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Day 1 at the Jaipur Literature Festival 2026, presented by Vedanta, packs in discourse that sparks reflection and inspires change

By FnF Correspondent | PUBLISHED: 16, Jan 2026, 20:48 pm IST | UPDATED: 16, Jan 2026, 20:48 pm IST

Day 1 at the Jaipur Literature Festival 2026, presented by Vedanta, packs in discourse that sparks reflection and inspires change
New Delhi: The much-anticipated 19th edition of the Jaipur Literature Festival opened today at Hotel Clarks Amer, Jaipur, bringing together some of the most influential voices from literature, politics, media, and culture across India and the world. Presented by Vedanta and produced by Teamwork Arts, the Festival will run till 19th January 2026, continuing its legacy as a vibrant platform for dialogue, debate, and the free exchange of ideas. The opening day set the tone for five days of thought-provoking conversations, powerful storytelling, and meaningful engagement with contemporary issues.
 
In the traditional beginning of the Festival Morning Music, supported by Infosys Foundation, Aishwarya Vidya Raghunath and Rithvik Raja led a five-piece Carnatic music ensemble that blended classical rigour with quiet imagination. With Sayee Rakshith on violin, Praveen Sparsh on mridangam, and Skanda Manjunath on ghatam, the meditative performance created a calm, immersive tone for the day’s dialogue and discovery.
 
The opening day featured a keynote address by Banu Mushtaq, followed by inaugural addresses by writers and Festival Co-directors Namita Gokhale and William Dalrymple, and Festival Producer Sanjoy K. Roy. A traditional lamp-lighting ceremony marked an auspicious start in the presence of Rajasthan’s Hon’ble Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma and Deputy Chief Ministers Diya Kumari and Prem Chand Bairwa. Sanjoy K. Roy, Managing Director of Teamwork Arts, reflected on the Festival’s journey from Diggi Palace to its current global presence across nine cities, highlighting its engagement with contemporary themes such as artificial intelligence.  Festival Co-director and author Namita Gokhale welcomed the audience, acknowledging writers from across India and the world, representing diverse languages and literary traditions. In his Keynote address, Hon’ble Chief Minister of Rajasthan, Bhajan Lal Sharma, spoke about Rajasthan’s rich cultural heritage, noting, “The Jaipur Literature Festival is not merely an event; it is a celebration of ideas, a confluence of words, and a bridge of dialogue between cultures.”
Gokhale added, “In this bright sunshine, in the month of Magh, when fluttering kites reach for freedom as our minds do, the Jaipur Literature Festival 2026 carries the spontaneity and spunk that mark every edition. We have whimsy, opinions, counter opinions…every year brings its own magic, yet the spirit remains unchanged, a joyous curiosity.” Historian and Festival Co-director, William Dalrymple, in his address, emphasised how the festival has grown enormously in the past 19 years, 
 
 
and said: “There is a reason why this Festival has taken root in quite the spectacular fashion that it has…sometimes half a million people turn up to hear writers speak about books.”
 
The opening session featured International Booker prize winner Banu Mushtaq in conversation with Moutushi Mukherjee. Mustaq emphasised writing as an act of survival and resistance in societies marked by inequality and erasure. Framing literature as inseparable from life, she noted that her accolades, including the International Booker Prize 2025, reinforce her social responsibility. She advised young writers: “Don’t just plan writing, start writing. Write, Write, and Write.” 
 
Legendary poet, lyricist, and public intellectual Javed Akhtar drew packed audiences in Javed Akhtar: Points of View, in conversation with Warisha Farasat, sharing the changes in post-independent cultures, the middle class in India, and the role of writers and poets in society. To the young minds present in the audience, he said that there will always be people in the world who are better than you. His guiding words of encouragement urged them to look within themselves for inspiration instead of competing with others. 
In a session where global histories and shared futures formed the focus of Coexistence: How Arabs and Jews Can Live Together, featuring historians Ussama Makdisi, Noa Avishag Schnall, and Avi Shlaim, in conversation with William Sieghart, the panelists offered perspectives on memory, reconciliation, and coexistence.
 
Among other highlight sessions was The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, where Booker Prize-winning author Kiran Desai was in conversation with Nandini Nair. Desai spoke about her Booker shortlisted novel, offering rare insight into her writing life, creative discipline, and the emotional core of the book. The session moved fluidly between craft, memory, and the many meanings of loneliness that shape Desai’s fiction.
 
