What Kind of an
IAS Officer Should One Aspire to be? – An Interview Transcript – Akand Sitra
As the
heading suggests, this article is not just a chronological collection of the
events that happened during my interview, but rather an attempt to make
everyone realize the hidden potential in themselves and thus helping them
become better human beings. This can be considered as the third and the final
article in my series. The first two being, and dealing with the questions –
1.
WHY
– Why I want to become an IAS Officer.
2.
HOW – How to become an IAS Officer – A
Detailed Strategy.
And this
article deals with the next question – WHAT. What kind of an IAS officer should
one become and what kind of qualities that the interview board hopes to see in
their candidates? I request all of you to read the above two articles before
this, as there is a sense of continuation and you will not lose the context.
Before I
start, I would like to thank profusely for the overwhelming response that I got
for the previous two articles. I have received hundreds of emails from
dedicated aspirants and I have tried to answer each and every one of them. But,
I couldn’t reply to some emails too due to lack of time, I apologize sincerely
for that. Some emails have enlightened me and I tried to ignore some harsh
emails too. I humbly apologize to some people if my articles portray me as a
“self-glorifying”, “narcissistic” and “fame-addicted” person. I am sorry that I
did write a lot about “me” and “my journey” but that was just to mention the
lessons that I had learnt. I also would like to mention that I am not
“fame-addicted”, as most of my college and school friends didn’t even know that
I was preparing for this exam, till a month ago.
Anyway, I am
forever indebted to each and every one of you who has blessed me with wishes
and who have showcased their love and affection towards me. I also like to
thank all people who have taken the time out to write to me. I appreciate all
the gestures and I hope I continue to help and serve people.
Now, instead
of just concentrating on what happened in Delhi during my interview, I would
like to talk about my journey from December till April too. As this phase,
truly changed my life, and I hope it will change yours too.
In December,
I knew that I might pass Mains, so I thought of concentrating on the next
stage, after taking a small break. My family thought of sending me to Delhi for
interview coaching (Facepalm, they never understand), when I said no, they
asked me to take at least mock interviews. I still had some ideological
conflicts about the whole “preparation” stage. So I denied this offer too.
I did not
want to attend mock interview sessions because I did not want to hide my true
personality. The mock sessions teach you how best to portray yourself, they
will teach you how to showcase your personality in the best way and they will
make you put on a fake disguised mask where you will be shown as something you
are truly not. I heard that in some coaching centers, they even make you
by-heart information about various hobbies so that you can repeat them at the
interview.
I have been
told to make a list of 100 questions on my biodata and background, and then
make a perfect well-worded answer for each question and by-heart the answer so
that I can talk impressively the prepared sentences in the interview when I’m
asked the relevant questions.
I don’t know
why, but this did not appeal to me. I did not want to put a fake Akand in front
of the panel with pre-planned answers and cheat them to get this job. But,
rather I wanted to improve myself internally and I wanted to ‘earn’ the
qualities of an ideal personality. So, in order to imbibe and inculcate the
good characteristics, I started thinking on a new strategy. I asked myself why
people wanted to become IAS officers and asked whether I would fit into any of
the following categories.
a) IAS gives respect – True. Many
people want respect in the society so they attempt this examination, and there
is nothing wrong in it. People need respect for a good living. But, did I want
this attribute? I was an IITian. I had enough respect in the society already.
In fact, I get very embarrassed by this. Sometimes, I get sick of it, so I
ensure strangers don’t know that I’m an IITian. I cannot handle too much
respect. That is why, I don’t want this job for the respect that it gives. I don’t
care about the ‘lal - batti’ and the infinite ‘salaam - saab’ salutations. I
think I will ban my subordinates from saluting me every time we meet.
b) IAS gives money – My previous job used to pay me more than what
a district collector earns. I did not want this job for the money. I just would
need enough cash for sustenance. And I’m not really a fan of materialistic
things. (I did not use a phone for 6 months) So, even this attribute did not
appeal to me.
c) IAS gives power – Of course.
It would give a normal man too much power. Power to do anything, power to
influence anyone, power to make people listen to you. Honestly, I was and am a
very shy person and I am sure I need special training to even learn how to
wield such power. I don’t feel comfortable with these qualities at all. I did
not want IAS for the power. Power scares me, and I’m sure it can corrupt too.
d) Service to people – This
attribute is many times confused. And this explanation might prove to be
controversial. IAS, IPS etc., are not for “serving” people. A service-oriented
person sometimes might not be suitable for this job. If someone wants to truly
“serve” people, they should open an NGO instead.
IAS officers
do serve people but that is only because it is an indirect result of the “duty”
that they are supposed to do. Since, ours is a welfare state, all the policies
that the government makes are service-oriented. That is the only reason why IAS
officers are often confused with “Benefit-givers”.
The true
role of an IAS officer is – “Administration”. His only duty is to give a
flawless efficient administration and should implement the policies
effectively. He should not be service-oriented but should be duty-oriented.
If a
government policy which has been approved by the Parliament, is against the
society, a service-oriented mindset can show resistance in implementing it.
But, an IAS officer should perform his duty no matter what. If, suddenly India
transforms into a police-state from a welfare-state, the IAS officers should be
immune to peoples’ feelings. So, whatever the duties are, he should perform
them diligently. So, I wont hesitate to repeat, that the most important
attribute of someone who is preparing for the civil services should not be
service. But, rather it should be formulating good policies and ensuring
effective implementation which indirectly serves the intended people. Societal
service is a necessary by-product, but the intended goal should be good
administration.
Then, I
realized I had to get the qualities of an ideal administrator, a perfect
manager, a true leader. So, I made a list of characteristics that I intended to
develop. And I’m sure, every administrator must develop these basic ideals.
