Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

A Prayer for the Ganges: Smithsonian Magazine

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

A Prayer for the Ganges

 

By Joshua Hammer

Smithsonian magazine

November 2007

 

A blue stream spews from beneath brick factory buildings in

Kanpur, India. The dark ribbon curls down a dirt

embankment and flows into the Ganges River. " That's toxic

runoff, " says Rakesh Jaiswal, a 48-year-old environmental

activist, as he leads me along the refuse-strewn riverbank in

the vise-like heat of a spring afternoon. We're walking

through the tannery district, established along the Ganges

during British colonial rule and now Kanpur's economic

mainstay as well as its major polluter.

 

I had expected to find a less-than-pristine stretch of river in

this grimy metropolis of four million people, but I'm not

prepared for the sights and smells that greet me. Jaiswal

stares grimly at the runoff-it's laden with chromium

sulfate, used as a leather preservative and associated with

cancer of the respiratory tract, skin ulcers and renal failure.

Arsenic, cadmium, mercury, sulfuric acid, chemical dyes

and heavy metals can also be found in this witches' brew.

Though Kanpur's tanneries have been required since 1994 to

do preliminary cleanup before channeling wastewater into a

government-run treatment plant, many ignore the costly

regulation. And whenever the electricity fails or the

government's waste conveyance system breaks down, even

tanneries that abide by the law find that their untreated

wastewater backs up and spills into the river.

 

A few yards upstream, we follow a foul odor to a violent

flow of untreated domestic sewage gushing into the river

from an old brick pipe. The bubbling torrent is full of fecal

microorganisms responsible for typhoid, cholera and

amoebic dysentery. Ten million to 12 million gallons of raw

sewage have been pouring out of this drainpipe each day,

Jaiswal tells me, since the main sewer line leading to the

treatment plant in Kanpur became clogged-five years ago.

" We've been protesting against this, and begging the [uttar

Pradesh state] government to take action, but they've done

nothing, " he says.

 

Half a dozen young fishermen standing by a rowboat offer

to take us to a sandbar in the middle of the Ganges for " a

better view. " Jaiswal and I climb into the boat and cross the

shallow river only to run aground 50 yards from the

sandbar. " You have to get out and walk from here, " a

boatman tells us. We remove our shoes, roll up our trousers

and nervously wade knee-deep in the toxic stream. As we

reach the sandbar, just downstream from a Hindu cremation

ground, we're hit by a putrid smell and a ghastly sight: lying

on the sand are a human rib cage, a femur, and, nearby, a

yellow-shrouded corpse. " It's been rotting there for a

month, " a fisherman tells us. The clothed body of a small

child floats a few yards off the island. Although the state

government banned the dumping of bodies a decade ago,

many of Kanpur's destitute still discard their loved ones

clandestinely at night. Pariah dogs prowl around the bones

and bodies, snarling when we get too close. " They live on

the sandbar, feeding on the remains, " a fisherman tells us.

 

Sickened, I climb back into the rowboat. As we near the

tanneries, a dozen boys frolic in the water, splashing in the

river's foulest stretch. Jaiswal calls them over.

 

" Why do you swim in the river? " I ask one of the boys.

" Aren't you worried? "

 

He shrugs. " We know it's poisonous, " he says, " but after we

swim we go wash off at home. "

 

" Do you ever get ill? "

 

" 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.

 

Fifteen miles downriver, at Rishikesh, the valley widens,

and the Ganges spills onto the northern Indian plain.

Rishikesh achieved worldwide attention in 1968, when the

Beatles, at the height of their fame, spent three months at the

now-abandoned ashram, or meditation center, run by the

guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (who today resides in the

Netherlands). Built illegally on public land and confiscated

by the government in the 1970s, the ruined complex rises on

a thickly wooded hillside overlooking the Ganges. The place

has been unoccupied ever since it was seized-an

intragovernmental dispute has prevented its being sold or

developed as a tourist resort-but I gave 50 rupees, about

$1.25, to a guard, and he unlocked the gate for me. I

wandered among derelict, stupa-like meditation chambers

high above the river, which still conveyed a sense of

tranquillity. Baboons prowled the ghostly hallways of the

Maharishi's once-luxurious hotel and conference center,

which was topped by three domes tiled in white mosaic. The

only sounds were the chorusing of cuckoos and the cawing

of ravens.

 

It's unlikely the surviving Beatles would recognize the busy,

litter-strewn tourist town that Rishikesh has become. Down

below the ashram, I strolled through a riverside strip of

pilgrims' inns, cheap restaurants selling banana lassis and

pancakes, and newly built yoga schools. A boat packed with

Indian pilgrims, wild-haired sadhus and Western

backpackers ferried me across the river, where I walked past

dozens of storefronts offering rafting trips and Himalayan

treks. A building boom over the past two decades has

generated a flood of pollutants and nonbiodegradable trash.

Each day thousands of pilgrims drop flowers in

polyethylene bags into the river as offerings to Goddess

Ganga. Six years ago, Jitendra Kumar, a local ashram

student, formed Clean Himalaya, a nonprofit environmental

group that gathers and recycles tons of garbage from hotels

and ashrams every day. But public apathy and a shortage of

burning and dumping facilities have made the job difficult.

