Blindness no hurdle for NL Beno Zephine who gets IFS posting
Girl becomes first-ever 100 per cent visually challenged person to become an IFS officer
Chennai: It was the abhorrence she exhibited in her teenage years, when it came to people wasting even a drop of water and the subsequent response from her relatives and friends, which inspired N.L. Beno Zephine, now 25 years old, to attempt the civil service examinations. While she went around urging them to conserve natural resources, they would tease her, calling her nattamai (village head) and collector (IAS officer). Now, they would have to call her not an IAS officer but an IFS officer, for Beno has become the first-ever 100 per cent visually challenged person to enter South Block (Union foreign ministry) as an officer.
Ms Zephine remembers that “While pursuing class 11 at Little Flower Convent, I remember giving a piece of my mind to those who let the taps run. I made sure to make them understand that water was precious.” If that quality, shown while trying to protect a natural resource, inspired her to become a civil servant, the reaction from her close ones, who called her nattamai and collector, made Ms Zephine, visually impaired from birth, determined.
So, when in 2014 she secured an impressive all-India 343 rank in the prestigious examinations, it was with some considerable excitement that she waited for the service allotment. On Friday evening, after a year’s time, Ms Zephine was informed about her appointment to the Indian Foreign Service. She thus became the first-ever 100 per cent visually challenged person to become an IFS officer.
Ms Zephine, who completed her masters in English at Loyola College and is now pursuing Ph.D. at Bharatiyar University, is set to join the ministry within the next 60 days for training. “My disability was not a setback, though it would probably have been if I considered it so. Both my parents were a constant source of support.
While my father purchased whatever book I required, mother assisted in the reading process. My advice to the disabled (wishing to attempt the exam) will be to count on the support of all resources they are surrounded by and not give up,” said Ms Zephine, who had also worked at State Bank of India for about a year.When asked whether she has lined up any specific plans, now that she is set to become a civil servant, she replied, “All that I am concerned about right now is giving the service my best.”