Responsibility – Integrity – Humility – Gratitude –
Vision – Innovation – Quality – Respect – Empathy – Unity – Adaptability –
Magnanimity – Perseverance – Balance – Simplicity – Courage – Attention –
Discipline – Patience – Leadership
So, to
attain a perfect personality, I wanted to practice each of these
characteristics. So, on Dec 31st, I took a series of New Year resolutions. I
took some tangible time-bound resolutions, because without a timeline, I would
not achieve them. They were –
1) Lose 5 kgs in 30 Days.
2) Cook 15
delicacies in 45 Days.
3) Read 30 Books
in 90 Days.
4) Travel 5000 km
in 150 Days.
5) Become an IAS
officer in 180 Days.
Each of
these resolutions were supposed to teach me few of those ideals. Also, since I
was not working anymore, I had lots of free time to spare. And I always wanted
to spend it in a productive way. I was busy for a long time with college,
studies and office. At last, I had got some time to do the stuff that I wanted
and could never do again – Travel, read and cook.
1. Lose weight
After
graduation, I had gained 15kgs within 6 months. I just had to sit at home, eat
home food (after 4 years) every day. I just was sitting, studying, eating and
sleeping. So, soon, I became a fat man from a skinny boy. So, after the exam I
decided to decrease.
And in the
process, I would learn – Perseverance, Dedication, Discipline, Courage and
Patience.
It takes a
lot of determination to wake up at 5 and go for a jog in the cold weather. It
takes a lot of patience to weigh yourself everyday hoping to reduce at least
100g. It takes a lot of dedication to repeat the exercises every day for 30
days. It takes courage to start running when you are out of breath and are
about to die.
So, this
goal was easily reached and I did a conscious study of the ideals that I was
learning.
2. Cook food.
Till now, I
did not even know how to boil water. Making maggi itself was a tough job for
me. So, I took up this challenge. All of you might think, I am blabbering
unrelated useless things. But, trust me, it is in the simplest of actions that
the deepest wisdom lies. Every action you perform, no matter how miniscule it
might be, will have great repercussions in your personality. Cooking, might be
unrelated to civil services preparation, but it is very much important in
determining what kind of a person one wants to become.
Cooking teaches
a lot of ideals such as – Balance, Quality, Innovation, Team work, Attention,
Observation and Discipline.
I just did
not want to cook edible food, I wanted to create art. I took keen interest in
the aesthetic external appearance of the dishes too. I wanted the food to
please the eye. I gave attention to detail and observed the various intricacies
in balancing the taste. I learnt how a mixture of various tasteless individual
ingredients, make a divine dish which everyone can relish. It teaches everyone team-work.
It teaches the leader to appreciate each and every ingredient’s quality that is
brought to the table. Even without the contribution of one member (ingredient),
the dish(work) will taste bad.
Cooking, in
short, gives a good Management lesson. And I think every human being,
irrespective of the gender should learn to cook. Cooking, either by a male or a
female, teaches a myriad of life-lessons which are not taught anywhere else,
most important of them being – Gender equality.
3. Reading books.
I missed out
on so many books in the busy hectic life’s rat race that when I finally found
peace, I wanted to read all of them. But, when I was about to quit my job, I
was worried. I was worried because I had to repay my Education Loan which I had
taken to complete my BTech. The bank had said that I had to start repaying, 6
months after the graduation. So, when I quit my job, I called up SBI and asked
permission to extend the period. The Manager was gracious enough to extend it,
but he also said the interest will keep on piling up. I was happy that I need
not think about it for a long time after Mains.
So, I had 6
months after Mains which I wanted to utilize to the maximum. I had to take up a
job again after that. So, I decided to read at least 30 books in 3 months. I
carefully selected books which can give me wisdom, and teach me life-lessons.
The list of the books can be found here – Each book taught me a lot. I would
leave it to the readers to read those books to gain more in-depth
understanding.
4. Travelling.
An IAS
officer should understand the society well. True understanding doesn’t come
merely by reading books, articles and reports. I was an urban educated regular
middle-class guy. I had never seen true poverty of a rural farmer. I had never
seen the crowd outside a ration shop in villages. I had never seen the quality
of water, people actually drink.
Of course, I
“knew” about all these. I knew the statistics. I had seen countless documentaries
regarding the societal problems. I knew about female infanticide, I saw in
movies about the bad upkeep of hospitals. I was empathetic, I felt bad for the
people who couldn’t afford a decent meal every day. I was sympathetic and I
wanted to do something for the society.
But, had I
really witnessed true India? Had I seen with my own eyes people’s everyday
living? I lived in Bangalore for over 16 years. But, did I know about the
living conditions of the rest of the 70% of the population?
I can
honestly say, No!
I wanted to
travel the country. I wanted to see regular people in my journeys. I wanted to
see true India. But, my savings were getting depleted very fast. So, I had to
carefully plan everything I wanted to happen.
But, I
didn’t know where to go!! One should realize that a journey without a
destination is meaningless. It is akin to getting lost. So, my mother advised
me to go visit far-away temples. I did not know what to say. I was an atheist,
and going on a pilgrimage at such an age did not appeal to me. But, I then
realized that I should concentrate on the journey rather than the destination.
I wanted to experience and observe people around the temples. On top of that, I
would get an extra incentive for going and visiting gods. It was funny that I was
bribing God to give me a seat. I shouldn’t say this as it might be blasphemy.
Anyway, I
started visiting nearby temples after making a long list. I wanted to cover
5000 km in 5 months.(And I managed to cover 10000 km including the Delhi trip)
I had embarked on a journey which would change my life forever.
I did three types of travelling.
1)
I travelled alone.
