A Prayer for the Ganges
Across India, environmentalists battle a tide of troubles to clean up a river revered as the source of life
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Gary Knight
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
"We all get rashes," he replies, "but what can we do?"
Walking back toward the main road, Jaiswal seems despondent. "I would never have imagined the River Ganga could get like this, with stinking water, green and brown colored," he says. "It's pure toxic muck."
I shake my head at the irony. For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions as a symbol of spiritual purity. Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there spilling into the Bay of Bengal. "Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods—the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga. "Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One," proclaims in the Ramayana, the Sanskrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ. Modern admirers have written paeans to the river's beauty, historical resonance and holiness. "The Ganges is above all the river of India, which has held India's heart captive and drawn uncounted millions to her banks since the dawn of history," Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first prime minister, proclaimed.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream. Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people. And the amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990s; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for a decade. In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations World Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades. "Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environment, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital. These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness. "People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
Twenty years ago, then prime minister Rajiv Gandhi launched the Ganga Action Plan, or GAP, which shut down some of the most egregious industrial polluters and allocated about $100 million for constructing wastewater treatment plants in 25 cities and towns along the river. But these efforts have fallen woefully short. According to a 2001-2002 government survey, the treatment plants could handle only about a third of the 600 million gallons of domestic sewage that poured into them every day. (The volume has increased significantly since then). Many environmentalists say that the Ganges has become an embarrassing symbol of government indifference and neglect in a country that regards itself as an economic superpower. "We can send a shuttle into space, we can build the [new] Delhi Metro [subway] in record time. We can detonate nuclear weapons. So why can't we clean up our rivers?" Jaiswal laments. "We have money. We have competence. The only problem is that the issue is not a priority for the Indian government."
Early in 2007 the Ganges' worsening state made headlines around the world when Hindu holy men, known as sadhus, organized a mass protest against river filth during the Kumbh Mela festival. "The river had turned the color of Coca-Cola," says scientist Trivedi, who attended the festival and, against the advice of his colleagues at the Central Pollution Control Board, took a brief dip in the Ganges. ("I was not affected at all," he insists.) The sadhus called off the protests after the government opened dams upstream, diluting the fetid water, and ordered another 150 upstream industrial polluters to close. "But it was a short-term solution," says Suresh Babu. "It didn't achieve anything."
This past May, I followed Mother Ganga downstream for 800 miles, half its distance, to witness its deterioration firsthand and to meet the handful of environmentalists who are trying to rouse public action. I began my journey high in the foothills of the Himalayas, 200 miles south of the river's glacial source. Here the cold, pristine water courses through a steep gorge cloaked in gray-green forests of Shorea robusta, or sal trees. From a beach at the edge of a litchi grove below the Glass House, an inn where I stayed, I watched rafts of helmet-clad adventure-tourists sweep past on a torrent of white water.
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Comments (18)
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Nicely elaborated a topic on sacred Ganga.
Posted by neelkanth on March 2,2013 | 11:55 PM
Dear, Fellow Indonesians I too am a Ganges follower, and I also want to clean the Ganges river up so please help me by getting my name out there! Thank You, Zack Jewell
Posted by Zack on April 13,2012 | 12:31 PM
Horrifying truth. The government is against us, media is against us, but its we 'the people' who have to bring the lost sanctity back to mother GANGES. And we will definitely defy all the odds and clean up the GANGES soon, very soon.
There are plenty of organizations and ashrams working for this but there is no good communication between them. As a result, each organization is week. Lets join in hands to bring the organizations together, become a single but massive force for the upcoming revolution.
Organization like Ganga Ahvaan, Maitri Sadan , are just a few to name from.
Any ideas,anythig whatsoever, lets keep this burning issue alive and be a part of the revolution
Posted by Ankit on December 2,2011 | 01:16 AM
Dear Friends,
What we can do is just to stop flowing waste water without treatment. if you are living in residential society you can ask member to have your small sewage treatment palnt. And if you are reciding in old areas of city then you can ask Parhad(Elected muncipal corporation represntative of your area) to raise voice for installing a STP to nearest possible distance. The treated water can be reuse for different puposes like irrigation,horticulture, flushing. This will solve our problem to a great extent. But this will only be achieved by people awareness.Together we can fight with this biggest environmental disaster.
