Exam Jankari

Girlsโ€™ Lives Matter: A NEET Aspirant Silenced by Her Own Father

๐๐š๐ฉ๐š, ๐€๐š๐ฉ ๐Š๐š๐ฎ๐ง ๐’๐ž ๐‚๐จ๐ฅ๐ฅ๐ž๐œ๐ญ๐จ๐ซ ๐๐š๐ง ๐†๐š๐ฒ๐ž ๐“๐ก๐ž?
A 17-Year-Old NEET Aspirant Beaten to Death by Her Own Father

In a gut-wrenching tragedy that has shaken the entire nation, a 17-year-old girl named Sadhana Bhosale from Nelkaranji village in Sangli district, Maharashtra, lost her life at the hands of her own fatherโ€”all because she scored poorly in a NEET mock test.

Sadhana, a bright and hopeful Class 12 student, had long nurtured the dream of becoming a doctor. But on the night of her mock exam results, her dreamโ€”and her lifeโ€”was brutally snatched away.

A Question That Triggered Brutality

When confronted by her father, Dhondiram Bhosale, a headmaster by profession, about her low marks, Sadhana reportedly replied:
โ€œPapa, aap kaun se collector ban gaye the? Aapke bhi to marks kam the.โ€
(โ€œDad, which collector did you become? You too had low marks.โ€)

What followed was a horror no child should ever face. Enraged by her response, her father picked up a wooden stick and beat her mercilesslyโ€”throughout the night.

A Night of Pain. A Morning of Neglect.

Despite her severe injuries, Dhondiram did not take Sadhana to the hospital. Instead, he went on to attend an International Yoga Day event the next morning, leaving his daughter unconscious at home.

By the time he returned and tried to get her medical help, it was too late. Sadhana was declared dead before treatment could begin.

Justice Begins, But the Pain Remains

The local police have arrested Dhondiram Bhosale. An FIR has been filed, and a deeper investigation is underway.
But for the villagers of Nelkaranjiโ€”and for everyone who hears this heartbreaking storyโ€”the emotional damage is irreparable.

When Dreams Are Crushed By Expectations

Sadhanaโ€™s death is not just a case of domestic violence. It is a tragic reflection of the toxic pressure placed on students in the name of academic excellence, especially in the fiercely competitive medical entrance space.

No exam, no grade, no result should ever be greater than a childโ€™s life.

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