Posted on 01/23/2015 10:52:17 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Volunteers cleaning the streets of Raipur, India.
In cities all over India, anonymous men and women are picking up trash, fixing potholes and painting dirty walls. Theyre not paid to do this; in fact, they pay for their tools themselves. These citizens are part of a growing movement of spot-fixers, volunteers who use their free time to clean up ugly parts of their city, and then post before-and-after pictures on social media.
While teams of volunteers like this have operated steadily in big cities like Bangalore and New Delhi for several years now, dozens more have sprung up over the past few months. Some of the newest groups say they were inspired by Prime Minister Narendra Modis Clean India campaign, which was launched in October. Modi called on all Indians to do their bit to keep the country clean, and specifically suggested that if you see dirt anywhere, take a picture and upload it on social media then take a video of yourself cleaning it and upload the photo of the clean spot.
Old and new groups alike share a common aspect they dont accuse the authorities of failing to do their jobs, but instead emphasize the individuals role in shaping their community.
Whenever we travel and people ask us where were from, they say, oh, India its very dirty there, isnt it? Satish Bhuwalka is a founding member of Bunch of Fools, a volunteer spot-fixing group that was founded two months ago in the city of Raipur.
I started this group with six other friends; were all former classmates and businessmen. Whenever we travel and people ask us where were from, they say, oh, India its very dirty there, isnt it? This makes us feel very bad. So we wanted to do something about it, show a different face of India to the world. And we firmly believe that keeping streets clean is every citizens responsibility.
Every Sunday, a group of at least 30 of us go out to different slum areas in the city to clean up garbage and fix what needs fixing, like holes in the street or sidewalk. The tools, the paint we pay for all of it out of our pockets. We dont ask for donations or do any fundraising, since we dont want to be linked to any political group or organisation.
Often, the people living in the slum areas find it quite funny that we educated businessmen are picking up trash. They say, this isnt your job dont you have more important things to do? But then we explain why were doing this, that the streets are important to us, and they get motivated to start cleaning too. These are usually very poor people, who cant necessarily pay for materials, but they can pick up garbage and might then think twice about where they throw their own garbage.
Of course, not only poor people litter in India, far from it! We call ourselves Bunch of Fools in opposition to the wise people, which is what India's educated people are called educated people who still throw garbage out of the windows of their cars! If theyre wise, we are the fools
A few before-and-after shots of the "Bunch of Fools" work in Raipur:
Keep this up and the “Big Bang Theory” writers are going to have to work harder.
This is what able-bodied recipients on the public dole should be doing continually and by compulsion, just like the boys and girls from the county jails who tidy up the highways and bi-ways. Oh, and don’t let them vote until they 1.) get off the public dole, and 2.) pass a test or two in basic civics.
We did the same with the public parks. Each neighborhood would have their cleaning turn and we all showed up with brooms, pitchforks, trash bags and/or shovels.
Public parks were a place for kids to play, not for gang bangers to hang out and make drug deals.
Good for them. I hope it catches on, and I spreads to the USA.
A cultural movement like this can work wonders, far beyond what it actually does, because it motivates people to want to improve something, be it their property, their neighborhood, or themselves.
Socialists are attracted to this, but they always fail because they want to *direct* and *force* people to do this in a regimented and controlled fashion, the way the socialist wants. This is a big reason that people despise socialists, and would rather live in squalor than give the socialists what they want.
This is very cool. I wonder how widespread it is?
Wow. The high price of idealism. (I’m feeling pretty grateful right now. The beach near us has some free street parking, and a $5.00 lot.)
Good for them. I hope it catches on, and I spreads to the USA.
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Duh! Should be
Good for them. I hope it catches on, and it spreads to the USA.
(I’s don’t gots ta be spreadin’ to the USA; I already live here. Also, I would prefer not to spread any more than I already have in the last several years.)
In Vermont the spring snow melt reveals all the trash that over the long winter ended on the roadside, in front yards, parks etc. So every spring we have "Green-up Day". People collect the trash and the trash companies pitch in by picking up the bags of trash left along the roads. Lots of groups like the Rotary, KoC, Scouts, churches, etc do it as an outing.
Good for them. Indians are good people, yea they’re coming here and taking our jobs, but maybe they can turn their country around.
Here in DC, "spot cleaning" is usually an early sign of gentrification. I well recall the years during which Capitol Hill began to turn around. Come a fine spring morning, and the new neighbors would be out in force, working first and foremost on their own front yards but also tackling the problem areas in parks and alleys. I know that these were the new neighbors because there were certain easily observable differences between them and the older residents.
They are a bunch of fools if they think the garbage won’t be back within a week. All they did was give out free fish rather than having the neighborhood catch their own fish.
This may seem unrelated, but there is also an amazing number of small private schools in India, because the government is just incompetent. This is part of a people empowering trend.
BEar in mind that for the most part Americans deal with the cream of the crop from India; many of them have low opinions of countrymen left behind (they tend to view them as unmotivated).
Here in NJ they’ve used convicts to do it (though it has been a couple of years since I’ve seen them).
Catholic hospitals do weel there because many wealthier Hindus prefer them to the regular ones. In a country of a billion+ people, there just isn’t much value placed on life and they’d be treated as just another cog in the wheel.
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