Address (Excerpts) by Shri Jagdeep Dhankhar, Honourable Vice President of Indian at the Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali in Punjab on February 17, 2025.

Mohali, Punjab | February 17, 2025

Good afternoon all of you. If there has been some disruption in your normal activity, because as Vice-President of the country, I take it as my prime obligation to connect with young minds and important institutions.  It is from that perspective I solicited this invitation.

I am grateful that it was accepted. Professor Anil Kumar Tripathi, Director IISER, a man who brings on the table huge experience, commitment, and in his brief address he has revealed the object, the performance and the potential.  Professor Renu Vig, Vice-Chancellor, Punjab University, has two distinctions.

One, she is the first ever woman Vice-Chancellor of the Punjab University, a very prestigious university. I am sure we can applaud her, and, she is the 14th Vice-Chancellor, appointed by a Chancellor, who happens to be the 14th Vice-President of the country, that's myself. Both of us missed number 13 very narrowly.  Professor R.P. Tiwari, Vice-Chancellor, Central University of Punjab.  Have you noticed something unique here?  There are three Vices. So, Professor Anil Kumar Tripathi can be happy and delighted.  Unless he says that prefix of Vice does not mean vice as it is defined in the dictionary, I would not reflect upon myself.  But I can assure you, Vice-Chancellor Renu Vig and Vice-Chancellor R.P. Tiwari have no Vices.

This is a unique Institution and 7 being in number.  Having been Governor in the State of West Bengal for three years,  I am aware of these Institutions and the seminal role they play in the evolution of the heart.  Every institution is defined by the faculty, and I greet members of the faculty who are very distinguished  and are futuristic in their outlook, whatever little I have gathered.  We as a nation can take pride that we have an unparalleled legacy unknown to other nations. That long, and if we traverse our civilisational journey of 5000 years,  we will find Bharat had been glory of the world,epicenter of knowledge and culture.  People from all over the world flocked in pursuit of knowledge. That is your motto.  What a motto you have picked up.  Nalanda, Taxila, people came from all over the world in search of knowledge,  shared knowledge and wisdom. 

We at the moment are at a very critical juncture, and I say so with some amount of nostalgia.  I got into the seat of governance 35 years ago  when I was elected to Parliament (Lok Sabha)  and had the good fortune to be a Minister. I know the situation there.  The mood of the nation.  Our worrisome foreign exchange disturbed Jammu and Kashmir. I saw it all around, and our government didn't last long, not because of me. And what I see now,  180 degree difference.  The nation has an environment of hope and possibility.  Our global image is very high.

Leadership of the Prime Minister is globally acknowledged.  And we have traversed against heavy winds.  Difficult terrain. From fragile five economies  to the world's largest five economies at the moment.  Ahead of those who ruled us for centuries, the Great Britain.  It is a matter of time. That we will be marching ahead  of Japan and Germany also  to be the third largest in about a year or so.  Such a jump.  When I was elected first in parliament  I had no courage to dream. Then that was the time, young boys and girls,  where a Member of Parliament felt  really an authority  because he or she could give 50 gas connections  or 50 telephone connections in a year.  Imagine where we have come.  In the shortest possible time,  550 million people of the country  benefited from banking inclusions. They never had that account. 

Over 100 million households have toilets.  Cooking gas in every house, electricity in every house,  internet in every remote corner,  health centres and education centres around,  road connectivity, everything is happening. World class infrastructure we are seeing of global benchmark, and therefore, as I said this morning also,  no nation in the world has grown  as fast in the last 10 years as Bharat.  This has created a challenge. A challenge of aspirational youth.  They want more.  They are entitled to more  because they have tasted development. They see it on the ground.  They know that per capita internet consumption of India is more than that of US and China taken together, that speaks  of our access to technology  and adaptability of technology.

 When it comes to direct transfers,  a service delivery driven by technology,  our direct digital transactions are four times  the combined transactions of USA, UK, France and Germany.  We are a nation where  global entities, International Monetary Fund, World Bank are appreciating us.  I recall my days  in 1990 as a minister.

Our gold had to be shipped  in an aeroplane  to be placed to two banks in Switzerland  because our foreign exchange  was around 1 billion US dollars.  Now it is 700 times.  And not a cause of concern, and therefore,  the challenge is  how do we meet aspirations of our young minds and my message to young minds.  Seriously, look around,  the opportunity basket  which for you is getting larger and larger by the day. Come out of these silos and groove  that are defined jobs only with the government  or working in a corporate.  

