In the late 1960s, a mother in Alipur, a small village in Chandrapur, made a radical decision. Her daughter, Maya, had finished the seventh standard at a school that could offer no more. Rather than letting the girl settle into the domestic rhythm of a farming family, the mother took her to Wardha, rented a two-room apartment, and dedicated herself to ensuring Maya received a science education. It was a sacrifice of immense proportions, a quiet bet on a future that the mother would never fully see. Maya’s mother died when she was in her second year at GMC Nagpur, never witnessing the moment her daughter emerged as a “full doctor”.
The Simple Girl from Warora
Maya describes herself as a “simple girl who came from a modest background”. Born in Warora to a farming father, her entry into the competitive world of GMC Nagpur in 1973 was a triumph of rural grit over urban privilege. She navigated the college years in the company of a close-knit group—Pratibha Thakre, Rekha Sapkal, Maya Bhaskarwar, and Vanmala Chatur—women who would all become pillars of Vidarbha’s medical landscape.
The central tension of Maya’s life was the pull between her professional potential and her domestic responsibilities. After graduation, she served at the Government Hospital in Wardha. It was here that she encountered Dr. Rani Bang, the legendary gynecologist and social activist. For a young doctor, Bang was more than a supervisor; she was a master-class in surgery and ethics.
Dr. Rani Bang taught me all that I could learn as a post-graduate in Obstetrics and Gynaecology. She taught me surgeries step-by-step, explaining the tips and tricks of each operation. I was so influenced by her that I even thought of moving to SEARCH in Gadchiroli, but I couldn’t because of competing family responsibilities.
The Tendulkar of Tubectomies
Maya eventually joined Matru Seva Sangh (MSS), an institution that has been the bedrock of women’s health in Maharashtra since 1921. She served there for nearly 25 years. Her forte was family planning, a mission she pursued with the stamina of a marathon runner. She traveled to the furthest corners of the Wardha district—Pulgaon, Arvi, Hinganghat, and Anji—organizing camps in an era when population control was a critical national imperative.
The statistics of her career are staggering. Over three decades at Matru Seva Sangh, Maya performed close to 50,000 tubectomies. It is a number that batch-mates often compare to the career run-tally of Sachin Tendulkar. Beyond the volume, there was the pioneering nature of her work; she was the first doctor to start performing Caesarean Sections at the Matru Seva Sangh in Wardha, providing an essential intervention that previously required a trip to the medical college in Sevagram. She completed over 1,000 such surgeries, often in the quiet, pressurized environment of a district hospital where the margin for error was slim.
The Independent Inning
In 2004, Maya made the pivot to private practice, establishing a seven-bed hospital in Wardha equipped with its own operation theater and ultrasound. This move represents the “generational shift” described by historians like Ramachandra Guha: the transition from the selfless service of the post-independence institutions (like Matru Seva Sangh) to the self-advancement and autonomy of private practice. Yet, for Maya, the transition was seamless. The patients who had trusted her at the Sangh followed her to her clinic, drawn by the “kindness and gentleness” that had become her signature.
Her daughter, Ashwini, followed in her footsteps, becoming an anaesthesiologist and currently serving at the medical college in Sawangi. Her second daughter, Vaishnavi, an IT engineer, represents the diversification of the family’s intellectual capital.
The Completion of the Circle
Today, Maya Khati lives and works in Wardha, the same town where her mother once rented those two small rooms. Her life has been an answer to her mother’s gamble. She has become the doctor her mother envisioned, but also something more—a clinical institution in a district that needed her.
The circle that began in Alipur with a girl who had “only finished seventh standard” has closed with a woman who has conducted thousands of deliveries and surgeries. Maya remains a “simple girl” at heart, but one who built a career of extraordinary volume and impact. She is the proof that in the history of Indian medicine, the most consequential revolutions often happen one tubectomy at a time, in the hands of a woman who was taught that her “hand, heart, and mind” should always be “set to soothe and heal”.
ACF Fields
- spouse_details: Dr. Sudhakar Gharote, MBBS, GMC Nagpur (1971 batch).
- children: Ashwini, MBBS, MD (Anaesthesia); Professor at Sawangi; married Dr. Ajay Dhawale. Vaishnavi, BE (IT); married Mr. Kaustubh Mulay.
- degree: MBBS, GMC Nagpur, 1978.
Yoast SEO Fields
- focus_keyphrase:
- seo_title: Dr. Maya Khati · GMC Nagpur 1973 · General Practitioner
- slug: maya-khati
- meta_description: Dr. Maya Khati, GMC Nagpur 1973. A general practitioner in Wardha celebrated for performing 50,000 tubectomies and her decades of service at Matru Seva Sangh.