With the Sagar-Mitra Abhiyaan, Children Grapple With the Plastic Problem

Under the programme, schoolchildren in Pune have been collecting plastic items from their homes for safe disposal, assisted by their teachers and community workers.

School students with plastic items they’ve helped collect under the Sagar-Mitra Abhiyaan programme. Credit: Scharada Dubey

Pune: Children from over a hundred schools in Pune, numbering over 111,000 in 2016, have developed a daily routine as natural for them as doing their homework or packing their school bags. Every day, they collect small items of clean, dry, empty plastic from their homes, such as packets, bottles, bottle tops, ball pen casings, old combs – anything broken made of plastic, and put these into a big plastic bag kept specially for the purpose. Every month, on a designated day, they hand over the bag full of plastic items to teachers and volunteers at school. Each child, collecting only plastic waste, and only from the confines of his or her home, is a declared ‘Sagar-Mitra’, Hindi for ‘Friend of the Ocean’.

“It began out of what we observed during a cleaning drive that had been organised by some groups with schoolchildren,” says Vinod Bodhankar of The Academic Advisors (TAA), the NGO that founded the programme. He, along with co-founders Susan Raj and Lalit Rathi, had accompanied the children on the cleanliness drive when they were confronted with the mountain of waste containing hazardous material along a portion of the riverbank. “We saw immediately that children could not be asked to pick up plastic from sites where they could be exposed to used syringe needles, pieces of glass and other such sharp objects. We asked them to go home. It was then we decided that children should have a safe and effective way of collecting the plastic from their homes and contribute it for recycling or safe disposal.”

Thus began TAA’s Sagar-Mitra Abhiyaan initiative in 2011. “We began in 2011 with 150 children from one school. Today we have a lakh and eleven thousand students from classes 5 to 9 from schools spread across Pune city, and we are adding more every day as we cover more schools by presenting them with the Sagar-Mitra programme. The target is to cover all 780 schools in the city, or twelve lakh students. This will bring about a definite change in the culture of the city,” says Bodhankar, whose daily routine consists of visiting schools with his laptop, meeting principals and teachers, and presenting the Sagar-Mitra concept to hundreds of children.

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The presentation is like an initiation ritual for children, who assemble to watch a slideshow explained in the clearest and simplest terms by Bodhankar or his assistant. The children gasp when they see images of marine life and birds choked to death on plastic or the heaps of refuse containing tons of plastic that is contaminating rivers, lakes and other water bodies closer to their homes. “If you had a beautiful fish tank in your home, would you throw bits of plastic and rubbish into it?” the children are asked. “No!” they reply in total unison. “These creatures are dying and choking, through no fault of their own. Shouldn’t we try and protect them?” they are asked. “Yes!” they reply, again in complete accord.

In less than an hour, Bodhankar has managed to communicate to the children that: