
Faith unshaken, an emotion called Yamuna
But today, the Yamuna cries. Once revered, the river now bubbles with toxic foam. Her darkened waters, choked with industrial effluents and untreated sewage, reflect not the purity of the heavens but the apathy of a city that has long turned its back. In Delhi, the capital of a modern republic but also the keeper of ancient faiths, thousands of devotees still descend upon her banks during festivals like Chhath Puja, risking health and life to touch what was once holy.
At Kalindi Kunj, in southeast Delhi, 38-year-old Rameshwari (name changed) stands ankle-deep in the murky waters, holding her son's hand. 'The water is extremely dirty but we don't have many options. It is a ritual to take a bath in a water body so we have come here,' she says.
She's lived in the city for seven years and, in all that time, the white froth, now as familiar as the rituals themselves, has never disappeared.
'I know the water is unclean,' says Mohini, who had travelled from Noida with her daughter. 'My skin burns afterwards, but what choice do we have? If I don't offer prayer to the setting sun in this river, my prayers won't be complete,' she says. Her hands tremble, not with fear, but from conviction. 'This is our dharma,' she added.

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