An inspiring story that shows just how simple it can
be for one person with an idea to make a difference.
Aabid
Surti is an odd character. A few years ago, the angular, bearded author was
invited to meet the President of India to receive a national award for
literature at a ceremony in the capital, New Delhi. He politely declined.
Absorbed in writing the first draft of his new novel, he cited the reason that
he did not have time. But what he has made time for every Sunday for seven
years now, is going door-to-door in Mira Road, a non-descript suburb of Mumbai,
with a plumber in tow, asking residents if they need their tap fixed for
free!
As a
distinguished Indian painter and author, Aabid has written around 80 books but
no story so moved him as the truth about water scarcity on the planet. “I read
an interview of the former UN chief Boutros Boutros Ghali,” he recalls, “who
said that by 2025 more than 40 countries are expected to experience water
crisis. I remembered my childhood in a ghetto fighting for each bucket of
water. I knew that shortage of water is the end of civilized life.”
Around
the same time, in 2007, he was sitting in a friend’s house and noticed a leaky
tap. It bothered him. When he pointed it out, his friend, like others,
dismissed it casually: it was too expensive and inconvenient to call a plumber
for such a minor job – even plumbers resisted coming to only replace old
gaskets.
A
few days later, he came across a statistic in the newspaper: a tap that
drips once every second wastes a thousand litres of water in a month. That
triggered an idea. He would take a plumber from door to door and fix taps
for free – one apartment complex every weekend.
As a
creative artist, he had earned more goodwill than money and the first challenge
was funding. “But,” he says, “if you have a noble thought, nature takes care of
it.” Within a few days, he got a message that he was unexpectedly being awarded
Rs.1,00,000 ($2,000) by the Hindi Sahitya Sansthan (UP) for his contribution to
Hindi literature. And one Sunday morning in 2007, the International Year of
Water, he set out with a plumber to fix the problem for his neighbors.
He
began by simply replacing old O-ring rubber gaskets with new ones, buying new
fixtures from the wholesale market. He named his one-man NGO ‘Drop Dead’ and
created a tagline: save every drop… or drop dead.
Every
Sunday, the Drop Dead team – which consisted of Aabid himself, Riyaaz the
plumber and a female volunteer Tejal – picked the apartment blocks, got
permission from the housing societies, and got to work. A day before, Tejal
would hand out pamphlets explaining their mission and paste posters in
elevators and apartment lobbies spreading awareness on the looming water crisis.
And by Sunday afternoon, they would ensure the buildings were drip-dry.
By
the end of the first year, they had visited 1533 homes and fixed around 400
taps. Slowly, the news began to spread.
In
March 2008, director Shekhar Kapur, who was working on his own water
conservation film, heard about Aabid’s efforts and wrote on his website: ‘Aabid
Surti, thank you so much for who you are. I wish there were more people like
you in this world. Keep in touch with us and keep inspiring us. Shekhar.’
Local
newspapers began to write about Drop Dead, which prompted a further flood of
grateful emails and spontaneous messages. One of the most heartfelt messages
was from superstar actor-producer Shah Rukh Khan, a longtime fan of Aabid’s
work as a comic book creator. After reading the newspaper report titled ‘City
of Angels’, he wrote to Aabid: “…It sounds like one of the little big things
my dad would have done.Strange that I have enjoyed [your comic] Bahadur in my
childhood and enjoyed reading your tap story so many years down the line… when
I am father myself. God bless you and yes, I believe in angels after reading
the newspaper.”
In
2010, Aabid Surti was nominated for the CNN-IBN CJ ‘Be The Change’ Award. In
the same year, a television crew from Berlin flew down to follow him on his
Sunday rounds which continued come monsoon or shine.
It’s
hard to say how much water he has saved with his mission, given that the
faucets he fixed could have continued leaking for months, and maybe years, had
he not rung the doorbell one Sunday morning. But conservatively, it could be
estimated that he has single-handedly saved at least 5.5m litres of water
till date.
In
the summer of 2013, the state where Aabid lives is expecting its worst drought
in 40 years. Months in advance, the Chief Minister Prithviraj Chauhan has
warned citizens to begin conserving water. While ministers lobby for
drought-relief packages worth millions of dollars, Aabid sees his own approach
as simple and inexpensive.
As
he rings another door-bell on yet another Sunday in Mira Road, seven years into
his one-man mission, he says: “Anyone can launch a water conservation project
in his or her area. That’s the beauty of this concept. It doesn’t require much
funding or even an office. And most importantly, it puts the power back in our
own hands.”
I
would call him a modern-day angel;
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