Not everyone is born with a silver spoon.
But in the hidden corners of Ranchi, a boy dreamed of holding one anyway.
Mohit Kumar grew up in Shivaji Nagar, in a home where life was measured in needs, not luxuries. But Mohit was built different. In his mind, he always knew he’s here to achieve greater things.
Reality, however, tested that conviction relentlessly…
Mohit’s father worked as an office assistant, earning barely ₹15,000 per month. It was the only income for a family of four. His mother managed the household with careful budgeting, while his younger sister struggled to continue her education under the same financial pressure. With rising expenses and limited resources, the burden slowly shifted onto Mohit’s shoulders.
When Mohit completed Class 12, the unspoken decision was already made for him: earn. Higher education was a luxury his family simply could not finance. The choices before him were narrow and predictable. A shop helper, an office assistant like his father, or another low-paying job that would secure survival. After all, an additional ₹15,000 a month could steady the household and guarantee a marriage for his sister.
Mohit did exactly what was written for him, but with a little change, a slight delay of four months.
Instead of queuing up for a minimum-wage job, Mohit did something different. He enrolled in one of Anudip’s courses, without knowing what to expect. Being an avid reader, Mohit knew that AI was one of the most trending topics. So he chose the Certificate in Digital Operations and Service with an AI course. Afterall, having a certificate in the most trending subject shouldn’t hurt, especially when it was almost free.
But this slight change in his trajectory proved to be the butterfly effect of his life. When his classes started, Mohit began to enjoy the new technique of learning. Mohit read beyond modules, questioned beyond slides. Each day he arrived with doubts about the productive kind. Trainers noticed. The hunger was hard to miss. They knew this could now be satisfied only with a suitable job where he would learn the practical use of what is being taught and explore further.
By the end of the course, he was not just another candidate in a job drive. He was prepared. Interviews followed. Then the call came. A systems developer role at Concentrix.
We speak loosely of “impact.” But somewhere in Shivaji Nagar, an income line rose, a sister’s future steadied, and a household recalculated its possibilities. This is not charity. It is arithmetic. Multiply one Mohit by thousands, and you begin to see what development actually looks like.
To those who log in at Anudip Foundation every morning, this is your arithmetic. Every attendance sheet updated, every doubt answered, every placement call made, every follow-up completed, they travel far beyond dashboards and reports.
This is not routine work. It is quiet nation-building.
