Stench of Misconception: How India’s True Colors Defy Dirt and Decay

In a land celebrated for its vibrant diversity, traditions, and spirituality, one narrative that has been persistent for decades now is India’s association with trash and filth. India is often seen as a dirty country. But this statement oversimplifies a complex, deep-rooted issue. Behind such statements lies a complex tapestry of cultural habits, infrastructural challenges, and emerging civic movements that together defy any one-dimensional narrative.

Rushali Mariam & Dinesh Babu Sukumar

4/16/20256 min read

It is a paradox that a nation famed for its vibrant festivals, architectural marvels, and centuries-old traditions should so often be labeled “dirty.” From colonial-era photographs highlighting squalor to modern-day media fixations on polluted rivers and overflowing garbage heaps, India faces a persistent, oversimplified portrayal of filth and decay. Historically, India embraced rigorous hygiene: the Indus Valley Civilization had advanced drainage systems, and many ancient texts refer to detailed sanitary rituals. Over time, however, rapid population growth, uneven urban planning, and a lingering colonial lens helped perpetuate stereotypes of a country perpetually drowning in its waste. Today, as India’s mega-cities strain under the weight of exploding populations, and as the world seizes upon shocking visuals of open defecation or toxic smog, the old question reasserts itself: Is India doomed to be “dirty,” or can a nation of this scale and diversity forge a future defined by cleanliness and sustainable living?

Colonial Hangovers and Modern Media

The stereotype of “dirty India” began with the British Raj. Colonial administrators, missionaries, and travel writers documented scenes of open defecation, chaotic urban centers, and unfamiliar cultural practices, framing them as evidence of an uncivilized land. These narratives persisted, serving both to justify colonial rule and to satisfy Western curiosity about the “exotic East.”

Fast-forward to the present, and international headlines still selectively spotlight India’s worst pollution episodes. Films like Slumdog Millionaire - though artistically acclaimed - can reinforce the idea that squalor is all-encompassing. Media rarely features the steady rise of neighborhood cleanups, or the sophisticated metro lines crisscrossing modern Indian cities, or Kerala’s successful waste-segregation policies. The result? A skewed perception that has overshadowed centuries-old sanitation traditions and modern strides in infrastructure.

Historical Roots and the Caste Factor

Beneath India’s modern-day waste management dilemmas lie historical inequities, especially tied to caste. Long before colonial rulers arrived, India had varied local systems of sanitation. Yet, over centuries, those most directly involved in handling waste and manual scavenging came disproportionately from Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs). Today, this grim reality persists in many parts of the country.

Although states like Karnataka implemented a law against manual scavenging in 1975 - well before the National Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of Dry Latrines (Prohibition) Act of 1993 - the practice endures. Many areas without underground drainage continue to rely on workers (often Dalits) to clear soak pits or remove “night soil” by hand. According to one study cited by journalist and filmmaker Nupur Basu, around 1.3 million Dalits are still involved in this inhuman practice. Further, recent data indicates that at least 28 manual scavengers in Karnataka died of asphyxiation over the last two years while working in manholes or related sites.

The reasons are many:

  • Insufficient Infrastructure: Roughly 87% of the state has no underground drainage network, rendering costly jetting machines irrelevant in many areas.

  • Caste-Based Stigma: Even where automation exists, the deeply ingrained notion that certain communities “ought” to handle waste perpetuates manual scavenging.

  • Lack of Media Coverage: Though occasional news items highlight tragic deaths or show the horrors of raw sewage disposal, sustained coverage is rare, overshadowed by more commercialized stories.

These historical injustices mean that while India wrestles with the public perception of “dirt,” many of those who do the literal dirty work remain caught in a cycle of caste-based marginalization.

The Infrastructure Conundrum

Dismissing India as “dirty” ignores a deeper truth: Indian cities grew at breakneck speed, often outpacing municipal planning. The arrival of millions of rural migrants to urban hubs like Delhi, Mumbai, and Bangalore has tested even the most robust city services, especially those related to sanitation. Where critics see indifference, many Indians see an infrastructure deficit - exacerbated by scarce public dustbins, limited sewage capacity, and overburdened waste collection systems.

Yet, the tide is turning. Government-led initiatives such as Swachh Bharat (Clean India) Mission have constructed millions of toilets, drastically reducing open defecation in rural areas. Urban neighborhoods are adapting too: cities such as Bangalore now enforces stricter waste segregation rules, and civic bodies partner with local entrepreneurs to create efficient garbage disposal strategies. These interventions might not be uniform across all states, but they signal a fundamental shift in public priorities

Culture, Customs, and Contrasts

India’s association with “dirt” also arises from cultural misunderstandings. Traditional practices - such as eating with one’s hands or using water instead of toilet paper - may appear unhygienic through a Western lens. In reality, Indian customs frequently emphasize personal cleanliness; consider ritual bathing before prayers or the deeply ingrained sense of purity around cooking.