2)
I travelled with parents to far off places in train.
3) My
family drove to nearby destinations if it was an important temple.
And in each
mode of travel, I had new experiences and did learn a lot. I consciously
observed everything in these journeys.
I always
wanted to take the second class general coaches of trains. I had never done
that before, and I assured my mother that I would be safe. So, whenever I
travelled alone, I started taking general unreserved tickets. The first thing I
realized was that they were dirt-cheap. And the second thing I realized was
that the bogies would get hazardously crowded!
I truly
started enjoying my train rides. The coach in the mornings would get so filled
up that, in each compartment at least 12 people used to sit, where seating’s
for 6 were recommended. There would be 6 people sitting on the two upper berths
too! I used to wonder how flexible they could be! Most of the time, I did not
get a seat and I used to stand near the door and enjoy the beauty of nature.
The trees and barren fields used to zoom past by me, and I would just stand
there enjoying the air and would observe people.
In the
evenings, I could see that many men used to go back home from work. They
literally travelled for over 60 km every single day to work in the big city and
then travel back again to go to their far-away towns. They lived too close for
total urban migration, and they lived too far away for a less-tiring commute. I
used to get frustrated even if I was stuck in traffic for a mere 30 mins. But,
after seeing this so much hard work for mere sustenance, I had to humble down a
lot. They were brave dedicated men, who worked and traveled extra-ordinarily so
that they could provide their families a decent living. All of them were
small-time blue-collar employees and suddenly I had immense respect for them
and applauded silently for the sacrifices they were making for their families.
The people
in second class bogies were both very friendly and very short-tempered at the
same time. I saw many small fights over small things, and used to get very
amused by them. These fights were some sort of entertainment for the rest of
the travelers. They used to fight verbally and physically over issues like
seat-sharing or water spillage.
But, at the
same time people were very understanding and helpful too. I was tired of
standing and wanted to sit down. There was an aunty beside me sitting on the
ground. When I tried to sit, she offered me a sheet of newspaper to sit on.(All
seats were full, and one cannot imagine the crowd) Imagine sitting on the floor
near the bathroom and the door with all the stench filling the atmosphere. I
was supposed to get disgusted but for some reason, I was enjoying myself. I
started truly experiencing what they experience. I started feeling what they
feel.
At this
time, I truly admired the Indian Railways. The tickets were very cheap and it
helped millions of very poor people travel. Even if they were very crowded,
there would be a sense of belonging. I cannot imagine what would happen to
those millions of commuters who use the long-distance trains to go to work every
day, if suddenly the railways increased the fares. I am sure there would be
fuel-surcharges that would be added to the cost of the ticket in the future,
and now, I was dead against to it. Truly, the Railways was a welfare
organization, and I wouldn’t mind it running in losses if it was giving life to
so many poor people who are at a disadvantage.
The food
items that were being sold in the General section were also very cheap! I ate a
small packet of hot and tasty sambhar rice for a mere Rs.15! I started
understanding the true meaning of a welfare-state.
In the above
picture, one can see sitting together on the same berth are a well dressed
government employee, a small scale industry businessman, a college student and
a farmer belonging to various castes, classes, religions and regions. The line
which divides people along castes and classes is truly blurred in a second
class coach of the Indian train. The trains are the single-most unifying factor
this country has seen and one should be proud of it.
Yes, the
train gets this much over-crowded. I was sitting on the corner most seat trying
not to fall off and I could see Biharis, Tamilians, Christians, Mizos, Gujjus
etc. sleeping all over each other!! Where else can you see this beauty!? Trains
are truly the melting pot of various cultures and depicts the true India.
The next type
of new experience came when I was traveling with my parents in reserved 2A
sleeper coaches. Here, the people were of a different class who were educated
and were informed about current affairs and news. My father has an unusual
habit of chatting up with co-passengers every time we travel. (I think all old
uncles have this annoying habit). The discussions usually would lead up to
politics of various states. Till then, I never listened to all the grown-up
talks, but this time I started listening more. (Civil service prep mentality I
guess)
This time, I
understood the differences in political perception of urban city people and
other people from smaller towns and villages. Urban young people talk a lot
about politics on social networking platforms like facebook etc., but would
have never been to a political rally. They wouldn’t even know who would be
contesting from their own constituencies. Urban young citizens do not talk
about manifesto points and usually many are lost in the crowded busy city life
that they do not vote also. (Bangalore had a 50% voting rate).
They have
strong opinions about a particular party and usually support one top
charismatic leader. They wouldn’t care about the rest of the 500 odd MP
contestants. They usually wouldnt even know what ideology each party stands
for.
But, on the
other hand politics plays a huge role in smaller towns and villages. This might
be due to the slower pace of life, villages being much more peaceful and the
people who are not rushing so much everywhere. Villagers would go to a
political rally atleast because they are bored at homes and need some form
of entertainment. Elections are a very exciting phase of life for them,
and they believe in local mass leaders than the party high command. Most of the
people who were discussing in the train would talk about their local leader in
their constituency and not the party itself. So, an established local leader
can get votes even if he changes the party frequently. It may be due to caste
lines, but it is the name of the candidate which matters more and not the party
itself.
This
fundamental difference in ‘candidature vs party’ was very interesting. It made
me think that in the current scenario, everybody talks about ‘Modi vs Rahul
Gandhi vs Arvind Kejriwal’ which is wrong. In a true democracy, the people
should elect for a leader in their constituency and not the PM directly. This
is true decentralization of electoral power.
But, what
happens in the real scenario is that a voter would decide upon the PM first,
and accordingly vote for his party irrespective of the candidate in his
constituency. The candidate might be corrupt or might have criminal case
against him, but if he belongs to the party of the voter’s favourite PM
candidate he would easily win. This way, in trying to make his favourite leader
as PM, the voter sends immoral people into the parliament.
