A Dwarf in the Universe

Maulana Wahiduddin Khan | Principle of Life 

God in His wisdom has given us minds with which to observe and reason. Therefore, when we view ourselves in the context of the vast­ness of the universe, we at once realize how small a part we play in it. With God’s universe extending itself before us in all its grandeur, we cannot but be imbued with an all-pervading sense of humility – the greatest quality that a man can have.

On April 8, 1984 the first Indian spaceman, squadron leader Rakesh Sharma, was privileged to view the universe from space itself – an impression more awesome than ever we could have from the earth’s surface. An interview with him, while he was actually in space, was relayed from the mission control centre in Moscow and telecast live on the Indian National TV Network. Here is a significant excerpt:

Interviewer: How do you pass your time when there is no work?

Sharma: I just peep through the window and watch the timeless space.

Interviewer: Don’t you feel like a tiny human being up there, dwarfed by the endless space?

Sharma: Certainly, it’s mind-boggling.

Humility of this sort is the greatest virtue that a man can have, while the worst streak in a man’s character is unbridled arrogance. Humility is a characteristic which develops through coming to terms with reality over and over again, whereas arrogance springs from shal­low thinking and from constantly turning a blind eye to what one’s ac­tual role in the universe is.