A week ago I read a news article, “US residents fight for ‘right-to-hang’ laundry. I know that in US they cannot have a clothesline or dry laundry outside their homes. They always use washing machines and driers. Indians, particularly elderly women who come to attend to their daughter’s delivery often find it difficult to adjust to it. As there is no other choice they follow the rule and find it difficult to dry their sarees with the drier. They adjust somehow for their stay of 3-6 months.
In quite a few states in US of A there are laws prohibiting residents using clothesline. In some housing associations fines are imposed for hanging clothes in the common yards. For convenience, or environmental considerations now some organizations have taken up the cause to fight for ‘right to hang’ laundry. They say that this right will reduce the domestic electricity consumption by 6% and also reduce greenhouse gases. It also saves few dollars in the electricity bills of a family. Carin Froehlich (resident of Pennsylvania) says “If my husband has a right to have guns in the house, I have a right to hang laundry”. She is writing a book on this subject.
In India, in general every house hold will have a clothesline, whether it is in the back yard or on the terrace or inside house where sunlight can fall directly. In apartments there are balconies to use for this purpose. If aesthetic reasons are considered, this looks awkward. This is the reason once (few years ago) a Governor of Andhra Pradesh wanted to restrain people living in the adjacent apartments hanging their laundry in the balconies. I don’t know whether he was successful. We often see variety of laundry outside the house or inside the house exposed directly to sunlight. Sunlight, in fact, acts as germicide. When a patient with skin disorder, scabies or fungal infection, apart from giving medical treatment, patient is also advised to change clothes everyday wash them and hang them in sunlight. In India though washing machines are driers are used, to get rid of the little dampness in them they are still hanged out in the sun.
Keeping in view of environmental issues, Ihope, Carin Froehlich will win her fight.
In quite a few states in US of A there are laws prohibiting residents using clothesline. In some housing associations fines are imposed for hanging clothes in the common yards. For convenience, or environmental considerations now some organizations have taken up the cause to fight for ‘right to hang’ laundry. They say that this right will reduce the domestic electricity consumption by 6% and also reduce greenhouse gases. It also saves few dollars in the electricity bills of a family. Carin Froehlich (resident of Pennsylvania) says “If my husband has a right to have guns in the house, I have a right to hang laundry”. She is writing a book on this subject.
In India, in general every house hold will have a clothesline, whether it is in the back yard or on the terrace or inside house where sunlight can fall directly. In apartments there are balconies to use for this purpose. If aesthetic reasons are considered, this looks awkward. This is the reason once (few years ago) a Governor of Andhra Pradesh wanted to restrain people living in the adjacent apartments hanging their laundry in the balconies. I don’t know whether he was successful. We often see variety of laundry outside the house or inside the house exposed directly to sunlight. Sunlight, in fact, acts as germicide. When a patient with skin disorder, scabies or fungal infection, apart from giving medical treatment, patient is also advised to change clothes everyday wash them and hang them in sunlight. In India though washing machines are driers are used, to get rid of the little dampness in them they are still hanged out in the sun.
Keeping in view of environmental issues, Ihope, Carin Froehlich will win her fight.
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