothels
Kat-Katha is on a mission to unleash sex workers and their children in New Delhi’s GB Road area.

Kat-Katha: Giving Hope to Souls Inside Brothels

CFL’s LATEST DRAFT: Sukhjeevan Chungh

CFL’s LATEST DRAFT: Sukhjeevan Chungh

Currently ranked as number 7 by the Canadian Football League (CFL), Sukhjeevan Chungh is a promis...

CFL’s LATEST DRAFT: Sukhjeevan Chungh