Startups,  unicorns  are doing wonders.  Let me tell you, IITs and IIMs  have given these unicorns. But about 50% are from other institutes.  I know the potential this country has  because I have been to ISRO.  Seen for myself. I have seen emerging  space economy, there I came to learn for the first time  when our rocket had to be put in space.  It was not from Indian soil, and now  we put rockets of other countries, USA also,  developed countries also, Singapore also,  from our and make money.  Good value for money. Chandrayaan, Gaganyaan – They are defining us.

I had the good occasion  to have discussion  with S. Somnathan,  ISRO chairman, he was till recently, now V. Narayanan.  Their fire, their zeal, their commitment,  very different.  In Bangalore,  Govindan Rangarajan,  Indian Institute of Science, and  Dr. Clyde Shelby.  I had the occasion to see personally  what kind of innovations are being done  for larger public welfare by  scientific and industrial research.  I say so because  a country's reputation, image, power  is to be defined by research.

Research is the bedrock  of economic supremacy  and global distinction.  There was a time when  we did not bestow attention on research  and we thought somebody will give it to us with a price.  And that someone will decide how much to give,  on what terms to give but now,  we have changed that.  Nations that lead in research  have global respect in economy,  in strategy.  And countries depend on them. Just imagine  how far we have gone  when it comes to meteorological predictions.  We are one of the best in the world.  As Governor-General of West Bengal,  and the state is prone to cyclones,  super cyclones,  there was no mortality on high seas. The prediction was very accurate.  Scientific prowess defines  strategic prowess.  Conventional wars are gone.

And we have an ancient legacy  of having been researchers,  discoverers,  giving to the world  right from zero in arithmetic or mathematics.  Aryabhatta, Brahmagupta  laid foundations of global mathematics.  Our scientific  pantheon,  Raman known by Raman effect, Bose,  Sarabhai, Chandrasekhar,  Shah, Bhatnagar,  and our former president,  they define  India's research mind,  orientation. They exemplify commitment to research.  And look at those days,  we were in  colonial shackles.  Raman effect discovered against  colonial scepticism.

It stands as a testament to our  Indian scientific beliefs.  Cutting edge research  is demand of the times.  And the research has to correlate  to fulfil  the needs of the society.  A research  that is to be put on the shelf,  a research  that is for the self,  a research that embellishes the profile,  a research that contributes  only to credentials  is not the research.  A research that only scratches the surface  is not the research.  The research has to be authentic.

The research must create a wave.  It must have positive,  cascading impact on the lives of the people.  Industries, business, trade and commerce  are driven by research. At the moment, boys and girls,  we are living in times we never imagined.  You are facing those times  as much as I am doing.  We call them  Artificial Intelligence,  Internet of Things,  Blockchain, Machine Learning and the kind. Blockchain for some may be Blockchain.  Machine Learning may be Machine Learning only.  But look at the power these technologies have.

 And these technologies  are known as disruptive technologies.  But these technologies come  with enormous challenges  that can uproot us.  But they come also with a basket of opportunities. And we must focus  on unleashing opportunity  out of these disruptive technologies.  Our research has to come up to that mark.  It is our good fortune  that the government is alive to the situation.

 And we as a nation,  home to one sixth of humanity,  are at the moment focussing on these technologies. Our quantum computing. There is a reflection by the director.  About 6 lakh or 8 lakh jobs  will be created out of investment of 6 lakh crores.  Quantum computing,  there is allocation of 6,000 crores and 18,000 crores  for green hydrogen mission. These are the opportunities for you people.  Space economy,  blue economy.  These are the opportunities for you.

 And therefore research has to facilitate  life of the ordinary person.  To improve our industry,  our administration.  A nation of 1.4 billion  and a rich human resource  unrivalled in the world. If it is catalysed and activated  by temperament of research,  the results will be exponential,  geometric and revolutionary.  Because now Bharat is no longer a nation  with a potential.  Our rise is unstoppable for last few years.

 It is incremental.  And therefore,  there has to be a greater commitment  that research in the country  is in the big league,  in the Platinum category.  And for that,  the faculty  has to brainstorm. We cannot have satisfying moments.  As reflected  by a Greek philosopher  much before Socrates' era,  Heraclitus, Boys and Girls,  now we are having change every moment.  Paradigm shift.

We are virtually  at an industrial revolution.  Unknown to the humanity before.  And if nations have to go  ahead of others,  we have to focus on  research.  There was a time in Silicon Valley  otherwise we could hardly see an Indian.  And there is now hardly  a global corporate that doesn't have  an Indian man or woman at the peak. Our demographic dividend  now requires  universalist  engineering, mathematics.  And that is why, after more than three decades,  a game-changing  education policy was introduced.  And that was to give you enough room  so that you can go after  your aptitude  and distance from the package of just degrees.

