I just finished watching the A&E Biography for Alexander Graham Bell. Though all of us know of Bell as the inventor of the telephone, his work for the cause of the hearing impaired, aviation, the hydrofoil, assisted respiration and even the pre-cursor to x-rays – a device to locate bullets in the human body are less known.
Similarly, a couple of months ago, while on my roadtrip through most of New England, I also listened to Time‘s compilation of The 100 Most Influential People of the 20th Century — and each one of them was truly amazing. From the leaders like Churchil, FDR, Hitler (even though he may be screwed in the head, he was a leader), Roosevelt, Kennedy, Mandela, Gandhi to Watson and Crick, Henry Ford, Bill Gates, Martin Luther King, Einstein, Alexander Flemming, Sigmund Freud, William Shockley, Tim Berners-Lee, Akio Morita, Sam Walton and even Bart Simpson! It boggles my mind to consider the greatness that has been achieved by these people. And while they reached the pinnacle of their contribution to humanity — they were all people. Each one with their own flaws. None perfect.
As I listened to Salman Rushdie’s piece on Gandhi, I realized that what we are taught in schools and in the media is the image of the person. he image the media wants us to see. But the real person behind that image may not be perfect. May not be the idealized human we expect them to be. Rushdie started his description of Gandhi by describing the multi-million dollar “Think Different” advertising campaign launched by Apple Computer in which they showed Gandhi and the words “Think Different”. And Rushdie asks the question as to when did this icon for peace become the medium to sell more computers and notebooks to consumers? Rushdie also pointed out that Gandhi too had character flaws — surprise surprise.
Besides learning about the amazing accomplishments of these amazing people, I think one of the things that made it that much more memorable for me was that these were all real people. They all had their weaknesses — which makes them like us — it doesn’t belittle their achievements, but instead tells us that despite our own flaws, we too can do things to leave our mark and make our own history.
It is truly an exhilarating experience for me to watch and listen to the successes of people who have gone over and above what most even dream of achieving in their lifetime. To all those who have done so in he past and to all those who are doing it today and to all those who will do it in the future — you are all amazing people.