Two young men from Ahmedabad, Gujarat, Shubham, whose father drives a rickshaw, and Rohit, whose father is a farmer battling a chronic illness, have completed their MBBS degrees and are preparing to enter India’s medical workforce. Their journey, made possible through scholarship support from Yuva Unstoppable. Yuva Unstoppable ranks among India’s top 10 NGOs, with a proven track record of impacting 10 million+ beneficiaries across education, environment, healthcare, and livelihood, supported by 100+ corporate partners in CSR and philanthropic initiatives. Founded by Yale alumnus Amitabh Shah, who famously left behind a Wall Street career to focus on grassroots initiatives in India, the organization ensures that the nation’s brightest talents aren’t forced to quit their studies due to tuition costs or resource scarcity.
Who They Are, and Why Their Story Matters?
India’s healthcare system faces a severe shortage of doctors in rural and semi-urban areas. Every qualified medical professional who returns to serve these communities represents a direct response to that gap. Shubham and Rohit, both first-generation doctors from modest agrarian backgrounds, are now positioned to become part of that solution.
For Shubham, the financial strain of pursuing medicine on a rickshaw driver’s income was near-insurmountable. For Rohit, watching his father navigate illness without adequate healthcare access became a defining motivation, but the cost of medical school threatened to make the dream impossible. YuvaUnstoppable’s scholarship programme intervened at that critical juncture, providing sustained financial aid and mentorship through the years-long rigour of medical education. “I am deeply grateful toYuva Unstoppable and Amitabh Shah for believing in students like me,” said Rohit Kumar Hadiya, one of the newly qualified doctors. “Once I start earning, I want to support other students who are going through the same struggles I once faced.”
Amitabh Shah, founder of Yuva Unstoppable and the youngest Indian to receive the US Government’s International Ellis Island Award, spoke to the significance of this moment. “Seeing these young individuals transform into healthcare professionals is the most meaningful measure of what we do,” Shah said. “Their resilience proves that when financial barriers are removed, Indian youth can meet any global standard of excellence.”
How is this part of a Larger Movement in the Education System?
The graduation of Shubham and Rohit is not an isolated event, it is the latest chapter in a growing record of outcomes. Hundreds of Yuva Unstoppable scholarship students have already qualified as doctors. Over the next two years, an additional 2,000 scholarship students are expected to complete their medical degrees, significantly expanding the pipeline of healthcare professionals reaching underserved communities across India. “Each of these 2,000 students represents not just a degree, but a family whose trajectory changes, and a community that finally has a doctor they can trust,” said Swati Shah, Head of Scholarships, Yuva Unstoppable. So far, Yuva Unstoppable has supported 7000+ underserved students with scholarships to become doctors, engineers, CAs, lawyers, among others.
Since its founding, Yuva Unstoppable has worked to bridge the distance between talent and opportunity through concrete infrastructure: upgrading school facilities, funding scholarships, and connecting students to mentors and professional networks. The organisation’s work has been validated by the London School of Economics, which found that school interventions boosted learning outcomes by 4x and attendance by 15%.
The scholarship programme extends beyond medicine. Yuva Unstoppable continues to identify and support high-potential students in engineering, civil services, and other fields, grounded in the conviction that education remains the most durable equaliser in a developing economy.
About Yuva Unstoppable
Amitabh Shah founded Yuva Unstoppable after turning down a Wall Street position at JP Morgan following his Master’s degree from Yale University, choosing instead to work on the ground in India. He is the youngest Indian to receive the US Government’s International Ellis Island Award, an honour previously given to President Bill Clinton, President George Bush, Muhammad Ali, Indra Nooyi, and Malala Yousafzai. The organisation’s impact has been recognised by former Presidents Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam and Shri Ram Nath Kovind, and Amitabh Shah has been appointed as a Viksit Bharat Ambassador.
Impact at a Glance:
- 10 million+ beneficiaries empowered across 25 Indian states
- 10,000+ schools transformed with WASH facilities, STEM labs, and smart classrooms — boosting attendance by 15% and learning outcomes by 4x (validated by London School of Economics)
- 7,000+ students supported through scholarships
- 1,00,000+ youth skilled for jobs in AI/ML, IT/ITeS, BFSI, and manufacturing
- 5 million+ trees planted, supporting 10,000+ farmers and sequestering 2 million tons of carbon
- CSR partners include HDFC Bank, IBM, EY, PwC, Adani, Torrent, Bank of America, and the Gates Foundation. KPMG serves as the audit partner.
