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River pollution in the Ganges

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An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated
in Environment, on the 27th of October 2009
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206055

Quick Actions:

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206054

Quick Actions:

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206053

Quick Actions:

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206052

Quick Actions:

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206051

Quick Actions:

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206034

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An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206033

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An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206030

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An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206019

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An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206018

Quick Actions:

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206017

Quick Actions:

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 206016

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An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 205997

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An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
"Mother Ganga" is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
"Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name," Lord Vishnu, the four-armed "All Pervading One", proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
"Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates," says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
"People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven," says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

ID: 205996

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New: So, if the river is SO

So, if the river is SO sacred, why do Hindus treat the river so poorly? Wouldn't that blasphemy? How do they justify this?

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I am a photographer/cameraman based in New Delhi, India. I have been a photojournalist for the past 20 years.

An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.
An estimated 2,000,000 people ritually bathe daily in the River Ganges, which is considered holy by the Hindus. Adding to the fact that it carries effluent downstream from all factories and untreated sewage. Kolkata, India. 27/10/2009.

For more than two millennia, the River Ganges has been revered by millions in India as a symbol of spiritual purity.
Originating in the frozen heights of the Himalayas, the river travels 1,600 miles across the teeming plains of the subcontinent before flowing east into Bangladesh and from there it spills into the Bay of Bengal.
'Mother Ganga' is described by ancient Hindu scriptures as a gift from the gods; that is, the earthly incarnation of the deity Ganga.
'Man becomes pure by the touch of the water, or by consuming it, or by expressing its name,' Lord Vishnu, the four-armed 'All Pervading One', proclaimed in the Ramayana, the Sanscrit epic poem composed four centuries before Christ.
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.
Irrigation canals siphon off ever more of its water and its many tributaries to grow food for the country's hungry millions. Industries in the country operate in a regulatory climate that has changed little since 1984, when a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the northern city of Bhopal leaked 27 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas and killed 20,000 people.
The amount of domestic sewage being dumped into the Ganges has doubled since the 1990's; it could double again in a generation.
The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.
In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health Organization, according to Veer Bhadra Mishra, an engineer and Hindu priest who's led a campaign there to clean the river for two decades.
Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.
'Polluted river water is the biggest cause of skin problems, disabilities and high infant mortality rates,' says Suresh Babu, deputy coordinator of the River Pollution Campaign at the Center for Science and the Environmet, a watchdog group in New Delhi, India's capital.
These health problems are compounded by the fact that many Hindus refuse to accept that Mother Ganga has become a source of illness.
'People have so much faith in this water that when they bathe in it or sip it, they believe it is the nectar of God [and] they will go to heaven,' says Ramesh Chandra Trivedi, a scientist at the Central Pollution Control Board, the monitoring arm of India's Ministry of the Environment and Forests.

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