"As a child of God, I am greater than anything that can happen to me"
About this Quote
Kalam’s line is built like a private shield that doubles as public instruction: define the self on a scale so large that circumstance can’t shrink it. “Child of God” is doing heavy rhetorical work here. It’s not a pious flourish so much as a claim to inherited dignity, a way of making self-worth non-negotiable. By framing identity as relational and sacred, he sidesteps the modern trap of basing value on performance, status, or the day’s headlines.
The provocative move is the word “greater.” He’s not promising that bad things won’t happen; he’s insisting they won’t get the final say about who you are. For a statesman who rose from modest origins to scientific and national prominence, that distinction matters. Kalam’s public persona fused technocratic optimism with moral seriousness, and the quote reads like a civic lesson smuggled inside spiritual language: resilience is not mere grit, it’s a worldview.
The subtext is almost constitutional. If the individual is “greater than anything that can happen,” then humiliation, failure, even political turbulence become survivable without turning into vengeance or despair. It’s also a quiet rebuke to fatalism. In a country where religion, class, and history can feel like destiny, Kalam’s sentence reframes destiny as interior: events can wound you, but they don’t own you.
That’s why it lands. It offers authority without aggression, confidence without denial, a sentence sized for crisis that refuses to let crisis define the person speaking.
The provocative move is the word “greater.” He’s not promising that bad things won’t happen; he’s insisting they won’t get the final say about who you are. For a statesman who rose from modest origins to scientific and national prominence, that distinction matters. Kalam’s public persona fused technocratic optimism with moral seriousness, and the quote reads like a civic lesson smuggled inside spiritual language: resilience is not mere grit, it’s a worldview.
The subtext is almost constitutional. If the individual is “greater than anything that can happen,” then humiliation, failure, even political turbulence become survivable without turning into vengeance or despair. It’s also a quiet rebuke to fatalism. In a country where religion, class, and history can feel like destiny, Kalam’s sentence reframes destiny as interior: events can wound you, but they don’t own you.
That’s why it lands. It offers authority without aggression, confidence without denial, a sentence sized for crisis that refuses to let crisis define the person speaking.
Quote Details
| Topic | God |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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