I learned about the plight of the world's oppressed peoples while I lived in India for 20 years doing cross-cultural work. India is home to 750 million people considered to be low caste and "untouchable" — people who are poor, marginalized and vulnerable. They have few rights.
India's minority women also face radical oppression. Women are sometimes burned on their husband's funeral pyre, and the dowries their families must pay at the time of their weddings are equivalent to them being sold to the highest bidder.
Religious minorities in India also face violent attacks and are often not granted the right to worship freely.
Low caste children learn to steal food at an early age, just to survive.
Young women commit suicide to escape abusive marriages.
Peaceful religious gatherings turn into riots when worshipers are prevented from practicing their faith.
I learned that India's oppressed are desperate. They have no resources, no savings. Financial and food insecurity wreaks havoc on their mental state. All their energy is spent providing for their physical needs. There is no assistance, no alternative to this hellish existence.
We are left, then, with desperation and its consequences. And this is not just something found in India. Every nation on earth, even the wealthy ones, have desperate oppressed people clinging to whatever shred of hope they have for survival.