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Swachh Warriors: These Community Change Makers Are Cleaning India’s Littered Public Spaces

Meet the community change makers who are taking the lead in helping India cope with environmental crisis

Swachh Warriors: These Community Change Makers Are Cleaning India’s Littered Public Spaces

New Delhi: With an environmental crisis looming over the planet, is the way out community-led? Two cleaning initiatives in India, targeting heavily-visited – and littered – mountains and beaches, show how civic conviction can turn into an on-ground impact that ropes in local stakeholders. ‘Bringing back our old Dadar beach’ was the simple phrase motivating Chinu Kwatra, 28, when he first picked up garbage from the squalid Dadar beach two years ago – the first step of removal of more than 2,000 tonnes of garbage – and set the ball rolling for a community-led beach cleanup.

Recalling the episode, Maharashtra’s Thane-based Mr. Kwatra told IANS how momentous changes begin small. For his collective Beach Warriors, it began with a day-long cleanup drive after he saw ‘visarjit’ (immersed) Ganesha idols everywhere on the beach.

A Facebook post about it traveled to an old professor, who then suggested that they extend it beyond a day.

However, even in the campaign’s second week, it was the same three people doing back-breaking work to free Dadar beach of its detritus.

I felt I will lose the battle if more citizens didn’t join us, said Mr. Kwatra, who quit his job to take up community work.

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To Mr. Kwatra’s surprise, it wasn’t long before local support started pouring in the form of students and “within an hour, from three the number rose to 25”, and then, attracted even more. What involved just two of his friends at first, propelled many communities into action. The team now gets volunteers from organisations, corporate houses, schools and colleges.

The social change maker leads a core team of 40 Beach Warriors. There are an average of 20 volunteers cleaning each of the seven beaches they work on – Cuffe Parade, Worli, Bandra, Juhu, Erangal, Madh, and Dadar, he said.

Inviting other people to step forward in their respective communities, Mr. Kwatra said that they aren’t doing “anything great” but only what “every citizen must do”, regardless of administrative intervention.

Mr. Kwatra said he was inspired by Afroz Shah, an environmentalist and lawyer, who led another set of volunteers cleaning Mumbai’s Versova beach – often termed as the world’s largest beach cleanup drive. It has removed thousands of tonnes of waste from Versova beach. Mr. Kwatra has now trained his eyes on cleaning up the highly-polluted Yamuna river in Delhi.

Also Read: Lakhs Of Rupees In Penalty, 32,000 Kgs Of Garbage And Cases Of Open Defecation: Here’s The Story Of Auli’s VIP Wedding

In the northern part of India, another cleanup drive targets mountains.

Trekking enthusiast Pradeep Sangwan, who leads a similar volunteer-driven cleaning initiative in the Himalayan cities, advocates for sustainable tourism along with encouraging communities to step forward for damage control. His collective Healing Himalayas Foundation, founded in 2016, collects garbage from trekking routes and areas around waterfalls.

Having worked around Manali, Kheerganga, Shimla, and more recently, Shrikhand, the sustained campaign has been vocal about reducing the carbon footprint and plastic waste tourists leave around, to the extent that “if a lost trekker follows the litter trail during a trek, she could find the group”.

Speaking about their cleanup drive around Manali’s Jogini Waterfalls, MR. Sangwan told IANS that it was relegated from a space for meditative activities to “a party place”.

Simply, the campaign is about saving waterfalls from becoming a big dump-yard. We organise regular cleaning drives and educating local communities and schools.

Like Mr. Kwatra, Mr. Shah and several other community-oriented change-makers, Mr. Sangwan too stresses the importance of a collective change that takes birth within people’s hearts and shows in their actions.

It is really about exploring spaces with empathy, and sense of preservation and sustainability, he strongly believes.

NDTV – Dettol Banega Swachh India campaign lends support to the Government of India’s Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM). Helmed by Campaign Ambassador Amitabh Bachchan, the campaign aims to spread awareness about hygiene and sanitation, the importance of building toilets and making India open defecation free (ODF) by October 2019, a target set by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, when he launched Swachh Bharat Abhiyan in 2014. Over the years, the campaign has widened its scope to cover issues like air pollutionwaste managementplastic banmanual scavenging and menstrual hygiene. The campaign has also focused extensively on marine pollutionclean Ganga Project and rejuvenation of Yamuna, two of India’s major river bodies.

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