River
Ganga is one of the longest river systems of India. The river
traverses over 2,500 km, from the Gangotri glacier in the Himalayas
to the Sunderbans delta in Bangladesh. The water resources of Ganga
basin are used by hundreds of millions of people. Unfortunately, this
use is mostly done without showing even a bit of concern about the
pollution caused. As a result, Ganga remains highly polluted. Any
one would wonder as to how this mightiest of rivers has become a
garbage dump. There are many reasons for this pathetic state such as
untreated sewage and industrial waste being dumped into the waters
without remorse.
The
task of reducing the pollution load of the Ganga is no doubt a
daunting and challenging task. However, the clamour for a cleaner
river has gained momentum in recent times, with Government
establishing a clean Ganga mission for the task. Doubting Thomas's
and skeptics have already questioned about success of this mission.
Government says that they have taken number of steps and the results
can become visible as project gains momentum.
It is
quite easy to criticize work being done on such a mega project. But
what is being done appears to be the right way to take up a task.
Mega problems can not be solved with a quick mega solution, a step by
step approach is what is required. I would like to narrate here a
personal experience of mine, which readers might find interesting. In
the year 1961, my home town Pune was washed with heavy floods due to
breaching of two dams that supplied water to the city. I was a young
man of eighteen years then. The flood waters that caused havoc in
the city, also had entered my grandfather's factory, which was not
very far away from the river. Next morning, I also accompanied my
grandfather and father as they had entered the factory premises after
the waters had receded.
It was
a heart breaking view. All machinery, equipments were covered with
inches of sticky mud. The factory floor was so slippery that it was
even difficult to walk. All materials, tools that were in open were
gone. My grandfather however remained calm. He called all the staff
and workers in the open space and told them that they have two
choices, either to start the factory again, for which they would have
to work hard for next month, but they can keep the jobs; or close
down the factory and let it being sold as scrap. In this option they
all would loose their jobs. The staff and workers opted to clean up
the factory.
My
grandfather then arranged services of a water tanker, which would
bring water from nearby wells continuously, tonnes of kerosene and
other industrial solvents were ordered along with bags and bags of
cotton waste. For next fifteen days, everything in the factory, from
walls to furniture to machinery was washed clean with torrential
water jets pumped from the tankers. Next, came the turn of washing
all the machinery with kerosene and solvents to remove mud from
exteriors. By the time, this was done, the electrical people had
checked all the wiring and had replaced all defective wiring and
fittings. After about three weeks the lights came on.
Yet
the most difficult task was still to be done. Now each and every
piece of machinery was completely unscrewed and dismatled with all
parts laid bare on the ground. Each part was washed in kerosene to
remove mud, lubricated and then reassembled with new bearings; with
help from manufacturers, where help was available. The first machine
tools that got going were simple center lathes. In another couple of
weeks, machine shop started producing components and after about
three months from that disastrous day, the first consignment of
finished product left the factory premises.
I
consider myself lucky, as I was able to witness this entire operation
from very close quarters. It did two things to me. Firstly, my
respect for my grandfather skyrocketed for his guts and calmness,
which saw the factory again being brought to life. Secondly this
entire episode taught me that however daunting or challenging the
task may be, if you work step by step, it is possible to achieve
success.
Later,
I always remembered my grandfather, during my professional career,
whenever I was negotiating a new business or order that prima facie
looked much beyond our means an capabilities. The step by step
approach always gave me confidence to complete the task.
Working
step by step does not mean however, that you only think of a small
portion of a project at initial stage. At this stage, the entire
project in its total enormity, should be crystal clear to the top
management, who should first carry out a system design on paper with
blocks. Obivously, my grandfather must have had full blue print in his mind, when he started work on renovation of the factory. The inputs and outputs for each block well specified and
exact. Once this is done, the attention could be now given to
individual blocks and depending upon resources, work on one or more
blocks can be taken up at a time. This is the time to think small and
about details. Only after completing one block, the work may be taken
up for the next block.
Most
professional organizations work in this fashion, but even at personal
level, this approach gives far better results. Four or five years ago
I renovated my house. It was a major project. However once the total
plan was decided, we gave detailed considerations only to the work
that was going on. In this way, there were hardly any confusion or
glitches at the end.
This
approach also works well for report writing or even writing a work of
fiction. Many a times, I have watched a film or read a novel, where
after first few reels or chapters, you realise, as a spectator or a
reader, that the work of fiction is not going anywhere or is getting
tangled in knots, which might become undoable. We can easily
conclude that such works were written without a proper block system
design. As against this, consider the works of master story tellers
like Agatha Christie or Daphne du Maurier. The end is always perfect,
showing that the plot was ready in the author's mind, even before
first line was ever written.
A step
by step approach is always a winner, only when the entire system
design is ready first in the initial stage itself. I hope Government
has done that, in clean Ganga mission. Only this would bring success.
12th
March 2015
Thank you for sharing this wonderful personal story.. Hats off to your grandfather's leadership
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