 I will take the occasion  to appeal to corporates  that  they must come forward  to drive the engines of research.  Liberally contribute  because ultimately they are the beneficiaries.  Alongside the government  they should be making liberal contributions  beyond their CSR funds. If you look at the global corporates,  how much they invest  you will be surprised.  We take pride in the last five years.  We have increased  our research fiscal commitment  in the corporates to 50% above.

From 0.89%  of their revenue  to 1.32% of their revenue.  I find it deficient.  Investment has  to be many times more. We take pride also  because earlier things were not moving.  Now things are moving.  When things are moving, we notice a change. Patents have nearly  more than doubled  in the last ten years.  But our patents must  be in consonance with our  demographic participation in the world.  One-sixth we must have. Because we are one-sixth of humanity.  And this one-sixth of humanity  qualitatively is very different than one-sixth.  And therefore,  taking note of technology access and adaptability,  we need to be  in optimal  performance mindset.

Imagine a country where  100 million farmers, three times a year, get direct banking transfers.  Young boys and girls were not aware, there was a time when corruption  was the password  for opportunity,  recruitment or business licence.  Power corridors were leveraged  by lies and agents. All this neutralised.  And neutralised  also through technological applications.  Because middlemen  have been shown the door. So when I look at your institute,  Director,  science, education and research, the triangle,  this defines your role.  Pursuit of knowledge.  It starts with education. Because education  as a transformative vehicle  is very powerful.  It brings about equality.  Any one of you can have unicorn and be in the big league of industry. You don't have to look to the situation.  That yes, my father was in the industry,  that's true.  We need to fight by technology. That's the sin we are facing.  So education. In education, science is important.

 Because science  unfolds your mind  to generate creativity,  innovation.  And then the next step is research.  A combination of these  will unlock  the enormous potential of Indian mind. Will make available  avenues and vistas  to our population.  Every nation hopes to be self-reliant.  But we as a nation  are very large. Complex on occasions.  When the nation is growing so fast,  some of us,  the number is very small.  The traction is large. Put personal interest,  commercial interest,  political interest,  above national interest.  This can't be allowed.  This is unfair to boys and girls.

 This is unfair to everyone, because  if in our democracy there is someone  as a class  more serious, significant stakeholder in democracy and growth,  than any one of us sitting here,  is the youth of the country.  Because as we march for Viksit Bharat  after 2047,  you are the  driving force behind engines of growth.  And therefore  we have to give new dimension now.  Make in India, start up India.  And look at  technology. It has to get into healthcare.

Technology has to get into education.  Technology  can catalyse that quality health  and quality education is available  to one and all.  And if that happens,  Bharat will be what it has been for centuries.Our lean period started in 12th century.  Then marauders came,  invaders came,  recklessly destroyed our culture.  They  sacrileged our religious places  to an extent that they put their own  at the same place. Then came the Britishers who did not give us the education to rule ourselves.  They gave us education and taught us history  as suited to them.  Now things have changed. We are much ahead of UK in economy. We have a bunch of institutions now all over the country.  IITs, IIMs, Institutions like yours, and therefore  we must have this ecosystem  with ears  and eyes on the ground.  The litmus test  is changing the life  of the ordinary man.  We all stand committed to that because that is  our preamble.

We the people of India want these things.  I conclude for time constraint.  What Vivekananda said,  “Arise, awake,  stop not till the goal is achieved”. A motto which you must have. From my side I can give it to you. Have no tension, Have no stress, Never fear failure. Failure is natural. Sometimes you will be surprised, Oh he has succeeded, he should not have succeeded, take it in stride. System is transparent, there will be aberrations. Sometimes you will find, Oh! my own success is unjustified. These are situations natural to us, and then Dr. Kalam whose heart was always in education. I recollect when he met his maker. He was with the students in the North East, and what he said I quote, 

“Dreams transform into thoughts, and thoughts result in action” and therefore my ultimate plea with you, If an idea occurs to you don’t allow your mind to be a parking ground for that idea because you fear you may fail. Get rid of it. Failure is a myth because there is no one who has not failed but they never took failure as failure. Chandrayaan 2 was failure for some who are critics, who are recipe for negativity. Chandrayaan II did not fail, It went that far, and Chandrayaan III did the rest. Let your innovations catalyse India’s scientific renaissance, and advance human progress because we are a country that believes in ‘Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam’ – One Earth, One Family, One Future, that was our motto to the entire world. 

Once again, I am grateful to the Director for making available this opportunity to me at a very short notice. I understand that there has been some inconvenience, I would urge that you overlook it.


Thank you so much.