I live in a cosmopolitan city, Bangalore. And I live in a multicultural community. I lecture in a college, which has students from all over India, and also has some international students. I don't pass an active hour without meeting someone categorically different from who I am. I live and work in the midst of differences.
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Inclusivity |
On the outside we are so much different: clothes that we wear, food that we eat, colour of the skin, religion that we profess, castes and classes that we belong to, and the list could go on. Yet on the inside we are so similar. We all have the same set of feelings, sense of justice, logical and rational behaviours.
It is these similarities that
bring us and keep us together. We undertake common intellectual pursuits, feel
empathetic to the other, we enjoy the same stories, art, cinema, and the list
is big.
There are people and
organisations with ulterior motives and profit intentions limiting individuals,
communities and societies to the difference outside of us. But the reality is,
unless we go a little inside, a little deeper we will not be able to live
together; because on the outside we do not have much in common to live
together. Inclusivity, one world, one common humanity, needs going a bit
deeper. Deeper than our skins, languages, and rituals; and resist those
limiting us to the outside for their profit.
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