Mumbai: In a moment that proved even the world’s most powerful supercars can have the softest hearts, Lamborghini’s Mumbai dealership sent its roaring Urus SE to Tata Memorial Hospital—not for a photo shoot or a billionaire buyer, but to fulfil the last wish of a young cancer patient.
The emotional story surfaced after the Director of Tata Memorial Hospital shared a heartfelt post on X (formerly Twitter), revealing that one of their paediatric oncology patients, battling incurable cancer, had just two simple dreams: to meet MS Dhoni and to ride in a Lamborghini. While the former is still a work in progress (Twitter has been officially summoned for duty), the latter was completed in spectacular V8-powered fashion.

“Grateful to our Paediatric Oncology team for making this happen… Today, we could make one of these happen,” wrote the Director, adding that even a virtual call with MS Dhoni would mean the world to the child.
Soon after, the hospital driveway witnessed an unusual sight—a wheelchair meeting a hybrid super-SUV. The child was brought out to see the mighty Lamborghini Urus SE, complete with signature Italian design but plenty of drama. The young fan posed with the car, smiled for photos, and was then taken for a ride that was probably more thrilling than most test drives.
The Urus SE, sent by the Lamborghini Mumbai dealership as their official test-drive car, is no ordinary SUV. Priced at around ₹4.5 crore in India, it packs a twin-turbo V8 combined with a plug-in hybrid system, producing over 600 horsepower—enough to make even adults forget their worries, if only for a few seconds.
But on this day, the Urus wasn’t about speed, luxury or status. It was about kindness on four wheels.
In an industry obsessed with 0–100 km/h times, this was a reminder that sometimes the most powerful performance is not on the road, but in the heart. Lamborghini may be a dream brand for millions, but in Mumbai, it proved that it doesn’t just sell dreams—it delivers them too.
And while the Urus SE returned to being a test-drive car, for one child, it became something far more special: a supercar that arrived not to impress, but to care.