In the parched village of Khattu (Narewa) in Rajasthan’s Balotra district, where the days are long and hopes often shorter, a story of extraordinary triumph has quietly taken shape.
Shravan Kumar, a 19-year-old boy born into crushing poverty, has done what many in his situation could only dream of, he cleared the NEET UG 2025 exam, securing 556 out of 700 marks, an All India Rank (AIR) of 9754, and 4071st position in the OBC category.
But this is no ordinary success story. This is a tale of struggle, sacrifice, and a will so unshakeable that even the harshest circumstances could not break it.
Shravan’s father, Rekharam Siyag, survives by washing dirty dishes at wedding ceremonies and doing seasonal farm labour. The family lives in a fragile thatched hut with no concrete roof, no secure electricity, and no savings to fall back on.
On the day NEET results were announced, June 14, 2025, Rekharam was doing what he usually does: repairing the roof of their hut, trying to prepare for the monsoon. That’s when someone brought the news. His son had made it.
Rekharam was stunned. Then, with tears in his eyes, he smiled and said: “Now I won’t have to wash dishes anymore. My son will be a doctor.”
Shravan had always been academically gifted. He scored 97 per cent in Class 10 and 87.8 per cent in Class 12, despite having no access to private tuitions or digital learning tools.
But talent does not always translate into opportunity. After Class 10, the family’s financial crisis forced him into daily-wage labour. He began working on construction sites in Balotra, quietly letting go of his dreams.
That might have been the end of the story. But then came a lifeline.
Shravan’s school teacher, Chimanaram, recognised his brilliance and connected him with the Fifty Villagers Foundation, an NGO in Barmer that supports promising students from underprivileged backgrounds.
The NGO selected Shravan through its merit-based test and offered full sponsorship: hostel stay, school fees, books, and NEET coaching.
With their support, Shravan resumed studies in Class 11 with Biology and began preparing for NEET. But the road ahead was not easy.
Shravan gave his first NEET attempt in 2023, scoring 519 marks, below the cutoff. In 2024, he scored 620 but still did not get a seat due to the high cutoff.
He was devastated but not defeated. With motivation from Dr. Bharat Saran, a government doctor, and his teacher, Shravan decided to try once more.
He studied harder, smarter. During breaks, he returned home and helped his father with work. At night, he studied using a basic smartphone that his mother received in a government scheme.
“I watched YouTube videos, searched for explanations online, and cleared my doubts using that phone,” Shravan recalls.
In 2025, on his third attempt, he finally cracked it.
As word of Shravan’s success spread, villagers and members of the NGO gathered at his home with boxes of sweets. His mother wept silently. His younger sister grinned ear to ear. His grandmother folded her hands in prayer.
Even Barmer MP Ummedaram Beniwal took to social media to congratulate Shravan, calling him a beacon of hope for rural India.
Today, Shravan stands at the threshold of a life his family never imagined, medical college, financial stability, and a chance to break the generational cycle of poverty.
But he has not forgotten where he comes from.
“I want to become a doctor and serve villages like mine. No one here should die for lack of a doctor,” he says.
In a country where millions of talented students drop out because of poverty, Shravan’s journey is a testament to what is possible when talent meets opportunity, and when even one person decides to believe.
From washing dishes to wearing a white coat, Shravan Kumar’s story is not just inspiring, it is transformative.
Comments