In any
democracy, the people should vote for candidates in the constituency first,
without any bias. Then the candidates should decide amongst themselves for the
nomination of the PM. But, in this country, it is exactly the opposite. First,
the PM is decided, then the people are made to vote to ensure that the decided
person becomes the PM! In the process, we get one honest leader with hundreds
of corrupt MP followers. This shouldn’t be the scenario.
It is
important to realize that voting for the right candidate is far more important
for us than to select the party in the centre. It is the candidates in every
constituency who need to be capable enough to fulfil their responsibilities in
their constituency irrespective of who is given the post of Prime Ministership.
These kind
of exciting political talks usually happen over a long train journey. I truly
believe trains are the best modes of transportation and one can learn a lot
about life during a long-distance train journey.
Some time ago, Insights had posted a video on
casteism in the country called –India Untouched. The video was truly amazing and it did teach
me a lot. The events shown in the video were unbelievable but when I was on one
of my travels, I witnessed one of the caste incidents first hand. It was truly
mind-blowing and shocking. Once, we were driving to a nearby temple (Around
150km) away. We had to go through some villages to reach that old temple. On
the way, we stopped near a local tea-stall to drink some coffee. I got out and
ordered for all of us from the tiny tea shop. There were few people sitting
inside already sipping their coffee from a ‘glass’ tumbler. The tea shop owner
gave us four cups of tea in a ‘stainless steel’ cup but. The documentary which
was shared clearly said that the glass cups were used by lower caste people and
the tea shop owners usually give stainless steel cups to higher caste people.
Maybe, by seeing the car, he thought we were from a higher caste. When I
realized this phenomenon I asked him to give me a cup of coffee in the glass
tumbler to check his reaction, he and the others looked at me weirdly for a
second. He then gave me in the glass one and I went back into the car and
explained the story to my family members. It was amazing to see discrimination
on such a large scale.
These
travels have taught me about poverty, welfare-state, caste, religion, region,
politics and basic human behaviour. The journey into rural India opened my eyes
and showed the naked truth of the country that we live in. With such an enlightening
experience I was truly ready to contribute. I was truly ready to face my
interview. I had truly believed that I had become a better human being in those
4 months and I tried to inculcate as many good qualities as required by an IAS
officer. I was ready now to test them in my interview arena.
Then, we
went to UPSC Bhawan, New Delhi.
Before going
inside, I told my parents not to worry. I told them I might get a rank or I
might not get a rank, but the last 15 months had been amazing. I had completely
transformed myself, I had learnt a lot and experienced a lot more. So, I
wouldn’t really mind if I did not get a rank too as I had come a long way in a
short time. In fact, I loved the studying phase, I loved it so much that I did
not mind to repeat the whole one year process again. So, with that, I had no
tension of facing the interview. Many students face a lot of tension just
before the interview thinking about the results. Because of this tension, they
fumble in the interview and lose confidence while they talk. This would
directly give them lesser marks. I had no such tension because I did not care
about my results at all at this point. I was happy with the amount of progress
I had made and I did not worry about this last step. I had done my groundwork, I
had worked hard enough and I left it in the hands of destiny to determine my
success.
With that
worrying off my mind, I went inside the gates at 9am. The next 2 hours would be
the most over-hyped phase of the whole examination process. The coaching
centres talk so much about the boards, mocks, hobbies, DAF, saying good morning
etc. etc. that once you actually face the interview you will know that all this
was just a huge unnecessary hype to scare the students. The board consists of a
bunch of old educated people who just want to get to know you better. It is
more of a conversation than an interview. There was no grilling, no
cross-questioning nor any uncomfortable queries.
If one did
not know the answer to any factual question, he could just say I dont know sir!
There was nothing wrong in it. Nobody knows everything on this planet, but what
matters is the courage to accept something you don’t know as you don’t know.
The board checks if you are really interested in the job and whether you are
honest and capable enough to handle so much of responsibility. The board checks
your confidence, cool headed mind and your attitude mainly.
So, as soon
as I entered the gate, they gave me a desk number to sit at the waiting hall(I
got E-3) and then they checked all our documents(Call letter, 10th, Graduation
degree). They gave me a name of the hospital where my medical check-up would be
done the next day. I saw that I had to attend Lok Nayak hospital at 9 am the
next day to undergo some simple tests. An attendant came to our desk and
informed details about our Board and also said that I would be the first person
to get in. I was both excited and nervous but kept my calm.
When my name
came up at 10.15 am, I was ready. I was ready to face the best 30 mins of my
life.
Date – 30th April 2014
Board – Prof David R Syiemlieh
Detailed Application Form (DAF) – goo.gl/gqmm2s
The
attendant opened the door for me, there were five members including the
Chairman sitting around a circular desk. My seat was opposite to the Chairman’s
and I had two Members on either side. It was more of a discussion desk rather
than an interview desk. Let us call the members as CM, M1, M2, M3 and M4.
A – May I
come in Sir?
CM – Come
in, come in.
Then I
turned around, said “Thank you Bhaiyya” loudly to the attendant so that I
ensured that all the board members heard that. I wanted them to think I respect
everyone irrespective of their job and status.
A – Good
morning Mr. Chairman, good morning sirs.
CM – Good
morning Sitra, please take your seat.(My name is Akand!!)
A – Thank
you sir. ( Sat comfortably, it was a very comfy chair)
CM -So, you
were born in Anantapur? (Reading my DAF)
A – Yes, sir
and my home town is Kurnool.
CM – Achcha,
and you live in Bangalore right now?
A – Yes sir,
I’am from Bangalore.
