I, Rajesh Kumar Pathak, from Tripura village, Burari, Delhi, am a person with a disability. There is a respected person, Ram Karan Ji, who resides in Ayodhya and is immersed in the service of Lord Ram in the Shahadat Ganj area. Sir, I extend my heartfelt greetings to you. You are truly fortunate to be absorbed in the name of Lord Ram. May the Lord bless you, and may this devotional singing bring new happiness, growth, prosperity, and fulfillment into your life. Now, coming to your question regarding the changes made by CBSE: The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has stopped conducting the 10th and 12th exams for private candidates. This is the biggest change—now a blind or disabled person cannot give the 10th class exam directly through CBSE as a private candidate. For blind students, many kinds of hurdles have been created. For example, if you want to appear from Delhi, you need to have a Delhi Aadhar card. But where would a person get that made? Sometimes an organization might help by giving their address for Aadhar, but only if you are staying there. So, these kinds of rules have been created by CBSE. If you have already passed 10th grade, then you can appear for the 12th grade exam through Open School (like NIOS), based on your 10th certificate. But yes, you will have to take migration from CBSE to do that. As for writers (scribes) for disabled candidates in exams—there’s a rule that for 10th-level exams, the scribe must be of 7th or 8th-grade level. Although the Secretary issued an order about this, the exam-conducting agencies have rejected the Secretary’s directions. Now, Santosh Kumar Lumta Ji, the head of the National Disabled Federation, is preparing to knock on the doors of the Supreme Court. So, day by day, disabled individuals are facing only more and more difficulties. Our entire team and all our federations associated with our organization request that: we are not against technology, but...