Home / Environment / Musi River's Plight: Folk Art Ignites Awareness
Musi River's Plight: Folk Art Ignites Awareness
8 Feb
Summary
- Youngsters use folk art to raise awareness about Musi River's pollution.
- Performers transformed riverbanks into open-air performance spaces.
- Initiative focuses on local traditions to tell the river's story.

Youngsters from villages situated along the Musi river have initiated a distinctive awareness campaign to address the river's critical pollution levels. This group is leveraging traditional folk art forms, including Chindu Yaksha Ganam and Oggu Katha, alongside folk singers and poets, eschewing conventional protests.
These artists have creatively transformed sections of the Musi's banks into open-air stages. Through performances deeply rooted in local culture, they illustrate the river's degradation from its pristine beginnings in the Ananthagiri Hills to its present polluted condition.
The initiative's unique approach involves holding performances directly along the river, near polluted areas and farmlands irrigated by its waters. Organizers emphasized capturing live experiences, allowing the river and its surrounding communities to authentically convey their story to the public.