CM – Achcha,
your hobby is cycling? How did that start?
A – Sir,
back in college, cycling was a necessity. Hostels were far from classes and
also far from mess. So, all of us used to cycle to all places. So, a necessity
had transformed into a passion. We started going on long-distance cycling
trips. We cycled till Mahabalipuram which is over 50 km away and also to
Kovalam beach near Chennai.
CM – Hmmmm.
Around two days ago, there was another candidate with a strange hobby. It was
sparrow watching. Can you tell me why sparrow watching in big cities, like
Delhi is declining?
A – (Why is
he asking me questions on someone else’s hobby?! Maybe he is trying to make
this into a stress interview) Sir, one of the main causes for decline of
sparrow watching is due to the immense pollution that every city has these
days. A few decades ago, sparrow watching would not be considered as a hobby as
there were sparrows everywhere! It has become a “hobbby” now because they are
almost endangered.
CM – Hmmmm..
Do you know who was the first sparrow watcher in India?
A- Smiled. I
don’t know Sir.
CM – Who was
the founder of the Indian National Congress?
A – (Why is
he asking random unrelated questions!) Sir, Dadabhai Naoroji.
CM – Ummm,
along with Mr. A.O.Hume.
A – Yes Sir.
CM – He was
one of the first sparrow watcher in India. Not many know this side of him, many
know him just for founding INC. He was an incredible bird watcher.
A – Smiled.
Okay Sir. (No clue why he was saying all this)
CM – Achcha,
you worked in this company called Sabre Holdings? As an Associate Product
Specialist? What was your exact work there?
A – Sir, I
had joined the job in July after writing Prelims in May. Within three months I
quit the job because I couldn’t find time to prepare for Mains. So, they did
not give me any solid work till then. I was still in basic training.
CM – Look
Sitra. (My name is Akand!!) When you talk with your peers, you can use words
like “Mains”, but when you come to important interviews like this you should
not only be politically correct but also academically correct. Mains can be
anything.
M4 – Yeah!
It can be power mains or water mains too! So what Mains is it?
A – (I
understood that this was one of the stupidest questions. They were just trying
to make me uncomfortable and wanted to see whether I would panic) I grinned
from ear to ear. True sir, Sorry. I meant Civil Services Mains. I should be
more careful. Then gave a broad smile.
CM – Okay.
Tell me three best qualities you think you have.
A – (I was blank,
no quality was coming into my mind) Ummm Sir, Leadership. I had assumed many
leadership roles in college and I think I did a fair job.
Ummm, second
would be honesty. Smiled.
Third, let
me think Sir. Nothing is coming into my mind.
CM – Your
smile man! Your smile is your best quality. Never forget that.
A – Yes sir,
my smile. Thank you sir. And gave a big grin again.
CM – Tell me
your three negative qualities now.
A – Well
sir, first would be I don’t know what to talk when. I should learn to be more diplomatic.
Like just now, I should have said Civil Services Mains instead of Mains.
CM – Thats
all right. You can always learn that in training. Second?
A – Ummmm, I
always take too much in my plate.
CM – That
is, you bite more than you can chew?
A – Yes sir,
back in college, I tried to organize a lot of events simultaneously. I think,
if I had taken them one by one, I could have done a much better job.
CM – And
third?
A – (I
thought for a while) I make friends very easily Sir. That is, I have trust
issues. I am very trusting.
CM –
Laughing. It’s okay. That is not a negative.
Then he
asked M1 to continue.
M1 – You do
yoga? Tell the different types of yoga.
A – (I
totally forgot this answer) Sir, there is hatha yoga, kundalini yoga,
meditation yoga etc. I dont remember others.
M1 –
Meditation yoga??? Hmmmm.. What is transcendental meditation?
A – I am not
sure of the answer, can I take a guess Sir?
M1 – No,
leave it. You know Art of Living? Who is its founder?
A – Sri Sri
Ravishankar… Ji.. Sir.
M1 – Hmmm..
Who was his guru?
A – Sorry
Sir, I don’t know that.
M1 –
(Irritated) Forget yoga. Are you thorough in anything?
A – Sorry
sir, I have been doing very basic yoga under my school yoga master, Mr. Rawat.
Very simple pranayamas and asanas like anulom-vilom, vrikshasana etc. I am not
really thorough in the theoretical aspects of yoga as I had always concentrated
only on its practical uses.
M1 – You
didn’t get me. Let me repeat myself. Are you thorough in anything?
A – Sir,
biotechnology sir.
M1 – What
biotech did you learn? Industrial or research?
A – Sir, we
had courses on both industrial biotech like reaction engineering and also on
research biotech like cell biology and tissue engineering. I did two
internships, one in an industry and one in an research institute, IMSc.
M1 – What is
the difference between industrial biotech and research biotechnology?
A – Gave a
long textbook definition.
M1 -You know
WTO?(Yes, Sir) What is TRIPS?
A – Trade
related aspects of intellectual property rights is a policy… blah blah.. talked
about traditional knowledge… blah blah.. patenting healing properties of
turmeric powder, yogic postures, bad for indigenous growth…. etc etc.
M1 – But,
how is patenting turmeric illegal? It is mere documentation of process, right?.
A – No sir.
When a western company patents the healing properties of turmeric powder, it
gains the sole right for all its properties and its commercialization. In
countries like India, turmeric powder is in use for centuries. After such a
patent, any traditional use will be illegal and all Indians should start paying
royalty for using their own indigenous product. So intellectual properties must
be regulated hence the necessity of TRIPS.
M1 – Okay,
tell me the three requirements for patents.
A – Ummmm,
originality? Innovation?
M1 – No.
It’s novelty.
