ADVERTISEMENT

A railway officer who lays the tracks for education

July 25, 2016 12:00 am | Updated 05:57 am IST - CHENNAI:

He helps fulfil the educational aspirations of youth from Maharashtra

REALISING DREAMS:Ajeet Saxena (centre) with some of the students he has helped. —Photo: Special Arrangement

In the midst of his hectic schedule, a senior bureaucrat of the Southern Railway gets a long-distance call from Wardha, Maharashtra. The caller, young Prashanth Bhurjan, briefs him that the filled-in applications from eight girls from marginalised sections are being taken to Mumbai, where the girls will be entering college.

As Chief Commercial Manager of Southern Railway, Ajeet Saxena is extremely busy attending regular work, taking part in official meetings and sorting files. But he makes sure that young women and men from families that have been severely hit by the drought in Maharashtra are not deprived of their higher education.

A visit to Sewagram Ashram in Wardha a decade ago exposed him to the cruelty inflicted on the families of farm hands owing to adverse weather conditions and more importantly, bad debts, which forced male heads of families to commit suicide. “I decided that nothing should come in the way of completing their basic education and pursuing college,” Mr. Saxena told

ADVERTISEMENT

The Hindu .

ADVERTISEMENT

So far, he has helped over 200 young people from poor families pursue education, the latest among them being a top grade earning boy in Class X, but from a very poor family in Karnataka.

Mr. Saxena continues to get calls from people helping students from poor families to enter college, including professional courses like medicine. An IIT (Roorkee) engineer, the officer first promises a seat for the children from poor families in colleges by assuring the management that the fee will be paid. He then reaches out to his network of friends, philanthropists and donors to pay the tuition as well as hostel fee. Though most of the beneficiaries have been from the Vidarbha region of eastern Maharashtra that witnessed prolonged drought, women from other urban pockets of that State have also been helped.

While at Wardha, when he was witness to the plight of the families, he had two choices before him — feel sorry and return to his work or do something positive.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mr. Saxena chose both.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT