LAHORE : The third edition of the Lahore Literary Festival (LLF) in New York will take place on May 12 at the Asia Society.
The “safe place for dangerous ideas” (The Guardian) hosts writers, artists, and commentators speaking on issues affecting Pakistan and the world. The full day of programmes includes discussions on fiction and non-fiction, art, architecture, history, and politics.
“In this third year of our collaboration it is more important than ever to host this exchange of ideas and creativity in an interdependent world,” said Rachel Cooper, Director for Global Performing Arts and Special Cultural Initiatives at the Asia Society. “The LLF cuts across genres and disciplinary silos and seeks to cultivate common ground,” Ms Cooper added.
The special feature of this year’s New York edition of the LLF is a keynote address by Ayesha Jalal, Mary Richardson Professor of History at Tufts University, titled ‘Liberalism and the Muslim Question.’
“We are thrilled to be working with Asia Society in bringing closer American and Pakistani writers and thinkers to explore the common ground which is often lost in the labyrinthine world of diplomacy,” asserts Razi Ahmed, the founder and CEO of the Lahore Literary Festival. “With the strong support and patronage of the American-Pakistani community in New York, we have been able to successfully institutionalise a platform, in the shape of the LLF, for dialogue and reflection on matters that concern us all and that form the basis of thought provoking literature such as the recent works, Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie, and Exit West by Mohsin Hamid,” Ahmed noted.
Speakers at the LLF at Asia Society include, among others, eminent architect Nayyar Ali Dada, cutting-edge artist Waqas Khan, Urdu short story writer Muhammad Umar Memon, award-winning The Associated Press journalist Kathy Gannon, and Kiran Desai, the author of The Inheritance of Loss, which won the 2006 Man Booker Prize for Fiction.
After a star-studded lineup of speakers, there is a special performance by Fareed Ayaz and Abu Muhammad Qawals. Muhammad Qawwal and Brothers are masters of Qawwali Sufi music as well as classical genres such as tarana, thumri, and khayal. They belong to the Qawwal Bachon ka Gharana of Delhi, a music school founded in the 14th century that remains the best-known gharana today.