Cleanliness...
From the Bhakti List Archives
• October 14, 1999
Dear Sriman Sampathkumaran : Your feelings and genuine concern about cleanliness in temples is well-placed. However, adiyen may kindly be permitted to add my few cents' worth as some one whose doctoral research is on the subject of people's attitude to environmental problems (water and garbage) with Madras (Chennai) as focus. There are two different problems here. One concerns behaviour by regular users of temples. The other concerns behaviour by users who are not day-to-day users but occasional visitors. In a place like Tirupati, the latter is the bigger issue. In most smaller temples, the former is the issue. In discussions on common prpoperty resources, this is referred to as incentive problem. A temple space or for that matter many public spaces are open access resources. While the people you refer to throw the 'dunnai' or contribute to waste in the public spaces, they may be keeping their own houses clean (according to their standards). In both instances, they are behaving rationally (according to a narrow interpretation of rationality). There is no incentive to keep the public space clean - due to either a lack of a sense of ownership (that this space belongs to everyone including me), or a general belief that 'someone' will take care of it any way. I do not want to go into details but the solution to this problem is to correct the incentives. Regulation and coercion was thought to be the solution (Garet Hardin's 1967 paper The Tragedy of Commons), but we know from experience that people themselves resolving the problem is better than regulation imposed in a top down fashion. Madras also has one of the best examples of such co-operative solution named Exnora. I do not know if your comments about Tiruvellikeni are based on today's experience but as far as my knowledge goes, there are several Civic Exnoras and an organisation called Srinivasa Young Men Association (or something like that) working near and around Parthasarathy temple area. These organisations together have transformed Tiruvallikeni area completely from the earlier one of garbage strewn locale to one of clean community. Also, adjacent to Tiruvallikeni temple, (in Peyalwar sannidhi street - if I am not wrong) there is a colony (like an agraharam) in a space belonging to a trust originally belonging to a devotee from Ayodhya. That entire colony is an example of how modern life can co-exist with vedic philosophy - they have again collectively organised water and sanitation in the entire colony. I am not making this up. In fact, I was pleasantly surprised to find a discussion of this colony in VS Naipaul's book 'India - A Million Mutinies Now' though the names of the persons have been changed. The same can be done in Tiruvallore or in fact anywhere. To form an organisation like Civic Exnora you need participation of all the people concerned. Example itself then acts as an instrument of change. Before asking people not to throw garbage we need to show them where it can be thrown. We need to make sure the garbage so collected is then disposed of properly. You will need the help of local municipal organisation for the purpose. >From my research, it was found that people in Madras in general (all walks of life) have a good understanding of environmental problems. But that awareness by itself fails to transform into action without appropriate institutions. There are good examples of how such institutions can be created and sustained without much difficulty. If I have spoken too much, adiyen may kindly be forgiven. Dasan Anand ---------------------- P.B. Anand p.b.anand@bradford.ac.uk
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