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When most people think about space missions, they imagine huge labs, shiny buildings, and gadgets that cost a fortune; right?. But ISRO didn’t start out like that. And here's a story that every child must know. Did you know India’s space agency, ISRO, started in a church? Back in the 1960s, a tiny team of scientists worked out of St Mary Magdalene Church in a little village called Thumba, Kerala. They even stored rockets inside the church. The Bishop House, which was part of the church, even doubled as the office for the Director of TERLS. Years later, in 1985, the church got a proper makeover and became the VSSC Space Museum.It is hard to imagine about this today, seeing the missions ISRO pulls off now.And that small, humble start says a lot about the grit and resourcefulness of those first scientists who did not bother about lack of resources but worked hard to give India a place in global stage.
They didn’t have fancy machines or endless budgets, but they had ideas, curiosity, and a lot of determination.In those early days, rockets and their parts didn’t arrive on trucks or forklifts.
Sometimes they were carried on bicycles. These scientists were testing small rockets, figuring out propulsion, checking instruments, and basically laying the foundation for India’s entire space program from scratch.The church, the bicycles, the tiny teams, they all became symbols of ISRO’s “do more with less” mindset.
And that mindset? It’s still there today.
Right now, ISRO is reaching Moon, Mars
Fast forward a few decades, and ISRO is sending satellites into space, reaching the Moon, even Mars, all while keeping costs surprisingly low. Chandrayaan-1 put India on the lunar map by discovering water molecules on the Moon. Mangalyaan went all the way to Mars. And then there’s NAVIC, India’s own navigation system, which can actually be more accurate than GPS in some parts of the country, though most phones don’t even fully use it.These amazing missions didn’t happen overnight. They were built over decades, learning from tiny experiments, and plenty of failures along the way. ISRO doesn’t hide those failures either. They study them, share what went wrong, and use that knowledge to get better. That’s one reason they keep achieving so much with relatively little.




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