Introduction
In our last article, Domestic Rituals vs Public Spaces, we explored how India’s traditions of ritual purity — sweeping temple courtyards, sprinkling water around thalis, scrubbing kitchens — remain vibrant indoors, yet fade when extended to civic spaces. We argued that civic sense must be reframed as an outward ritual of respect, not confined to private sanctuaries.
This week, we take that insight further. The paradox of ritual purity is not only about inside vs outside; it is also about then vs now. Older generations treated cleanliness as a collective inheritance, while modern urban life has narrowed responsibility to individual boundaries. Understanding this generational shift is crucial to reclaiming civic sense as shared heritage.
Origins and Examples
Village collectives In agrarian India, elders organized seasonal cleaning drives before harvest festivals. These were not just practical acts — they were tied to beliefs that purity invited prosperity. Cleaning ponds, wells, and streets before sowing was seen as honoring the gods of fertility and ensuring a bountiful crop. Over time, this became a cultural rhythm: collective cleaning as preparation for collective celebration.
Temple devotion

Saints like Appar in Tamil Nadu popularized "uzhavarapani" — cleaning temples as worship. The act symbolized removing impurities to invite divine presence. Temples were seen as microcosms of the universe, so their cleanliness was a spiritual duty. This belief carried forward for centuries, embedding civic duty within religious devotion. Even today, temple courtyards are spotless, showing how ritualized cleaning became a cultural inheritance.
Neighborhood bonds Courtyards and thresholds were cleaned not just for the family but to honor neighbors and guests. In many traditions, sprinkling water at the entrance was believed to purify the space for visitors and invite auspiciousness. This practice reflected empathy — cleanliness was a way of showing respect to others. It became culture because it was repeated daily, passed from elders to children, and reinforced during festivals when entire neighborhoods joined in.
Modern Practices Reveal the Shift
Urban anonymity Apartment living has reduced visibility of shared responsibility. In villages, neglecting to clean a street was noticed by everyone; in cities, anonymity shields accountability. The cultural transmission of collective cleaning weakened as urbanization replaced close‑knit communities with private households.
Commercial boundaries Shopfront sweeping continues, but the ethic of collective prosperity has narrowed. Dust is pushed into a neighbor’s area because the ritual of broom worship (linked to Goddess Lakshmi) is interpreted as prosperity for my shop, not the market as a whole. The religious symbolism remains, but the collective spirit has eroded.
Symbolic rituals Sprinkling water around thalis continues as a symbolic act of purification, rooted in Vedic shaucham. But the civic extension — waste segregation, street cleaning — is ignored. The symbolism survives, but the practical hygiene dimension has not been carried forward. This gap shows how rituals became inward‑focused, losing their outward civic relevance.
Lessons to be Learnt & Collective Action Required
Cleanliness is a collective effort — purity was always shared; temples, courtyards, and festivals taught that dignity thrives in community, not isolation.
Civic sense extends beyond cleaning — it is about living in a healthy environment, respecting air, water, and public spaces as sacred.
Respect for others is respect for nature — civic responsibility means treating neighbors, rivers, and streets with the same reverence as private sanctuaries.
Generational learning is continuity — children absorb values by observation; consistency indoors and outdoors ensures civic sense is passed down naturally.
Prosperity thrives in shared cleanliness — shopfront sweeping linked to Goddess Lakshmi once blessed entire markets; fortune grows when responsibility is collective.
Festivals are civic opportunities — Diwali, Ganesh Chaturthi, harvest rituals can be reframed as drives for clean streets, parks, and neighborhoods.
Urban anonymity must be countered — apartment living hides neglect; civic drives restore visibility and accountability.
Markets must shine together — prosperity is not individual; collective cleaning of bazaars and streets builds trust and commerce.
Schools as transmitters of civic rituals — classrooms, playgrounds, and waste segregation teach children that respect extends beyond property lines.
Symbolism must evolve into practice — sprinkling water around thalis is meaningful, but must be matched by waste management and civic hygiene.
Community pride sustains dignity — clean neighborhoods become symbols of belonging, strengthening bonds across generations.
Civic sense is cultural continuity — it is not a modern invention but an extension of heritage; reclaiming it honors both tradition and progress.
Collective rituals preserve ecology — cleaning springs, rivers, and streets is not just civic duty but environmental harmony.
Respecting boundaries means extending care — dust pushed into another’s area is symbolic neglect; civic sense requires empathy beyond property lines.
Civic responsibility is belonging — when citizens embrace civic sense as heritage, cities transform into sanctuaries of dignity and respect.
Conclusion
In Domestic Rituals vs Public Spaces, we uncovered how India’s traditions of ritual purity remain vibrant indoors yet fade when extended outward. In this article, we examined the Generational Shift — how practices once rooted in collective heritage have narrowed into symbolic or individual acts. Cleanliness, once a shared inheritance, has been fragmented by urban anonymity, commercial boundaries, and inconsistent generational learning.
The lesson is unmistakable: civic sense cannot survive as a private ritual. It must be reclaimed as shared heritage, practiced in homes, shops, neighborhoods, and cities alike. When citizens, shopkeepers, and communities act together, civic responsibility transforms from burden into pride, from obligation into belonging.
But reclaiming heritage is only the first step. The next challenge lies in bridging the gap between symbolic purification and practical hygiene. Sprinkling water around thalis or sweeping thresholds carries meaning, but without systems of waste management, segregation, and public hygiene, symbolism risks becoming hollow.
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