A view of the branch library set up by the Directorate of Public Libraries in partnership with the Environmentalist Foundation of India at Marina beach in Chennai.

A view of the branch library set up by the Directorate of Public Libraries in partnership with the Environmentalist Foundation of India at Marina beach in Chennai.
| Photo Credit: B. JOTHI RAMALINGAM

On the service road along Marina beach, where Kamarajar Salai’s traffic fades into the rhythm of rolling waves, a small branch library and an environmental NGO have opened an unusual channel of communication with the sea.

In partnership with the Environmentalist Foundation of India (EFI), the Directorate of Public Libraries (DPL) has set up an ‘Ocean Station’ — part reading corner — part outreach centre — for marine awareness. At its heart, stands a modest post box, bearing an invitation that feels almost radical in the digital age: “Kadalukku Oru Kaditham” (A Letter to the Sea).

The idea is romantic in the old sense of the word: believing that the sea can listen. But the intention, says EFI founder Arun Krishnamurthy, is deeper. “In a city like Chennai, once you stand on the beach, it becomes serene, almost spiritual. You lose yourself. People naturally talk to the ocean, try to connect with it. That ocean connect is deep within us. We are just giving an opportunity for people to express that,” he says. For the organisers, the post box is also a creative engagement tool.

It is a way of engaging with people in a very creative way because they also know that the sea does not respond, says B. Chandramohan, Secretary of the School Education Department. “So what is essentially being done is getting people to communicate. If they were to say something to the sea what would they say. In a way, it is also an attempt at making people connect with nature,” Mr. Chandramohan explains.

In eight months, only four letters have been posted. Yet each letter is seen as a quiet testament to people opening up—often anonymously—in a public space. The Ocean Station itself is the result of a collaborative effort: EFI approached the District Library Officer, the government reconstructed the old building, and EFI mobilised resources to fill the campus with material on marine life, ocean wealth and conservation. Today, the library has become a hub for EFI’s ocean-awareness activities.

V. Thennavan, who stumbled upon the library during a recent visit to the Marina, recalls visiting a small aquarium in the area as a child. “This is a nice idea, especially when writing is declining. The library not only makes people read; this post box encourages them to write. Penning thoughts and feelings helps people immensely. I have personally benefited from writing a diary,” he says.

Behind the modest library building, the Bay of Bengal stretches endlessly—eternal, unreadable, and patient. And somewhere between the waves and the wind, the sea waits, quietly, for the next letter.


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