Or: How 1.4 Billion People Figured Out How to Disagree Without Killing Each Other (Mostly)
Picture this: You're at a dinner party, and someone asks you to explain India. Where do you even begin?
It's like being asked to describe the ocean to someone who's only seen puddles. You could talk about its size, its depth, its storms and calms. But how do you capture the essence of something that contains multitudes—that is simultaneously ancient and modern, peaceful and turbulent, unified and impossibly diverse?
I recently dove deep into this question, commissioning three different AI systems to analyze what makes Indian civilization truly unique. What emerged wasn't just a list of facts, but a fascinating puzzle: How has this civilization managed to be a continuous, recognizable entity for 5,000 years while containing more internal diversity than entire continents?
But first, let me tell you about a funeral.
A Phone Call During Last Rites
It was my mother's funeral. The pandit was halfway through the Sanskrit mantras when his mobile phone rang. Without missing a beat, he answered it, negotiated the timing for another funeral later that day, hung up, and continued chanting as if nothing had happened.
Nobody blinked. Nobody was offended. This was India—where the sacred and mundane don't just coexist, they interpenetrate so completely that a business call during last rites seems perfectly natural.
I grew up in India from 1966 to 1984, watching a civilization of incredible talent and diversity slowly strangle itself with Nehru's Fabian socialism. The License Raj wasn't just economically disastrous—it was spiritually crushing, watching a culture that literally worships wealth (more on Goddess Lakshmi later) pretend that entrepreneurship was somehow immoral.
But that funeral moment captured something essential about India that no economic policy could destroy: the ability to hold contradictions without anxiety, to be reverent and practical in the same breath, to maintain continuity while adapting to whatever life throws at you—even if it's a Samsung ringtone in the middle of ancient death rituals.
Let me take you on a journey through what makes this civilization truly unique—and fair warning, some of it might surprise you.
The Myth of the Eternally Peaceful Civilization
Let's start by slaying a sacred cow (metaphorically, of course—this is an article about India, after all).
There's a persistent narrative that India has always been an exceptionally peaceful civilization, a land where ahimsa (non-violence) reigned supreme and conflicts were settled through philosophical debate rather than warfare. It's a beautiful story. Gandhi would approve.
It's also, well, not entirely true.
As Harvard historian Upinder Singh points out, India has experienced "three millennia of more or less continuous warfare." The Partition of 1947 alone saw between 500,000 and 2 million deaths. The anti-Sikh pogroms of 1984 killed thousands. Ancient texts record rulers like Ashoka (yes, the same Ashoka who later embraced Buddhism) massacring 18,000 Ajivikas.
But here's where it gets interesting: What distinguishes Indian violence isn't its absence, but its pattern. Unlike the systematic, state-sponsored genocides we've seen elsewhere—the Holocaust, the Armenian genocide, the Rwandan genocide—Indian mass violence has been episodic rather than systematic, often stopped by intervention from authorities or civil society.
Think of it this way: If violence in human civilizations were a graph, India wouldn't be the flatline of perfect peace. Instead, it would show spikes and valleys—moments of terrible violence followed by collective revulsion and reform. Ashoka's transformation from conqueror to pacifist Buddhist emperor after the Kalinga War is perhaps the most dramatic example, but it's a pattern that repeats throughout Indian history.
The Babri Masjid demolition in 1992 led to riots, yes—but also to decades of soul-searching and legal battles. The 2002 Gujarat riots horrified the nation and influenced electoral outcomes for years. The farmers' protests of 2020-21, despite involving millions and lasting over a year, remained remarkably peaceful. Each episode of violence seems to strengthen the societal antibodies against the next one.
Living Together Separately: The Indian Model of Diversity
Now here's something genuinely unique: India figured out how to be diverse before diversity was cool.
Recent Pew Research reveals a fascinating paradox. While 84% of Indians say respecting all religions is "very important" to being "truly Indian," similar majorities also prefer to keep their religious communities somewhat separate in daily life. It's what scholars call "segmented pluralism"—or as I like to think of it, "living together separately."
Let me tell you my favorite story about this: When the Parsis fled Islamic conquest of Persia in the 8th century, they landed on the coast of Gujarat. The local Hindu king was wary—how could he accommodate these foreigners without disrupting local harmony? He showed them a glass full of milk, symbolizing that the kingdom was already full. The Parsi leader added sugar to the milk and said: "We will sweeten your society without displacing anyone."
Today, Parsis are less than 0.01% of India's population but have produced industrial giants (Tata), legendary musicians (Freddie Mercury), and pioneered everything from cricket to nuclear physics in India. They kept their religion, their towers of silence, their peculiar customs—and India just shrugged and said, "Cool, you do you."
