Public spaces reveal more than buildings and development. They reflect how you treat your surroundings and the values you live by. While India’s cities keep expanding, your civic sense and attitude toward cleanliness still struggle to match that pace.
No matter how impressive a place appears, its real identity lies in how people behave there. A recent post on X highlighted this contrast at Varanasi’s Namo Ghat during Dev Deepawali, exposing the gap between progress and behaviour.
During the celebration, some individuals were reportedly seen urinating on the ghat, while a food vendor operated nearby and others walked past without concern. The scene showed how public apathy continues to stain spaces meant for culture and faith.
This is especially disheartening because Namo Ghat was created as a model of cleanliness and modern heritage on the Ganga. Yet, actions like these erase the purpose behind such initiatives, showing that true progress demands more than polished infrastructure.
Cleanliness begins with awareness and responsibility. One careless act can undo years of effort. Until that mindset changes, no ghat no matter how grand can truly embody the idea of a clean and conscious India.
People peeing on the Namo-ghat on Dev-Deepwali.
One Vendor is selling something edible next to them.
Others are just walking by.
Welcome to Indian Civic sense. pic.twitter.com/ozSXl7aOig
— Tarun Gautam (@TARUNspeakss) November 8, 2025






