Our Vision:
-1st July 1964 on the eve of inauguration of the workshop
SKILL IS ABUNDANT BUT TOOLS ARE SCARCE
It
was Archimedes who said - "Give me a place to stand and a rod long
enough and I will move the Earth." He conceived the tool but
did not live long to be transplanted to another planet to get the place
he sought to stand upon and even if he had, he perhaps could not have
the tool -'a rod long enough'- to demonstrate the incredible act of
moving the Earth. The substance of this is that an idea of howsoever
sound cannot be transformed into actual work without the tool even
though the requisite skill is present. It is not strange that
civilization is reckoned by the stone, Bronze and Iron ages - the
materials which the human beings used to make their tools and weapons
from. The measure of civilization is thus the type and quality of tools
which a society uses for creation of articles of necessity and the
quantity in use directly reflects its prosperity.
In Ancient India
Whatever
may have been the reason for the present backwardness of this ancient
land of ours, it is established beyond doubt that we had developed such
skills thousands of years ago which have not been able to be repeated
even today by those countries who are highly advanced in the art of
applied science (e.g. The iron pillar, Qutub Minar, Delhi - purest form
of stainless wrought iron).
A
large part of our population is traditionally artisan in whose veins
flow the blood infested by indestructible germs of skill combined with
intelligence, sensitivity and creativity. They try to do their best with
whatever materials and tools they can lay hands on or devise. This
however, is not enough since technological developments have produced a
wide variety of material which can be effectively and profitably put to
use only when treated, handled and worked upon in a specified manner
with the help of advanced type of special tools.
Special Tools
Costly,
complicated and delicate modern equipments machines and engines - all
need special tools to build, dismantle, renovate and service for long
life and calculated performance. We constantly clamor for the quality of
whatever is produced in our country and unhesitatingly start to find
fault with workmanship and other things directly attributable to the men
who put their physical energy in producing that article but seldom
ponder over the more important causes such as manufacturers greed
manifest in improper material, use of obsolete methods and indifference
towards control of quality and employment of trained men equipped with
adequate and proper tools.
Malady
While
there is a remedy for most of the above shortcomings which are products
of market boom, the most important malady- shortage of special tools,
instruments, gadgets, gauges and testing apparatus- cannot be easily
remedied unless those in Government who frame policies about imports
have the good sense of not viewing these things as items of luxury. The
present policy of restricting the inflow of these essential items which
result into excessive profits for those who have somehow the privilege
of getting licenses is destructive in a good measure and hits at the
very root of the program of advancement and development which the nation
has set for itself for peace, progress and sufficiency. It can perhaps
be said that denial of the right to possess the tool one needs to
properly perform his duty is equivalent to denial of opportunity. We
have confidence in our workmen . Give them the tools and they will
transform this country, abundant in skill, into Workshop of the World.
B. V. Malani