Echoes by the River

  • Dates
    2021 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Documentary, Editorial, Fine Art, Landscape, Nature & Environment, Photobooks

Echoes by the River reflects on the enduring presence of the Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad, India — founded by Mahatma Gandhi in 1917 as the heart of his experiments in living and social reform. The series lingers on this riverside landscape where history

Soft, whispering echoes that sometimes linger by the river

Restless, tentative and abstract

like unformed words

Floating circuitously in a world that is frozen

Breaking cold sighs in their desolation

Hovering on the threshold of reality

Never revealing themselves to a seeker

Only in happenstance they offer us a glimpse

calling us in sotto voce

Luring us to peek into their world

that which emerges only in silence

Withholding with pursed lips

voices of the past, existing in banality

tantalising us with their unspoken words

 

 Echoes by the River is a reflection on the subtle vibrations of the temporal world. The river is the Sabarmati, along whose banks the city of Ahmedabad was founded. In 1917, M. K. Gandhi established his ashram here — a place where he lived for thirteen years, shaping his vision of truth and non-violence. The resonance of that time still lingers in the air and across the grounds by the river.

These grounds exist like a sanctuary — a utopian expanse within the city, yet somehow suspended outside its pace. They feel like fossils preserved beneath the sediments of time, while the world beyond has transformed beyond recognition. And yet, unlike fossils, the Ashram continues to breathe the air of its beginnings — though this, too, is bound to change.

The Ashram precinct, spread across fifty-five acres, now faces imminent transformation under the government’s Sabarmati Ashram Redevelopment Project. Many fear that such interventions may compromise the fragile ethos that defines the site.

In 2021, I began a photographic documentation to record what endures before the winds of change alter its spirit. Over the years, I have often wandered through these grounds — mostly without intent. These images, too, emerge from that quiet purposelessness. They might be read as pages from an unwritten diary — meditations on a landscape where the past continues to breathe gently through the present.