A – Okay
sir. ( I thought my interview was very bad till now. I had to gain the upper
ground soon or else I would get very average marks. It seemed like M1 hated me
and now I had to answer more carefully. They had manipulated me enough, it was
my time to manipulate them)
M2 – Tell me
the difference between botany and biotechnology.
A – Sir,
botany is the study of plants and organisms whereas biotechnology is the study
of usage of modified living organisms for economical purposes for humans, like
GM crops, drugs etc.
M2 – Okay,
tell me a 20 th century Indian botany scientist.
A – Ummmm,
Sir, Jagadish Chandra Bose?
M2 –
Correct, can you tell me his achievements?
A – He was
the first to discover that plants could communicate with each other.
M2 – Okay,
any other discoveries?
A – Also
something related to radio waves.
M2 – No,
that is in physics, I’am asking in botany.
A – I think
that’s all sir.
M2 – He also
discovered that plants were living things like us too. Yes, as you said, they can
communicate too. Do you know any English 20th century botanist?
A – Umm
sorry sir, I cant recall any.
M2 – Ever
heard of Luther Burbank?
A – Yes sir,
the name is familiar but I don’t recall anything else about him.
M2 – He was
a great botanist too. Without using biotechnology like in recent days, he used
to make better crops. Can you tell me how?
A – By
cross-breeding between two different species of the crop sir. In-breeding.
M2 – Yes,
correct. He also invented something called “edible cactus”. Can you explain
what that is and how he could have done it?
A – Hmmmm.
Sir, usually cactii have thorns on them to protect themselves from animals
which try to eat them. Maybe, Burbank tried to communicate with the cactus and
tried to tell it that the surrounding is safe for it. There are no animals in
the area to eat it. This made the cactus not grow the thorns, thus using
communication he got cactus without thorns which can be edible.
M2 – Yes,
correct. On a totally unrelated note, can you tell me who said this quote? “I
am not an Athenian or Greek, I am a world Citizen”
A – Ummm,
Socrates??
M2 – No, it
was Aristotle. (It is Socrates actually) Can you tell me what you understood
from it?
A – In
today’s globalized world, the whole world is becoming one global village. The
boundaries between different states, nationalities are eroding day by day. With
communication technology, one can contact any part of the world instantly.
Every country is becoming more and more similar with common companies like
McDonalds etc. So, distinguishing ourselves through countries is being replaced
by becoming a global citizen. Who knows Sir, in the near future all countries
might become one and literally replace with world citizenship as prophesized by
Aristotle. (It was Socrates)
M2 – Hmm.
You are partially correct. But, according to me I think he was saying that we
all are humans first. Let’s be human beings before dividing ourselves into
various countries.
A – Yes Sir.
But he used the term “world citizen”, so I think it is much more than just
being a human being.
M2 – Yes,
Sitra. You are right. (My name is Akand!!!)
CM – What
are your preferences?
A – First,
the administrative services Sir, then the police services..
CM –
Administrative? For which country? British eh? Bhutan eh?
A – I am sorry
Sir. I did it again. I should be more academically correct. I meant the Indian
Administrative Services. (He was trying to stress me out again. This is one of
the most random correction a Chairman can ever do. I LOLed in my mind)
CM – Achcha,
always be diplomatic and think before you answer. (Yes Sir) What are your state
preferences?
A – Sir, I
don’t mind working in any part of the country, every state has its own
problems. But, since the choice of preference was given I would take Andhra
Pradesh, because of familiarity with ground problems.
CM – Hmmm,
next? (Sir, Karnataka). Next? (Tamil Nadu) Next? (Kerala). (He was testing me
whether I had actually remembered my state preferences. Many people just
allocate them randomly, but thankfully I remembered all the South Indian
states)
(I think the
Chairman has talked a lot with me. Usually with other candidates the CM doesn’t
talk much. Maybe because I was the first one to get in, everyone was fresh in
the morning for a nice chat)
M3 – You
said your first positive quality is Leadership. Can you tell me the difference
between a leader and an administrator.
A – Sir, a
leader should be a person who can enthuse his subordinates anytime so that they
are willing to work for the profit of the organization. An administrator is
more a mix of a manager and a leader. A manager just needs to facilitate and
give directions. So, an administrator should be an efficient leader and an
effective manager.
M3 – What is
this S-Net ambassador? What have you done there?
A – Sir,
Sustainability Network is an organization in IIT Madras, which takes care of
the sustainability of the energy resources we use. My work as a S-Net
ambassador was to calculate the total energy consumption in my hostel and also
to calculate the unnecessary wastage going through. I was also asked to
calculate the area on the roof where a solar water heater could be established.
I made a report with all my recommendations and observations in it.
M3 – Ok. Do
you Food stability act?
M4 – He
means Food Security Act.
A – The
NFSA? Yes sir, the idea behind the act was that everybody should be comfortable
regarding food. Noone should sleep on an empty stomach.
M4 –
Everybody? Are you sure?
A – Yes sir,
I was coming to the technical part. The govt gives subsidized food grains to
2/3rds of the population. 75% in the rural areas and 50% in the urban areas. So
that everybody can be happy and not hungry.
M4 –
Everybody?
A – Mostly,
people below the poverty line Sir. But the core idea was everybody should be
well-fed.
M4 – Everybody?
Think harder. It is called the National Food Security Act.
A – (Then it
dawns on me) No Sir, not everybody. Only Indians.
M4 – Yes
correct. It is only for the Indian citizens and not the world population. You
should be very careful in your choice of words. This is the third time. In one
instant, you changed the beneficiaries from 1 billion to 7 billion!
A – (Gave a
sheepish grin)(Smiled) Yes sir, sorry. I should be academically correct.( Even
M4 was playing with me like CM. Why is everyone trying to make me tense? When I
was clearly laughing at such questions)
M3 – Okay,
you are from Andhra Pradesh. Tell me about the status.
