Scientists as shamans
After Pokhran II in May 1998, the saligh parivar in India wanted to distribute the radioactive sand of the Thar desert as the symbolic prasad of India's atomic deities. When some sensible scientists pointed out the dangers involved in the exercise, the scheme was quickly abandoned, and instead the idea of building a temple at the epicentre of the nuclear blast was floated. Better sense prevailed yet again, and the plan for the temple gave way to the enclosed open-air memorial that exists today.
In one memorable picture taken immediately after the Pokhran tests, APJ Abdul Kalam raises his hands along with fellow technocrats of India's atomic establishment accompanied by a jubilant George Fernandes and a satisfied-looking Atal Behari Vajpayee. The joy, alas, was to be short-lived for the Indian bhaktas of Nucleareshwar. Before long, the Chagai hills of Pakistan were trembling to Pakistan's own nuclear explosions. Pakistanis dutifully paraded on the streets, celebrating the arrival of Islamic science. The 'Hindu' bomb and the 'Islamic' bomb were now arrayed against each other, expressions of Indian and Pakistani boastfulness.