Sevagram General Store: The One-Stop Shop for Village Life
In Sevagram in the mid-seventies, the medical college was just six years old. There were neither big showrooms nor fancy shops, no cinemas or luxury shopping malls. Only one bus would ply between Sevagram and Wardha; a cycle rickshaw would take an hour and a half to carry passengers and a Tonga (horse-drawn carriage) symbolized a luxurious journey from the city to the village. Flipkart and Amazon India hadn’t entered the households. There were no cell phones, no computers, or television sets. And there were just two houses in Sevagram with cars parked in front of them. The roads were not tarred, and the street was not lined with electric lights.
Sevagram was abuzz with newfound riches. Knowledgeable people—trained in medical schools, upwardly mobile, articulate and ambitious—began to arrive in the village. People knew each other by their first names. Residents of Sevagram spent all their evenings with their neighbours. They were excited to see and host a guest.
Sevagram had a simple shop that met the daily needs of medical students, doctors, nurses and ward boys. All the roads in the village would converge and lead to the shop. The shop offered almost everything— pen, pencil, paper, pad, chocolates, toys, gift items, kitchen utensils, buckets, brooms, Britannia biscuits and groceries. What more would a professor from the prestigious AIIMS or PGI medical schools ask for?
The shop was Sevagram General Store. Mr Gulab Singh Baghel owned the shop.
He passed away a few years ago at the ripe old age of 85. I had known him for almost four decades but hadn’t had a chance to know how poverty and ingenuity shaped his life. Last week, I spoke to Sunil, his son, who inherited the enduring legacy of his business skills. The conversations helped me understand the real Gulab Singh.
Early Life and Childhood
Gulab Singh was born to Shri Raisingh and Kausalya Bai Baghel on 3 August 1933. The Baghel community is a Rajput community mostly found in the Baghel Khand plateau of Madhya Pradesh. Rewa Riyasat was ruled by Baghel Rajput. When Solanki Rajput from Gujarat came to Madhya Pradesh, the Solanki king Vyaghra Dev established the Baghel dynasty from Solanki. They migrated to Vidarbha long ago.
Born in Ekdara, a village 14 km from Warud taluka in Amravati district, he was second of the five siblings—two brothers and three sisters. Baghels are traditionally farmers. Little wonder his father, too, was a small farmer.
At age 7, he went to Adarsh High School, Anji, a village 16 km north of Wardha city. He dropped out of school after the eighth grade. In those days, he slayed with his maternal uncle in Sukli Bai and would walk 4 km to school, every day. His father, a Hamal (a porter) in the Ekdara village, migrated to Wardha where he kept on doing the same job. In his adolescence, Gulab Singh worked for a while in Kharangana, Sukli and Anji villages. Farming helped him learn the vagaries of life: “You will have good seasons and bad seasons. One cannot control the weather but be prepared for it,” he once said. ” Don’t shout at the crops and don’t blame them for not growing fast enough. Don’t uproot the crops before they have had a chance to grow,” he would teach his children.
In the early fifties, he worked in a grocery shop near Ramakrishna Hotel, Shivaji Square, Wardha. Finding the job repetitive and boring, he moved to Goras Bhandar, Wardha. Goras Bhandar was started at Wardha in 1931 by Mahatma Gandhi, Acharya Vinoba Bhave and Shri Jamnalal Bajaj. Taking care of and serving the cows was close to Jamnalalji’s heart. About 1000 litres of milk would arrive here every day and he served as an accountant for seven years. His ingenuity impressed the management and he earned a promotion—the post of manager. In 1954, he married Shantibai who came from Hinganghat.
Making a Difference: The Humble Beginnings of Gulab Singh
For the next six years, he worked as a manager for the Government Credit Co-operative Society. In 1972, destiny brought him to Sevagram. Shri Anantram from Sevagram Ashram recognised his accounting skills, integrity and hard work ethos and put him in the Gandhi Ashram where he began to look after agriculture and accounts. The pay was a little over minimum wage. In those days, he was also asked to look after the Goshala in Pipri Meghe, about six km from Mangalwadi.
