India’s civilisational journey is one of the most remarkable experiments in human coexistence. Across millennia, the Indian subcontinent has witnessed the meeting of religions, languages, cultures, philosophies, ethnicities, and social traditions on a scale unparalleled in world history. From the Vedic age to the present democratic republic, India has repeatedly demonstrated an extraordinary capacity to absorb diversity without losing its essential unity. In the contemporary global atmosphere, where questions about religious freedom, minority rights, and social harmony often emerge in international discourse, it becomes essential to revisit India’s long and complex history of communal coexistence and to reaffirm the necessity of preserving this invaluable heritage.
Recent diplomatic exchanges involving remarks by political leaders from Europe regarding India’s internal social conditions have once again opened debates on pluralism and minority rights in India. While criticism and dialogue are natural in democratic engagement, understanding India requires a deeper appreciation of its civilisational foundations. India is not merely a modern nation-state created in 1947; it is an ancient civilisation shaped over thousands of years by interaction, accommodation, and cultural synthesis. The idea of India has always rested upon plurality rather than uniformity.
The roots of communal harmony in India can be traced back to the earliest phases of Indian civilisation. The ancient Indian worldview was fundamentally inclusive. The Rigveda famously declared: “Ekam sat vipra bahudha vadanti” — Truth is one, sages call it by many names. This philosophical principle became the foundation of Indian pluralism. Unlike many ancient societies that sought cultural homogeneity, India developed a civilisational ethos that accepted multiplicity in belief and practice.
The emergence of Hinduism itself demonstrates this openness. Rather than being a rigidly centralised religion, it evolved through assimilation of regional traditions, local customs, tribal practices, and philosophical schools. Over centuries, Shaivism, Vaishnavism, Shaktism, Buddhism, Jainism, and later Sikhism emerged and flourished within the same geographical and cultural space. The coexistence of diverse paths of worship became a defining feature of Indian society.
Buddhism and Jainism, which arose in the sixth century BCE, challenged prevailing social and ritual structures, yet they were not annihilated through systematic persecution. Instead, they entered into philosophical dialogue with other traditions. Emperor Ashoka’s reign in the third century BCE remains one of the finest examples of state-sponsored pluralism in world history. After embracing Buddhism, Ashoka did not impose his faith upon the empire. His edicts repeatedly instructed citizens to respect all religious sects and condemned hatred among communities. His message of “Dhamma” emphasised tolerance, compassion, and mutual respect.
India’s openness toward external communities further strengthened its pluralistic identity. Jewish communities arrived on the western coast of India more than two thousand years ago. Unlike many parts of the world where Jews experienced persecution, Indian society largely welcomed them, allowing them to preserve their religious and cultural identity while participating fully in social and economic life. Similarly, Christianity reached India through the Malabar Coast according to ancient traditions associated with Saint Thomas the Apostle. Indian Christians lived peacefully for centuries and contributed significantly to education, healthcare, and intellectual life.
The arrival of Islam in India represents another major chapter in the story of coexistence. Islam came not merely through conquest but also through trade, scholarship, and Sufi spiritual networks. Arab traders had commercial and cultural interactions with coastal India during the lifetime of Prophet Muhammad. Muslim communities emerged peacefully in Kerala and along the western coast centuries before the establishment of Muslim political dynasties in North India.
The spread of Islam in India was deeply influenced by Sufism, which emphasised love, spirituality, equality, and service to humanity. Sufi saints such as Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti, Nizamuddin Auliya, Shah Hamadan, and countless others created spaces where people from different faiths gathered together. Their shrines became symbols of interfaith harmony and cultural synthesis. The Bhakti movement within Hindu traditions paralleled this inclusive spirituality. Saints like Kabir, Guru Nanak, Ravidas, and Mirabai transcended rigid communal boundaries and emphasised devotion, humanity, and moral integrity over sectarianism.
The Mughal period, despite episodes of conflict and political contestation common to all empires, also produced important examples of cultural integration. Emperor Akbar’s policy of Sulh-i-Kul, meaning “peace with all,” promoted religious tolerance and administrative inclusion. His court included scholars from multiple religious traditions, and translations of Sanskrit texts into Persian facilitated intellectual exchange. Indo-Islamic civilisation flourished through architecture, music, literature, cuisine, and language. Urdu itself emerged as a linguistic symbol of cultural interaction between Persian, Arabic, Turkish, and Indian linguistic traditions.
India’s composite culture was not confined to royal courts or elite circles. Everyday life in villages and towns reflected shared cultural practices. Festivals, local traditions, folk songs, crafts, and regional customs often transcended communal divisions. Hindus participated in Muharram processions in many regions; Muslims contributed to local Hindu festivals; Sikh Gurudwaras welcomed all communities through the institution of langar. Shared sacred spaces became common throughout the subcontinent.
The colonial period, however, introduced new tensions. British colonial policies often relied upon “divide and rule,” institutionalising communal identities through census classifications, separate electorates, and political representation based on religious categories. Communal consciousness increasingly became politicised. Yet even during the freedom struggle, India produced extraordinary examples of inter-communal solidarity.
