There is a palm-reading story in this profile, and it deserves to come first. Khemraj Wankar — Roll No. 171, class of 1973 — had taught himself chiromancy during the GMC years: the art of reading the lines and mounts of the human hand to foretell what was coming. One day he looked at Abhimanyu Niswade’s palm and announced, with the quiet confidence of someone who has studied the matter carefully, that Niswade was destined to become a surgeon. The prediction was accurate in the sense that mattered and wrong in its speciality. Niswade did not become a surgeon. He became a Paediatrician, an academic researcher, and eventually the Dean of the institution in which the palm was read. If Wankar reads hands with any regularity, he may have learned to allow for the gap between prediction and outcome. In medicine, as in life, it is a gap worth allowing for.
From Khandala to GMC: The First Journey
Abhimanyu Niswade was born in Khandala, Taluka Sakoli, Bhandara district — a village forty-one kilometres east of the district headquarters and seven kilometres from Sakoli — to a farmer. His father had little formal education beyond primary school; his mother was a homemaker. He attended Zilla Parishad School, Khandala, then Lokmanya Tilak Vidyalaya and SES High School, Sakoli, and came to Nagpur for his premedical education at the Institute of Science. He entered GMC Nagpur in 1973 as part of a cohort that contained, unusually, a high proportion of first-generation doctors — young men and women whose families had no medical precedent and whose presence at GMC represented a social mobility still recent enough to feel remarkable.
His rural internship was at the primary health centre, Tiroda, 110 kilometres east of Nagpur — alongside Sharad Jaitly, Abhimanyu Kapgate, and Kailash Murarka. Urban internship followed at GMC Nagpur. He obtained his MD (Paediatrics) from GMC Nagpur, his thesis on IgE levels in paediatric asthma supervised by Dr. Anand Mohan Sur — the head of the Department of Paediatrics whose lecture on breastfeeding had, in an earlier year, directed Bharat Kothari towards the same speciality. The department had a way of producing commitments that lasted.
The Academic Climb and the INCLEN Fellowship
Niswade joined the Department of Paediatrics at GMC Nagpur as a Lecturer and moved steadily through the ranks: Reader, Professor, Head of Department. The ascent was unspectacular in its chronology but substantial in its content. He was awarded an INCLEN fellowship — membership of the International Clinical Epidemiology Network, a global body of clinical epidemiologists, biostatisticians, and social scientists united by a commitment to improving healthcare quality for disadvantaged populations. The fellowship changed the way he thought about research: not as an activity separate from clinical work, but as the discipline through which clinical work becomes legible, reproducible, and improvable.
Within the INCLEN network, he contributed to a landmark multicentre trial asking whether three days of oral amoxicillin worked as well as five days in the treatment of childhood pneumonia. The answer — that it did — had significant implications for treatment costs and compliance in resource-limited settings. The paper appeared in *PLoS One* in 2008. He also assessed neonatal mortality and morbidity in rural and tribal central India (*Indian Journal of Community Medicine*, 2011) and co-authored diagnostic tool papers for primary care physicians on neuromuscular impairment, autism, and epilepsy (*Indian Pediatrics*, 2014). The publication record is solid and purposeful — every paper chosen for its relevance to the population he cared about, not for the metrics of academic visibility.
The Dean’s Mandate
On 24 April 2015, Abhimanyu Niswade was formally appointed full-time Dean of Government Medical College, Nagpur. He had been officiating in the role since September 2014. He accepted the appointment without any visible hesitation, knowing exactly what the deanship of GMC entailed. GMC Nagpur is one of Maharashtra’s oldest and largest public medical colleges: a sprawling institution with a proportionally large accumulation of the problems that come with age, size, underfunding, and decades of deferred maintenance — physical, administrative, and academic.
His approach was blunt and consistent. Zero tolerance for disorder. All doctors to wear aprons. OPD hours extended by sixty minutes. The accident and emergency wards, which had been effectively shut, reopened. These are not glamorous policy achievements. They are the kind of decisions that a dean makes who understands that institutional culture is constituted by a thousand daily choices, and that the daily choices are where the culture is either defended or abandoned. Niswade defended it.
He was, by the accounts of those who worked under him, particular about cleanliness in a way that extended beyond hygiene into symbolism — a clean GMC was a GMC that still cared about itself. He was accessible to staff without being permissive about performance. He was, as those outside his inner circle sometimes found, demanding to the point of appearing severe. Those inside his inner circle knew that he demanded nothing of others that he did not demand of himself.
In 2018, the Medical Council of India conducted an inspection of GMC Nagpur for the purpose of verifying its fitness to admit two hundred students per year. The inspection found no deficiency in staff, infrastructure, or laboratory equipment. For a government institution of GMC’s age and size, this is not a routine outcome. Under Niswade’s stewardship, GMC also developed one of the finest trauma centres in the public sector in Maharashtra. In November 2018, the Department of Medical Education approved funding for ultra-modern equipment worth Rs 198 crore for the Radiotherapy Department — a decision that reflected both the quality of the institutional case made and the credibility of the man making it. Niswade retired as Dean in March 2019.
The Family and the Piercing Gaze
With a balding scalp and an expression that classmates describe, with careful consistency, as piercing, Niswade is the kind of person whose authority does not require announcement. It is there in the way he enters a room, the way he listens, the way he responds to a question with another question that makes the original question look imprecise. He looks — to use the phrase a classmate reached for without irony — like a leader men will follow. The grit in his eyes, visible in photographs taken across four decades, has not softened with time. He seems to consider this appropriate.
His wife, Dr. Devyani, holds an MS in ENT from Lady Hardinge Medical College, Delhi, and serves as Additional Director, CGHS, Nagpur. Their elder daughter Neha is an anaesthesiologist with a DM in Neuroanesthesiology, working at NMC Speciality Hospital, Dubai, alongside her husband Dr. Sagar Shahane, a neurosurgeon. Their younger daughter Grishmi holds an MDS and teaches at Kalmegh Dental College, Kolkata; her husband Dr. Karan Waghmare is an orthopaedic surgeon. The family has spread across Dubai, Kolkata, and Nagpur, which is the geography of a generation that built things in one place and watched their children build in others.
The farmer’s son from Khandala, who a classmate once predicted would become a surgeon, spent forty years in a different kind of operating theatre — the ward, the classroom, the Dean’s office — repairing the institution that had made him. Khemraj Wankar was not entirely wrong. The hands that built GMC Nagpur’s recovery were Abhimanyu Niswade’s.