" It's really sad, " Vipin Sharma, who runs a rafting and

trekking company (Red Chili Adventures), told me. " All of

our Hindus come with this feeling that they want to give

something to the Ganga, and they've turned it into a sea of

plastic. "

 

From his base in Kanpur, Rakesh Jaiswal has waged a

lonely battle to clean up the river for almost 15 years. He

was born in Mirzapur, 200 miles downstream from Kanpur,

and remembers his childhood as an idyllic time. " I used to

go there to bathe with my mother and grandmother, and it

was beautiful, " he told me. " I didn't even know what the

word 'pollution' meant. " Then, one day in the early 1990s,

while studying for his doctorate in environmental politics, " I

opened the tap at home and found black, viscous, stinking

water coming out. After one month it happened again, then

it was happening once a week, then daily. My neighbors

experienced the same thing. " Jaiswal traced the drinking

water to an intake channel on the Ganges. There he made a

horrifying discovery: two drains carrying raw sewage,

including contaminated discharge from a tuberculosis

sanitarium, were emptying right beside the intake point.

" Fifty million gallons a day were being lifted and sent to the

water-treatment plant, which couldn't clean it. It was

horrifying. "

 

At the time, the Indian government was touting the first

phase of its Ganga Action Plan as a success. Jaiswal knew

otherwise. Kanpur's wastewater treatment plants broke

down frequently and could process only a small percentage

of the sewage the city was producing. Dead bodies were

being dumped into the river by the hundreds every week,

and most of the 400 tanneries continued to pour toxic runoff

into the river. Jaiswal, who started a group called

EcoFriends in 1993 and the next year received a small grant

from the Indian government, used public outrage over

contaminated drinking water to mobilize a protest

campaign. He organized rallies and enlisted volunteers in a

river cleanup that fished 180 bodies out of a mile-long

stretch of the Ganges. " The idea was to sensitize the people,

galvanize the government, find a long-term solution, but we

failed to evoke much interest, " he told me. Jaiswal kept up

the pressure. In 1997, state and local government whistle-

blowers slipped him a list of factories that had ignored a

court order to install treatment plants; the state ordered the

shutdown of 250 factories, including 127 tanneries in

Kanpur. After that, he says, " I got midnight phone calls

telling me, 'you will be shot dead if you don't stop these

things.' But I had friends in the police and army who

believed in my work, so I never felt my life was in real

danger. "

 

Jaiswal's battle to clean up the Ganges has achieved some

successes. Largely because of his corpse-cleanup drive, a

cemetery was established beside the Ganges-it now

contains thousands of bodies-and a ban was enforced,

obviously often violated, on " floaters. " In 2000, the second

phase of the Ganga Action Plan required 100 large- and

medium-sized Kanpur tanneries to set up chrome-recovery

facilities and 100 smaller ones to build a common chrome-

recovery unit. Enforcement, however, has been lax. Ajay

Kanaujia, a government chemist at Kanpur's wastewater

treatment facility, says that " some tanneries are still putting

chrome into the river without any treatment or dumping it

into the domestic sewage system. " This treated sewage is

then channeled into canals that irrigate 6,000 acres of

farmland near Kanpur before flowing back into the Ganges.

India's National Botanical Research Institute, a government

body, has tested agricultural and dairy products in the

Kanpur area and found that they contain high levels of

chromium and arsenic. " The irrigation water is dangerous, "

Kanaujia says.

 

I'm in a motorboat at dawn, putt-putting down the Ganges in

Varanasi, where the river takes a turn north before flowing

into the Bay of Bengal. Called Benares by the British, this

ancient pilgrimage center is the holiest city in India:

millions of Hindus come each year to a three-mile long

curve of temples, shrines and bathing ghats (steps leading

down to the river) along its banks. With a boatman and a

young guide, I cruise past a Hindu Disneyland of Mogul-era

sandstone fortresses and green, purple and candy cane-

striped temples. None of the pilgrims sudsing themselves in

the Ganges, bobbing blissfully in inner tubes or beating their

laundry on wooden planks, seem to pay the slightest

attention to the bloated cow carcasses that float beside

them-or to the untreated waste that gushes directly into the

river. If toxic industrial runoff is Kanpur's special curse, the

befouling of the Ganges as it flows past the Hindus' holiest

city comes almost entirely from human excreta.

 

The boat deposits me at Tulsi Ghat, near the upriver

entrance to Varanasi, and in the intensifying morning heat, I

walk up a steep flight of steps to the Sankat Mochan

Foundation, which, for the past two decades, has led

Varanasi's clean-river campaign. The foundation occupies

several crumbling buildings, including a 400-year-old

Hindu temple high over the Ganges. I find the foundation's

director, Veer Bhadra Mishra, 68, sitting on a huge white

cushion that takes up three-quarters of a reception room on

the temple's ground floor. Draped in a simple white dhoti,

he invites me to enter.

 

Mishra looks at the river from a unique perspective: he is a

retired professor of hydraulic engineering at Banaras Hindu

University and a mohan, a Hindu high priest at the Sankat

Mochan Temple, a title that the Mishra family has passed

from father to eldest son for seven generations. Mishra has

repeatedly called the Ganga Action Plan a failure, saying

that it has frittered away billions of rupees on ill-designed

and badly maintained wastewater treatment plants. " The

moment the electricity fails, the sewage flows into the river,

and on top of that, when the floodwaters rise, they enter the

sump well of the sewer system pumps and stop operations

for months of the year, " he tells me. (Varanasi currently

receives only about 12 hours of power a day.) Moreover, he

says, engineers designed the plants to remove solids, but not

fecal microorganisms, from the water. The pathogens,

channeled from treatment plants into irrigation canals, seep

back into the groundwater, where they enter the drinking-

water supply and breed such diseases as dysentery, as well

as skin infections.

 

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.

 

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/people-places/ganges-

200711.html

or

http://tinyurl.com/2zoj46

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...