Temples go back to basics, say no to plastics

Prasadam counters, shops instructed to shift to eco-friendly alternatives

January 14, 2019 01:15 am | Updated 01:15 am IST - CHENNAI

Right from not burning the plastic covers on camphor to using arecanut leaf plates or stainless steel bowls for holding archana articles, the Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Department (HR&CE) has made a list of dos and don’ts to be implemented in temples to enforce the ban on single-use plastics.

“We began our training programmes and preparations for the ban three months ago. Prasadam counters and shops that are let out by temples on lease have been instructed to shift to non-plastic packaging. Though it will seem costly at present, it will get absorbed in the long run. Temples stand for traditions and plastics are an intrusion into that ethos. We are only reviving the culture of people carrying flowers and archana items in bamboo/wooden/steel baskets to temples,” said T.K. Ramachandran, former Commissioner of the HR&CE Department, who is now posted as the Thoothukudi Port Trust chairman.

At the Sri Kapaleeswarar Temple in Mylapore, non-woven bags have been replaced with pure cotton bags, the original manjappai .

“We have kept boards and have been making announcements on a regular basis asking devotees not to bring plastics into the temple premises. Volunteers are also on regular watch for devotees coming in with plastic bags,” said a temple official.

Biogas plants

Other kinds of waste, including flowers and food waste, are also being dealt with by individual temples.

Following regular training programmes by Temple Exnora and environmental experts, temples that have space, like that of Oppiliappan Perumal at Thirunakeswaram, have been asked to install biogas plants, said S. Sivakumar, Joint Commissioner, Mayavaram.

M.P. Rajasekharan, chief technical advisor of Temple Exnora and principal consultant on environment and ecology appointed by the Department, said after the sensitisation programmes, there was a visible reduction in the use of plastics in temples. “Shopkeepers are afraid to give plastic bags and say they don’t want to pay fines. Earlier, plastic bags used to be thrown into temple ponds and sometimes the bags used to block stormwater drain channels from the temples,” he said.

S. Vanitha, a resident of Triplicane, said she was happy to see plastics being banned inside temples. “ Dhonnais and steel tumblers are witnessing a come back. If it is enforced for a year, it will become a habit and a ban won’t be necessary,” she said.

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