Skip to content
Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

Primary Menu Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

Hindi News, हिंदी समाचार, Samachar, Breaking News, Latest Khabar – Pratirodh

  • Home
  • Newswires
  • Politics & Society
  • The New Feudals
  • World View
  • Arts And Aesthetics
  • For The Record
  • About Us
  • Featured

Recycling Flowers: One Man’s Mission To Clean Up The Ganga

Mar 18, 2021 | Pratirodh Bureau

Workers remove floral waste outside a temple on the banks of the Ganga in Kanpur, UP

Sitting at plain wooden tables, women in face masks roll a brown paste into thin cylinders – helping to recycle some of the millions of tonnes of flowers that worshippers throw into the Ganga.

They are part of a 100-strong team working for entrepreneur Ankit Agarwal’s Phool.co, removing floral waste from one of the most polluted stretches of India’s holy river in the northern city of Kanpur.

Indians typically offer flowers at temples as a mark of devotion and, Agarwal says, some eight million tonnes of those offerings end up in the country’s rivers each year – along with sewage and industrial and domestic waste.

“All the pesticides and insecticides that were used to grow these flowers mix with the river water, making it highly toxic,” he told Reuters TV.

Agarwal’s team, most of whom are women, pluck out the discarded flowers near the river bank and gather them from temples to repurpose them into paper and incense – as well as water colours that can be used for the Hindu festival of Holi.

Many Indians prefer to dump the flowers they offer to deities into water bodies as putting them into bins is considered unholy, Agarwal said.

To discourage them from also discarding into water the packets of incense sticks his company makes, his company stamps them without images of Hindu gods and infuses the paper with basil seeds, a plant considered holy in Hinduism.

“The concept was, once we use these products, please sow the packaging and a Tulsi (basil) plant would grow out of it and the packaging really helped us establish our brand,” he said.

Phool.co has received investment from the social arm of the Tata business group, and most of the women he has employed used to work as manual scavengers or were jobless.

Now they have an occupation that commands respect – cleaning the sacred Ganga.

“People see me as an independent woman who can do a job and also run her household. So, this has brought a change in my life,” said one, Sujata Devi.

Tags: environment, flower recycling, Ganga, Pratirodh

Continue Reading

Previous Over 10 Million Displaced By Climate Disasters In Six Months
Next Uni Students Protest As Academics Quit Amid Row Over Freedoms

More Stories

  • Featured

Delhi’s Toxic Air Rises, So Does The Crackdown On Protesters

2 weeks ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

A Celebration of Philately Leaves Its Stamp On Enthusiasts In MP

2 weeks ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

Groundwater Management In South Asia Must Put Farmers First

2 weeks ago Pratirodh Bureau

Recent Posts

  • Delhi’s Toxic Air Rises, So Does The Crackdown On Protesters
  • A Celebration of Philately Leaves Its Stamp On Enthusiasts In MP
  • Groundwater Management In South Asia Must Put Farmers First
  • What The Sheikh Hasina Verdict Reveals About Misogyny In South Asia
  • Documentaries Rooted In Land, Water & Culture Shine At DIFF
  • Electoral Roll Revision Is Sparking Widespread Social Anxieties
  • Over 100 Journalists Call Sheikh Hasina Verdict ‘Biased’, ‘Non-Transparent’
  • Belém’s Streets Turn Red, Black And Green As People March For Climate Justice
  • Shark Confusion Leaves Fishers In Tamil Nadu Fearing Penalties
  • ‘Nitish Kumar Would Win Only 25 Seats Without Rs 10k Transfers’
  • Saalumarada Thimmakka, Mother Of Trees, Has Died, Aged 114
  • Now, A Radical New Proposal To Raise Finance For Climate Damages
  • ‘Congress Will Fight SIR Legally, Politically And Organisationally’
  • COP30 Summit Confronts Gap Between Finance Goals And Reality
  • Ethiopia Famine: Using Starvation As A Weapon Of War
  • Opposition Leaders Unleash Fury Over Alleged Electoral Fraud in Bihar
  • In AP And Beyond, Solar-Powered Cold Storage Is Empowering Farmers
  • The Plot Twists Involving The Politics Of A River (Book Review)
  • Red Fort Blast: Congress Demands Resignation Of Amit Shah
  • Here’s Why Tackling Climate Disinformation Is On The COP30 Agenda

Search

Main Links

  • Home
  • Newswires
  • Politics & Society
  • The New Feudals
  • World View
  • Arts And Aesthetics
  • For The Record
  • About Us

Related Stroy

  • Featured

Delhi’s Toxic Air Rises, So Does The Crackdown On Protesters

2 weeks ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

A Celebration of Philately Leaves Its Stamp On Enthusiasts In MP

2 weeks ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

Groundwater Management In South Asia Must Put Farmers First

2 weeks ago Pratirodh Bureau
  • Featured

What The Sheikh Hasina Verdict Reveals About Misogyny In South Asia

2 weeks ago Shalini
  • Featured

Documentaries Rooted In Land, Water & Culture Shine At DIFF

2 weeks ago Pratirodh Bureau

Recent Posts

  • Delhi’s Toxic Air Rises, So Does The Crackdown On Protesters
  • A Celebration of Philately Leaves Its Stamp On Enthusiasts In MP
  • Groundwater Management In South Asia Must Put Farmers First
  • What The Sheikh Hasina Verdict Reveals About Misogyny In South Asia
  • Documentaries Rooted In Land, Water & Culture Shine At DIFF
Copyright © All rights reserved. | CoverNews by AF themes.