A sari worn by Dr Tessy Thomas, India’s celebrated ‘rocket woman’, has been acquired by the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC. The garment, a simple cotton weaved in Andhra Pradesh, represents not just personal achievement but a quiet revolution in affordable space exploration. The British Space Agency has publicly commended the move, calling it “a symbol of how cultural identity and cutting-edge technology can coexist”.
Dr Thomas, the first woman to head a missile project in India, wore this sari while overseeing the successful deployment of India’s Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) in 2013. That mission, costing a fraction of comparable NASA projects, became a world reference for efficiency. The sari itself is a mute witness to the calculations, the coffee-fuelled nights, the final countdown. It reminds us that innovation often wears a humble guise.
For the British space sector, the acquisition is a prompt to reassess its own support for inclusion. “We cannot afford to overlook the value of diverse perspectives,” said a spokesperson. “Dr Thomas’s story proves that brilliance is not limited by dress or background.” The museum’s decision to feature the sari in a new exhibit on low-cost interplanetary exploration aligns with a broader trend: the democratisation of space. India’s ISRO has mastered the art of achieving more with less, challenging the assumption that only billion-dollar budgets can reach Mars.
The technology behind MOM was frugal but smart. Engineers used off-the-shelf components and innovative orbital mechanics to slingshot the probe towards the Red Planet. The sari, now preserved behind glass, symbolises this ethos: you don’t need a designer suit to design a spacecraft. It is a quiet rebuke to the tech industry’s obsession with shiny, expensive gadgets.
Yet we must ask: what does it mean when a piece of clothing becomes a museum piece while the woman who wore it still faces systemic barriers? Dr Thomas has spoken of the challenges women in Indian science endure. The sari is a trophy, but the fight for equality continues. The British Space Agency’s applause is welcome, but applause without action risks being hollow. We need more than tokenism; we need policies that ensure the next Dr Thomas is not an exception but the norm.
The exhibit, set to open next summer, will also feature interactive displays on India’s space programme and workshops on frugal engineering. It is a chance for the public to see science through a different lens: not as a white-coated elite but as a sari-clad engineer who calculated trajectories while managing a household. The museum’s director noted: “This sari tells a story of national pride, personal sacrifice, and technological triumph. It belongs here among our most inspiring artefacts.”
But let’s not romanticise. The journey from a small town in Kerala to the Smithsonian was not paved with saris alone. It required infrastructure, investment, and institutional will. India’s space programme succeeded because it was funded consistently and allowed to innovate freely. The lesson for Britain, as it builds its own space ambitions, is to support grassroots talent and avoid bureaucratic inertia. The sari is a reminder that the best innovations often come from where they are least expected.
As we celebrate this cultural fusion of tradition and technology, we should also reflect on the digital sovereignty of nations like India. Their ability to launch missions to Mars without reliance on Western tech giants is a quiet assertion of independence. The sari, now in a US museum, becomes a statement on global collaboration: we are all in this cosmic endeavour together. But it also warns against cultural appropriation. The garment’s true value is not in its textile but in the story it carries: a story of a woman who dared to dream of Mars while wrapped in six yards of cotton.
For the average person, this exhibit might seem trivial. Yet it holds a mirror to our prejudices. We still expect scientists to look a certain way. A sari on a rocket scientist challenges that stereotype more powerfully than any diversity report. The British Space Agency’s endorsement is a step, but the real work lies in ensuring that future artefacts reflect not just one extraordinary woman but a transformed system that empowers many.
The sari’s arrival in the US is a triumph of soft power. It puts India’s space feats in the global spotlight while reminding us that technology and heritage are not mutually exclusive. As we move towards an era of commercial spaceflight and moon bases, let’s not forget that the most radical innovations often wear the most elegant simplicity.








