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French expat cleans dirt-filled Gurugram streets, one at a time

Published on: Oct 03, 2025 03:30 AM IST

Her journey into civic activism began almost by chance. As a volunteer with Friendicoes, an animal welfare NGO, she would spend weekends walking abandoned dogs in the Aravallis.

Every weekend, while many residents of Gurugram retreat indoors, a small group gathers in different parts of the city with gloves, garbage bags, and determination to wage a quiet battle against litter. At the centre of these efforts is Mathilde Rateria, a 38-year-old French expatriate, former journalist, and television director who has made the Millennium City her home and her mission.

French expat Mathilde Rateria cleaning the garbage along the road. (Parveen Kumar/HT)

Rateria first came to India eight years ago as a correspondent for French television. She says she fell in love not only with the country’s landscapes and cultures, from the cleanest village in Meghalaya to the tea plantations of Munnar, but also with its people. After returning briefly to France to host an environmental show, she moved back two years ago, married her husband in a Hindu wedding, and shifted to Gurugram.

Her journey into civic activism began almost by chance. As a volunteer with Friendicoes, an animal welfare NGO, she would spend weekends walking abandoned dogs in the Aravallis. “The forest is magical, but I was disheartened to see it getting dirtier, with construction waste piling up. That’s when the idea struck me, we cannot just wait for others to clean up, we must start ourselves,” she said.

She often draws comparisons with her hometown in France, where dedicated cycling and walking infrastructure has brought pollution levels down drastically. “The PM2.5 there rarely crosses 20. That’s the quality of life I dream of for Gurugram,” she said.

Her efforts have already inspired NGOs, schools, and resident groups to join in. Several neighbourhood associations now organise their own drives after seeing her group’s work. “We never wanted to be just cleaners,” Rateria said. “Our goal is to spread awareness and encourage others to take pride in their public spaces.”

For many residents, the sight of a foreigner working tirelessly to clean their city has been a wake-up call. “If she can do this for us, why can’t we?” said a local shopkeeper at one of the clean-up sites, asking not to be named.

As Gurugram grapples with waste management and crumbling infrastructure, Rateria’s movement remains small but symbolic. Every Sunday, with a broom and a smile, she shows that change need not wait for government orders. It can begin with one determined person. Her story showcases how even the smallest acts of care can spark collective change, and that Gurugram’s future can be cleaner, greener, and kinder if citizens choose to walk that path together.

 
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