Do we call it a pharmacy, a residence, or a phenomenon of chimerical character? Under the streetlights of Kolkata, which once harboured a halogen glow, there is a crack in the veneer of the expected. A crowd gathers on the grand steps that lead to the palatial quarters. A cloud of tobacco smoke then a green cross blinks into view. Between haphazard feet, it reads “Chemist. Butto Kristo Paul. Druggist.” The name repeats above in wrought iron, curling over a deep verandah. Inside, an elderly woman sits behind the counter, flipping the day’s newspaper at 8 p.m. She is surrounded by artefacts that too seem to have forgotten to check the timestamp. A Lewis Carroll-like tableau spills out from the shelves: tinctures, tonics and stickers. Boroline, contraceptives, Hansaplast advertisements. Sanitary pads and Cerelac. A refrigerator from the 1920s under lock and key. Four calendars from four different years. Oxygen cylinders engraved “BKP” next to a print of Kali Maa. A night bell in the age of 24-hour-delivery apps. A ticking clock that has long since run out of time.
Dr Devi Shetty Interviewed by Namrata Dewanjee Produced by Mrudul Pathak Kundu and Shriti Das
“People don’t come into the pharmacy wanting to verify credentials. They already trust the institution, because the place has existed longer than they have”
— Dr Devi Shetty







