"Today I shall have to grapple with another prejudice which is even more mischievous, because it forms a kind of icy barrier between the Hindus and their rulers and makes anything like a feeling of true fellowship between the two utterly impossible. That prejudice consists in looking upon our stay in India as a kind of moral exile, and in regarding the Hindus as an inferior race, totally different from ourselves in their moral character, and, more particularly in what forms the very foundation of the English character, respect for truth. I believe there is nothing more disheartening to any high-minded young man than the idea that he will have to spend his life among human beings whom he can never respect or love natives, as they are called, not to use even more offensive names, men whom he is taught to consider as not amenable to the recognized principles of self-respect, uprightness and veracity and with whom therefore any community of interests and action, much more any real friendship, is supposed to be out of the question. So often has that charge of untruthfulness been repeated, and so generally is it now accepted, that it seems almost Quixotic to try to fight against it."
— India: What Can it Teach Us? by F. Max Muller
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— India: What Can it Teach Us? by F. Max Muller
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