Kuppai Thiruvizha to inspire young minds to become eco-friendly
By Express News Service |
Published: 27th November 2017 02:16 AM |
CHENNAI: What could have been a
run-of-the-mill school festival took an interesting colour this weekend,
as it focussed on the theme of solid waste management (SWM).
‘Kuppai Thiruvizha’, an initiative by
the movement, Kuppai Matters, was a two-day event designed to sensitise
and expose students to the idea of ‘reduce, reuse, repair, refuse and
recycle’.
Groups of students watched with
curiosity as they walked through a large display of used plastic bottles
mounted on poles and stretched for metres. It made children understand
the magnitude of waste we generate.
The auditorium of a private school in
Anna Nagar was the venue for the first of 15 ‘Kuppai Thiruvizhas’ to be
held in the city. “We will hold this in every corporation ward, and get
at least one lakh people to pledge that they will segregate waste,” said
Kripa Ramachandran, a member of Citizen Consumer and Civic Action Group
(CAG), which is behind this movement.
The Greater Chennai Corporation recently
urged all residents to segregate their degradable and non-degradable
waste. Kripa, however, argued that the model might not become successful
until and unless the collection, incineration and composting were
decentralised. “For this process to be decentralised, citizens have to
co-operate by segregating their waste regularly. This programme is a
step in that direction,” said Kripa.
Apart from sensitising people to the idea of waste segregation, the festival also sold eco-friendly everyday objects.
The fete was lined with stalls selling
compost pots, recycled decors, degradable accessories and even reusable
sanitary napkins. The event was designed to give participants an
opportunity to use affordable, eco-friendly fashion accessories and
cutlery.
The two-day festival culminated in a
public consultation meeting where children brought along their parents
too to learn about managing waste at their homes. Parents and children
sought help from various experts on SWM to make their home and community
‘zero-waste’.
“I learned about green dustbins and red
dustbins from this festival. I brought my mother also today so that we
can separate bio-degradable waste at home,” said A Ahmed, an 11-year-old
boy who attended the festival. The ‘Thiruvizha’ was conceived by CAG,
Vettiver Collective, Arappor Iyakkam, Pennurimai Iyakkam and Poovulagin
Nanbargal. It will happen in more wards over the next few months.
For more details, contact +918939107923 or follow the Facebook page ‘Kuppai Matters.’
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