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A asthma patient, born to Father Sherram, who could hardly manage physical work and a mother, Tejendra, who was struggling with mental illness, was far away from being a doctor.

Tejendra studied at Village Government School, scored 82.33% in class 10. (AyraNews24x7 Hindi/Local 18)
In the rural village of Betu Panji in Bermer district of Rajasthan, where families struggle for two classes a day, a young man has made a way to the world of medicine through sheer patience and sacrifice. Tejendra Kumar Meghwal, a boy, who once worked at construction sites to spend the expenses of books, has got admission in a medical college after cleaning the NEET exam in his first attempt.
With the all -India rank of 73,788 and a category of 2,202 (SC), Tejendra’s achievement is not only a personal milestone, but a will for the unwavering spirit of a family that refused to give up, no matter how hostile it is.
Born in a family where his father Sherram, an asthma patient, could hardly manage physical work and his mother has been struggling with mental illness for more than two decades, Tejendra’s dream of becoming a doctor was far away. Their house echoes more with the struggle of survival than academic aspirations, made of mud walls and dreams. There were days, Tejendra recalls when facing a basic food was a challenge.
In this harsh background, his younger brother emerged as a silent force behind the miracle. Colding such a burden shoulder to shoulder, he started working as a daily wage laborer, often abandoning food, just to ensure that his elder brother’s studies were not interrupted. Together, the two brothers postponed in the sun – one to earn, the other to learn.
Tejendra studied in village government school, scored 82.33% in class 10. It was when the dream of wearing a white coat was the first root. But dreams needed books and coaching, Meghwal could not luxury the house. It is expected that when Tejendra was selected from 50 students of the village for a free assistance program. Armed with books borrowed, community belief and terrible determination, he exploded NEET with a score of 483 out of 720.
Tejendra said, “I believe my brother and 50 villagers who believed in me, as much as I believed in myself.”
Now with a stethoscope in sight, Tejendra wants to serve rural communities like him. His story is already inspiring a new generation in Beyu Panji, where children now talk about NEET and MBBS, as he once did about farming and labor work.
- Place :
Bermer, India, India
- first published:
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