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Republic Day and Cleanliness Day at Thane Project
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Republic Day and Cleanliness Day at Thane Project
Republic Day and Cleanliness Day at Thane Project
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| When |
26-01-06 16:10
26-01-06 16:10
26-01-06
from
10:40
to
10:40
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On Republic Day on January 26, 2006, Population First
organised a workshop on bio-composting in the 20 villages
it has adopted under the Thane Project. The day was
observed as 'Cleanliness Day' by the villagers, including
women's self-help groups (SHGs), youth groups and men.
Earlier, under the Project Population First has worked
with the villagers to tackle the sanitation problem
by showing them how to construct and use soak pits to
drain the sewage water. This helped tackle many illnesses
that resulted from allowing the water to stagnate.
Two resource persons from the NGO, Stree Mukti Sanghatana
(SMS) Ms. Nirmala Ughade and Ms. Sushila Mokal explained
and demonstrated the procedure of bio-composting to
an eager gathering of over 150 women.
The workshop and demonstration on bio-composting was
aimed at teaching the villagers how to manage their
garbage. In the villages, the solid waste is mostly
biodegradable in the form of dry leaves, gobar, grass,
kitchen waste (peels, leaves, seeds, used tea leaves
etc.) These lend themselves easily to bio-composting
which can be used to produce organic manure.
In the 1990s, with the advent of the Advanced Locality
Management (ALM) groups in Mumbai, the NGO, Stree Mukti
Sanghatana (SMS) along with the BMC pioneered the techniques
of vermi- and bio-composting. Two resource persons,
Ms. Nirmala Ughade and Ms. Sushila Mokal from SMS demonstrated
the procedure and explain the benefits of bio-composting
as an effective method of waste disposal.
The session began with some informal introductions about
the SHG members, where they had come from and in what
way were they successful in tackling basic issues in
the village. Then Ms. Sushila sang inspiring songs in
praise of Savitribai Phule, the women's reformer. Soon,
the mood for change and reform was suitably created
in the small village school that was beautifully decorated
with festoons, charts, drawings and buntings. The women
had come from villages as far as 30 km away, but their
spirit charged the room. Children added to the energy
levels in the area, as the boys ran about noisily playing
cricket, while the little girls giggled away sometimes,
sometimes coyly served water to their guests from Mumbai.
Ms. Sushila then commenced the session speaking on what
bio-composting is, how it should be done and why it
is beneficial to the villagers. She narrated her experiences
of working on the technique in Mumbai. She said, "In
Mumbai, we don't have space to do this. But here in
the villages, all the conditions are perfect. They have
ample space, plenty of grass, cow dung, leaves and kitchen
waste to process in the pits and also enough sunlight
to aid the process. It can be an economically viable
proposition, provided they follow the procedure properly."
The whole group proceeded to the demonstration area,
where Ms. Nirmala and Ms. Sushila instructed the villages
to dig a pit in which the biodegradable waste would
be processed. The layers of grass and gobar and wet
waste like banana peels were added. Villagers were encouraged
to keep their surroundings clean and healthy through
this technique.
You will soon find further information about the event
in this section.
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