On 9 September 1979, the day Manohar Kanadia opened his private clinic in the Lakadganj colony where he had lived for 23 years, he charged his first patient two and a half rupees. He has not forgotten that figure. Forty-four years later, he still works from the same neighbourhood, still sees patients who bring their children and grandchildren to him, and still speaks of his work in the language of service rather than commerce.
He was, by his own account, the youngest in the class of 1973 to begin private practice.
The Boy from Itwari
Manohar was born in Nagpur to a civil engineer. He attended Umiya Shankar Narayanji High School, where he shared a bench with Dinesh Soni — a friendship that would survive GMC, internship, and four decades of separate lives. For his premedical studies, he moved to Sindhu Mahavidyalaya in Jaripatka, a college barely a year old, which nonetheless sent eight students to GMC Nagpur in 1973: Khatija Arif-Jumkhawala, Dhanwanti Vanjani, Harish Motwani, Gagan Panjwani, Manohar Kanadia, Chandrashekhar Jambholkar, Murtaza Akhtar, and Dinesh Soni.
The early morning bicycle ride from Itwari to GMC is what Manohar remembers most vividly from that first year. The group assembled in stages: Manohar and Dinesh Soni from Itwari, Bharat Kothari and Murtaza Akhtar joining them along the way, Arun Warkari emerging from the hostel near Amardeep Talkies, and Mahendra Sawarkar falling in as they sped through Mahal. “With our starched aprons carefully perched over the handlebars,” Manohar recalls, “we, the first years, would approach the GMC gate with hands trembling, tongues parched, and hearts palpitating. Ragging was an important rite of passage for first-year medical students in those days, and the mere sight of seniors would make our hearts leap in our throats. We could cope with Anatomy and Physiology, but not with ragging.”
The daily convoy had the quality of a small ritual — boys from different parts of the city, converging each morning toward the same gate, their white coats folded across handlebars like flags.
The Practice That Stayed Put
After graduation, Manohar and Dinesh Soni — inseparable since Bal Mandir — chose together: Katari Sawanga in Kondhali for their rural internship, six months in a primary health centre sixty kilometres from Nagpur. When the internship ended, Manohar did not wait.On 9 September 1979, he set up his clinic in the colony he had grown up in, treating neighbours who already knew his face.
Milind Dangre followed a month later, in October.
What Manohar built over the next four decades was not a hospital or a chain of clinics but a practice — small, continuous, rooted. He saw patients with coughs and fevers, with blood pressure and diabetes, with the ordinary ailments that arrive at a general practitioner’s door and the more serious ones that require referral, careful explanation, and someone to sit with. He was clear-eyed about his role: “Right from the beginning, I was very comfortable as a primary care physician. I knew my strengths and limitations and practiced safe medicine.”
That modesty is not false. It describes a particular intelligence — the ability to know what one does well and to do it, steadily, for a long time.
Three generations of families have passed through his clinic doors. Over the years, he has witnessed a profound shift in the role of the general practitioner: where he once primarily treated self-limiting illnesses in 1979, he now manages a patient base largely focused on chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. He has adapted to this epidemiological shift without fuss or friction.
Beyond his primary clinic, he manages five inpatient beds and holds a seat on the Board of Directors at Dr. Dalvi Memorial Hospital, a fifty-bed multispecialty facility in Lakadganj. His leadership there is well-established; he served as Medical Superintendent from 2000 to 2004 and now serves as a Trustee, with a particular focus on gynaecological healthcare.
His commitment to service extends into the heart of the community. For twenty-five years, he has dedicated his Wednesday evenings to Seva Bharati, a healthcare unit run by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh in New Mata Nagar. There, he provides consultations for those who cannot afford private care—a weekly ritual of service he has maintained with quiet, unwavering discipline for a quarter-century.
The Long View
The GMC Class of 1973 belonged to one of the last generations for whom general practice was a complete career—not a stepping stone to specialization, nor a default for those who missed postgraduate seats, but a lifelong calling. The decades since have not been kind to that ideal. Specialists have multiplied, corporate hospitals have reshaped the skylines of mid-sized cities, and the neighborhood doctor who knows three generations of a family has become a rarity.
Manohar watched this transformation from the inside. He does not rail against the change; he simply continued what he began: modest fees, meticulous medicine, and a practice built on unwavering trust. The formula was never complicated, but its consistency was remarkable.
In the late eighties and nineties, as the economics of general practice tightened across Vidarbha, Manohar’s practice remained a localized anchor. The secret wasn’t technological—it was relational. “My clinical and social skills,” he says, “have helped me develop a rapport with three generations of families who continue to treat me with respect and trust.”
That rapport now spans more than forty years. The boy who once cycled to GMC with a starched apron draped over his handlebars has become, in his own quiet way, the definitive doctor of his neighborhood. Age has failed to wither his enthusiasm or his commitment. He continues to practice with the same vigor he brought to his first day in 1979. Evidently, some batsmen from the Class of ’73 are built to play a very long innings.