β
One day, the physicist Sir C.V. Raman came up from Bangalore to see Gandhi. Ramanβs conceit was legendary. In the summer of 1930, he booked a passage for his wife and himself on a boat leaving for Europe in October, so confident was he of winning the Nobel Prize for physics that year (which he did). Now, meeting an Indian even more celebrated than himself, Raman told him: βMahatmaji, religions cannot unite. Science offers the best opportunity for a complete fellowship. All men of science are brothers.β βWhat about the converse?β responded Gandhi. βAll who are not men of science are not brothers?β Raman had the last word, noting that βall can become men of scienceβ.
Raman had come with a Swiss biologist who wished to have a darshan of the Indian leader. Introducing his colleague, Raman said he had discovered an insect that could live without food and water for as long as twelve years. βWhen you discover the secret at the back of it,β joked Gandhi to the Swiss scientist, βplease pass it on to me.
β
β