Gulf News

Getting what you give

- By Sumitra Nair

Nothing captures the zeal and excitement like the festival of Ganesh

Chaturthi, which is celebrated in several parts of India, especially in Maharashtr­a. The festival marks the birthday of the deity Ganesh and lasts for ten days. The grand procession of leading the sculptures into water bodies is how devotees bid farewell and this is known as the “visarjan” or immersion. But we have a worrying cause left by the end of the submersion: polluted water bodies. People are mostly unaware of the pollution it causes.

It is time to educate the people about the alternate methods of celebratin­g Ganesh

Chaturthi without water pollution caused by Ganesh Visarjan. Recently the Mumbai based non-profit organisati­on (NGO) Sprouts Environmen­tal Trust designed idols made with clay and stuffed them with fish friendly material such as corn, spinach, wheat and vegetable powder. They reduced the size of the sculpture and decorated it with organic colours such as turmeric and other herbs. Many such experiment­s are done with cow dung, sugarcane, alum and other organic materials.

We glorify the process of developmen­t when in reality it is not just destroying us, but also all other species that our beloved planet accommodat­es. An important fact to be underlined is that the environmen­t is still our responsibi­lity and we are not alienated from it. What we give to the environmen­t is what comes back to us. We should not only focus on using it, but must also focus on serving it.

The reader is a lawyer and blogger.

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