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Multiculture - understand it!

Understanding diversity is essential for unity. All global events stem from culture and religion. People often reject practices outside their own, asking, "Why should I do it? It's not my culture." This is a problem fueled by ignorance. Lack of education leads to discrimination against unfamiliar cultural symbols. Some places are now introducing laws for schools to properly teach about different cultures, not just one. A story illustrates this: when asked why India has many goddesses, the response was that a garden's beauty lies in its variety of flowers, not just one type. The world is now a small village needing unity, which requires understanding diversities. We must be informed and free in our choices. Discrimination persists based on "my religion, my tradition only." Differences, like how one eats, are superficial; the act of eating is what matters. We must respect our own culture but not discriminate against others.

"If a garden has different kinds of flowers, that's the beauty of the garden."

"Hands are clean."

Filming location: Kranj, Slovenia

It is very important now to understand these multiple cultures. All that happens in the world is because of culture, religion, and these many things. People often say, "Why should I do it? It's not my culture." And there is a problem. "Why should I wear a turban? It is Indian culture." No, if you like, you can also wear a turban, and who are we to blame or discriminate against someone who wears a turban? This problem exists because ignorance is ruling in this world. People are not educated here; if they had education, they would not discriminate against any culture. They have no knowledge about certain symbols of some cultures. They are not educated in this, and therefore, now in Europe also, recently, they are bringing in some kind of system or law that in schools, education should begin not on a particular religion and culture, but these children should be informed and taught properly and truly about different cultures. Once someone asked Gandhījī why in India there are so many goddesses. Gandhījī said, "Thank God there are so many goddesses." His answer was, "If a garden has different kinds of flowers, that's the beauty of the garden. And if you have only one kind of flower, that's not such a beauty. Pumpkins are good, but if you have only pumpkins, pumpkins, pumpkins in your garden, it is not that beauty." Therefore, someone said this whole world has become a small village. And in this small village, we need unity, and in order to bring unity, we need understanding of diversities. We should be informed, and we should be free to do what we like to do. So this discrimination is very much in the world: "My religion, my tradition only, and not others." One likes to eat with a spoon. Others like to eat with their hands; why not? But what have you got against your hand? God gave you the hand. You were not born with a spoon. So this is how we are thinking; the main thing is that you are eating, it doesn't matter, so clean your hands. Hands are clean. So we, as yogīs, should stand above these things. We shall respect our culture; we shall maintain our culture. But we should not discriminate against other cultures when they discriminate against other cultures.

This text is transcribed and grammar corrected by AI. If in doubt what was actually said in the recording, use the transcript to double click the desired cue. This will position the recording in most cases just before the sentence is uttered.

The text contains hyperlinks in bold to three authoritative books on yoga, written by humans, to clarify the context of the lecture:

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