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  STREET 
  FURNITURE - Individual Responsibility
 Over lunch, we got to talk 
  about Delhi with Sharat Das, a graduate of SPA (1970), and one of the city’s 
  prominent architects.  Hs firm, Sharat Das and Associates, designed the Indira 
  Gandhi National Stadium, and is now working on the design for the IGNOU 
  campus.  In 1987, he was nominated to the Delhi Urban Arts Commission.  This 
  commission had been enacted in 1975, after Indira Gandhi had become disturbed 
  by the changes in Delhi’s urban environment; it was decidedly not 
  user-friendly, and monsters in the guise of public buildings were rising all 
  around.  The DUAC was given the responsibility for reviewing and clearing the 
  plans of all non-residential buildings proposed in the city, in order to 
  achieve some semblence of order and coherence.
 
 We began discussing street furniture – bus stands, benches, waste cans and all 
  the other paraphernalia normally placed along streets.
 
 Sharat:  
  In India, public property is abused.  If your car breaks down on the road, you 
  leave it there – no thought of shifting it to the curb – put some bricks and 
  stones around it, and repair it there.  When you’re finished, you drive off, 
  leaving the stones behind on the road.  This attitude seems peculiar to 
  northern India.
 
 The city administration wants clean roads, working lights, benches at bus 
  stops, trees to provide shade.  But after a month, all these are gone.  So 
  where does and administration get the initiative to do these things?  Society 
  must take responsibility for its won benefit, but I see no movement in this 
  regard.  In Bangalore, in Bombay, yes; but not in Delhi.
 
 DA:  
  so where can we put street furniture?
 Sharat :
   Well, there are really 
  no footpaths. They’ve all been cut, or encroached upon by electric towers, 
  vendors or pavement dwellers.  So the pedestrian moves down the road.  He has 
  no alternative.
 
 The lawns at India Gate, situated in the most prestigious location in the 
  country, are dying.  Funds have been provided, but wrongly spent.  When it was 
  opened to the public, the amount of litter left everyday was unbelievable:  
  piles and piles of ice cream wraps.  There are no waste baskets, or if there 
  are, they’re broken or poorly placed.  Most have been stolen.  If there is a 
  functional waste basket, people don’t use it; the waste is thrown close by, 
  but not in it.”
 
 People need to realize that when they do this, they hurt themselves.  
  When a labour union in this country strikes, what’s the first thing they do?  
  Burn the public transport. They are burning their own money!  In some tiny 
  way, they need to realize ‘these buses belong to us’.
 
 DA:  
  Could this be the attitude because so few people pay taxes?
 Sharat:  
  Even tax payers burn buses.  But 
  government is perceived as some foreign body collecting money form different 
  sources to look after our welfare.  We haven’t learned to differentiate 
  between the old rulers and government: That’s for the government to do.
 
 In the United States, in Delaware, I took a train to see what train travel is 
  like there.  In the station, there was an old man shining shoes.  He had a 
  beautiful stand; the brass was shining.  His uniform was crisp, perfect, not 
  an excuse of a uniform.  The traditions were upheld.  I said to my wife, I 
  must get my shoes shined.  But she looked at the price, $3, and thought it was 
  too expensive.  I went ahead, because the experience in such a setting would 
  be worth far more than $3 for me.  I sat down royally and got a wonderful 
  shine.  I gave him a $2 tip; this didn’t really make financial difference to 
  him, but it made a difference to me.  He gave me a salute and a smile as I 
  left.
 
 DA:  
  So how to inculcate individual responsibility for public property?
 Sharat:  
  The schools must take this on.
 DA: 
  Schooling may be 
  compulsory, but that doesn’t really mean everyone’s getting an education.
 Sharat : 
  It is not the poor so 
  much as the well-off who are the real vandals-the kids from the best schools, 
  whose parents give them a Maruti at age 14.
 DA: 
  Will the growing 
  consumer rights movement do some good in promoting individual responsibility?
 Sharat :  
  I don’t know.  People are scared 
  to lodge complaints against powerful people, for fear that their family might 
  be injured.  This fear psychosis is held by many people.  All we want is to be 
  able to live peacefully.  Even when you do something right, you are punished 
  for it.  Many years ago, before I married, I was living with some friends in 
  Nizamuddin.  It was about 11 at night, when we heard a lot of noise from the 
  market area.  We ran out and saw a huge Sikh holding another Sikh up in the 
  air by the man’s collar.  The big one had a knife and had already cut the 
  other on the arm.  I was too small to take on such a big man, but I couldn’t 
  believe I was going to stand on the edge of this silent crowd and watch a man 
  murdered.  I picked up two fistfuls and sand from a nearby pile, and worked my 
  way through the crowd till I was facing the big Sikh.  He hadn’t noticed 
  anything strange.  I threw the sand in his face, and as he dropped the other 
  man, ran behind him and punched him hard.  He fell, and by then the police had 
  arrived, and  took him to custody.
 
 For eight years, every four months or so, I was called to the courts as a 
  witness.  I would spend all day there.  Finally I asked the judge to take my 
  name off the list of witnesses, and he agreed.
 
 Why should I help this society?  Every country has its own problems, but at 
  least in the West, the common man can survive peacefully without problems from 
  his neighbours or the systems.
 
 Sensitiveness towards one’s neighbourhood and to public property as their own 
  can only be inculcated at a very young age at home as well as at school.  We, 
  most of us parents are fairly indifferent about it.  So the schools could not 
  care less.
 
 It is not possible for all of us to be transformed into selfless saints 
  overnight or become Gandhians.  But at least, let all citizens of this country 
  take a vow on Mahatma Gandhi’s birthday that no one will burn public buses, no 
  one will plant a bomb in a train or any building, no one will damage, steal or 
  encroach upon any public property.  Then, and only then will it be possible 
  for all of us to live in a safer Delhi and better India.
 
  
  
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