India is a poor country, but it still has – and it may well be the last in the world to do so – its ownstrong, deep-rooted spiritual culture, which is able to withstand the materialistic wave of globalization thatsteamrollers over identity and everywhere engenders suffocating conformity. This was the moment when Indiacould have sung the praises of diversity, when it could have reminded everyone that the world needs acoalition against poverty, exploitation and intolerance much more than it does even a coalition againstterror. India, sometimes described as "the largest democracy in the world", could have remindedWestern democracies that we won't solve our problems by restricting our citizens' freedom, protecting oursocieties with barbed wire, granting ever more power to repressive organizations and making those who aredifferent feel more and more excluded. It was the moment when India could have spoken up against violence ofevery kind, even that of the "new world order". This, with its supposedly "global"principles and criteria, which are actually those of the "strong" ex-colonialist countries, merelyimposes on India and many other economically underdeveloped and hence "weak" ex-colonies the kind ofpolicy which makes the rich richer, the poor poorer, and both more and more unhappy.