A prolific writer, orator, educationist, thinker, and above all, spiritual preceptor to millions, Dada Vaswani, the head of the Pune-based Sadhu Vaswani Mission, turns 90 this month.We pay tribute to a life lived in service to God, guru and the world. More>>
Noted
environmentalist Anil Agarwal,
who passed away recently, was a supreme combination of human excellence
and humanism
Whenever Prem Bhatia, my professional mentor, saw me weighed down by the
load of trivialities that daily journalism imposed on me, used to ask
me: "At what stage do you give up?" My answer was: "Every
morning when I open the paper," and then, looking at him, I would
add: "Never, Sir". Whether
it is momentary irritation or a crippling setback, I had learnt to take
things as they came because life is a lot easier, or a lot less difficult
that way. I often recall the lines from that old Frank Sinatra song, That's
Life:
That's
life, I can't deny it
I thought of quitting
But my heart won't just buy it
If I didn't think it was worth a try
I'd roll myself up in a big ball and die.
Anil Agarwal, who died in January at the unspeakably young age of
54 for useful persons, was a person who never gave up. The lifelong crusader
who worked tirelessly to make this world, the country (India) and our
own neighborhood better places to live in, tried, tried and tried before
rolling himself "up in a big ball" and die. Ironically enough,
the cause of his death was one which he was warring against to save the
citizens of Delhi, India from being afflictedthe cancer-inducing
pollution which hangs at nose level in the capital's air and atmosphere.
I had known
Anil Agarwal for 25 years, from the days he moved from a career as scientist
to become a journalist involved in the crusade for a better environment.
Always a gentle inspirer, he reminded me of that delectable Wodehousean
character, Lord Ickenham, whose mission in life was to "spread
sweetness and light" everywhere and "to make the world less
of a hellhole than what it was before I came in".
If Delhi
today is less of a hellhole than before pollution-wise, it is largely
due to Anil Agarwal. He campaigned against vehicle pollution for close
to two decades, trying to move the two great immovable objectsgovernment
and judiciaryand succeeding at long last in getting the needed
shift from petrol and diesel to compressed natural gas (CNG) for taxis,
autorickshaws and buses besides old cars. Realizing dreams means braving
the odds.
That's
life, funny as it seems
Some people get their kicks
Stepping on dreams
But I don't let it get me down
'Cos, the ol' world keeps getting
around
For Anil, there was no fragmentary interest in environmental issues. To
him it is not a crusade to save trees or tigers; neither is it to prevent
huge dams or promote renewable energy sources. Yes, these are issues to
be fought for and they are necessary for a better environment, but Anil
insisted, and so very rightly, that environment concerns peopletheir
very survival. One of the major problems of all governance is that policy
makers and law implementers respond to personsgroups of humans with
specific interestsbut ignore people, a term that cuts across ethnic,
social, economic, religious and other barriers. His concerns were cosmic,
global and humanistic.
Anil's cosmic mind could encompass worries about the ozone layer,
bio-diversity and global warming while at the same time devising ways
to reach inexpensive fuel and drinkable water to village homes so that
men and women need not have to trudge miles of hot, barren land to get
a pot of water and dry sticks to fire their nondescript hearth. If only
our political leaders had that tiny wisdom to heed what Anil had to say
on a national energy policy, the country would not be in such a sorry
plight of perpetual energy crunch it faces to this day.
The core
of any energy policy ought to be to ensure that all people, especially
the poor millions, have access to cooking fuel. It does not matter what
they usefuel wood, agricultural waste, biogas or LPG and electricitybut
that it should be made available in adequate quantities to make lives
easy, or a little less arduous.
This simple
idea would not attract the government purely because PEOPLE are not
its concern, but Persons may be. Spending macro-money for mini benefits
is what government is all about! So Anil's efforts concentrated on making
poor people, village dwellers, less dependent on the government and
more on their own labor and energies. Water harvesting is a neighborhood
concern while building huge dams remains a governmental obsession. Nuclear
and hydel and thermal power plants consume billions of rupees rendering
it impossible for poor people to afford to dispel nightly darkness.
Over the
decades, Anil Agarwal has inspired two generations of selfless workers
and spurred voluntary movements. His Centre for Science and Environment
(CSE) and its fortnightly organ, Down To Earth, have helped raise
public awareness of environmental issues and the level of social consciousness
on problems faced by deprived sections of society. The message from
this unproclaimed Gandhian is simple: "Do not worry about the Gross
National Product; preserve and promote the Gross Natural Product."
The pursuit of the former GNP and the neglect of the latter GNP have
served to increase our GNMgross national misery.
The nation
has lost yet another of those countably few persons who do not give
up or lose hope. But his CSE and Down To Earth go on. The inspirer
has left behind countless young inspired men and women. The Indian poet-king
Bhartrihari has identified in a classic verse on the types of people
who undertake endeavors:
Base
humans do not undertake work fearing obstacles. The mediocre embark
on adventures but give up in the face of problems. Persons of excellence,
once they start a venture, do not give up whatever the impediments.
Anil Agarwal
was a supreme combination of human excellence and humanism.