Tunza in New Delhi, Indiaby | 29-03-2014 04:46 |
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![]() ![]() ![]() 'This is month of March. You see these sweat drops at my fore-head. Was Delhi as hot 10 years ago as it is now? It is raining outside which is not expected in a common month of March in New Delhi, India. Was the climate as unpredictable before as it is now?' Samsung Engineering and Tunza Eco-generation was presented at the Sikhar Organization's online training center in New Delhi, India. Students looked curious and exchanged their ideas with us that made our discussion alive. They realized their duty for nature and acknowledged the fact that only active involvement can survive the environment and lead us to a sustainable future. Very few good cities in the world are blessed to be situated at a river bank. Fortunately, Delhi is one of those cities. When the river Yamuna enters the city, it is a fresh water river but when it crosses the city, it turns into a river with acid bubbles, zero transparency, dark water, almost like a big drain. Almost every student nodded that it should not be the fate of a beautiful and important river. Mr. Shamshad Alam, a veteran Indian upcoming artist appealed to the students, 'We need to educate and sensitize ourselves in better ways. This is our colony, city, country and world. We are responsible for global warming, climate change and other environment related problems. And only we can change the situation.' Personality Development Trainer, Mr. Manoj Kumar Dhakyab, shared the stage and instructed the students, 'we live in this city, nobody from outside comes to pollute it. But if you have already made corners of city look like a garbage dumping place, even outsiders will also not hesitate to add the beauty of garbage.' Session ended with distributing Tunza knowledge material to the student and with a pledge to save the environment. |