Two years ago, Shubham Shukla and Harshvardhan Singh were just like any other pair of driven young friends — one dreaming of IAS, the other donning the IPS uniform. They shared notes, plans, long study hours, and a vision to serve the country. Harshvardhan had already made it. Shubham was next in line.
But fate had other plans.
Just five months ago, Harshvardhan, posted as an IPS officer, died in a road accident in Karnataka while heading to join his first assignment. The news shook the nation and broke something inside Shubham. But what it couldn’t do was stop him.
Today, with an All India Rank of 116 in UPSC 2024, Shubham’s story has come full circle. soaked in celebration, stitched with the silence of loss.
THE REWA BOY WITH BIG DREAMS
Hailing from Urrahat Mohalla in Rewa, Madhya Pradesh, Shubham Shukla grew up in a modest household. His father, Ajay Shukla, runs a business. His mother, Sangeeta, is a homemaker. From the beginning, Shubham stood out not for being loud or flashy, but for his focus.
A student of Bal Bharti School, Rewa, and later a civil engineering graduate from IET DAVV Indore, Shubham was the kind of student teachers remember. His grandfather once hoped he’d become a successful engineer, but Shubham’s heart was set on public service.
ENGINEERING BY DEGREE, IAS BY PASSION
While his batchmates at college were preparing for GATE or applying for jobs, Shubham quietly started laying the groundwork for his civil services journey. His sister Shivani recalls how he would come home from college, skip the Netflix sessions, and head straight to his desk.
Delhi came next. Books, coaching classes, and the relentless grind of Mains and Prelims became his world. But through every exam, every rejection, and every sleepless night. there was one constant: Harshvardhan.
THE LOSS THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING
Harshvardhan Singh wasn’t just a friend, he was Shubham’s sounding board, his daily check-in, his fellow warrior in this long, uncertain fight. When Harsh cleared UPSC and joined the IPS, it felt like a joint victory.
So when the accident happened, it hit Shubham hard. Just months before his own interview, he lost his closest friend.
He couldn’t talk for days. He wasn’t crying. He was just silent.
But Shubham didn’t let that silence drown his dream. He picked up where he left off, this time, carrying not just his hopes, but Harshvardhan’s memory too.
FOURTH TIME. FINAL TRY. THIS TIME, IT WAS DIFFERENT.
Shubham had cleared the UPSC Mains four times before. He had reached the interview stage thrice. Each time he came close but not close enough.
This time, in his final attempt, the result was different. AIR 116. The dream was real. And the first thing he did? He dedicated the success to three people — his parents, his sister Shivani, and his friend Harshvardhan.
A MESSAGE THAT GOES BEYOND RANK
Today, Shubham Shukla works as an Assistant Director at the Sports Authority of India. But very soon, he’ll step into a new role as an IAS officer.
There will be a nameplate outside his office. There will be files to clear, villages to visit, policies to implement. But behind it all will always be the story of a boy from Rewa who chose to keep going even when the world around him paused.
His success isn’t just about cracking an exam. It’s about carrying someone’s legacy forward — quietly, powerfully.
NOT JUST A RESULT, BUT A PROMISE
For Shubham, the journey wasn’t just about becoming an IAS officer. It was about proving that even in the face of unimaginable loss, you can still rise.
In his own words to a friend after the results were announced, he said softly:
“Harsh would’ve been proud. This one’s for him.”
And that says it all.