Environmental activist fasts to death over fate of India’s Ganges River
Environmental activist fasts to death over fate of India’s Ganges River

Environmental activist fasts to death over fate of India’s Ganges River

Summary

In breaking news, Agrawal, 86, a pioneering environmental activist, died after a nearly four-month hunger strike that he began in late June to pressure the Indian government to take actions to rejuvenate the Ganges River. His death is a sensitive topic for India’s government, which has pledged to clean up the Ganges, a river considered sacred in Hinduism. The root of the problem surrounds the mass degradation of the river. The Ganges, which runs 1,500-mile-long, has seen its water become heavily polluted as it has become a dumping ground for industrial effluents, agricultural byproducts and human waste. Agrawal sought to reverse and bring attention to such matters by demanding the government meet his specific requests, including passing legislation to clean and revive the river, canceling all hydroelectric projects on the upper reaches of the Ganges, banning deforestation and sand mining along the river, and establishing an independent body to oversee its management.

 

 

 

 

 

Environmental activist fasts to death over fate of India’s Ganges River

 

NEW DELHI — For G.D. Agrawal, the Ganges River was a unique gift that he described as India’s very soul. On Thursday, his crusade to conserve it ended in his death.

Agrawal, 86, a pioneering environmental activist, died after a nearly four-month hunger strike that he began in late June to pressure the Indian government to take actions to rejuvenate the Ganges.

During Agrawal’s fast to draw attention to the plight of the river, he reportedly drank only water with honey and lemon juice.

His death is a sensitive topic for India’s government, which has pledged to clean up the Ganges, a river considered sacred in Hinduism. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s own constituency is in Varanasi, an ancient pilgrimage city that sits on the banks of the Ganges.

The river is revered by many Hindus, who believe bathing in its waters can bring healing and spiritual redemption. But the 1,500-mile-long river has become a dumping ground for industrial effluents, agricultural byproducts and human waste. Its waters are not only polluted but also meager compared with their prior flow, a situation Agrawal sought to reverse.

 

Before starting his fast, Agrawal wrote to Modi with a list of demands: pass legislation to clean and revive the river, cancel all hydroelectric projects on the upper reaches of the Ganges, ban deforestation and sand mining along the river, and establish an independent body to oversee its management.

The government sent a minister to meet with Agrawal and persuade him to give up his fast, but he refused so long as his demands were not met.

“I have no qualms about giving up my life,” he wrote in a letter to Modi in August. During the Modi government’s time in office, it had taken “not even a single action” toward rescuing the river, Agrawal wrote.

On Thursday evening, Modi expressed his condolences on Twitter and saluted Agrawal’s passion for the environment.

 

“Saddened by the demise of Shri GD Agarwal Ji. His passion towards learning, education, saving the environment, particularly Ganga cleaning will always be remembered. My condolences.”

 

Over the course of his life, Agrawal was an engineer, a professor at one of India’s most prestigious universities, a pollution regulator, an entrepreneur and finally a renunciate: In 2011 he joined an order of Hindu monastics in the northern state of Uttarakhand and took the name Swami Gyan Swaroop Sanand.

As a young man, he did graduate work at the University of California at Berkeley. He later taught at the Indian Institute of Technology at Kanpur and served as a member of the Central Pollution Control Board of India.

Together with S.K. Gupta, his former student, Agrawal helped build Envirotech Instruments, the first firm in India to offer locally made devices for monitoring air pollution.

Agrawal went on to mentor a host of prominent environmental lawyers and activists in India. Following a trip to the Himalayas in 2006, Gupta said, Agrawal became deeply distressed by the state of the Ganges River and decided to devote himself to rejuvenating it.

After Agrawal undertook two previous hunger strikes in 2008 and 2009, the Indian government acceded to his demand that it cancel a hydroelectric project on the Bhagirathi River, one of the sources of the Ganges. But future victories proved elusive.

Gupta, his former student and friend of 50 years, said he spoke to Agrawal on Thursday just before he died at a hospital where he was taken when his condition deteriorated.

“He advised me to keep up the battle,” Gupta said. “He said, ‘I have lost, but maybe you can fight.’ ”

 

 

 

Source: The Washington Post, Joanna Slater, Oct. 12, 2018. Photo credit to Dibyangshu Sarkar, Getty Image.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *