ARTICLE BY GV DASARATHI

(G V Dasarathi is director of a software products development company)

This when I was born 46 years ago.....
I was born to Tamil speaking parents, my father had a dark skin and my mother a 
light one. My ayah was a light-skinned woman from UP who spoke Hindi.
We lived in a thickly forested area in Jharkhand, where the majority of the 
population was dark-skinned tribal people who spoke a language called Ho. On my 
trips out of home I saw people wearing all kinds of attire -- from sadhus 
wearing nothing at all, to the locals who went topless, to women in burqas.
Most of the guests in our home spoke English.
 We were Hindu, my ayah was Muslim, and the tribals were either Christian or 
Animists who worshiped trees, animals or the spirits of their forefathers. 
People around me had all kinds of food habits. Some ate only vegetables, some 
did not eat cattle, some did not eat pigs, some ate anything including rats and 
monitor lizards.
 Our small mining community celebrated festivals of all religions with equal 
gusto.
 We lived in the middle of an almost virgin forest that was home to a huge 
variety of wild animals that included elephants, bears and deer. The animals 
added to the fun and the unpredictability of life by occasionally walking into 
our tiny community of 10 houses (sometimes into them).
 This was my small introduction to the enormous diversity of this wonderful 
land. Even as an infant I was listening to people of different colours and 
facial features speaking four languages, of four religions, dressing in 
different ways, and eating a variety of food.
 These must have been the lessons that I learned : anyone looking like a human 
was a human, irrespective of skin colour or features; humans worshiped all 
sorts of gods, wore all sorts of clothing, ate all kinds of food, and spoke all 
kinds of languages.
 As I grew up, my father's company transferred him every two or three years 
through about half the states in India. I saw the rest of India. I learned that 
Indians believe in far more gods than the four that I was introduced to as an 
infant. I learned that each state has three or four different regions. People 
in each of these regions speak different languages or dialects and may not even 
understand the other dialects in their own state. Each region eats a different 
kind of food, wears different clothing, is culturally very different, and looks 
very different geographically.
 Today, nobody can convince me that I am superior to someone else because of my 
religion, skin colour or language. The diversity that I experienced, accepted 
and enjoyed as an infant is not unique to me. Every Indian experiences this -- 
only the details differ. I believe that this is what makes us the most tolerant 
country in the world. I enjoy our diversity so much that I cannot even think of 
living in one of those countries where everything is homogeneous -- everybody 
looks the same,eats the same food, believes in the same religion. Think of 
countries like the Netherlands, Germany, Japan, Sweden... hundreds of them.
 Yes, the diversity occasionally makes us kill each other, usually over 
different religions or sub-religions. This is tragic and should never happen, 
but look at it this way: Sunnis, Buddhists, Roman Catholics, Sikhs, Bohras, 
Digambar Jains, Parsis, Khurmis, Iyers, Agarwals, Nairs, Syrian Christians, 
Shias, Shwetambar Jains, Jews, Ismailis, Seventh Day Adventists, Bishnois and a 
whole lot of other groups live together in India.
 In Britain and Yemen two sects of the same religion were killing each other 
for decades. In Lebanon, people from two religions have been killing each 
other. The US and South Africa have seen huge problems over two skin colours. 
In Canada it's over two languages.
 As an Indian, I laugh at these silly reasons for their conflicts -- two 
religions, two colours, two languages. I feel like saying "Hey guys, try 
Digamber Jain, Gujarati-speaking, pyjama-kurta- wearing herbivore co-existing 
with Syrian Christian, Malayalam-speaking, mundu-wearing carnivore". Where 
would we be if we had been as intolerant as them?
I believe that the religious intolerance that we are seeing now is confined to 
a small percentage of us, and that in the long run we have the sense to not 
take our differences too seriously, to acknowledge that the whole lot of us are 
a wonderful amalgam of different races, religions and cultures.
 I can never be a global citizen. Contrary to the advice that any stockbroker 
would give, I've invested all my emotional stocks in this company called India, 
because I'm sure that the value of these stocks can only go up. Not because of 
the amount of steel, armaments and textiles we can make, but because we know 
how to live together.


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