A – Sir,
recently after the division of Andhra Pradesh into Telengana and residual
Andhra Pradesh, the future is going to be both grim and hopeful for the
residual Andhra. With Hyderabad gone to Telangana, more than 60% of the revenue
is gone. With most of the Godavari and Krishna running through Telangana, there
will be water shortage for the residual Andhra too. Not only that, all
educational institutions, offices, important colleges, everything is gone. I am
not saying the division is a bad thing, the emotions of the Telangana people
must be respected. But the repercussions on the residual Andhra are very high.
It has nothing right now, that is the sole reason why I want to go the Andhra
cadre. The IAS officers who join now will be pioneers in rebuilding the state.
I want to bring a planned change in all districts and bring Andhra back to its
former glory. And the whole Andhra is united this time to bring back enormous
developmental change. So, even when the situation is very bad everyone is
hopeful of starting everything back from scratch Sir.
M3 – Okay,
you said Hyderabad is gone to Telangana right? What other important cities are
in Andhra now?
A – Sir,
Vishakhapatnam. Vijaywada, Tirupthi etc. Mostly all the district capitals, most
of them are big towns not large metropolitan commercial cities like Hyderabad.
M3 – Okay,
and these cities are in residual Andhra?
A – Yes Sir.
M4 – (Reading
the Accomplishments section in my DAF) What is this NCO? AIR 225?
A – NCO is
National Cyber Olympiad where “Indian” students from all over the country had
participated. It was mostly an online exam which tests our computer skills. I
got rank 225 all India.
M4 – What is
cyber crime?
A – Any
crime made through computer technology and the internet is cyber crime Sir.
Like hacking govt websites, online transactions of money etc.
M4 – KVPY.
“Offered” to join IISER? I didnt understand. You were offered to join an
institution?
A – Yes Sir,
Kishore Vaigyanik Prothsahith Yojana is a govt scheme where exams are conducted
to take students into basic sciences. I wrote the exam in my 12th std and I was
offered to join IISER with a stipend after I cleared it. But then, I got
through IITJEE also, so I declined this offer to join IIT Madras.
M4 – Hmmm.
Good. What is this Al Gore Sustainable thing?
A – Sir, Al
Gore Sustainability Technology Venture Competition was an event founded by a
Professor in Carnegie Mellon University. She had come to IITM and she said she
wanted volunteers to organize this event and I was one of the volunteers. We
organized it in a grand scale. It is basically a competition for sustainable
business plans for upcoming start-ups. I saw many astonishing designs which can
be put for use in rural India.
M4 – Okay,
who was Al Gore.
A – He was
the ex-Vice President of the US.
M4 – Yes, he
was into politics too and not only the environment. Did he win a Nobel Prize?
A – Yes sir,
he won one.
M4 – Are you
sure? No he did not.
A – I think
he did Sir. Smiled.
M4 – You
have Marathons in your DAF too? Tell me where the word marathon is derived
from.
A – I am
sorry Sir, I dont know. I think it is another Greek word.
M4 – You and
your friends used to run marathons but never discussed about the origin of the
name?
A – Smiling.
Yes sir, sorry sir. We were more worried about completing the marathon only. He
laughed.
M4 – What is
this Eureka run?
A – It was
the name of an NGO which organized a run Sir. After running, whatever money we
contributed, they would make a good use of it.
M4 – Okay,
tell me how the word “Eureka” originate?
A – (Trying
to remember.) Sir, I know the story. There was a guy sitting in his bath tub
and he came out crying Eureka after discovering a scientific principle.
CM – “Guy”!?
A guy? Was he wearing jeans? Was he listening to his iPod?
A – Oops
Sorry Sir. I did it again. (Smiling)(He was smiling too) I should be more
academically correct in my statements. A respected scientist came out running into
the streets after discovering buoyancy sir.
M4 – What
was his name?
A – (Tried
hard to think but forgot this simple fact.) Sorry sir, I don’t remember.
M4 – No, you
cant say I don’t knows anymore. (Laughing) Take a guess.
A – Sir,
Aristotle.
M4 – No, it
was Archimedes.
A – Yes
sir! (With a sudden emotion of recognizing the simple answer)
M4 – So you
play Kho Kho and Kabaddi too? Nobody plays these games anymore.
A – Yes sir,
I used to play back in school. I was in Kendriya Vidyalaya so all these games
were compulsory.
M4 – But,
isn’t Kho Kho a girl’s game?
A – No Sir!
It is played by boys too. We have a national boys kho kho team in our school.
M4 – Good
good. ( I don’t know why he was impressed when I said my school had a team. I
had nothing to do with it :P)
M4 – Sitra,
you have done so many things! And you are not even 23 yet!
CM – Yes
yes, he is too young. You can see that on his face itself.
M4 – I think
he is one of the youngest we have seen in this stage right?
A – (Smiled)
Thank you sir.
M4 – Okay,
tell me about biodiversity. How does it harm humans?
A – Sir,
biodiversity is the variety of living organisms in the surroundings. But sir,
people keep saying if we destroy the biodiversity, “nature” will be destroyed.
I think it is the other way round. Nature will always be there. It was there in
the past, it is there now and it will continue to be in the future. When humans
try to harm the environment through pollution etc., they are not harming
nature. But they are harming themselves. It is their species which is going to
get destroyed and not nature. Through usage of too many polluting chemicals,
global warming, melting of polar caps, submerging of coastal areas, nothing
serious is happening to nature. It is our survival that we should be worried about.
(I was on a
high when I was saying this)
M4 – Okay.