He would regularly attend dawn and dusk prayers in the Ashram. He learned the virtues of simplicity and frugality in Ashram and his early days at Goras Bhandar, and later at Ashram. influenced him to wear a Khadi all his life. As one with a strong feel for numbers, he was a stickler for accuracy. He would not mind spending an entire night checking the difference of even one rupee in the account. He practised fiscal discipline and believed in the adage that money saved is money earned.
He was born in abject penury—and spent his adolescence living quite literally hand to mouth—but was driven to make a difference. He toiled hard in order to keep the household afloat. ” We would go to a school in Wardha from our thatched hut near the Sevagram post office and our father would pay us only one-way bus travel expenses. We would walk from Wardha to Sevagram—this is how he wove financial frugality in our fabric,” recalls Sunil, his son whose departmental store is one of the most sought-after stores in Sevagram.
At Ashram, he started helping almost everyone who tapped his door. Always conscious of his early life struggles, he generously offered financial assistance to those in need.
In 1976, Sevagram Ashram Pratishthan opened a fair price shop (also known as a ration shop) and was assigned the responsibility of running the shop on the young shoulders of Gulab Singh. He was tasked with the distribution of staple food grains, such as wheat, rice, sugar and essential fuels like kerosene at subsidized rates to the poor. People from the neighbouring villages would flock to him and he would be up till the wee hours trying to satisfy every customer who came to the shop.
A year later, the entrepreneur in his blood got the better of him. At the behest of doctors from Sevagram Medical College, he left his job and decided to open a grocery shop. The shop was located between the old and the new hospital. He was able to convince the Ashram people of the necessity of starting a grocery shop that would cater to the needs of local doctors, nurses, attendants and technicians.
Deeply sceptical of the idea, Ashram Pratishthan was a bit reluctant to buy the idea, but he was able to prevail over the reservations. He obtained their approval with a caveat—to keep the bare minimum stock in the shop. By then, the medical college was almost a decade old and the number of health professionals staying on campus was growing. Almost nobody owned a car and bringing groceries from Wardha town required considerable effort and additional expenses. Doctors asked him to stock not only the grocery but the entire range of household items. The Pratishthan, not willing to expand the shop, expressed its inability to fund the expansion. It asked him to delink the shop with Pratishthan and launch a new shop independently.
Starting a Grocery Shop
In 1976, Sevagram Ashram Pratishthan opened a fair price shop (also known as a ration shop) and was assigned the responsibility of running the shop on the young shoulders of Gulab Singh. He was tasked with the distribution of staple food grains, such as wheat, rice, sugar and essential fuels like kerosene at subsidized rates to the poor. People from the neighbouring villages would flock to him and he would be up till the wee hours trying to satisfy every customer who came to the shop.
A year later, the entrepreneur in his blood got the better of him. At the behest of doctors from Sevagram Medical College, he left his job and decided to open a grocery shop. The shop was located between the old and the new hospital. He was able to convince the Ashram people of the necessity of starting a grocery shop that would cater to the needs of local doctors, nurses, attendants and technicians.
Deeply sceptical of the idea, Ashram Pratishthan was a bit reluctant to buy the idea, but he was able to prevail over the reservations. He obtained their approval with a caveat—to keep the bare minimum stock in the shop. By then, the medical college was almost a decade old and the number of health professionals staying on campus was growing. Almost nobody owned a car and bringing groceries from Wardha town required considerable effort and additional expenses. Doctors asked him to stock not only the grocery but the entire range of household items. The Pratishthan, not willing to expand the shop, expressed its inability to fund the expansion. It asked him to delink the shop with Pratishthan and launch a new shop independently.
He had to pay back everything that he owed to Ashram Pratishthan.
When the going got tough
Completely thrown off balance by the unexpected turn of events in his life, Gulab Singh found himself on his knees. Not only did he have to repay the money he owed to Pratishthan, but he also had to inject fresh funds to make the new shop commercially viable. He turned to his relatives for support when things got really tough. Together, they managed to raise Rs 10,000. However, before he could invest the borrowed money, his relatives demanded repayment of their debts. He felt abandoned and confused.
But only for a short while.
Gulab Singh quickly gathered his wits and offered his wife’s mangal sutra—the only piece of gold that she possessed—as collateral for a loan from the Bank of Maharashtra. With the loan, he was able to repay his debts to Ashram Pratishthan and his relatives.
