Scientists in India, concerned about pollution, have been assessing the
effects of immersing painted idols in water during religious ceremonies
Multicoloured idols of Ganesh, the elephant-headed god, were found
immersed in a lake in Hyderabad. Photograph: Blaine Harrington III/Alamy
Do the gods pollute? Scientists in India, worried about the public health consequences of immersing idols in lakes and rivers, have been looking anew at water pollution. They hope, and perhaps in some cases pray, to harmonise their medical concerns with some people's religious priorities.
Most of their research has focused on idols of the elephant-headed god Ganesh, created for the annual Ganesh Chaturthi
celebration. Once a fairly quiet, mostly private practice, Ganesh
Chaturthi now involves large, public festivals in many parts of the
country. Researchers have also looked, a little, at the effects of
immersing other idols, especially those of the many-armed goddess Durga.
One of the latest studies
is called Assessment of the Effects of Municipal Sewage, Immersed Idols
and Boating on the Heavy Metal and Other Elemental Pollution of Surface
Water of the Eutrophic Hussainsagar Lake (Hyderabad, India). A team
sampled water repeatedly from different parts of the lake, including one
spot "immersed with hundreds of multicoloured idols of Lord Ganesh and
Goddess Durga", and another near "the outfall of black-coloured,
untreated raw sewage containing a collection of industrial effluents".
Sewage, they conclude, accounts for most but not all of the pollution.
High levels of zinc, calcium and strontium "were probably due to the
immersed idols painted with multicolours".
Some studies concentrate on isolating the effects of idols from those of other sources. Impact of Ganesh Idol
Immersion Activities on the Water Quality of Tapi River, Surat
(Gujarat, India) tells of sampling the water "at morning hours during
pre-immersion, during immersion and post-immersion periods of Ganesh
idols". The conclusion: the "main reason of the deterioration of water
quality … is various religious activities", with special blame given to
"the plaster of paris, clothes, iron rods, chemical colours, varnish and
paints used for making the idols".
Several studies examined a lake in the city that suffered India's most famous act of pollution: the 1984 chemical leak from a Union Carbide factory, which resulted in several thousand deaths.
Heavy Metal Contamination
Cause of Idol Immersion Activities in Urban Lake Bhopal, India,
published in 2007, finds that idol immersion has become "a major source
of contamination and sedimentation to the lake water". It warns that
idol-derived heavy metals, especially nickel, lead and mercury, are
likely to find their way into "fishes and birds inhabiting the lake,
which finally reach the humans through food". The authors want to
"educate idol makers" to make their idols small, of non-baked,
quick-dissolving clay, and with "natural colours used in food products".
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