
Diversity forms the core of Indian society, yet every day someone deviates personal bias in this harmony and reminds us of how fragile inclusiveness can be without conscious effort.
An example of one such conscious effort for inclusion was recently found in a welcome message in the hostel.
In the viral post LinkedIn, Student of Law, Pratichi Lugaria, shared a hard welcome message at the HJ Bhabha hostel entrance, probably at Rajasthan University.
In accordance with the Indian visionary nuclear physicist Homi Jehangir Bhabha’s vision that diversity is not only about differences, but how cultures mix, overlap and create new identities, welcome report in Hindi:
“Shoes and slippers can enter.”
But caste, hierarchy, inviolability, gender bias –
Pratichi, praised the message, said that the sign “does not delay words” and simplified, “Leave your shoes on. Leave your prejudices out.”
Student of Law in her contribution LinkedIn stressed that no long manifestations or posters “Value Diversity” with photographs have been used, but “only hard boundaries: If your thinking is toxic, it is not welcome.”
Pratichi said that the advice made her think about how people go to so many offices with polished shoes and dirty thinking. “And we left them.”
“This sign will turn the script,” she said, adding to tell you to tell you, “Your prejudice is your problem, not ours.” “Bring skills, ideas and humanity. Leave the ego, claim and outdated” -isms “.”
She said that if more organizations had a rule of entry of a similar hostel HJ Bhabha: “Half of the policy would disappear and prosper twice.”
This is how Netizens reacted:
Netizens was stunned by a welcome message and greeted, “Every changemaker creates mind with courage and clarity.”
“Greeting to the one who thought he would put it on the gate!” Social media user said.
“The great perspective of the writer whose intention is this. Greeting every Indian intending to change the thought process and teaching them a good lesson,” he added.
The user praised, “Lords! What line!”
“Yes. We clean our body, clothes and our homes. And what about cleaning where we really live the most – in our minds!” added another.
One user said, “It’s time for us to all soak up in our DNA.”
(Tagstotranslate) Changemaker





