Diversity is often spoken about in numbers — percentages, categories, representation charts. But in reality, it is something far more human. It is the quiet acknowledgment that no two stories begin in the same place, and no two perspectives travel the same path. Diversity is not a trend or a strategy. It is the natural condition of a world that has never been singular.
It lives in contrast — in accent and rhythm, in fabric and form, in memory and migration. It challenges comfort, invites curiosity, and asks us to look beyond the familiar without losing ourselves in the process. At its core, diversity is not about difference for the sake of difference. It is about expansion — of thought, of empathy, of possibility.