India’s ‘Festival Of Lights’ Shines Bright: Deepavali Is Now On UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage List!

Deepavali has officially found a place on UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. The decision was adopted at the 20th session of UNESCO's Intergovernmental Committee, hosted at Delhi's Red Fort in December 2025. Alongside Deepavali, the committee also inscribed several other cultural traditions from around the world, including:

  • Hadrami Dan gathering - Yemen
  • Guruna pastoral retreats - Chad & Cameroon
  • Family circus tradition - Chile
  • Cuban Son music practice - Cuba
  • Koshary culture and associated daily practices - Egypt
  • Highlife music and dance - Ghana
  • Compas music tradition - Haiti
  • Swimming pool culture - Iceland
  • Al-Mihrass tree rituals and associated knowledge - Jordan
  • Diwaniya, a unifying social practice - Kuwait

This makes Deepavali one of India's recognised living traditions on the global stage for the way it continues to shape community life, memories, and cultural identity.

Photo Credit: Freepik

Why Deepavali Qualified

UNESCO's evaluation looks at how a tradition is practiced, preserved, and passed on. Deepavali fits naturally into that framework.

The festival's rituals - lighting lamps, rangoli, exchanging sweets, gatherings, prayers, music and craft aren't just festive routines. They connect families across generations, support artisans, and create shared experiences that cut across regions and communities.

These aspects aligned well with UNESCO's focus on community participation, cultural transmission, and everyday heritage.

India's Role In The Nomination

India submitted the nomination for Deepavali earlier this year, backed by documentation showing its cultural depth and social relevance. After the committee's approval, the listing became India's 16th entry under UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage category.

The Culture Ministry and government representatives welcomed the decision, calling it a moment of recognition for a festival that millions already carry with them as part of their identity.

How UNESCO Looks At A Festival Like Deepavali

Contrary to what many assume, UNESCO's listing isn't an award or a certification.
It doesn't "elevate" the festival; instead, it highlights the need to safeguard it.

The Representative List is designed to:

  • Encourage documentation and research
  • Support the people who keep the traditions alive
  • Help countries create long-term plans for preservation
  • Promote diversity without standardising or changing the practice

For Deepavali, this means more visibility, more cultural exchange, and a stronger push to protect traditional knowledge, crafts, and local practices associated with the festival.

What This Means for People Who Celebrate 'The Festival Of Lights'

For most of us, Deepavali has always been personal - the lamps at home, the familiar smell of sweets being made, the comfort of routines we've followed for years. UNESCO's recognition doesn't change the festival. What it does is acknowledge what has always been true: Deepavali is a living tradition carried by ordinary people, not institutions. It evolves with society, yet holds on to a sense of continuity that families pass on almost without realising it.

Photo Credit: Freepik

Deepavali's UNESCO listing highlights how strongly cultural practices survive when they live in homes, not just in history books. The festival continues because people keep celebrating it in their own ways - adapting, teaching, and holding on to the moments that matter. And now, the world has officially recognised what India has always known: Deepavali is not just celebrated; it is lived.

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