Ever since he got to know that he cleared
the chartered accountancy finals in the first attempt, 23 -year-old M.
Gnana Sampath has been itching to go home.
“I
can’t wait for my people to say, ‘auditor vandhaachu,’” says the
all-India third-rank holder who hails from Pogalur near Coimbatore.
“There are barely three or four graduates
there. My parents do not even know what a CA is. But that is the place
that taught me to take education seriously,” he says.
“At
a very young age, I was sent to Ellapalyam where my grandparents live,
because at Pogular I had to walk up to 3 km and then travel by bus for
an hour to reach school,” he says.
Gnana Sampath hails from an agricultural
family and says his father wished for him to study so he wouldn’t have
to depend of farming.
“We were completely
dependent on well irrigation. A few years ago, when the fields dried
up, our life collapsed. We have been living on my father’s savings since
then,” he says.
Last week, when Gnana Sampath told his
parents he scored 593 marks and secured a national rank, his mother had
one thing to say, “Don’t roam around much on a bike. There is too much
traffic in Chennai.”
“My parents have barely studied up to class
VIII, but my uncle, a B.Com graduate, was an accountant with the RBI. He
was my hero. Though I was interested in science, I chose the commerce
stream to break the circle of poverty,” he says.
Gnana Sampath pursued B.Com at PSG College
of Arts in Coimbatore. “Everybody there wore good clothes and spoke
great English. I was extremely shy for the first couple of years. But
later, I learnt to mingle,” says the student who has already cleared
Cost and Works Accountancy.He underwent a rigorous schedule when he
moved to a mansion in Chennai a few years ago.
“I tried to manage with as little money as
possible because I was dependent on my father. I got Rs. 7,000 as
stipend but that was not enough in a city like Chennai,” he says. The
day began as early as 6 a.m. with classes, after which he would spend
all day at ICAI in Nungambakkam preparing, and then go to evening
classes.
His room has just the bare essentials and
the TV is plugged off. “Fear of failure kept me focussed. I didn’t want
to spend more money. It is time I gave my parents some relief,” he says.
His peers speak highly of him. “He is very dedicated. Even in class,
when asked a question, he would wait for others to answer. When
everybody gave up, he would softly give out the right answer,” says his
roommate Nagasabarish who hails from Pollachi.
Gnana Sampath is also an inspiration for
him, he says. “It is by looking at him and learning from him that I
cleared my CA finals in the first go this year,” Nagasabarish says.
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