The World-Class Physicians of the River !
In one of the
grand meetings of the darbar, the king rose with glittering ambition: “Our
kingdom shall be the wealthiest in the world!” The courtiers applauded,
though their minds whispered of limited resources and impossible dreams.
Then, a wise
courtman stood and spoke: “Majesty, I have heard it said — Health is Wealth.
If our subjects are healthy, we shall indeed be wealthy. Let us produce
world-class physicians, chosen from the most intelligent minds of our land.
Train them well, and soon the world shall salute us.”
The phrase “world
class” rang like music in the king’s ears. He praised the wisdom, the
courtiers saluted, and the darbar swelled with pride.
But then came the
question: How to select these brilliant minds?
After marathon
discussions, the experts presented their plan. A “Test” would be conducted.
Aspirants would gather on the riverbank, each to pick a stone from the heap and
hurl it into the flowing waters. In a tower nearby, an assessor armed with the
most advanced digital distometer would measure the distance of each throw. The candidate who hurls the stone the farthest would
be selected for training as a physician.
The king was
dazzled. The courtiers clapped. The technology was praised as “state of the
art.” Rules and regulations were drafted, approved, and the test was conducted.
Many hailed it as innovative, fair, and modern.
Yet faint voices
rose: some candidates had heavier stones, others lighter ones, tilting the
chances. Some whispered that the assessors manipulated the readings on the digital distometer. But these voices were so weak that they disappeared into the air.
A few voices
dared to speak boldly: “Your Majesty, throwing stones measures only arms,
not minds. A frail but brilliant student may cure fevers, though he cannot hurl
rocks.”
The king
thundered in reply: “Silence! The sacred river shall decide who heals the
kingdom. Let the distometer record their destiny!”
And so it was
decreed. The kingdom’s future physicians were chosen not by wisdom, compassion,
or skill, but by the distance of stones hurled into the river and recorded on the distometer.
The darbar
rejoiced, the king proclaimed progress, and the people waited — unaware that
their health now rested on the strength of arms rather than the strength of
minds.
Dr. Mahendra
Ingale @ Pune, June 7, 2026
Author of
“Value-Based Leadership” mvingale2405@gmail.com
#ValueBasedLeadership
#EngineeringHeartBeats #EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls