The Better India · 4 hours ago
Sarah Moin, unable to see, hear, or speak since childhood, just scored 98.75% in her Class 12 exams in Lucknow - a feat achieved through braille displays, unwavering discipline, and a school that reimagined how knowledge could reach her. Her dream is not personal glory but the Indian Administrative Service, where she plans to "work for people, especially disabled children." Yet her father's appeal cuts through the celebration: Sarah's success exposes how examination systems still fail deaf-blind students, forcing them to rely on scribes instead of the assistive technology that would let them truly express themselves. What makes her achievement quietly radical is not just the excellence, but the clarity with which she sees - without sight - a world she intends to change.