Pankaj Shrivastava
Dy.manager
Fontus Water Ltd.
New Delhi
Posted by Pankaj Shrivastava on November 4,2011 | 07:44 AM
An awareness has to be created to shed religious practices which harm the living,
Posted by dkraju on April 9,2011 | 10:06 PM
I have lived in Kanpur nearly 20 years now and almost that long I've known Rakesh Jaiswal. I have watched him in his long,lone uphill struggle to do something to save the river Ganga. He has motivated school, parents and the general public all this while. He has interacted ceaselessly with various bodies like the tannery owners,courts and the government; brought about PIL's and lead cleanup expeditions and slogan marches(garnered great well-wishers and support groups). Funnily, he is still up against a burgeoning population that grows daily and believes in religiously using Ganga as the burial pond. And, ofcourse the government/elected leaders are not interested, infact--A LOT OF VOTEBANKS REVOLVE AROUND HOW RELIGIOUS SENTIMENTS ARE placated or fanned. Ganga is something nobody wants to touch - a veritable beehive. So it continues getting sewage (this is only one aspect- for I' m not touching on the corruption and fund embezzling issues here- also related to Ganga) The point I'm making is (not fault finding) the power of one person --like a Rakesh Jaiswal has indeed made a difference. If not the government and the policy makers/bureaucracy at least the educated public is beginning to bay for blood. I wish there were more people like Jaiswal. I add my prayer for Ganga- 'May there be more Jaiswals'.
Posted by Rita Joyce Singh on March 25,2011 | 10:21 AM
Dear Devotees,
It is very sad that none of us group together to bring back the glory of mother Ganges. Let us all start a revolution to bring back the glory of our mother.
Radhe Radhe
Anuradha
Posted by Anuradha on February 12,2011 | 10:01 PM
i am verryy worried for them.
Posted by Ladan Love on May 17,2010 | 02:58 PM
my feelings towards this is anger seeing how this article states very good points. India is such an economic power house they have all this money and some of the richest men in the world yet they donate nothing to help there on country. I've never been to India but from what i hear it is as if there are no laws, and if there is no one follows them.
Posted by Jonathan A on November 17,2009 | 08:43 PM
I am immensely saddened by the horrific facts about the most loved river in the world. Not only the livelihood of millions in India depends on it but it is a crises of global proportions which demands urgent action.
Posted by Ayesha M Mian on July 27,2009 | 04:27 PM
Dear all, We are sad ,very sad, but what are we doing against the miserable condition of mother Ganga.Unfortunately we, the South Asian people talk much but do less. I'm going to write a paper regarding the pollution of the Ganges -Brahmaputra Basin. Could you please help me by sending some related information.I do need some views of the local people who get directly involved with the river for their daily works. I'm a PhD fellow in Xiamen University ,P.R.Chiana. Love for Ganga. Utpala.
Posted by Utpala Rahman on May 2,2009 | 11:23 AM
It saddens me, to see that last post was in November, when Mother Ganges though just a meandering river but yet an embodiement of faith and love a mother holds for her child, is so miserably worsening. It is time that people should(people who worry more about paying their bill, do not read this), come and join,or alone if the world still prefers to succumb to their foolishness, to do something which gives us a chance to have a good night sleep , if not a bank balance to pay off our bills.
Posted by nitin tewari on April 6,2009 | 03:53 PM
well we all were no doubt touched by this article..but the thing is that a bright focus on what an individual or a small community can do in order to "change these circumstances is important, rather than just pointing out what the problem is" perhaps calling all the interested people to meet, forming a larger community and then the knowledgeable persons guiding the young environmentalist on "WHAT TO DO NOW?" is more important and should be focused more... i believe practical world and work is required...
Posted by Deepika Dev Rishi on November 12,2008 | 12:50 AM
This is absolutely true!In fact not only Ganga, but all the rivers and India itself is a garbage dump.Something must be done but that is all we say. Few do anything. I myself being a student try to tell people not to litter and if anyone does then I throw it in the trash can. The govt needs to be aroused somehow and it need to be considered as one of the top priorities.
Posted by Ritika on August 21,2008 | 11:46 AM
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