How did the bullock cart always come on time to take us to the railway station? Then I was too small to ask and too busy trying to squeeze into a tiny space among the bags and the other members of the family. Nor do I know now; even my mobile can’t tell me. The cart would shake and sway its way for a long time past many miles of trees and farms until we reached the river. The river with clear water flowing past stones and boulders and fish that swam carefree. That’s where we had to get down, cross the river and walk the rest of the way to the station. The elders would get off and carry the bags, stepping confidently from one boulder to another. The whistling of the steam engine would urge us children to run, deliberately stopping once in a while to let the fish nibble at our feet. I look up the name of the that river. Wikipedia finds it for me. “The Kalpathy River, also known as the Kalpathipuzha, is one of the main tributaries of the Bharathapuzha River, the second-longest river in Kerala, south India. “One of the problems faced by the Kalpathipuzha, like most other rivers in Kerala, is illegal sand mining. This has left many pits in the riverbed, which leads to shrub growth. During summer, the river is covered by a green carpet of Water Hyacinth and other shrubs.” I am now in a big busy city. I can see two bridges, extending the road from one bank of another river to the other. Above those is another bridge bearing the metro rail. From where I am, I can see everything, and everyone is in a rush. No one has the time to look at the river, except when you want to fling yet another bag of garbage into it. The water is sluggish and black wherever it is not smothered by thick swathes of water hyacinth. This river used to attract so many birds. They are missing now. Did all the fish die? Right below my window, they are felling more trees so that we can have another road for more people. The river appears to pause and sigh. Fires in cities. Heavy rain in deserts. Lush green growth in Antarctica. There are more roads and more bridges. But we can hardly move because there are too many of us. We build and build. But we get time to live only in vehicles. The rivers now weakly carry the filth we can’t stop generating to the ocean where the mightiest predator is plastic. We can’t go back to yesterday. Perhaps, today, we can stop and look at the river. And look after it? Are we already too late? Is it tomorrow, no, tosorrow already? All images produced by artificial intelligence, which does not have a solution unless real intelligence gets its act together.
2 Comments
Nagesh Simha
20/1/2025 10:19:50 am
Very true. Sad reality
Reply
Dhruv Shirpurkar
4/2/2025 10:01:38 am
Well said…unfortunate reality
Reply
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