This isn't the American melting pot, where differences dissolve into a common culture. It's not the Canadian mosaic, where distinct pieces sit side by side. It's more like... imagine a jazz ensemble where each musician plays a completely different genre of music, but somehow they've figured out how to jam together without forcing everyone to play the same tune.
The Linguistic Magic Trick
Let's talk about the 800 languages. No, really—depending on who and how you ask-- there really are 800 or so languages, 22 official ones, and somehow it works.
I once saw a meeting of a Bangalore IT company where the conversation flowed between Kannada, Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, and English—sometimes within the same sentence. "Sir, naan complete pannitten, but client-ku mail anuppanum, right? Woh billing issue ko leke..." (Sir, I've completed it, but need to send mail to the client, right? Regarding that billing issue...)
This isn't confusion—it's linguistic parkour. Indians don't just speak multiple languages; they inhabit multiple linguistic universes simultaneously. A typical urban Indian might speak their mother tongue at home, Hindi with the rikshawala, English at work, and understand enough of two or three other languages to watch movies and argue about politics.
And check out this example:
This is Dr. Kulnaz Kaur giving a lecture at Punjab University about my great-grandmother, Lado Rani Zutshi. She speaks 3 languages frequently within the same sentence: English, Hindi and Punjabi. And since I don't understand Punjabi, I only understood about 2/3rds of it! But this is so common that there is no cause for comment whatsoever!
Here is another interesting bit of "linguistics." I grew up in Delhi from 1966 to 1984. Guess what my native language is? The one that I write in, think in, feel in, etc.? What did you guess? Hindi? Well, you'd be wrong. Sure, I understand Hindi and can speak it. But it isn't my native language. My native language, the one I have always used to speak to parents, relatives and friends, or think, read and write in, is English! Yup! English. English actually has a longer history in India than Hindi does (which by the way, very few people actually speak other than TV newscasters employed by the government. What people actually speak is Hindustani, a lovely melange of Urdu, Persian, Sankrit and other languages!). And English was my parents' native language and my grandparents' native language (on both sides of the family, mind you). And it was my great-grandfather's native language too (he was not given a knighthood (only a CIE) by the British -- for whom he worked -- reputedly for refusing Lady Willingdon Rs. 50,000 to renovate her bathroom).
The three-language formula in schools (local language + Hindi + English) created a nation of polyglots by accident. Movies became the great unifier, teaching North Indians to recognize Tamil through dubbed movies and South Indians to pick up Hindi through song lyrics. The result? A Tower of Babel that somehow decided not to fall.
Zero: The Philosophy That Changed Mathematics
Here's something that didn't make it into the original 3 AI reports but absolutely should have: India didn't just invent zero as a placeholder—it invented the concept of nothingness as something.
In Western thought, nothing was literally no-thing, an absence, a void to be feared. In Indian philosophy, śūnya (zero/void) was pregnant with possibility. It was the silence between notes that makes music possible, the space between words that makes meaning possible.
This philosophical comfort with nothingness enabled mathematical breakthroughs impossible elsewhere. When Indian mathematicians like Brahmagupta (7th century) wrote rules for calculating with zero—including division by zero leading to infinity—European mathematicians wouldn't accept these ideas for another 800 years. They literally couldn't conceive of nothing as something.
The Kerala School of Mathematics, operating between the 14th and 16th centuries, infinite series and trigonometric functions centuries before their re-discovery in the West. Why? Because when you're philosophically comfortable with infinity and zero, mathematical innovation becomes natural rather than heretical.
The Gender Paradox
No honest discussion of India can avoid the gender question. Here's a civilization that produced more female rulers than medieval Europe—from Razia Sultan to Rani Lakshmibai to Indira Gandhi—yet also practiced sati. It has matrilineal societies in Kerala and Meghalaya existing alongside deeply patriarchal structures elsewhere.
The Vedas mention women sages. Ancient texts describe female scholars debating philosophy. The Kamasutra (yes, that Kamasutra) assumes educated, independent women as readers. Yet child marriage persisted into the modern era.
What's happening here? It's the same pattern of segmented diversity—different rules for different communities, different times, different places. A Nair woman in medieval Kerala could have multiple husbands while a Rajput woman in the same period might be expected to commit sati. Neither was "more Indian"—they were differently Indian.
The real revolution is happening now: female literacy jumped from 8% at independence to 70% today. Birth rates plummeted from 6 children per woman to 2. In South India, parents now spend more on daughters' education than sons'. The IT sector—India's pride—has a higher percentage of women than Silicon Valley. Change, when it comes to India, comes not as revolution but as a tidal shift.
The Food Map of Civilization
You want to understand Indian diversity? Look at the dinner table. Or rather, tables—because "Indian food" is like saying "European food" but more so.
