Ganesh Chaturthi 2018: Mumbaikars Will Have to Celebrate Ganesh Festival Without Plastic

With the plastic ban in force in Mumbai, there are caps not only on the height of idols or eco-friendly Ganpatis but also on festivities.

Published date india.com Updated: July 31, 2018 10:54 AM IST
Ganesh Chaturthi 2018: Mumbaikars Will Have to Celebrate Ganesh Festival Without Plastic
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Mumbai is famous for two things – festivals and plastics, and both of them go hand in hand. During Ganesh Chaturthi, the bitter truth is that everything goes in the sea. Every year, the number of Ganpati idols keep increasing, which leads in more water pollution. Ganeshotsav is observed in second and third weeks of September, but workshops of idol makers and other festive decorations are already feeling the heat of plastic ban in the state that has been effective since June 23, 2018.

With the plastic ban in force in Mumbai, there are caps not only on the height of idols or eco-friendly Ganpatis but also on festivities. Ganesh mandals are now not allowed to use plastic or thermocol as a part of their decorations. The same applies to home-bound Ganpatis as well. But many idol workshops in the city still cover the idols with plastic sheets. They claim their murtis would otherwise get dirty and be of no use and that they would then have to make the idols from the scratch again.

“Also, there is no other alternative to plastic which can shield these idols from rainwater. And if the murtis are made of shadu maati (clay), it is all the more difficult to sustain,” said Raju Shinde, a Lalbaug idol-maker who was under late Vijay Khatu’s tutelage, the famous artisan who passed away last year, for more than 38 years.

Many workshops across the city unapologetically cover idols with banned plastic. Surprisingly, no civic official has taken any action whatsoever, at least as yet.  However, the mandals got some respite last week in a meeting with the umbrella body of Ganesh mandals across the city, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) had decided to allow the use of plastic for ‘aagman’ and ‘visarjan’ in order to shield idols from rains.

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The members of the Brihanmumbai Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav Samanvay Samiti (BSGSS) had met BMC officials to voice their demands and suggestions. The mandals already feel their festival spirit has dampened after the Bombay High Court order of them not able to use plastic and thermocol for decorations. “The plastic ban has already led to heightened rates of other alternative decorative materials for the festival. The festival is not about business as much as it’s about culture,” said Harish Jadhav, another murti maker.

The mandals will, however, not be allowed to use plastic while giving prasad to devotees in plastic zip bags or hand mementoes in plastic carry bags. The same should be given in butter paper or paper similar to that material. Mandals have been demanding a relaxation in the thermocol ban for Ganpati decorations this season, which was junked by the high court.

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