By Inderjit Badhwar
In per week dominated by grim headlines—from the collapse of yet one more public construction within the capital, to contemporary political turmoil and information of deepening divisions—one might be forgiven for pondering that the nation is adrift in chaos, incompetence, and confrontation.
At India Authorized, we all know that information will not be all the time uplifting. In reality, most of the time, it’s sobering. And but, journalism’s job will not be merely to chronicle what’s fallacious with the world. It is usually to highlight what is correct. That’s the reason, regardless of a turbulent information cycle and the temptation to chase louder tales, we now have chosen to characteristic Kumkum Chadha’s piece on Dr G Madhavi Latha on our cowl this week.
In a nation obsessive about energy, spectacle, and headlines, she is not one of the above. She didn’t search the highlight. She actively resisted it. She didn’t shout slogans, wage battles, or dominate primetime. What she did as a substitute was quietly, meticulously, and with exceptional perseverance, assist construct one of the extraordinary feats of recent engineering: the Chenab Railway Bridge.
For 17 years, Dr Latha, a geo-technical engineer and professor on the Indian Institute of Science, labored with resolve and scientific rigour on a venture that many deemed unimaginable. Rising 359 metres above the river, the Chenab Bridge is now the tallest railway arch on the earth. However the top isn’t just bodily—it’s symbolic. It represents the top of human effort, ingenuity, and resilience.
And but, when the bridge was lastly inaugurated amid nationwide celebration, Dr Latha requested the media to not make her “unnecessarily well-known”. She reminded us, humbly, that she was “one amongst 1000’s” who labored on the venture. That gesture alone, in an age of curated vainness and hyper-personalised narratives, is sufficient to warrant consideration.
We’d like tales like hers. Desperately. We’d like them not as a distraction, however as an antidote—towards despair, cynicism, and apathy. As a result of not all braveness wears camouflage or instructions a mic. A few of it wears a lab coat, stands on cliff edges, attracts up blueprints, and quietly defies gravity, time, and doubt.
There’s, we imagine, immense worth in recognising this type of heroism. Particularly now. In a time when public belief is fraying, when infrastructure collapses appear to reflect ethical ones, when younger folks develop up surrounded by noise as a substitute of substance—there’s hope in reminding them that greatness will not be loud. It may be silent, studious, and steeped in service.
That’s the message we wished to ship—not simply to India, however to the world: that on this huge, noisy democracy, there nonetheless exist individuals who rise each morning to not be seen, however to construct; to not be celebrated, however to unravel; to not grandstand, however to present.
It is usually a quiet rebuke to the media narrative that thrives on disaster. We aren’t suggesting we glance away from what’s damaged. Removed from it. At India Authorized, our protection of institutional collapse, authorized inequities, and coverage failures stays as unflinching as ever. However journalism should even be accountable, and responsiveness requires vary. It means balancing critique with celebration, scepticism with recognition, despair with chance.
Highlighting Dr Latha’s story is our editorial act of hope. It’s a vote of confidence within the different India—the one that also believes in benefit, in science, in nation-building, and in doing the fitting factor even when nobody is watching.
So sure, whereas buildings leak, bridges crack, and political narratives unravel, a single span of metal throughout the Chenab River now stands agency. Not simply as infrastructure, however as inspiration.
And someplace, a lady who requested for nothing in return continues her work—instructing, mentoring, constructing. It’s time we not solely observed her, however celebrated her.