Shekhawat joins Lokmanthan 2026 pre-event in Jaipur
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Culture and Tourism Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat attended the pre-event of Lokmanthan 2026, titled 'Lokmanthan Ro Shankhnaad' (The Conch Call of Lokmanthan), in Jaipur on Wednesday, 1 July 2026, alongside Rajasthan Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma and Deputy Chief Minister Diya Kumari.
Context
Sharing his reflections on the occasion, Shekhawat invoked the Preamble of the Constitution of India, adopted on 26 November 1949, noting that the phrase 'Hum Bharat ke log' — 'We, the people of India' — embodies the country's cultural consciousness, shared heritage, and collective responsibility. In his words, the phrase signals that every citizen is a member of a vast democratic family called India.
The minister stated that being aware of one's timeless identity — knowing and taking pride in one's culture — is what makes a person 'Indian at heart.' The event brought together political leadership from both the Centre and the Rajasthan state government under the BJP.
Policy Backdrop
Lokmanthan is a cultural-intellectual conclave focused on India's folk traditions, civilisational identity, and the nation's future. The 2026 edition is positioned as a platform for what organisers describe as meaningful ideological deliberation on folk traditions and cultural consciousness.
Shekhawat expressed confidence that Lokmanthan 2026 will serve as an effective forum for such deliberation and will also contribute to the realisation of the Viksit Bharat vision — the government's framework for a developed India by 2047, first outlined by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his 2023 Independence Day address. The Ministry of Culture has consistently linked heritage promotion to this long-term development goal.
Stakeholders and Impact
The event is expected to draw cultural scholars, folk artists, and policy thinkers from across Rajasthan and beyond. For the state's folk-arts community, a high-profile conclave backed by both the Union and state governments signals potential policy attention and institutional support for traditional art forms.
The attendance of Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma and Deputy Chief Minister Diya Kumari underscores the Rajasthan government's active partnership with the Centre on cultural programming, a pattern consistent with the BJP's emphasis on civilisational identity as a pillar of governance.
What's Next
The main sessions of Lokmanthan 2026 are expected to be held in Jaipur, with the pre-event serving as a curtain-raiser to build momentum. Observers will watch for any cultural policy recommendations or formal state-Centre collaborations that emerge from the full conclave.
If the conclave produces actionable proposals — on folk-art funding, heritage documentation, or integration with the Viksit Bharat framework — it could shape the Ministry of Culture's programming priorities in the months ahead.