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 4 of 4)
A decade ago, Mishra, with hydraulic engineers and scientists at the University of California at Berkeley, designed a water-treatment scheme that, he says, is far better suited to Varanasi's needs. Known as an "advanced integrated wastewater pond system," the process relies primarily on gravity to carry domestic sewage three miles downstream to four huge pools where oxygen-enriched bacteria break it down and pathogens are killed by sunlight and natural atmospheric action in a "maturation" pond. The projected cost of the system, which has been endorsed by the Varanasi municipal government, is $60 million.
Mishra was named one of Time magazine's Heroes of the Planet in 1999; in 2000, President Clinton praised him for his environmental work. But in spite of the honors that have come his way, Mishra has grown discouraged. The national government and the state government of Uttar Pradesh, which would have to fund the wastewater project, have openly opposed it on grounds ranging from doubts about the proposed technology to objections that treatment ponds would lie in a flood plain.
Meanwhile, the city's population keeps growing—it has doubled to three million in a generation—along with the bacteria count. Mishra says he's especially concerned for the future of India's most devout Hindus, whose lives are entirely focused on Mother Ganga. He calls them an endangered species. "They want to touch the water, rub their bodies in the water, sip the water," he says, "and someday they will die because of it," admitting that he himself takes a dip in the river every morning. "If you tell them 'the Ganga is polluted,' they say, 'we don't want to hear that.' But if you take them to the places where open sewers are giving the river the night soil of the whole city, they say, 'this is disrespect done to our mother, and it must be stopped.'"
But how? Suresh Babu of the Center for Science and the Environment in New Delhi believes that if municipalities were obliged to draw their drinking water from downstream rather than upstream, "they would feel an obligation" to keep the river clean. But growing pressures on the Ganges seem destined to outstrip all efforts to rescue it. By 2030, according to Babu, India will draw eight times the amount of water from the Ganges it does today. In the same time, the population along the river and its tributaries—up to 400 million, or one-third of India's total population—could double. Trivedi admits that the government "lacks a single coherent plan" to clean up the river.
Rakesh Jaiswal tells me that after all the years of small achievements and large setbacks, he finds it difficult to remain optimistic. "My friends tell me I've made a difference, but the river looks worse today than when I started," he says. In 2002, the Ford Foundation gave him enough money to hire 15 employees. But the next year, when the foundation cut its Environmental Equity and Justice Program, Jaiswal had to let his staff go and now works with one assistant out of a bedroom in his sister's house near the river. On his dresser stands a framed photograph of his wife, Gudrun Knoessel, who is German. In 2001, she contacted him after seeing a German TV documentary about his work; a long-distance courtship led to their marriage in 2003. They see each other two or three times a year. "She has a job in Baden-Baden," he explains. "And Kanpur needs me." So he often tells himself. But sometimes, in darker moments, he wonders if anybody really cares.
Writer Joshua Hammer is based in Berlin, Germany. Photographer Gary Knight lives in the South of France.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (18)
+ View All Comments
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
+ View All Comments