World Toilet Day is incomplete without paying rich tributes to India's
Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak, the pioneer innovator of economic sanitation and social
reformer
Today is November 19.
What
is the importance of this day? Indians in India and across the globe will say
it is the birthday of former Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. They are right. But, I am
discussing about another importance of this day.
Today the World Toilet Organization (WTO)
is observing World Toilet Day. The World Toilet Organization founded by Jack
Sim in 2001 with 15 members, now has 215 member organizations in 57 countries
working towards eliminating the toilet taboo and delivering sustainable
sanitation.
The observation of World Toilet Day is
incomplete without paying rich tributes to India's Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak, the
pioneer innovator of economic and hygienic sanitation and social reformer. He
has been developed the cheapest toilet in the world. Many an elite people in
India and the general public at large are not familiar with the name Dr.
Bindeshwar Pathak. However, they are familiar with the name Sulabh Shauchalay,
the pay-and-use public toilets across the country.
Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak, founder of Sulabh
Sanitation Movement in India, has been awarded the 2009 Stockholm Water Prize
Laureate. As the Founder of the Sulabh International Social Service Organisation,
Dr. Pathak is known around the world for his wide ranging work in the
sanitation field to improve public health, advance social progress, and improve
human rights in India and other countries. His accomplishments span the fields
of sanitation technology, social enterprise, and healthcare education for
millions of people in his native country, serving as a model for NGO agencies
and public health initiatives around the world.
Since he established the Sulabh Sanitation
Movement in 1970, Dr. Pathak has worked to change social attitudes toward
traditional unsanitary latrine practices in slums, rural villages, and dense
urban districts, and developed cost effective toilet systems that have improved
daily life and health for millions of people. He has also waged an ongoing
campaign to abolish the traditional practice of manual “scavenging” of human
waste from bucket latrines in India while championing the rights of former
scavengers and their families to economic opportunity, decent standards of
living, and social dignity.
“The results of Dr. Pathak’s endeavours
constitute one of the most amazing examples of how one person can impact the
well being of millions,” noted the Stockholm Water Prize nominating committee
in its citation. “Dr. Pathak’s leadership in attaining these remarkable
socio-environmental results has been universally recognized, and not least by
those who have secured the freedom of human dignity as a consequence of his
efforts.”
Sanitation Innovator
Frequently citing the common toilet as
one of civilization’s most significant advances, Dr. Pathak has led the
development of cost-effective and culturally appropriate toilets and related
treatment systems to replace the traditional unsanitary bucket latrines in poor
communities throughout India. His most prominent innovations include:
- · The Sulabh Shauchalaya twin pit, pour-flush toilet system now in use in more than 1.2 million residences and buildings built by Sulabh. This technology has been declared a Global Best Practice by United Nations HABITAT and Centre for Human Settlements, and is now recommended by the UNDP for use by more than 2.6 billion people around the world.
- · Sulabh public toilet and bath facilities based on that system at 7500 locations, together serving more than 10 million people daily. These pay-per-use public facilities provide an economically sustainable, ecological, and culturally acceptable solution to hygiene problems in crowded slum communities and public places.
- · Optimised water conservation in the Sulabh Shauchalaya systems, requiring only 1.5 litres of water per use to flush, in contrast to conventional toilets that require a minimum of 10 litres. This has significant additional benefits for health and quality of life in water-poor regions.
- · Environmentally balanced wastewater treatment based on a duckweed and fish raising (pisciculture) ecosystem that provides economic opportunities for rural poor communities.
- · Several technologies that convert waste from Sulabh Shauchalaya toilets into biogas for heating, cooking, and generating electricity.
Action Sociologist
A self-described “action-sociologist,”
Dr. Pathak has worked on the leading edge of social enterprise for decades,
combining business best practices and principled activism to advance the causes
of better sanitation, societal change, and improved quality of life. In 1970,
he founded the Sulabh International Social Service Organisation, an NGO that
has been a catalyst for improved sanitation and social change across India. Now
with more than 50,000 associate members who are rendering their voluntary
services, the organisation has recently /started operations in Bhutan and
Afghanistan. In collaboration with UN-HABITAT, Sulabh has trained engineers,
architects, planners and administrators from 14 countries in Africa. Sulabh is
now planning to start work in Ethiopia, Cambodia, Laos, Angola, Madagascar,
Dominican Republic, Tajikistan and other countries.
Through Sulabh, Dr. Pathak has waged a
decades-long campaign to abolish the traditional practice of manual
“scavenging” of human waste from the simple pit latrines that have predominated
across much of India. His early concern for the plight of the “untouchable”
scavenger caste led to the development of the Sulabh Shauchalaya toilets to
eliminate the need for scavenging in poor communities. Over the years he has
led multiple initiatives to champion social dignity, economic justice, and liberation
from the caste-oriented system for former “untouchable” scavengers and their
families.
Hygiene and Health Educator
With
the establishment of the Sulabh International Institute of Health and Hygiene
(SIIHH), Dr. Pathak has led efforts across the NGO and government sectors to
develop effective and culturally oriented hygiene and health models for urban
slums and rural villages. In collaboration with other organizations, SIIHH has
created hygiene curricula for young schoolchildren and their teachers, provided
sanitation and health training for volunteer instructors in slums, and opened
centres providing basic healthcare for urban poor at Sulabh community toilet
complexes.
Working with the Indian Ministry of
Environment and Forests, Dr. Pathak also established the Sulabh Environmental
Information System Centre to gather and disseminate environmental information
related to hygiene, sanitation, and sewage treatment for researchers,
academics, policy makers, and students.
About Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak
Born to a Brahmin family in 1943 and raised in the Indian state of Bihar, Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak attended Patna University where he earned an M.A. in Sociology, an M.A. in English, a Ph.D. in “Liberation of scavengers through low cost sanitation” and a Doctorate of Literature in “Eradication of scavenging and environmental sanitation in India: a sociological study.”
Dr. Pathak first came to understand the
plight of scavengers in 1968 when he joined the Bhangi-Mukti (scavengers’
liberation) Cell of the Bihar Gandhi Centenary Celebrations Committee. During
that time, he travelled throughout India, living with scavenger families as
part of his Ph.D. research. Drawing on that experience, he resolved to take
action, not only out of sympathy for the scavengers but also in the belief that
scavenging is a dehumanizing practice that would ultimately have a destructive
impact on modern Indian society. With the establishment of the Sulabh
International Social Service Organisation in 1970, he thus launched a unique
movement that combines technical innovation with humanitarian principles.
A prolific writer and speaker, Dr. Pathak
has authored several books, the most well-known of which is The Road to
Freedom, and is a frequent participant in conferences on sanitation, health,
and social progress around the world. He lives near the Sulabh campus in New
Delhi.
The Government of India must consider
conferring the highest civilian honour, the Bharat Ratna, to Dr. Bindeshwar
Pathak without any hindrances or political recommendations of Bihar or Delhi
governments as paying rich tributes to his glorious services.