“Now you can eat as much mutton biryani as you want, but don’t forget to brush your teeth twice a day,” said Allah Baksh to Amina Biwi, while soaping his hands under the busy KR Market Flyover in Bengaluru. Amina Biwi appeared relieved: her pain had receded. In gratitude, she flashed a generous smile at Baksh, revealing the three shiny new incisors she had just received.

KR Market is a bustling bazaar with a rich history. According to The Hindu, the area was a buffer zone between the Bangalore fort and the city at the time of the Third Anglo-Mysore war in 1791 AD. When the British army laid siege to the fort, it was at this place that they camped.

That history is difficult to see now in the dusty market.


Baksh’s work falls into a grey zone. Though it helps those in need, it violates Chapter V, Section 49 of the 1948 Dentist Act, which clearly demands that dentists, dental mechanics and dental hygienists should be licenced.

A proud Imran Pasha proclaimed that there is little difference between them and dental surgeons with degrees – they are equally skilled and take extreme care while treating their patients. What set them apart perhaps, he said, are the resources. The brick-and-mortar clinics possess expensive equipment and they are more hygienic. “But none of our patients has complained for the past 30 years,” he said.

I met two other roadside dentists under the KR Market Flyover – Shaik Ajaz and Syed Khizar. Ajaz, once an assistant in a dental clinic, complained that he used to get 15-20 patients a day, but the number dropped over time. And now only the really poor come to them.
Baksh and his peers under the flyover think of their job as social work. Although a complete set of dentures costs Rs 500 and a single tooth Rs 50, the dentists often accept any amount if the patient cannot afford the rates. For the poorest of the poor, the treatment is free.
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