INDOMITABLE Character... Effort
Perseverance

The Indomitable Collection

Santiago Ramón y Cajal

A boy born in a remote little village in Navarre, who dared to think differently from the rest of the world. He ignored the mockery and rebelled against the most powerful scientists to discover what lies inside our brains: a garden of independent cells that communicate with each other through tiny flashes of light.

He achieved it with very little: his passion for drawing, a microscope, and a few drops of ink.

Children forever

INDOMABLES connects great historical figures with today’s business leaders to inspire children to believe in themselves, dare to think differently, and strive to achieve whatever they set their minds to. A collection declared of social interest by the Government of Navarre, uniting children and adults around a story.

Advocate

Each figure in the collection has an Advocate chosen by the TWF Board of Trustees for spreading universal values throughout their careers. In this edition, Belén Garijo — a global leader in science and healthcare and CEO of Sanofi — accompanies Cajal, sharing a personal reflection with readers on the values that made his legacy possible.

Rigor and insight

The scientific supervision and supporting biography for adults included in this edition were provided by Santiago Lamas, MD, PhD and Research Professor at the CSIC. His connection to Cajal is deeply personal: his father maintained a regular correspondence with Don Santiago and was in close contact with members of his School of Neuroscience. Until recently, he preserved letters, portraits, and first editions of Cajal’s works, which were recently donated to the CSIC.

Educational impact

Coming soon: the second phase of the project — an educational programme with teaching materials and partnerships with schools and organisations focused on social inclusion. Because every child deserves to discover that curiosity, perseverance and knowledge can help them reach their full potential.

An Indomitable Advocate

Belén Garijo is one of the most celebrated leaders in international healthcare innovation sector. Her connection to this edition stems from a conviction she shares with Cajal: science transforms lives. Through her letter, she invites children to discover science, cultivate curiosity, and pursue their goals with determination. "Important things never happen on their own. You have to strive, prepare yourself, and have the ambition to go out and find them."

A letter
from the Advocate

A story of effort, curiosity, and rebellion. The story of someone who united art and science to understand the invisible.

TW Group President

Carlos Llonis

Cajal, the boy who dared to think differently.

One morning, lying in the grass, Santiago experienced something that changed everything: a solar eclipse that had been predicted by scientists. The sky went dark in the middle of the day. And he became obsessed with a question: how could those people know the exact day and time the sun would disappear? What superpowers does human intelligence have? What is inside our brains?

At school, he stood out for his curiosity and his rebellious streak. He refused to memorize everything because he was bored to tears, driving his teacher up the wall, until he finally got himself expelled. By day, he started working as a barber; by night, he accompanied his father to the cemetery to learn anatomy, drawing skeletons. That was how he returned to school, strengthened by a newfound purpose: to become a doctor.

He finished medical school and began his new life with an adventure: heading off to a war in Cuba to save lives. That was until a mosquito attacked him with a killer parasite, and he lost that battle. He returned home skinnier than the skeletons in the cemetery.

Back in Spain, he decided to settle down. He fell in love with Silveria. Together, they had seven children and the stability he needed to research... cells! Using the family’s savings, he bought a microscope. And with just a few drops of ink, he changed everything.

He looked at blood: cells. At muscle: cells. At skin: cells. But in the brain… the world’s leading scientists could only see a vast, tangled cobweb. Cajal rebelled. The most extraordinary organ had to be made of extraordinary cells. They just had to be found. And so, he worked from sunrise to sunset until he succeeded. There, hidden from the eyes of the rest of humanity, he discovered the universe of the mind, inhabited by independent cells: "the butterflies of the soul."

Any human being, if they so choose, can be the sculptor of their own brain.

Father of neuroscience

Santiago Ramón y Cajal