At the same time, there is a confounding “circle of trashing” at play. Many Indians who travel abroad become paragons of cleanliness, yet at home, they may litter or ignore recycling norms. As noted in a 2019 Times of India article, “When the same Indians travel abroad they display exemplary standards of cleanliness and do not dare to litter”. This paradox stems partly from inadequate local infrastructure and partly from a deep-rooted societal notion that “someone else” should be responsible for public spaces. Transforming this mindset requires not just more garbage bins but also educational campaigns and the shared conviction that streets, parks, and rivers belong to everyone.

Tolerance for the Unpleasant

An anecdote that captures the true resilience of Indians is the testing of the Israel “stink bomb” in India. The “Skunk”, a non-lethal weapon used for crowd control, emits a foul smell that is eerily close to sewage. The Skunk has proven effective in other countries, including Israel where it has been used against Palestinian protesters since 2008. But when the skunk was tested in India, the subjects were unfazed, thus failing the test.

According to a 2017 report by The Times of Israel, when the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) tested the stink bomb on a captive crowd in Delhi, the participants “managed to tolerate the smell without much difficulty.” The Skunk, often described as smelling like a “rotting corpse from a stagnant sewer” was meant to replace more harmful crowd control methods in Kashmir but proved ineffective due to India’s higher threshold of tolerating stench. While this incident underscores the severity of India’s odor issues, it also suggests a desensitization born out of daily encounters with uncollected waste or poorly maintained sewage lines.

However, this capacity to endure unpleasantness is not an immutable flaw. If the problem partly stems from high thresholds of tolerance, it can be addressed by elevating public expectations for cleanliness through legislation, robust municipal governance, and persistent public education.

Global Comparisons: Lessons from Home and Abroad

India is far from the only country wrestling with massive sanitation challenges. Rio de Janeiro, Jakarta, and Manila struggle with their own inadequate waste systems and ecological crises. Yet some nations have pioneered solutions that blend infrastructure with communal involvement.

  • Japan: Notoriously clean despite minimal public dustbins - citizens embrace a culture of carrying their own trash until it can be properly sorted and disposed of.

  • Bangladesh: Shifted from rampant open defecation to near-total eradication through rural sanitation drives and community participation.

  • Singapore: Demonstrates how strong policy enforcement and public discipline can transform a once-chaotic harbor town into one of the world’s cleanest cities.

India, too, is innovating. Municipalities experiment with “pay as you throw” waste schemes to disincentivize landfill overuse. River-restoration initiatives like Namami Gange combine industrial regulation with citizen involvement, mirroring the success of rivers rehabilitated in Europe. Corporate Social Responsibility programs also accelerate the push for cleaner streets and better waste management - an indication that sustainable development is increasingly viewed as good economics.

Summary

India’s “stench of misconception” traces back to a potent mix of colonial legacy, infrastructure shortfalls, caste-based injustices, and media oversimplification. Reality is more layered: even as the country grapples with the outsized demands of a billion-plus population, progressive policies, grassroots cleanups, and cultural reevaluations challenge the notion that India is irrevocably unclean. Unseen by many global observers, a renaissance in civic pride is underway - young volunteers restoring lakes in Bangalore, entire communities in Tamil Nadu embracing composting, and policy experiments redefining urban sanitation.

Final Thoughts

Who is to blame when the roads cry for relief under the weight of our disregard? Who shares the guilt when city sidewalks weep for respite from the day’s endless stream of garbage? Who is this invisible littering Maamu? Is it the government’s oversight - or each of us, turning a blind eye? Every single street, every river gasping for oxygen, bears witness to our choices. If you find yourself in a position to support or drive change, do so - by organizing a neighborhood cleanup, championing waste-segregation drives, or simply refusing to litter in public. Small yet consistent measures can spark a collective transformation.

India should not defined solely by images of filth and decay. Ultimately, transcending outdated stereotypes requires a shift in both mindset and technology. From the revival of ancient Indian sanitation wisdom to modern AI-assisted solutions for wet waste management like Mankomb’s “Chewie”, India has the tools to reclaim a bright, clean future. By rewriting our own narrative - one home at a time - India can reveal that its true colors are far deeper and more vivid than any caricature of dirt and decay could ever convey.