Vishwambhar Nath Mishra, dressed
in a traditional dhoti, was struggling to make his way through to the famous
Dashashwamedh ghat, barely three km from his house. The ghat was spruced up and
illuminated for the Ganga Aarti hosted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi for hisJapanese counterpart, Shinzo Abe. The Special Protection Group personnel denied
him access, disregarding his VIP ‘pass,’ and directed him through the common
gate. Mr. Mishra, the Mahant of the famous Sankat Mochan temple, was shocked
and felt humiliated. The officials soon realised their error and tried to make
amends. But Mr. Mishra, miffed at the negligence, refused to participate
further. He also boycotted Mr. Modi’s banquet, for which he was specially
invited. “If you cannot manage an event, how can you address the problems of
the Ganga and Varanasi,” asked Mr. Mishra. He also termed Mr. Modi’s drive to
clean the Ganga ‘cosmetic’ as there was no engineering solution in place. “If
Modi was serious about a fair assessment of the situation and concerned about
highlighting Varanasi’s woes, he should have taken Abe through broken roads and
shown him drains. Not the Aarti,” Mr. Mishra said. Despite many visits by Mr.
Modi to his constituency and publicising of schemes, Mr. Mishra said he had not
seen any new approach to clean the Ganga. “The Ganga Ministry has come up. But
nothing concrete has been done. The same obsolete techniques are at play, like
installation of pipes. Indiscriminate medication without diagnosis of the
disease can be disastrous,” Mr. Mishra said, referring to the numerous
proposals slated for Varanasi. An over-emphasis on a bureaucratic approach and
lack of competent officials is a big shortcoming, he said. He is opposed to the
plans of converting Kashi into another Kyoto. “It is okay if we adopt some of
the good things from Kyoto, like cleanliness. But each city has its own model
and spirituality. You cannot tamper with that cultural coding. Varanasi is a
living heritage not just buildings and monuments.” Mr. Mishra traces the
problem to the failure of the Ganga Action Plan, launched in 1986. Almost three
decades later, the existing infrastructure in Varanasi can only treat 102
Million Litres per Day of discharge. The average discharge stands much higher,
at 350 MLD.

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