#GoodNews: Meet India’s First Visually-Impaired Woman IAS Officer
from thequint.com
Thirty-year-old
Pranjil Patil lost her vision at the age of six but that did not deter
her from beating all odds and achieving her dream.
Patil, who hails from Maharashtra, secured the 124th rank in UPSC 2017. And on 28 May, she took charge as the Assistant Collector of Ernakulam district in Kerala, becoming the country’s first visually impaired woman IAS officer, Hindustan Times reported.
This wasn’t the first time Patil cleared the UPSC. In 2016, she could secured an all-India rank of 773, The New Indian Express reported. Despite being offered a job in the Indian Railway Accounts Service (IRAS), she wasn’t deemed fit as her vision was nil.
Patil, who hails from Maharashtra, secured the 124th rank in UPSC 2017. And on 28 May, she took charge as the Assistant Collector of Ernakulam district in Kerala, becoming the country’s first visually impaired woman IAS officer, Hindustan Times reported.
This wasn’t the first time Patil cleared the UPSC. In 2016, she could secured an all-India rank of 773, The New Indian Express reported. Despite being offered a job in the Indian Railway Accounts Service (IRAS), she wasn’t deemed fit as her vision was nil.
Patil,
who lost her eyesight due to retinal detachment, completed the first
leg of her training at the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of
Administration, Mussoorie. As part of her training, she will hold the
position of the Assistant Collector for a year, The Indian Express reported.
After her field-training in Kochi, she will head back to Mussoorie next year to wrap up her training, at the end of which she is expected to submit a dissertation, the IE reported.
After her field-training in Kochi, she will head back to Mussoorie next year to wrap up her training, at the end of which she is expected to submit a dissertation, the IE reported.
A
political science graduate, Patil completed her Masters in
international relations from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi,
followed by an MPhil and PhD, HT reported.
She cited Japanese philosopher Daisaku Ikeda and physicist Stephen Hawking as her role models in one of her interviews.
She cited Japanese philosopher Daisaku Ikeda and physicist Stephen Hawking as her role models in one of her interviews.
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