In 1976, the male students of GMC Nagpur’s hostel had a benchmark for physical fitness that no textbook had prescribed: Ganesh Ramteke’s abdominal muscles. He had arrived at GMC as a boy of 147 centimetres, a farmer’s son from Panodi village in Bramhapuri, and within a year of arriving in Nagpur he had grown to 165 centimetres and built a body that generated, by his own admission, “a sense of envy and inferiority in most males.” The six-pack had no name yet in popular culture, but Ganesh had one before the term existed.
He would go on to spend four decades in government public health, building systems rather than bodies — but the discipline was the same.
The Boy Who Ranked Nineteenth
Ganesh was born in Panodi village, Bramhapuri, district Chandrapur. His father held a small piece of land and farmed it. He attended Nevjabai Hitkarini High School, Bramhapuri — the same school that produced Manik Khune of the 1973 batch — and in 1971 stood 19th in the merit list in the HSSC Board examination. He was, he notes without false modesty, the first and last student from that school to appear in the state merit list.
He came to Nagpur and joined the Institute of Science, then Hislop College, for premed education. He lived at Chokhamela Hostel near Deeksha Bhoomi with Adesh Gadpayle, Kailash Ramteke, and Gopal Ingle. In 1973, he joined Government Medical College, Nagpur.
The bodybuilding was purposeful, not vanity. “I measured just 147 centimetres when I passed the tenth class examination and was very keen to add a few inches to my height,” he recalled. Without a gymnasium — none existed in Nagpur then that he could use — he trained in the hostel with equipment improvised from what was available. The results spoke for themselves.
From Wards to Villages
After graduation, Ganesh did his internship at Tumsar and Bramhapuri. He did house jobs in Surgery and Gynaecology — but left both and joined the Government of Maharashtra’s public health service instead. His first posting was at a primary health centre in Seloo, district Wardha, followed by Bhidi. He then enrolled in the MD in Preventive and Social Medicine at GMC Nagpur, completing it under Dr (Mrs) ND Vasudeo with a thesis on the effect of reorientation training on multipurpose health worker skills.
What followed was a career that traced the geography of Maharashtra’s public health challenges. Bhandara. Nagpur. Gadchiroli. Jalgaon. Chandrapur. Parbhani. Hingoli. Jalna. Nagpur again. Latur. Each posting brought a different district, a different set of problems, a different population — tribal, rural, urban-poor — with the same underfunded infrastructure. He rose to become Additional District Health Officer and eventually retired as Deputy Director, Latur Circle, in August 2013.
The route was not linear, and it was not easy. But Ganesh had learned long ago, in a hostel room in Nagpur, that discipline and patience build things that haste cannot.
After Latur
Following retirement, Ganesh joined Gitanjali Medical College, Udaipur, as Associate Professor in Community Medicine — continuing the teaching he had woven into public health work throughout his career. He settled in Nagpur, in an apartment in Manish Nagar, and has watched his children build their own paths: a son, Abhishek, a cyber law practitioner in Nagpur, and a daughter, Avanti, who combined design with management.
Nandini, his wife, kept the home through all those years of transfers and postings, in the way that doctors’ spouses in government service quietly do — essential, unrecorded, irreplaceable.
Ganesh Ramteke came to Nagpur as a short boy from a village in Chandrapur district. He left government service four decades later having served more districts of Maharashtra than most men see in a lifetime. The physique has changed. The discipline has not.
ACF Fields
career_highlights: MD (Community Medicine), GMC Nagpur; DPH. Government public health service, Maharashtra: postings across Bhandara, Gadchiroli, Jalgaon, Chandrapur, Parbhani, Hingoli, Jalna, Nagpur, Latur. Retired as Deputy Director, Latur Circle, 2013. Associate Professor, Community Medicine, Gitanjali Medical College, Udaipur.
hook_quote: “I measured just 147 centimetres when I passed the tenth class examination and was very keen to add a few inches to my height. I began taking keen interest in athletics during my premedical days and within a year I grew to 165 centimetres.”