Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur’s student
Pratish Dutta who is visually challenged has proved that eyes are not
required to see, one can see through his mind.
Pratish Datta who lost his eyesight when he was in
college was awarded Professor Jagadish Chandra Bose Memorial Gold Medal
from President Pranab Mukherjee for the best academic performance among
outgoing students of the M.Sc courses in the science disciplines at the
IIT.
His
cumulative grade point average was 9.87 — higher than any other M.Sc
student at the IIT. After graduating with mathematics from St. Xavier’s
College, Kolkata, he joined the institute in 2010.
Born at Batanagar in north Kolkata to Prabir, a civil
engineer with a government undertaking, and Ranjana, a home-maker,
Pratish has depended on his mother for studies. She would read out his
lessons and he would memorise them.
From his childhood he was dependable on his mother for everything. “If
I studied 10 hours a day, my mother used to study 15 hours for me as
she is instrumental in helping me understand the subjects since I could
not read,” said a jubilant Pratish who thanked his mother after receiving the award.
Pratish was six months old when doctors told his
parents that he had ‘retinoschesis’ , in which the layers inside the
retina gradually get separated from each other, eventually leading to
total blindness. By Class VIII, he had to use high-powered magnifying
glasses to study.
It was in his second year at St Xavier’s College that
he lost his sight completely. Ranjana turned a full-time reader for her
son and when he cracked IIT-JEE , she moved to Kharagpur with him.
Pratish and his mother live in a rented apartment on the IIT-KGP campus.
“We received a lot of help from people . His IIT teachers and
classmates were very kind. At St Xavier’s , College they would print
question papers on A3 sheets for him,” Ranjana said.
“My parents are my inspiration . They never made me
feel that there was anything wrong. I received tremendous support from
my teachers and buddies. My friend and classmate Fauzal Atik took great
care of me at IIT,” Pratish said.
His father, who is a civil engineer, also played a
pivotal role in shaping his career. “My father always told me to give my
best effort and I followed his words. At last, I have succeeded,” added
Pratish.
“His mother would read out his lessons to him,” said Pratish’s father Prabir Datta. “All the credit goes to his mother. He
even ranked second in the country in GATE this year. We feel so proud.
My boy is no different… Rather, he has proved better than many,” Datta said.
Keen to take up teaching and research as his career,
Mr. Datta has enrolled in a Ph.D. programme on Cryptology and Network
Security at IIT Kharagpur.
His PhD guide Sourabh Mukhopadhyay is amazed at how a
visually impaired person could score so high in a subject like
Mathematics. “This has never happened in IIT, Kharagpur, or anywhere in
the world,” he said.
He could not solve a mathematical problem on a piece of paper because of his visual impairment.
“I could not even write a simple mathematical
formula, all I did was remember it. I do all the calculations mentally
and then dictate it to my scribe, who puts it down on paper,”
23-year-old Datta said.
“I would read out the lessons, including mathematical
problems, and he would memorise them,” his mother Ranjana Datta said,
adding that since Mr. Datta was interested in mathematics, she
encouraged him to take up the subject.
But, this did not dampen Pratish Datta’s love for
mathematics, or his zeal for pursuing a career in mathematical research.
Not only was he able to do complex mathematical calculations but he
scored the highest grade among all M.Sc. students this year.
“Pratish has an extraordinary mind and his way of
learning is only through listening to lectures. But whatever he listens,
it gets inked in his mind. We were also confused when he joined the
institute, but he emerged with flying colours with his ability to rise
above adversities,” head of the mathematics department Professor P.D.
Srivastava said.
Sheer grit and determination can do wonders. And 23-year-old Pratish Datta knows all about it. Datta has been a topper all his life. He tells that if one tries, one can do anything; lack of sight is hardly an impediment.
Listen to his talk at TEDxIITKharagpur
You did MSc in mathematics at IIT and are known to do complex mathematical calculations mentally. How is that possible?
It goes back to my childhood. I lost vision in one
eye at six months of age and had poor vision in the other. My parents
felt that if I studied a lot, the pressure would damage this eye too. So
my mother would read all my lessons to me and I would memorize them.
Even maths sums were done mentally. I knew no other way to do it. Over
time, practice made me perfect. I also manage to finish my exams in
almost the same time as normal students. But a lot of higher mathematics
is not just calculation but visualization too and I can handle that.
Even Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler lost his vision in the last 17
years of his life. But he continued to do research. My mind is my eye
now.
How did you cope with the loss of your eyesight?
How did you cope with the loss of your eyesight?
I was doing my second year at St Xavier’s College in
Kolkata in 2008 when I lost vision in my second eye. I was shocked to
suddenly see a dark world but my parents and teachers stood by me. As I
loved studies, I decided to concentrate on that. All my happiness is
related to studies. Even when I came to IIT, there were many questions
about whether I would be able to cope. But my faculty helped me with a
competent scribe, which itself takes the load off students like me. He’s
a computer operator here who understands mathematics symbols and has
done presentations for various seminars.
The dean of student affairs also helped me find
accommodation within the campus. I also have nice friends, especially
Fouzoul Atik who studied with me in MSc. He would sit beside me, dictate
what was written on the board, take me from one class to another, xerox
pages for me…he was very happy when I got the gold medal.
Was it difficult to handle the pressure in IIT with this impairment? Your mother seems to have sacrificed a lot.
As I was able to see in childhood, I understood maths
symbols and could do well. But for many others, the fact that higher
education books aren’t in Braille are a handicap. An attempt should be
made to convert them so that others like me don’t suffer. As for my
mother, she has stood by me like a rock. Even when I said I wanted to
study in IIT, she told me bravely, ‘Go as far as you want, I will be
with you.’ And she did. She left Kolkata where my father is a civil
engineer and came to stay with me, an only child, here at Kharagpur.
You seem to lead a normal life -you use the mobile quite well and have a Facebook profile. How do you manage these?
I have memorized the keys and functions of my mobile
so I can use it effortlessly. I also have a computer screen-reading
software called JAWS which reads out whatever text there is on it.
“My aim in life is to serve the nation by inventing tools that will help society,” he added.
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-09-23/all-that-matters/34040184_1_iit-mathematics-poor-vision
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