India's 'Destroyer of Sin' awash in filth

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Feb 11, 2007, 7:03:27 AM2/11/07
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* Perilous Times, False Religions, False gods

India's 'Destroyer of Sin' awash in filth*

POSTED: 0341 GMT (1141 HKT), February 10, 2007

ALLAHABAD, India (AP) -- Among believers, the river has many names: The
Pure. Destroyer of Sin. Light Amid the Darkness of Ignorance. But mostly
they call it "Ganga Ma" -- Mother Ganges -- and they worship it with a
blinding intensity.

They worship it despite the islands of garbage that float down its path,
and the tons of chemicals dumped in it. They worship it despite the one
billion liters (quarter of a billion gallons) of sewage poured into it
every day, spreading illness among the 350 million people -- some
one-twentieth of the world's population -- who live in its watershed.

For Hindus, the Ganges is a living goddess, capable of washing away sin.
But its troubles are as epic as the river itself, and as millions of
people filled a vast tent city on the floodplains outside this north
Indian city, gathering for a Hindu festival that pays homage to the
river, it was the goddess' troubles that grabbed attention.

"She is my mother," said Chandra Madash, a holy man squatting by a fire
on a cold night. His beard was long and dirty, his clothing frayed, his
voice gravelly. He has spent nearly his entire life in a remote Hindu
monastery. "Even if she is dirty I love my mother."

Then he asked: "How can people do this to her?"

Predictably, perhaps, in a country that straddles the ancient and the
modern, it was a group of Hindu holy men in the middle of the battle.
They filed lawsuits, called news conferences and organized protests. A
handful threatened suicide.

"The government has promised us they would stop dirty water from flowing
into Mother Ganges but it's still being done," Narendranand Saraswati, a
monastery leader, told thousands of cheering followers gathered by the
Ganges. "We want the entire country to know we will not stop until the
river is clean!"

These are not your typical environmental activists.

In India, they are known collectively as "sadhus," a sweeping term that
includes tens of thousands of Hindu holy men, from revered leaders to
charlatans who prey on the lost and confused.

While a handful are famous for their profligacy -- luxury cars, fur
coats and rumors of mistresses -- most live poor and celibate.

Many spend their days wandering India's streets, begging for food and
owning little beyond their clothes.

But among the loose coalition of sadhu leaders speaking out about the
Ganges, some have potent political connections. In a country with 890
million Hindus, they are part of wide, informal power networks.

But while their protests often spark headlines and short-term responses
(this year, the government opened dams to increase the Ganges' flow
during the festival, creating brief river surges), a serious cleanup
would have to confront decades of official failure.

"They government listens to us during the Kumbh Mela," said Binduji
Maharaj, a sadhu leader. "But unfortunately, when it is over they tend
to forget us."

Every six years, millions of pilgrims gather for the Ardh Kumbh Mela, or
Half Grand Pitcher Festival, held where the Ganges and Yamuna rivers --
along with the mythical Saraswati River -- come together.

Hindu mythology says gods and demons once fought a war over the nectar
of immortality, spilling some at the rivers' confluence.

Up to 70 million people are expected for this year's 45-day festival,
which ends Feb. 16, and even relatively quiet days bring tens of
thousands of pilgrims to the riverbanks.

They stand in the slow-moving grey-green water close to the shoreline,
scooping water with cupped hands and pouring it over their heads.

As loudspeakers blare hymns, boys peddle religious knickknacks, from
incense sticks to tiny clay lanterns to milk at 5 rupees (11 cents) a ladle.

"How can the Ganges be dirty?" asked Thiruven Shankar, the joy obvious
in his voice as he joined the throngs. "We drink it in, we bathe in it,
and we worship its waters."

But it's more than just dirty. Scientists say sewage has devastated the
1,550-mile (2,494-kilometer) river, which spills from a Himalayan
glacier and cuts through India's plains before flowing into the Bay of
Bengal. Scientists have found places near here with a fecal bacteria
count nearly 4,000 times the World Health Organization standard for bathing.

"We all have faith in our rivers, we all worship them. But at the end of
the day there's a reality: India's cities are growing, its population is
growing, and we don't have a proper sewage strategy," said Suresh Babu,
a river specialist with the Center for Science and Environment, a
prominent environmental group.

The medical effects are clear: millions of cases of disease, from amebic
dysentery to hepatitis. By some estimates, one person dies every minute
of waterborne disease in the Ganges river basin.

In the late 1980s, the Indian government vowed to clean it, launching
its Ganges Action Plan and spending $300 million (euro232 million) since
then. Its failures are famous. The federal environment minister noted
recently the program had achieved very little -- but said $1.5 billion
(euro1.2 billion) more was needed.

Repeatedly, the government has left promises unfilled, including to a
group of sadhus who launched an anti-pollution hunger strike during the
last Allahabad festival.

"These officials have done nothing," said Veer Bhadra Mishra, sitting
outside his home in the riverside city of Varanasi.

Mishra is the leader of an important Hindu temple, as well as a
professor of engineering and a longtime environmental activist.

He doubts the recent attention will accomplish much. Too many holy men
have ties to corrupt politicians, he believes, and too few understand
the science. India also has a habit, he adds, of forgetting its
environmental vows.

But giving up isn't an option.

"These officials must be humiliated!" the normally soft-spoken Mishra
said, his voice rising sharply. "They must be embarrassed that they are
allowing the Ganges to be dirtied!"

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