He threw himself into his work, living modestly and investing all his time, money, energy, and efforts into the shop. The shop was strategically located in front of the hospital’s main gate, with the central bank of India next door and the doctors’ residences just behind. This prime location meant that health professionals, patients, and their relatives would pass by his shop at least once a day and Gulab Singh exploited this proximity to the fullest.
As a result, his customer base began to grow.
Endearing personality and strong relationships with customers and friends
He had not read Stephen Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People—the book was written in 1989— but he knew everything that they didn’t teach you at Harvard Business School. He genuinely cared about customers—and showed it. He would always put customers first, no matter who they were— a schoolchild, a medical student, a professor, a nurse, a patient or a patient’s relatives. “They are here to do business, increase sales and generate profits,” he would explain to his children why he valued them so much. I am not sure if he had ever heard this quote from Mahatma Gandhi, “A customer is the most important visitor on our premises. He is not dependent on us. We are dependent on him. He is not an interruption in our work – he is the purpose of it. We are not doing him a favour by serving him. He is doing us a favour by giving us the opportunity to serve him.” but actively practised these words to the hilt.
Indeed, time and again I observed him following this rule,” The customer is not someone to argue with or match wits against—he is a person who brings us his wants.” Rajputs are known for their boisterous voices; we do not expect this degree of humility from Rajput.
Not afraid to break away from traditional models, he introduced new businesses to increase his earnings. Thus, when he heard that the medical hostel required firewood to cook food, he began supplying firewood to the hostels. To save expenses, he personally unloaded the packed truck and used a heavy axe to split the wood, and then transported it to the medical college hostel using a handcart. As his shop grew, he involved his three children and later daughters-in-law in the business. Although he may not have known about Mohsin Pabrai’s book “Dhandho Investor,” which details how Patels in the US succeeded in owning half the motels in the country during the 1970s, he knew how to utilize his family to manage the business and cut costs. It’s no surprise that he was acclaimed as the top low-cost operator in Sevagram.
During his four-and-a-half decade stay in Sevagram, his friendly approach endeared him to the customer’s hearts. Dr Sushila Nayar knew him well, as did Dr KK Trivedi, Dr ML Sharma, Dr OP Gupta, Dr AP Jain and Dr R Narang who became his most revered customers. His close friends include Bhoge Guruji and Kolhe Guruji from Yeshwant School and Subhash Deshmukh. Suresh Deshmukh, Pramod Shende and Shankar Agnihotri were his friends but he never took advantage of his political connections. He also befriended Shri Vishnu Borle, Thengeji and Chiman bhai.
Customer Service and Personalization
He was an extremely hard worker, putting in long hours every day. He would open the shop at 7 am, clean the merchandise, monitor inventory, track orders, keep accounts, and always be available behind the desk. Busy with his shop day and night, he had little time for recreational activities. He treated every customer with respect and had a knack for foreseeing their needs. Medical students, residents, and faculty found him unassuming, honest, and likable. “If I cannot run the shop profitably, no one can,” he thought, working as hard and smart as he could to make it successful. Although his business ebbed and flowed, he maintained his mental calmness. Money was important to him, as he was under pressure to support his four children, but he did not forget his social obligations. Over the years, he lent money to medical students, doctors, nurses, technicians, and attendants, seldom asking for repayment. He also helped poor customers whenever he could and had good contacts with doctors at the hospital.
In 1992, when the Central Bank of India moved to a new location, he rented the space and started selling gift articles and other items that medical students needed. He had a visionary mindset and dreamt of starting a school for poor children and industry. Although he was short-tempered, he was not afraid to speak his mind.
In his shop, whenever he eyed poor customers, he would try his best to fulfil their needs. Over the years, he developed good contact with doctors in the hospital. Whenever people from neighbouring villages ran into health-related issues, he would accompany them to the hospital, ensuring that they could access senior doctors,” said Sunil, his son.
Whenever his customers came to the shop to buy a birthday gift, he would remember who bought what, and would not only ensure that the gift was not duplicated but also suggest an item that the customer could afford.
