RELIGION was something I hadn’t expected in India. I mean, I know every country has religion, but I wasn’t prepared for the PERVASIVENESS of it in India. Religion is EVERYWHERE there – it is in the way people dress, the way they eat, the way they relate to one another, the way they worship, the way they celebrate, it is even in their politics. Religion is an integral part of life there in a much more “real” sense than I see in America. And religion in India is SO DIVERSE. There are many, many different faiths represented throughout the country – Hindu (the majority religion of the country), Muslim, Buddhist, Jain, Sikh, Bahai, Christian, Catholic, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, Parsi… And it seems, at least to this outside observer, that the different religions coexist in harmony. There do not appear to be overt attempts at convincing others that one religion is “right” and therefore “better” and others should convert to it. It seems to be accepted that Indians have an ingraine