Lahore — Around sunset on Thursday, Alhamra seemed to exhale a different kind of energy — quieter, warmer, and somehow deeply familiar. The annual Sufi Festival opened its doors with a burst of colour and a calm that felt almost like stepping out of the city and into a softer world.
The Lahore Arts Council launched the three-day event with a large art exhibition featuring over 100 works by 65 artists, each exploring a different shade of mysticism — longing, devotion, surrender, silence, and that eternal search for the Divine that Sufi poetry is built on. Visitors wandered through the gallery slowly, almost gently, as if the paintings themselves were asking them to pause.
An Exhibition That Felt More Like a Meditation
Inside the Allah Baksh Art Gallery, the walls glowed with textured calligraphy, abstract swirls, symbolic figures and soft, dreamlike colours. Nothing felt rushed. Even the brushstrokes looked like they were made with thought rather than urgency.
Officials, including Punjab Information Secretary Tahir Raza Hamdani and Alhamra Executive Director Mahboob Alam, opened the show, praising the artists for bringing spiritual imagination into a time when people seem increasingly disconnected from it. Alam said the festival is meant to be “a tribute to our Sufi heritage,” and honestly, standing in the gallery, it felt exactly like that — a quiet tribute, not a grand performance.
Beyond Paintings: Conversations, Theatre, Whirling & Poetry
The festival doesn’t just stop at artwork. Over the next two days, Alhamra will turn into a mix of sound, dialogue and movement.
A panel titled “Youth, Intellectual Challenges, and the Teachings of Wasif Ali Wasif” is set to explore how Sufi wisdom can help young people navigate a world that constantly pulls them in every direction. And people seem genuinely curious — not for academic debate, but for understanding.
One of the festival’s highlights, a theatrical piece Maqsood-e-Kull Main Hoon!, will dive into existential and mystical themes through dramatic storytelling. And then there’s the part everyone secretly waits for: Sufi music, the steady rhythm of dhamaal, the spinning grace of Raqs-e-Darvesh, and poetry recitations that move even those who don’t fully understand every word. Because sometimes the emotion carries you longer than the meaning.
Why This Festival Hits Different This Year
Maybe it’s the global mood. Maybe it’s how overwhelming news cycles have become. Or maybe people are simply craving something spiritual again — something steady and grounding.
Whatever the reason, the Sufi Festival feels perfectly timed. It brings together art, philosophy and performance not as entertainment, but as a reminder that heritage isn’t something locked in books and old shrines. It’s alive. It breathes. And people still want to feel it.
Sufism has always been about connection — with the self, with others, with something bigger — and that’s exactly what this festival seems to offer. A little connection in a world running on noise.
What Visitors Can Expect This Weekend
If you’re planning to drop by Alhamra between November 28–30, here’s what you’ll find:
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Art that invites reflection instead of selfies
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Performances rooted in centuries-old tradition but staged for a modern audience
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Conversations that bring mystic thought into today’s world
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A space where devotion and creativity exist side by side — without trying too hard
And honestly, that alone is worth the visit.