He was a visionary and was never content with the ordinary work he was doing. He always had big aspirations and dreamed of starting a school for underprivileged children. He also had ideas about starting an industry. He had a talent for knowing whom to speak with and when. Despite being short-tempered, he was not afraid to speak his mind and tell things as they were.
The Legacy of the Baghel Brand
Fast forward forty years, and the Baghel family business has diversified into independently owned shops and properties owned by Gulab Singh’s three children and grandchildren. Despite the onslaught of e-commerce giants like Flipkart and Amazon, the Baghel brand has stood strong in brick-and-mortar stores.
A Father’s Love and Support
After his wife died in 1985—he was only 51 then—he didn’t let the shock of her premature death numb him. He looked after his children—Vijay, Bhupendra and Sunil—taking care of their education and helping them acquire and hone skills in the family-owned businesses. His love and support were instrumental in their success today.
The End of an Era, But Not the End of His Legacy
Mr Gulab Singh continued to work in the shop until his mid-eighties. Despite his passing on 2 August 2018 following complications from a broken hip, his legacy lives on. The Sevagram people remember him fondly, sharing stories of his wisdom and kindness for generations to come. Although he is no longer with us, Gulab Singh remains an important part of the village, a cherished friend and go-to shopkeeper for all who knew him.
Sir
Re- lived Sewagram days thru’ your writing.
For all we students he was always encouraging and a fatherly figure !
💐🙏🏻
Very nice write up, as always.
I read this piece a couple of times and was transported to nostalgic times in the 90s in Sewagram. What could we have done without this shop? Sunil Bhaiyya and Munna Bhaiyya were our support system during our time in Sewagram. We will be always indebted to their kindness and their support during those years. “Gulabsingh ki dukaan” as they called it, will forever have a place in our hearts, no matter where we are…. Thank you once again, sir. Mazaa aa gaya after reading this!
Sheer Nostalgia Sir
Coop was such an integral part of our lives
Remember Babuji so well
In fact, we missed meeting him when we were there for our 25th reunion as he wasn’t well
Thank you so much for sharing Sir.
Thank you for sharing, Sir.
The co op store was a part our life at Sewagram
Very nostalgic.
Bahut si purane yaaden taza ho gayeen. Hamare bahia khate hote the . Udhar dete the …bitiya bad me de Dena le jao …tum per nahi vishwas karunga to fir kisper…. hasata huva chehara. Shuruvat ki kahani unhone ekdin apane much se sunayee yaad aa gayee Sir !! Aapane bahut sunder likha he 🙏 🙏
Well written. He was a simple unassuming man.
I’m feeling nostalgic..
I remember we used go to his store for all our daily requirements as we felt so homely with Sunil bhaiya and Munna bhaiya. And very quickly they practically knew all of us by our names…
I wish I knew all about Shri Gulab singh ji 🙏back then..but im so happy that you ve shared his wonderful journey with us..
He was indeed a unsung hero of sewagram..
Very touchy and well studied article about Gulabsingh ji. Sir such a hard working gentleman he was .When I was in the hostel oftenly I used to to visit his store .He always greeted with smile .It’s very kind of you too to write about him.
Really Sir..Sewagram memories are incomplete without mention of this supershop..And real gem persons like Gulab Singh uncle and Sunil bhaiyya..Very beautiful description sir.
Remember our good Golden Years in Sewagram. Very nostalgic.
Shivani Malik
Thank you sir …. immensely beautiful…. heartwarming and enlivened. So many memories and so many things I did not know about him…. this was one of the most beautiful sharing I have read in the past few months …. am honoured and privileged to be a part of the small place sewagram … the charm is embedded deep… ✨🌹🌹🌹🙏
Prolific account… Indeed!
The shop was part and parcel.of our Sewagram days.
A tour de force your article, Sir…. And, also, the life of Gulabsingh uncle…. We, all, look forward to reading your articles written precisely and articulately…
What a great write up. I cannot imagine what life in Sevagram would have been without his shop. 🙏
Beautiful write up, Brought back immensely precious memories.
Malgudi days!
So beautifully written, uncle, I was completely unaware of the history of this shop! 🙂
The only cooperative shop in the world to sell hematoxylin, eosin and glass marking pencils, which were so difficult to procure even in Mumbai. Hats off to his entrepreneurship.
