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Brothers from Bihar overcome disability and poverty to crack IITJEE

For many years, Basant Kumar Pandit(18) has been carrying his physically challenged elder brother Krishnan on his shoulders to school and later to the coaching institute here.

higher education, higher education india, union cabinet, union cabinet higher education, finance agency, higher education indian students, india news, education newsThe Maharashtra state board for secondary and higher secondary education (MSBSHSE) conducts the exam for the students for the Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC) exam from Thursday, at Belapur. Express Photo by Narendra Vaskar. 18.02.2016. Mumbai.

A polio-stricken boy and his brother from an underprivileged family in Bihar have managed to make it through the IITJEE entrance exams beating all odds.

For many years, Basant Kumar Pandit(18) has been carrying his physically challenged elder brother Krishnan on his shoulders to school and later to the coaching institute here.

Krishan has landed in IIT with 38th All India Rank in OBC, disabled quota in the JEE advanced results declared recently. Basant has achieved 3675 rank in OBC category.

Their father Madan Pandit owns five ‘bigas’ of land in Paroriya village in Samastipur and their mother is a housewife.

Krishan (19) suffered from polio when he was only six months old. Later, Basant took upon himself to take Krishan on his shoulders to school. Aspiring to be engineers, the brothers reached Kota three years ago and took admission in a coaching institute to prepare for IIT entrance test.

Read: Tribal girl from Maoist stronghold cracks IITJEE 2016

Here too, Basant would take his brother on his shoulders to the coaching classes and the two would study together. “When I left the village for coaching three years ago, people in the village suspected my abilities and whether we would be able to continue like this,” Krishan said, adding “we were determined to become engineers”.

For Krishan, his younger sibling is much more that his “legs” and he gets emotional talking about him especially as the two brothers, who have been inseparable until now, will have to study in separate colleges.

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“Basant does everything for me. He takes me on his shoulders from home or hostel room to classes, serves me food,” said Krishan.

“I feel very sad when I think about living without him in the engineering college,” he added.

Also read: Top Engineering Colleges in North India

Basant said he is accustomed to doing these things for his brother. “It is very painful to think of living without my elder brother. The taste of success is enjoyable but separation sours it,” he said and the elder brother agreed.

Basant recalled their school days. “Once while we were in class five, I participated in a residential camp for disabled in the village as my brother Krishan could not live there without me,” he said.

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After failing in their first attempt in IIT entrance exam, their father asked them to return, but their two elder brothers, who work in a garage in Mumbai, assured them of financial assistance.

The management of the institute also exempted 75 per cent of the fees for them and also granted scholarship, according to Krishan.

“At the institute, we have been in the same batch and same class,” he added.

“Basant aspires to join civil services after completing his engineering, while I want to be a computer engineer,” Krishan said.

For more such inspirational stories on education, click here

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