roadrunner
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No ancient civilization, republic or empire came close to the modern definition of multiculturalism.
Sure, democracy has ancient roots dating back to ancient Greece and India. Equality of all citizens has roots dating back to the Abrahamic faiths. Multi-religious society has roots in India as well.
Greeks had slavery, so did the Romans. Hindus had caste, Islamic empires had both slavery and monopoly over religion. China too had a totalitarian state.
However, only the 21st century has combined all these strands of thought and put them into practice.
too many errors here
1) India was never a multireligious society. There was no country known as India until very recently, it was never unified. Each country had only 1 religion. Buddhism for example was driven out of India through mass genocide. Islam only thrived when India was ruled by Islamic Empires. Else there was persecution.
2) Democracy probably had more chance of originating in Pakistan's borders than Indias.
3) Unity in diversity refers to citizens obviously, not to slaves who weren't considered citizens. The Indian caste system I agree demonstrates that India was not following a unity in diversity principle, but the Greeks who used slaves that were not citizens did have an egalitarian society.
Multi-religious, equality based, multi cultural societies have existed for millenia. You don't think when Islam originated, that there were not Jews, and Christians in the same area, or when Islam entered the Indus Valley region, that people were not following other religions? Islam coexisted with these other religions, in a multi religious, multi-ethnic society.