03 July 2014

Sustainibility - What it means to me.. Part 2 of n

I have often had people look at me weirdly when I use the unused blank side of a paper which has been printed. In my opinion its a perfectly justifiable use of paper for sketches or making small notes. This attitude has been with me since my teenage years.
In this post I am going to write about the Indian attitude towards "Paper" in general and how we have been traditionally sustainable - long before the email signatures of today "Do you need to print this?"
The first part of this series is here.

Newspaper

As a child, I remember there was a special place in the house where all the old newspapers were accumulated for a whole month. Bhaiyyaji would come at the end of every month with his usual sing-song voice calling out - "paassti -paper". Pasti - is a vernacular gujarati word meaning "waste paper".  He would have a fixed rate per kilogram for English and a slightly lower rate for the vernacular - gujarati papers. Probably the english newspapers used a different quality of paper.

A few months' old newspapers would get you the money for about half month's worth of subscription money. But that was never the point. The newspapers ended up getting recycled in various ways. 

The neighbourhood retailer would probable buy the old newspapers from the bhaiyyaji and the old newspapers would end up as wrapping paper for your monthly rations which you would purchase from him. 

These wrapping papers also ended up being recycled ! Mom would carefully unwrap them and empty the contents into a steel container with a lid (dabba) and remove the creases from the paper and store them separately. These would then emerge from the storage place when the veggies were being peeled or the poha or flour was being dehusked to gather the waste remains. Only then would these land up in the waste bin. 

This became a system year after year and a routine to be followed. Bargaining with the raddiwallah bhaiyyaji became a passion and a pastime. It rarely yielded more than 50 paise more than the rate but it was definitely no mean achievement.

Another use for  the newspapers that was quite common, was to use them as shelf liners or backing sheets. These helped in absorbing the moisture and probably the smell of ink from the newspaper kept the insects away. The shelf lining was changed every few months and it used to be fun to read the old news and reminisce the past. We still follow this inf our home wherever we go. I get teased by my colleagues when I take the old newspapers from them for such insignificant uses. In my city in India, this tradition has now been modernised and one can have your old newspapers picked up at a pre decided price. Talk about being conveniently sustainable!!

More on paper in the next post

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