Sullied rivers in full spate

Sankar Ray

Book Review

River Bagmati: Bounties Become A Curse
Dinesh Kumar Mishra
Sandrp and People's Science Institute
Rs 595  pp 196

Manusmara is a killer tributary of the River Bagmati, also known as
Purani Dhar or ‘old channel’ at Runni Saidpur in the Sitamarhi
district of Bihar. According to myth, Lord Vishnu once stayed at the
confluence of the Bagmati and the Vishnumati. The Bagmati touched his
feet and the doab is called Siddhabhumi,   where sin has no place.
Hanuman is believed to have halted there before going to the Himalayas
in quest of the Sanjivani plant to save Lakshman, fatally hit by an
arrow during the Lankan war. Given all this, the existence of the Kala
Pani of the Manusmara, another tributary of the Bagmati — the result
of the dumping of effluents from sugar mills whose major shareholder,
incidentally, is a devout Hindu — actually ridicules Lord Vishnu and
Hanuman as anyone who now takes a dip here will, in all likelihood,
soon die. Indeed, this makes a complete mockery of the Sanskrit sloka:
“Who takes a dip in this river (Bagmati) will find a place in heaven”.
All this is vividly told by Dinesh Kumar Mishra in a narrative packed
with history, earth science and politics. The book includes maps and
tables, folklore, myths and details about cruel mismanagement through
thoughtless embankments and the destruction of fertile tracts that
once produced cash crops.

The river has been prone to flooding through the centuries but floods
are actually a boon for farmers unlike dykes, which, as Mishra
categorically states, can become a curse. The issues arising from the
placing of impediments to the natural flow of the river are old:
changes to its course were recorded by William Hunter and James
Rennel, two pioneering river experts of the colonial era. Then as now,
vested interests ignored important studies. Today, political parties
are strangely apathetic towards the pain of the people of the area.

Mishra has devoted his life to the people living along the banks of
rivers like the Bagmati and the Koshi, who are victims of the greed of
the construction lobby that colludes with a section of engineers and
politicians. Saving the river is inseparably linked to the livelihood
of millions.

This writer had the opportunity of traveling with the author to
witness how floods and wrongly built embankments perpetuate misery in
the region. The study of this great ongoing tragedy calls to mind the
seminal work Development of Underdevelopment by Andre Gunder Frank.
River Bagmati: Bounties Become A Curse is a call to action and
definitely deserves to be read.

Sankar Ray is an analyst on the environment and Left politics
http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/Print/1112069.aspx

-- 
Blog:biharfloods.blogspot.com
Web: www.toxicswatch.org

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