The West, for those far away, means a haven of modern thinking, reason, and clear-headedness, qualities not always apparent at home, and a refuge from ritualism and superstition; those who long for it are Occidentalists in a hopeful sense. And though such admirers are to be found in every traditional or impoverished culture, they are especially conspicuous in countries such as India, where centures of British rule have left many people thinking of London or Oxford as the natural culmination of their ambitions, social or intellectual.
– Pico Iyer, “The Buddha’s cure: A Review of An End To Suffering: The Buddha in the World by Pankaj Mishra” in The New York Review of Books, March 10, 2005, p. 4