Located in north Delhi's Kingsway Camp area, in the front yard of the over 80-year-old Harijan Sewak Sangh, the gallery instead of getting its due recognition, ironically has been "dishonoured" as many passers-by choose to relieve themselves on its boundary wall.
"Gandhiji saw sanitation as a road to social empowerment. He saw creation of toilets as a means to abolish untouchability as sanitation work was something which the society thought should be done by low caste people.
Though Gandhi could not live to see his vision brought to fruition, his work was converted into a tangible form at this gallery later by well-known sanitation activist Ishwarbhai Patel, he said.
Patel, driven by the Harijan Sangh's vision, had already played a major role in establishing the 'Safai Vidyalaya in Ahmedabad (now Environmental Sanitation Institute) in the 1960s.
"And, later as envisioned by Gandhi, Patel got the toilet gallery established in Delhi at the ashram later in the 1960s. Gandhiji wanted to show the people how the building of toilets around the country was changing society and also how to use excreta manure for biogas production among others," he said.
"We have tried to complain to the municipal corporation about people using the walls for open urination, and also to remove encroachment outside by hawkers and rickshaw-wallahs but everything has so far fallen on deaf ears," he said.
Talking about the gallery, he said the Sangh has a redevelopment plan ready but the maps have "not been cleared by the North Delhi Municipal Corporation."
"We have proposed a complete refurbishment of the existing gallery. Also, an exhibition to show the evolution of a broom is also part of the scheme. We want to take Gandhi's idea closer to people, how he saw the role of a toilet in the society," Dass added.
The ashram was born out of the historic Poona Pact between Gandhi and Babasaheb Ambedkar in 1932.
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