A Man of His Work

Another pothole bites the dust in India, thanks to the efforts of Gangadhara Tilak Katnam

Another pothole bites the dust in India, thanks to the efforts of Gangadhara Tilak Katnam

“You shouldn’t be out there filling potholes at your age.” That’s what Venkateswari Katnam tells her 67-year-old husband, Gandgadhara. He doesn’t listen. Over the past five years, he estimates that he has filled around 1,100 potholes on the streets of Hyderabad. He carries bags of gravel and tar in the trunk of his Fiat, along with a spade, two brooms, a wire brush and a crowbar. When he spies a pothole — or learns of one from a Facebook message — he can usually fill it in under an hour. He clears out any debris or standing water, pours in the mix of gravel and tar, levels it off and waits about 30 minutes for it to set. He puts up red flags in English, Hindi and Telugu to make sure no one steps or drives in it. And when he’s done, he takes a selfie to add to his collection of filled pothole

He wasn’t always obsessed with potholes. Gangadhara Tilak Katnam worked for the Indian Railways for 35 years, first as an inspector and later as an electrical engineer. Five years ago, while driving to work, he hit a massive pothole, splashing muddy rainwater onto a woman and her young child. Their clothes were ruined.

“I felt ashamed,” he says. He hopped out to apologize, he says, “but that was not enough, I realized.” So Katnam began taking action. He already knew how to fill a pothole. As a child he used to watch road crews at work and eventually would lend a hand. He started with the potholes on a stretch of road just outside his house. At first he did it all himself, paying for supplies from his monthly pension of about $300. Now he’s solicited some helpers from a group he started called Shramadaan — Hindi for “labor donation.”

It’s important work, he stresses. It’s not just clothes that can be ruined when a car splashes through a pothole. Pedestrians, cyclists and motorists have been injured and killed by encounters with potholes that can be a foot deep. Google “India’s killer potholes” and you’ll see many sad stories.

“The solution to stopping this suffering is so simple and straightforward,” Katnam says. But he won’t take cash donations, especially from folks outside of India who’ve learned of his work. “This is the government’s responsibility, and they have the money to fix the roads,” he says.

Read more here.

Leave a comment