When Darpan Inani went blind at just three years old, his parents could have panicked. Most families would. Suddenly every question about the future: school, friendships, career, independence felt like a giant question mark. But Satish and Vimla Inani chose a different road. They didn’t isolate him or anything. They chose to treat him like any other child with big dreams. That single choice shaped the rest of his life.Today, Darpan is a national blind chess champion, a qualified Chartered Accountant, an international chess player, and a two-time gold medalist at the Para Asian Games. It’s an extraordinary list of achievements but the real story is about something much simpler: what happens when parents refuse to let a disability set the limits.
11 Jun 2026 | 18:00
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The only blind kid in a regular school
When it came time for school, Darpan’s parents didn’t look for a special setup. Rather than placing him in a separate environment, they enrolled him in a regular school in Vadodara. He was the only blind student there. It wasn’t easy. Every single day meant figuring out new ways to keep up, adapt, and learn alongside classmates who could see the board, the textbook, the whiteboard. But his parents never treated him as someone who needed less from life. And Darpan rose to meet it. He held his own among sighted classmates, often finishing near the top, and eventually scored a stunning 99.75% in his Class 12 Commerce exams, proving that disability does not determine ability.
A game that changed his life
Image Courtesy: Instagram/darpaninani_official
At 13, someone introduced Darpan to blind chess. It’s played differently from regular chess: the board has pieces with raised textures so players can identify them by touch. For Darpan, it wasn’t just a game, it became a passion. As he immersed himself in the game, he began participating in tournaments across the country and eventually on the international stage.By 2010, he’d made history, becoming the youngest player ever to win India’s National Blind Chess Championship. And that was just the start.
Stacking up the wins, on and off the board
Image Courtesy: Instagram/darpaninani_official
In the years that followed, Darpan kept representing India on the world chess stage, all while pursuing a serious career path. His story even got featured into the documentary ‘Algorithms,’ which captures the journeys of India’s blind chess players. But chess wasn’t his only pursuit. He also went on to qualify as a Chartered Accountant, a feat that requires years of discipline, focus, and perseverance. Then, in 2023, he added two more golds to his name at the Para Asian Games in China, and along the way picked up one of the highest FIDE ratings ever achieved by a visually impaired Indian player.Two very different worlds: chess and finance, both conquered by the same kid who once needed someone to read him his textbooks.
The advice from his father he never forgot
Behind all of this is something deeper: how his parents talked to him about hardship. They never told him life would be fair or easy. Instead, they framed his struggle as something he had the strength to face. Darpan still remembers his father giving him. “My child, God is taking the test of your courage, and he only examines the strongest of his children. Now are you brave enough and courageous enough to pass this test with the highest marks?”Darpan also recalls another line from his father that became a lifelong source of motivation. “‘Always remember one thing,’ he said, ‘a battle is never over until you win. The fight ends only when you achieve victory.’” That wasn’t just a pep talk. It became the lens through which Darpan saw every challenge afterward.
What every parent can take from this
Image Courtesy: Instagram/darpaninani_official
A lot of parents struggle with how to help their kids handle setbacks: how much to shield them, how much to push them. Darpan’s story offers a quiet but powerful answer to how his parents didn’t try to clear every obstacle out of his way. What they gave him instead was something more valuable: the unshakeable belief that he could clear them himself.His parents didn’t dwell on what he’d lost. They kept their eyes on what he could still build. And because of that belief, a three-year-old who lost his eyesight grew into a man whose achievements continue to inspire people.In the end, this isn’t really a story about chess or medals or a CA degree. It’s a story about what happens when parents choose to believe in possibility over limitation and let their child discover just how strong he really is.
