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By Amarnath Tewary
Motihari, Bihar
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Saidullah has won many trophies (Pictures:
Prashant Ravi) |
Mohammed Saidullah, a resident of Motihari in the Indian state
of Bihar, has received many awards and trophies in the last few
years for his innovation.
In 1975, when his Jatwa-Janerwa village was swamped under flood
waters - an annual monsoon menace - he pleaded with a local boatman
to take him to safety.
When the boatman refused to give him space unless he paid for it,
the young Saidullah looked for other ways to tackle the floodwater.
Necessity met creativity and in just three days, he made an
amphibious bicycle which could easily negotiate the floodwaters.
He modified the conventional bicycle by adding four rectangular
air floats to support it while it moved on water. Two fan blades
were attached to the spokes of the rear wheel which enabled it to
run on both water and land.
The blades were arranged in such a fashion that the cycle could
be driven in reverse direction too.
Shining moment
Later, Mr Saidullah demonstrated the prowess of his vehicle
before a stunned crowd, which included the then state governor, AR
Kidwai, when he crossed the river Ganges in Patna city.
His big shining moment came in January 2005 when the then Indian
President, APJ Abdul Kalam, presented him with the National
Innovation Foundation's (NIF) lifetime achievement award.
In the same year, he was selected as one of the 12 finalists for
the prestigious Wall Street Journal Asian Innovation Awards.
Saidullah takes his grandchildren for a joy
ride in his cycle-rickshaw |
He was also profiled for the Discovery Channel's "Beyond
Tomorrow" programme.
In fact, he has won so many awards that he has lost count of them
all.
An impressed NIF took away his bicycle and offered to get it
patented.
But three years later, Mr Saidullah has neither got the patent
nor the bicycle.
Today, he lives in penury.
Everyday, he pedals about 30 kms on his bicycle to sell honey so
that he can feed his family of 16.
But the work brings him a paltry 1,500 rupees ($37) a month.
Grinding poverty
Unable to make the ends meet, he has now put up his roadside
half-thatched, half-concrete house and the small plot of land - in
Mathia Dih locality of Motihari in East Champaran district - on
sale.
His disillusionment is such that Mr Saidullah wants to return all
his awards and trophies.
"If you want to destroy someone, give him an award," he says.
After the bicycle, Mr Saidullah also invented an amphibious
cycle-rickshaw which he demonstrated before the BBC team in a nearby
pond.
"On this, I can take my grandchildren for a joy ride in the
water," Mr Saidullah told the BBC.
The workshop is his favourite
place |
"But I feel hurt by what the NIF has done to me. They used us for
their promotion," he says.
"May I know how many innovators like me have been benefited and
how many of us have been destroyed by them?" asks Mr Saidullah, with
pain creasing his face.
NIF executive chairman, Anil Gupta, is sympathetic to Mr
Saidullah's plight: "We tried a lot, are still trying and will keep
trying to explore things being done for Mr Saidullah's amphibious
bicycle. But yes his frustration is completely understandable.
"Despite our best efforts, for some reasons we failed to generate
any entrepreneurship for his bicycle. We've given him the innovation
fellowship of a fixed amount and we are ready to support him in
future too," Mr Gupta said.
There is still a chance that things may look up for him.
A senior official in Bihar state's science and technology
department, Ajay Kumar, told the BBC he would do all he could to
help Mohammed Saidullah.
"Though there is no structured schemes for commercialisation of
such innovations in my department but we would certainly help him in
getting his product patented after talking with the NIF," Mr Kumar
said.
According to Mohammed Saidullah's son, Mohammed Shakilurrahman,
the family was not always poor. Mr Saidullah inherited acres of
land, orchards, elephants and a big house from his father.
But, the rural scientist sold all his property to pursue his
innovations, his son says.
New things
He blames his father's "sheer madness" for the family's poverty.
He too sells honey in the state capital.
However, Mr Saidullah's bitter past experience has not stopped
him from moving on to new things.
After the amphibious bicycle, he developed a key-operated table
fan which can run non-stop for two hours, a mini-water pump that
needs no fuel and a mini-tractor which can run for two hours on just
five litres of diesel.
Saidullah names all his innovations after his
wife, Noor |
Now, he claims he's making a helicopter which would cost the
equivalent of $62,500 and a car that would be powered by air energy.
His dark, dingy workshop is crammed with a hand-made lathe
machines and countless corroded nut-bolts littered on long rusty
iron racks.
But it's his favourite place. "I love to be here all the time,"
he says.
Where would he go once his house and land is sold off?
"I'll make a three-storey moving car with folding cots, pack my
family in and park it on an open government land by the roadside
anywhere," he says.
The maverick innovator says he draws inspiration for his
innovations from his everyday experiences. He has named all his
creations after his loving wife, Noor Jahan.
"Noor means light and Inshallah a day would come when there would
be light in our life too," says Saidullah.