But can you be more specific how biodiversity changes can affect humans?
A – There
would be adverse effects on the food chain. The whole biodiversity is a large
web Sir. Even if there is a disturbance in one end, the whole web can get
affected. Every species has a specific function in nature, if we destroy that
species, we are harming ourselves and the whole fabric Sir.
M4 – Okay.
Tell me which is better. Small states or big states? Small states like Goa have
been developed too and large states like Gujarat are developed too. So should
we have many small states or should we have very few large states??
A – Sir,
every issue has both pros and cons. If we have large states, the ground level
administration can become tough, but large states send a large number of MP s
to the Parliament and they have the numbers to bring in state-specific
policies. Whereas, small states can be administered very well because of less
area and less population, but they send only 1 or 2 MP s. 1 MP doesnt make much
difference in 545 other MP s Sir. So, I would say it should be in middle. The
state should be small enough to be managed well and also large enough to get
enough attention in the Parliament.
M4 – Haha so
you took the middle ground. Safest approach.
CM – Thank
you Sitra, your interview is over. (My name is Akand!!)
A – Thank
you Sir. ( I got up and was about to leave)
M4 – What is
the meaning of your name, Sitra?
A – Sir, my
name is Akand. Sitra is just a family name.
CM – Achcha,
makes more sense now.
A – Thank
you Sir.
And left.
Came out at 10 45. Half an hour exact.
I went in at
9, came out of the building at 11. Two hours of memorable time were over. I had
mixed feelings about my interview.
1) The
board must have thought I was immature, who doesn’t take interviews seriously
(I was laughing the whole time) and they must have thought I might be too young
and immature to be a dignified IAS officer. I was a kid in front of their eyes
who got through the exam somehow. And for this they might award me less marks.
2) Or,
the board might have thought I had raw young energy, who was always cheerful
and was not tensed at all. I need some proper moulding and must train me in
diplomatic skills. And thus award high marks because I was one the youngest to
come till here in his first attempt.
But, I
stopped thinking about the results. I thought I had done my duty and I left
everything for fate now. If I am destined to become an IAS officer, nothing
could stop me. If I wasn’t, even if I studied hard I could never become one. I
thought that everything was over now. The UPSC chapter in my life is done for
now. I felt a kind of closure after studying for 15 months.
But God did
not want to leave me so easily. The story wasn’t over yet.
The next
day, I went to get my medical done. Around 15 of us were allotted Lok Nayak
hospital. They were simple tests. – Ear, audiometry, eye, height, weigh, chest
expansion, Chest X-Ray, blood test, urine test, medical test and internal
organs test(All organs, including private parts :P)
I was
perfect in almost all the tests that they conducted. I was 13 cm more than the
minimum height limit. My BMI was exactly 25. My eye-sight was perfect, I had no
vision problems. But the big problem came when I was getting checked for colour
blindness.
Eye tests –
Far vision, near vision, night blindness test, colour blindness test,
retina/iris test.
Doc – Read
this colourful chart and tell me the numbers you see.
She had just
shone a white torch light into my eyes to check for night blindness and I was
blinded for a second.
A – (I read
around four cards and the rest 6 I couldn’t read properly. Maybe I did have
colour blindness.)
Doc – I
think you might have colour blindness.
A – But
maam, I had a check up done 4 years ago and that time I did not have colour
blindness.
Doc – Hmmm,
colour blindness is genetic. It cannot come suddenly, you must have from birth
itself. Is this going to be a problem? (It was a govt hospital and there were
dozens of other OP patients waiting to get tested, so she was in a hurry)
A – Not for
all services maam, I think only for IPS and IRTS.
Doc –
Achcha, then tell me what do you want me to write in this form.
A – Maam,
write whatever you observe.
Doc – (She
smiled) Okay, as you say. But reduce laptops, phone screens and eat a lot of
carrots, papayas and cucumbers. Eyes are important.
A – Yes
ma’am, thank you. (I think she wrote I did have colour blindness)
I came out
and I was talking to my other friends. They asked me not to worry. Even if you
get IPS or IRTS, there will be another board doing a much more detailed check
up, and colour blindness usually wouldn’t be much problem. Since, you did not
have it 4 years ago, you cannot have it now. Just chill now and be happy!
I did
exactly that. But there might still be a slight possibility that I might be
colour blind. I took this as a positive sign from God. I thought this meant I
should have only one goal in mind – Only IAS. No other back up, no IPS, no IFS
and no IRS. Only IAS.
But could I
do it? Will my colour blindness be a problem? What did the doctor write in the
report? All these questions will be unanswered for another two months.
When my
parents scolded me asking why like every other student in such a situation, I
did not ask/beg the doctor to falsely report that I did not have colour
blindness when she herself asked, I said only one thing, “Everybody is ethical
and has a good character under normal circumstances, it is only in the adverse
situations like this, it would show who really is ethical. And I wanted to be
ethical in all circumstances” If I got IPS with colour blindness, I would die
with guilt for the rest of my life. I would rather not have IPS if it is got in
an unethical way.
Now, I just
need to wait for the results. I would either get a rank or I would repeat the
whole one year again. I was mentally prepared for both. Let us see what will
happen. But, before I finish I should say I am extremely sorry for such long
articles, I truly am. I sorry for testing the patience of all the readers. I
hope this long article can be of use to someone. I hope it can help them in
some way. And I hope everyone who reads this get all success in their life. I
hope Insights which has helped me so much, also help all aspirants to get a
rank and I hope they will strive to serve the society in the best way possible.
And, I had
earlier mentioned in the beginning of the article that this is going to be the
last one in the trilogy series. That doesn’t mean it is the end of my story.
It just
means, the actual story has just begun now.
No comments:
Post a Comment