The Indian national movement was fundamentally pluralistic. Leaders from different religions, regions, languages, and ideologies participated together in the struggle against colonial rule. Mahatma Gandhi envisioned India as a moral civilisation rooted in interfaith harmony. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad defended composite nationalism and rejected the notion that religion alone could determine nationhood. Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, known as the Frontier Gandhi, demonstrated how Islamic ethics and nonviolence could coexist. Rabindranath Tagore warned against narrow nationalism and emphasised universal humanism.
“India’s history—from ancient edicts and spiritual movements to the freedom struggle and the Constitution—is defined by pluralism and mutual respect. Preserving this heritage of coexistence is vital for both India’s progress and the moral future of humanity.”
The tragedy of Partition in 1947 undoubtedly left deep wounds. Communal violence on an unprecedented scale displaced millions and caused immense suffering. Yet the survival of India as a secular democratic republic after Partition remains one of history’s most remarkable achievements. At a time when many expected India to become a majoritarian state, its Constitution guaranteed equality before law, freedom of religion, minority educational rights, linguistic protections, and democratic participation.
The Indian Constitution reflects the civilisational wisdom accumulated over centuries. It does not merely tolerate diversity; it institutionalises it. India recognises multiple official languages, protects religious freedom, allows personal laws for different communities, and accommodates enormous cultural variation within a single democratic framework. The electoral participation of diverse communities and peaceful transitions of power demonstrate the resilience of Indian democracy.
India’s minorities have played foundational roles in nation-building. Muslims contributed immensely to literature, music, law, politics, sports, cinema, education, and the armed forces. Christians established some of the country’s finest educational and medical institutions. Sikhs have been central to agriculture, military service, entrepreneurship, and philanthropy. Parsis, despite being numerically small, made extraordinary contributions to industry, science, and public life. Jains and Buddhists enriched ethical and philosophical traditions. This collective contribution underscores that Indian identity cannot be reduced to any single religious or cultural category.
At the same time, it would be intellectually dishonest to romanticise history by ignoring moments of conflict. India has experienced communal riots, social discrimination, political polarisation, and episodes of violence. Every society carries contradictions and tensions. However, what distinguishes India is not the absence of conflict but the persistence of coexistence despite conflict. The larger arc of Indian history points toward accommodation rather than annihilation.
Today, preserving communal harmony has become more urgent than ever. Rapid technological changes, social media misinformation, political polarisation, economic inequality, and global ideological conflicts can intensify mistrust among communities. External commentary on India often fails to appreciate the scale and complexity of managing diversity in a nation of more than 1.4 billion people with hundreds of languages, multiple religions, and vast regional variations.
Constructive criticism is important in any democracy, but simplistic portrayals of India as fundamentally intolerant ignore both historical realities and contemporary complexities. India’s democratic framework allows criticism, elections, judicial intervention, media debate, and civil society activism precisely because democratic institutions continue to function robustly. The very public nature of debates about minority rights and freedom reflects the vitality of democratic engagement.
The preservation of communal harmony requires responsibilities from all sections of society. Political leaders must avoid rhetoric that deepens divisions. Religious scholars and institutions should emphasise ethical teachings of compassion, justice, and coexistence found within all traditions. Educational institutions should teach India’s shared civilisational history rather than sectarian narratives. Media organisations must act responsibly and resist sensationalism that amplifies hatred. Citizens themselves must cultivate empathy and reject prejudice.
India’s younger generation especially carries the responsibility of protecting this pluralistic heritage. They must recognise that diversity is not a weakness but India’s greatest strength. The Indian civilisation survived invasions, colonialism, economic exploitation, and political upheavals precisely because it possessed the capacity to absorb differences and renew itself continuously.
The philosophical foundations for coexistence already exist within India’s spiritual traditions. Hindu thought speaks of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam — the world as one family. Islamic teachings emphasise justice, mercy, and the dignity of all human beings. Sikhism advocates equality and service. Buddhism promotes compassion and nonviolence. Christianity teaches love and forgiveness. Jainism upholds ahimsa, or nonviolence toward all living beings. These traditions, despite doctrinal differences, converge around shared ethical principles that can strengthen social harmony.
The future of India depends upon strengthening this shared moral foundation. Economic growth alone cannot sustain a nation without social trust. Democracy cannot flourish without mutual respect among communities. National unity cannot be built upon fear or exclusion. India’s civilisational greatness lies precisely in its ability to accommodate difference while maintaining cohesion.
The world today faces rising xenophobia, ethnic nationalism, religious extremism, and social fragmentation. In such a global environment, India’s pluralistic experience carries universal significance. The Indian model demonstrates that large-scale diversity can coexist with democracy, constitutionalism, and national identity. Preserving this model is therefore not only a national responsibility but also a contribution to global peace.
Ultimately, communal harmony in India is not merely a political necessity; it is a civilisational imperative. The idea of India was never founded upon racial purity, linguistic uniformity, or religious exclusivism. It emerged from centuries of dialogue between communities, faiths, and cultures. Protecting this heritage requires wisdom, patience, constitutional commitment, and moral courage.
India’s history offers countless examples of coexistence, cultural synthesis, and mutual respect. From Ashoka’s edicts to Sufi shrines, from Bhakti poetry to the freedom movement, from the Constitution to contemporary democratic participation, the story of India remains deeply intertwined with pluralism. Preserving this inheritance is essential not only for India’s stability and progress but also for the moral future of humanity itself.
(The author a veteran academician is a former Professor and Head Department of Islamic Studies, Kashmir University. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)