The Festival also hosted The Undying Light: India’s Futures, featuring diplomat and author Gopalkrishna Gandhi in conversation with Narayani Basu, offering a deeply reflective exploration of India’s moral imagination, democracy, and the road ahead. At a session on his new remarkable memoir, ‘The Undying Light: A Personal History of Independent India,’ Gandhi commented on how he committed himself to truth and honesty through the course of writing. Speaking of his associations with esteemed personalities such as M.S. Subbulakshmi, a most sensitive singer, Gandhi talked about how she personified sorrow and sublimity on stage, the former that was part of her life and the latter that she brought through her music. The Festival also witnessed notable FIRST EDITION book launches. A Statesman and a Seeker: The Life and Legacy of Dr Karan Singh by Harbans Singh was launched by Namita Gokhale, William Dalrymple, and Sanjoy K. Roy, followed by a conversation between Dr Karan Singh and Harbans Singh, moderated by Ravi Singh. 
Another much-anticipated launch was The Art of Being Fabulous by Shalini Passi, who was in conversation with Ruchika Mehta, offering reflections on creativity, self-expression, and contemporary culture. In Unplugged: Adventures from MTV to Timbuktu, media pioneer and MTV co-founder Tom Freston spoke with journalist Saad Mohseni, sharing insights from a life shaped by global media, cultural exchange, and storytelling across borders, Freston recounted stories from the iconic “I want my MTV” campaign with David Bowie, his experience owning a clothing business in India and Afghanistan, launching Comedy Central, and even creating advertising for a toilet paper company.
 
Issues of credibility and truth in the digital age were addressed in The Seven Rules of Trust, where Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, was in conversation with journalist Anita Anand, discussing transparency, accountability, and the evolving nature of information. Wales discussed the role of social media algorithms in amplifying hostility by promoting aggressive and emotionally charged content, framing political disagreement as a moral threat rather than a democratic difference. Despite these challenges, he expressed cautious optimism, emphasising that societies have historically managed ideological differences through compromise when systems are perceived as fair.
 
Day 2 of the world’s most iconic celebration of words and perspectives will feature sessions on Lightning Kid, featuring Viswanathan Anand in conversation with Rahul Bhattacharya, and A Bit of Fry, with Stephen Fry in conversation with Anish Gawande. The forthcoming days will be an exhilarating space for inspiration and debate in the heart of the Pink City, where the world has gathered to carry forward the spirit of books, camaraderie and cultural connection.  
 
For further information on the festival, please visit: https://jaipurliteraturefestival.org/
 
NOTES TO MEDIA PERSONS
For media enquiries on the Jaipur Literature Festival, please contact Teamwork Arts and Edelman India: manas@teamworkarts.comapeksha@teamworkarts.com, and  IndiaJLF@edelman.com
 
About Jaipur Literature Festival:
Described as the ‘greatest literary show on Earth’, the Jaipur Literature Festival is a sumptuous feast of ideas. The past 19 years have seen it transform into a global literary phenomenon, having hosted nearly 2000 speakers and welcoming over a million book lovers from across India and the globe. As the years pass and the festival grows, our core values remain unchanged: to serve as a democratic platform offering access to all. Every year, the festival brings together a diverse mix of the world’s greatest writers, thinkers, humanitarians, politicians, business leaders, sports people and entertainers on one stage to champion the freedom to express and engage in thoughtful debate and dialogue. Writers and Festival Directors Namita Gokhale and William Dalrymple, alongside Festival Producer Teamwork Arts, invite speakers to take part in the five-day programme set in the historic and dynamic state capital Jaipur. Past speakers have ranged from Nobel Laureates J.M. Coetzee, Orhan Pamuk and Muhammad Yunus, Man Booker Prize winners Ben Okri, Margaret Atwood and Paul Beatty, Sahitya Akademi winners Girish Karnad, Gulzar, Javed Akhtar, M.T. Vasudevan Nair as well as the late Mahasweta Devi and U.R. Ananthamurthy along with literary superstars including Amish Tripathi, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Vikram Seth. An annual event that goes beyond literature, the festival has also hosted Amartya Sen, Amitabh Bachchan, the late A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, Oprah Winfrey, Stephen Fry, Thomas Piketty and former president of Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai. 
 
About Teamwork Arts:
Teamwork Arts, India’s pioneering arts company, crafting cultural experiences for over 30 years, has taken India to the world and brought the world to India, presenting and nurturing the finest of Indian performers, writers, change makers and visual artists to the forefront. Every year, we produce over 33 festivals in 45 cities and 19 countries in the fields of performing & visual arts, knowledge and literature. We produce the world’s largest literary gathering: the annual Jaipur Literature Festival; JLF international now travels to the US, UK, and Europe. Through its digital avatar, the Jaipur Literature Festival reached over 35 million viewers in January 2024. Some key offerings among our digital and hybrid endeavours are - Art Matters, that empowers artists across India to collaborate by commissioning them to create new works, and Be Inspired: Fast tracking the future, that  changes the narrative of scientific  possibility to innovation.  Two new milestones were added to our festival repertoire in 2024 - the Jaigarh Heritage Festival in Jaipur, celebrating India’s regal past and rich legacy of art, culture and architecture, and Voices of Faith in London, exploring the philosophies of faith to find a way towards collective empathy and understanding, and in 2026, Avakai: Amaravati Festival of Cinema, Culture and Literature was inaugurated in Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh.
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