Incredible!
This is beautiful….!
I always miss Sewagram..
I should have stayed as faculty..
Nicely written sir.
Once I went to wardha. The shopkeeper was surprised. He said, when you can get everything from Gulabsingh store why did you come here.
This store has almost everything anyone needs routinely. Hard work and good vision. Same continued by his sons.
Fabulous write up ..kindled memories..He used to have a notebook where every student ka hisaab and arrears were written meticulously.. Settled at month end !!!!
True Sir. Indeed the co-op had everything one wanted and Sunil bhaiya was so humble alwazzzzzz to help with everything. His father used to just exchange smiles and very little talk when we studied. Surely your words have told us so beautifully his hardships that made our lives comfortable away from home…
Very nicely written sir! Jai ho!
True sir, I also knew Gulabsinghji for many year. Very soft spoken, humble, hard working person. Respectable person. Vijay was my school mate. He never tried to save tax unethically. Hats off to him and his family. As usual you have narrated his life sketch beautifully. Hats off to you. 🙏🙏🙏
Sir, Thank you for starting your writing “career” and thank you for beginning with the iconic Gulab Singh ji’s story. He and his shop connect generations of Sevgramites💖
What a life story.Thanks to SP for bringing Gulab Singh ji to our memory. I personally won’t forget Gulab singh and the three children.Their humility is truly Gandhian.
Nicely penned down. Really he was a very good person. It is very difficult to find such people in these days.
We all thrived in Sewagram, courtesy to the Late Mr Gulabsinghji and his family. The days when we almost ran out of funds till the month end, until the DD from Papa arrived, the shop was our only way to survive. The Sewagram Store kept us full of hope, thanks to their student-friendly account register policy where one could write down one’s dues and clear them later on comfortable days. I pray Almighty God to keep the holy soul in peace. Our prayers for the family. Respected Sir, Your writing skills are just next level.🙏🙏💐💐💐
Your inimitable story telling style and acumen, enviable dexterity with which you weave an informed perspective around merely a character or an event, is so beautiful sir.
Reminiscent of ‘Malgudi Days’. Wish you too do likewise with, say, ‘Sevagram chronicles’
I spent merely 3 years as a PG trainee (Community Medicine) at MGIMS (97 – 99) but those years stand out as very special ones.
Do please continue to write sir.
Great write up about a person whom I used to call ‘uncle’ since childhood but never knew about his struggles!
Very well written Sir I remember him and his shop but never knew his story Thank you for sharing it!
All of us know about Gulab rao and his departmental store, but its more fun reading your articles sir. I still remember how beautifully you taught us the respiratory system making small alveoli and bronchioles
Elaborate description of a personality… Thanks Dr Kalantri….
Well penned indeed!
Fantastic piece of information for all of us from sevagram. Never knew this history behind the shop and the entrepreneur behind it.
No words to appreciate you too sir for your such a wonderful description or a story of a person whom I have known since my childhood. It is in fact so beautifully penned down that those who dnt know him will also like this story as behind it lies a great moral for all of us in many ways. Infact hats off to you for your writing and reading skills that we came to know while going through the texts. So finally it was great learning and motivational.
Many thanks to you.
Such a heartwarming story- Thanks for sharing.
Nice to know another gem from Sewagram.
Thanks sir for opening an another page from the history of Sewagram.
सर श्री बघेल काका के बारे में आपने बहुत सुंदर ढंग से उनके जीवन और जीवनशैली का परिचय कराया । व्यापार के कारण मेरा भी व्यक्तिगत सम्बंध उनसे आया करता था । उनसे मिलने जाना यानी कमसे कम एक घंटे की फ़ुरसत । जब भी मिलते व्यापार के बारे में , परिवार के बारे में अवश्य पूछते थे । वाक़ई में उनसे बहुत कुछ सीखने को मिला है ।
FANTASTIC!!
Everytime you write about someone, it takes us down the memory lane!!😊
Gets us back to Sewagram;In a minute through a Time Machine to the 79 to 87 era .
We relive our inadvertent relationship with that person.
