Nonsense. All our religious sites are in bad shape due to neglect and the govt takeover of the temples. Mathura, Varanasi, Brindavan none of these are exceptions.
Ganga does not get spoiled due to 80 bodies being creamated on its ghats everyday. This is the river with the greatest discharge of water on planet Earth after the Amazon river. Traveling over the Himalayas it carries millions of tons of forest debris and silt. So what is a few thousand people bathing in it or a few hundred bodies ashes immersed in it. Do not know how many dead bodies are floated in it, but guess it will not be more than 2-3 a day. For that huge a river this is nothing.
The river is polluted primarily because all the cities on its course discharge their effluents in it including all the industrial zone toxins along the way. Add untreated sewage water to it.
It has become popular to just attack some rituals on the River by Hindus, but everything used in the Hindu ritual is organic. Flowers, leaves, coconuts, these are supposed to be the major pollutants according to our ignoramuses.
Cremation on Ghats[edit]
Cremations in progress at Manikarnika Ghat,
Varanasi.
In
Hindu traditions, cremation is one of the
rites of passage and the Ghats of Varanasi are considered one of the auspicious locations for this ritual.
[2] At the time of the cremation or "last rites," a "Puja" (prayer) is performed. Hymns and mantras are recited during cremation to mark the ritual. The Manikarnika and Harishchandra Ghats are dedicated to the cremation ritual. Annually, less than 2 in 1000 people who die in India, or 25,000 to 30,000 bodies are cremated on various Varanasi Ghats; about an average of 80 per day. This practice has become controversial for the pollution it causes to the river.
[3] In 1980s, the Government of India funded a Clean Ganga initiative, to address cremation and other sources of pollution along the Ghats of Varanasi. In many cases, the cremation is done elsewhere and only the ashes are dispersed into the river near these Ghats.
[4]
Pollution of Ghats[edit]
Untreated sewage in a pervasive source of river
pollution in India. City municipal waste and untreated sewage is the largest source of pollution of Ganges river near the Ghats of Varanasi.
[5]