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3-When Devotion Slowly Pollutes Our Rivers

Good morning friends. Today’s story is a little uncomfortable, but important. It is about our rivers, our faith, and something we do with good intentions — yet cause harm. Early in the morning, when temples open and incense fills the air, rivers and lakes quietly receive what we leave behind after worship. Flowers, leaves, coconuts, idols, plastic bags — all of this is offered as nirmalya and then gently placed into water. We believe we are returning sacred things to nature. But rivers are not endless. When large amounts of nirmalya are dumped every day, flowers rot, oxygen reduces, fish suffer, and plastics remain for decades. What was meant as devotion slowly turns into pollution. The painful truth is this — rivers were never meant to be dustbins, even for sacred things. In older times, offerings were simple and biodegradable, and population was low. Today, the scale has changed. Faith has remained, but responsibility has not grown with it. Our rivers carry our prayers, but they also carry our waste. The solution does not lie in stopping worship, but in changing habits. Dedicated nirmalya collection bins, composting flowers, avoiding plastic in puja, and immersing idols in artificial tanks can protect rivers without hurting belief. Devotion is not proven by where we throw offerings, but by how gently we treat what we call sacred. If rivers are mothers, then protecting them is also a form of prayer.


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Written by Shantanu 2026-02-3
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