A Tamil Brahmin's meal (no onion, no garlic, no meat) has less in common with a Punjabi spread (meat, cream, butter) than French cuisine has with Russian. A Jain meal (no root vegetables, no eating after sunset) follows stricter rules than most religious dietary laws. A Kerala Christian's beef curry would horrify a Gujarati Hindu, while a Bengali Hindu's fish would puzzle a Rajasthani.
Yet somehow, the spice box—that universal Indian kitchen tool—creates continuity. Turmeric, cumin, coriander, mustard seeds—combined differently but present everywhere. By the way, this is why "curry powder" is a British invention (as is the notion of a "curry"). It's diversity with a common vocabulary, like jazz musicians who can jam together because they share the same scales even if they play different styles.
Corporate cafeterias became inadvertent experiments in managing this complexity. Visit any IT campus in Bangalore: separate counters for vegetarian, non-vegetarian, Jain, vegan, North Indian, South Indian, Chinese (Indianized, of course), and Continental. The logistics would break most societies. In India, it's Tuesday.
Goddess Lakshmi and the Capitalist Soul
Here's something that puzzled me growing up: How could a culture that literally worships wealth—where Goddess Lakshmi's images adorn cash registers and accounting books—embrace poverty-glorifying socialism?
The answer is it couldn't, not really. Even during peak socialism, Indians remained culturally capitalist. The black market thrived. Every family had someone doing "business" on the side. When I left in 1984, the entrepreneurial energy was like a coiled spring, compressed but not broken.
The 1991 economic liberalization wasn't just policy reform—it was cultural homecoming. A civilization that celebrates Diwali by literally praying to account books, that considers prosperity a divine blessing, that has merchant castes whose surnames (Shah, Seth, Chetty) became synonymous with business acumen—this civilization was never going to remain socialist.
Today's India has more billionaires than most countries, a startup ecosystem second only to the US and China, and a cultural comfort with wealth creation that would make American capitalists blush. Where else do business newspapers print special supplements for muhurat trading—the astrologically auspicious hour when the stock market opens for one hour on Diwali?
The Transfer of Power Nobody Noticed
In 2004, something extraordinary happened that perfectly captured India's unique nature: A Roman Catholic woman (Sonia Gandhi) voluntarily gave up the Prime Ministership to a Sikh (Manmohan Singh) in a ceremony presided over by a Muslim President (A.P.J. Abdul Kalam) in a Hindu-majority country.
And nobody commented on it.
Think about that. In how many countries could this happen without it being THE story? In India, the headlines focused on economic policy and coalition politics. The religious identities of the key players were barely mentioned because, well, what would be the point? This is how India works.
This wasn't tolerance—it was something deeper. It was the lived experience of a civilization where your accountant might be Jain, your doctor Parsi, your mechanic Muslim, your teacher Christian, and your vegetable vendor Hindu. Where festival holidays meant everyone got days off for Diwali, Eid, Christmas, Guru Nanak Jayanti, and Good Friday. Where secularism isn't the absence of religion but the presence of all religions.
The Jugaad Innovation Model
There's a Hindi word that captures something essential about Indian innovation: jugaad. It roughly translates to "creative improvisation" but means so much more. It's the ability to make do, to find workarounds, to innovate under constraints.
When the Indian Mars mission succeeded at a budget less than the Hollywood movie "Gravity," that was jugaad. When Indian IT companies figured out how to deliver services overnight by exploiting time zones, that was jugaad. When a roadside mechanic fixes your car with a rubber band and prayers, that's jugaad too.
This isn't systematic innovation like Silicon Valley or methodical engineering like Germany. It's innovation born from diversity itself—when you have 800 languages, thousands of communities, and limited resources, you learn to hack solutions that work across difference. It's messy, it's improvised, and surprisingly often, it works.
The Modern Test: Hindutva and the Civilizational Pattern
We can't discuss India's diversity without addressing the elephant (or should I say saffron-colored elephant?) in the room: the rise of Hindu nationalism and what it means for India's pluralistic tradition.
The optimistic reading is that this too fits the pattern—an episodic swing toward homogenization that will trigger its own correction. The pessimistic reading is that modern communications technology and electoral mathematics have broken the old patterns of accommodation.
The reality, as always with India, is probably more complex. Even as political rhetoric polarizes, everyday life continues its syncretic ways. Hindu IT workers still take their Muslim colleagues out for Eid biryani. Sikh farmers still sell wheat to Hindu traders. Christian schools still educate Hindu and Muslim children. The civilizational habits of 5,000 years don't disappear overnight.