Thanks Sir 😊🥇
Excellent tribute to the noble soul who enriched so many budding doctors and residents of sewagram.
You have done full justice to chronicle his life story 🙏
Perfect tribute to him … Regards !!
There’s so much that even I did not know about him, even though he was such an integral part of our student lives! I remember, when Badi Behenji passed, he had quietly pulled down his shutters, and closed his shop as a mark of respect for her…it was a quiet, but eloquent expression of his regard for her.
Oh ! Such a vivid narrative ! A beautiful life/ family followed up so well ! Thanks Prof Kalantri ! 🙏🏼
There were many such idols in Sevagram, Gulabsingh Kaka is one of them. I bow down to that holy soul.
Those who had simplicity, generosity and sympathy towards others, they had these three achievements.
This is the master piece sir…we all knew him so well …but so much more we know now sir…its just superb sir
There was a spirit in sevagram and that was of cohesion. The small Chowk and its shops were the beeline of the small village. Rightly said everyone knew everyone by name. I have seen Gulabsingh uncle since childhood and it was neighbourhood affair. Munna bhaiya and Sunil are the fine example of the values Gulabsingh ji instilled.
Lovely write up and so many things i was reminiscing.
How succinctly written, which only you can. The untold and unknown facets of a stern but loving man. I remember my days of PG when I was engaged to Aarti, and with a meagre stipend of 1700, I used to purchase small gifts for her on her birthday, etc. off course with udhar from Gulab Singh ji. Somehow lost touch with all those wonderful simple and helpful people due to complexities of life. Thanks for making me go down memory lane and making me think and pray for all that he and innumerable people like him who made our life easy and enjoyable.
All respect for you and your contributions in moulding us. Pranam sir and respect at your feet. 🙏🙏🙏
So many memories !!!
There’s so much that even I did not know about him, even though he was such an integral part of our student lives! I remember, when Badi Behenji passed, he had quietly pulled down his shutters, and closed his shop as a mark of respect for her…it was a quiet, but eloquent expression of his regard for her
I have gone through the link forwarded by you on late Shri Gulabsingh Baghel.
When I opened the link and commenced reading it, I just forgot that I was reading a “PDF”. I thought, I was watching a documentary on Shri Gulabsingh.
My memories went back to 1969-71, when I was posted at Wardha. I used to bring my two kids, Hema and Dilip, on scooter, to pay visit to the Gandhiji’s Ashram. In those days, it was dangerous to travel to Sewagram., as there was no traffic, as such.
In 1983, I was reposted at Wardha. In the intervening period, there was much development at Sewagram. In 1985 Dilip got admission in MGIMS and I had to visit Sewagram often. I was well acquainted with Mr GulabSingh Baghel. I used to keep a deposit of Rs, 2000/- with Baghel for pocket expenses of Dilip; with clear instructions that nothing should be given on credit basis, to Dilip, from the shop. In 1989, Asha also secured admission, I enhanced the deposit to five thousand. I had watched Gulabsingh growing in age; so also his entrepreneurs. I had very cordial relations with him as well as with Munna. I used to take assistance of Sunil for any hospital matters.
I’m overwhelmed by your style of writing the screenplay, the fluency and command over the language.
We are all doing well and hope the same at your end, too. Please convey my best wishes to dear madam and others.
Good day. With warm regards,
Raghavan
When we joined in1993, I was one of those rare people who wasn’t carrying a mattress/hold all. My father also wasn’t pleased with the cotton filled mattresses. Gulab Singh ji ensured it was brought from Wardha and delivered to me.
मामाजी को विनम्र अभिवादन
डॉ.कलंत्री सर ने मामाजी के बारेमें जो जानकारी दिया वह वंदनिय है। मामाजी की तपस्या हमारे लिये प्रेरणा है।
The Great personality…
Always inspiring all.
Thanks to Dr. Kalantri Sir ji for superb and detailed information.
Thank you for penning this lovely tribute. My daughter Vidhi, who was about 5 years old, was an avid customer, when we were there for a short visit. Every day, when I was at work, she spent many happy hours at the shop. He put together all free trinkets lying about the shop for her. Every time, I went to Sewagram later without her, on my return, she would ask whether that uncle had sent her some more!