Mumbai: The son of a marginal farmer, Rajesh Patil, a 2005 Odisha Cadre IAS officer, always nurtured the dream of becoming a collector.
After achieving his dream of joining the administrative service, Patil wrote an autobiographical booklet titled ‘Tai Mi Collector Vhayanu’ (Mother, I have become a collector). It was a tribute to his farmer-mother, whom he had promised that “one day I would make her the collector’s mother”.
Hailing from a small village in Jalgaon district of Maharashtra, Patil is at present on deputation as the Commissioner of Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation in that state.
His story begins with his childhood days when he found himself working odd jobs to help his debt-ridden family, The New Indian Express reported.
“I am the only son with three sisters. Our two-acre land was irrigated with the help of a well; we depended largely on erratic monsoon rains. The income was meagre, so we had to work on others’ land in our village,” recalled Patil.
He had to skip his school and go out for work. “I was good in my studies, but my hours were spent on working at farms. Somehow, I nurtured a dream to become a collector, which is the highest administrative posting in government,” he said.
“I realized that if we were to get out of our poverty, the only thing I required was good education. So, I would study no matter how physically drained I was,” he added.
He was a naughty and mischievous boy. “I played with kids, playing pranks on them. Like most of them, I too stole things and betted on insignificant things. Then, my mother drilled some sense into me, turning my attention to book reading. That changed my life. My mother played a pivotal role in my success,” Patil said.
“Once we had to mortgage our home. I was about to get a job, but my parents told me not to worry about the family’s financial condition. They wanted me to focus on my objective to become the collector. Even as I struggled making a tough choice, whether to support the family by joining some work or pursue my aim, my parents stood by me,” he shared.
After completing his primary and secondary education in government schools in the Marathi medium, he overcame the language barrier. “I’d tell my farmer-mother that one day I would make her the collector’s mother. I tried four times for the UPSC exams. I made it in my fifth attempt. I called my mother to say: ‘Tai, Mi Collector Vayanu’.”
The book is his attempt to guide thousands of youth from rural India dreaming to clear competitive exams.
The IAS officer said he has seen corruption at local bodies since childhood. “For a birth or death certificate or a benefit of a government scheme, rural people go through many bureaucratic barriers where at times they have to bribe some officials. I want to make a few changes in the panchayat raj system. I think if those changes are made, the system would be more responsive and directly benefit the intended people,” he signed off.