The real test isn't whether India will have periods of religious tension—history suggests it will. The test is whether the self-correcting mechanisms still work, whether the civilizational preference for accommodation eventually reasserts itself. The jury's still out, but the very fact that debates about "true Indian values" invoke pluralistic ideals suggests the old software is still running, even if it's glitching.
Is the Indian Model Replicable?
After all this, the question that haunts me is: Could anyone else do this? Is India's pluralistic model exportable, or does it require 5,000 years of practice?
Look at Indonesia—similar diversity, different outcomes. Nigeria—similar population and diversity, struggling with religious violence. The European Union—trying to create politically what India has culturally, with mixed results.
What India has that's hard to replicate: - Philosophical infrastructure: Concepts like multiple truths, cyclical time, and dharma that make diversity theologically comfortable - Shared stories: The Ramayana and Mahabharata known (in countless versions) across all communities - Institutional memory: Centuries of managing difference, embedded in everything from cuisine to corporate culture - Sacred geography: Pilgrimage sites that create shared experiences across religious boundaries
Maybe you can't fast-track civilizational wisdom. Maybe comfort with chaos has to be earned through millennia of practice.
The Beautiful Mess
I left India in 1984, frustrated by its socialist shackles and waste of human potential. I've watched from afar as it shed those chains and began reclaiming its place as one of the world's great economies and civilizations.
But what I've come to appreciate most isn't India's growth rates or its IT prowess. It's the mundane miracle of everyday pluralism—the pandit who takes business calls during funerals, the office cafeteria juggling fifteen dietary restrictions, the wedding that somehow accommodates 500 guests from 50 communities speaking 25 languages.
India's greatest innovation isn't zero or yoga or chicken tikka masala. It's proving that a civilization doesn't need to be coherent to be cohesive, doesn't need to be uniform to be unified, doesn't need to agree to belong together.
So What? The Practical Art of Holding Contradictions
You might be thinking: "This is fascinating, but I'm not Indian. I can't draw on 5,000 years of civilizational memory. How does any of this help me navigate my increasingly polarized world?"
Here's what I've learned from watching India work its magic: The mental moves that make pluralism possible aren't mystical—they're learnable. Think of them as cognitive tools:
The And/And Instead of Either/Or: When faced with contradictions, resist the Western urge to resolve them. Can something be both sacred and commercial? Both ancient and modern? Both yours and mine? Indians instinctively answer yes.
Contextual Truth Over Universal Law: What's right for a Jain isn't right for a Bengali, and that's okay. Truth can be plural without being relative. Multiple valid perspectives can coexist without canceling each other out.
Strategic Ambiguity as Wisdom: Not everything needs to be defined, categorized, and resolved. Sometimes the wisest response is a head waggle that means yes, no, and maybe all at once.
Code-Switching as a Life Skill: Indians don't just switch languages—they switch entire worldviews depending on context. At work, modern. At home, traditional. With friends, fusion. This isn't hypocrisy; it's sophisticated social navigation.
The lesson isn't "be more tolerant." It's "develop comfort with unresolved multiplicity." In a world demanding you pick sides, the Indian model suggests a radical alternative: Don't.
In our age of rising nationalism and cultural purism, when countries are building walls and communities are retreating into echo chambers, India stands as a glorious, maddening, inspiring mess—proof that diversity isn't just manageable but might be the secret to civilizational immortality.
After all, it's hard to kill something that contains multitudes. When one part struggles, another thrives. When one tradition calcifies, another innovates. When one community turns inward, another builds bridges.
It's not a bug. It's a feature.
And maybe, just maybe, it's exactly what the world needs to remember right now.
Check out my book, “The Science of Free Will”: https://amzn.to/4aMQJD1.
This is the first in a series exploring India's unique approach to human diversity. Coming next: "The Diaspora Paradox: What Happens to Indian Pluralism When Indians Leave India?" followed by "The Wedding Wars: How Indian Marriages Negotiate Diversity" and "WhatsApp Uncles vs. Wisdom Aunties: How Technology is Disrupting 5,000 Years of Pluralism."
What aspects of Indian civilization surprised you most? Do you think these mental moves could work in your context? I'd love to hear your thoughts—especially if you've tried applying "and/and" thinking to your own either/or dilemmas.
This made me cry a little as I often find myself yearn for that impossible paradox of being Indian but also enjoy the aggressive and liberating flattening of being American.
Thank you for the beautiful metaphors !
Here’s a story I wrote about kayfabing American while growing up in India (1984-2006)
https://vr00n.medium.com/the-fishbed-vs-the-starfighter-3ed669718ddc
India isn’t pluralistic. It survives because it’s Hindu majority and nearly every ethnic group is majority Hindu. Everywhere Hindus are not a majority has an insurgency movement.
Kashmir, Khalistan, NE Christian secession insurgencies.
India will collapse without Hindus