In the lead-up to this year's Festival, Gustra Adnyana, the Head of Indonesian Programming, sat down with us to talk about this year’s Festival theme, his curated sessions, and the events he is most looking forward to at this year's Festival.
What does this year’s Festival theme, Aham Brahmasmi – I am the Universe, mean to you personally as you curated the programme?
I always begin by trying to simplify, to draw closer, and to feel, to ask whether something moves me, whether it stirs my heart. Then I ask myself whether it might also hold meaning for others, beyond my own experience.
For me, Aham Brahmasmi – I am the Universe is an idea that is at once deeply personal and profoundly expansive. It reminds us that every story is a mirror of the universe within us, that every word, memory, and imagination reflects the larger pulse of life around us; that in caring for the heart, we are also caring for the universe.
In curating this year’s programme, I wanted to celebrate that interconnectedness: between the individual and the collective, between local voices and universal truths. Many of our speakers, writers, and artists explore how personal experience, rooted in land, language, and spirituality, can reveal deeper understandings of who we are as human beings. This theme inspired me to bring together storytellers who not only observe the world but also embody it, who remind us that literature is a living conversation between the self and the cosmos, that literature is breath itself.
What can people look forward to at the Festival this year? Are there any exciting highlights?
Every programme is exciting! This year, the Festival presents a rich array of free events, creating more opportunities, especially for young people and Indonesian audiences. A total of 196 speakers from across Indonesia, including Bali, will take the stage at the Festival. Some sessions will serve as special tributes, such as Fajar Merah: Remembering Widji Thukul and 100 Years of Pramoedya. Sessions like Rewriting Indonesian History, Timeless Bali, and Independent Media in Today’s Indonesia are definitely ones to add to your must-see list.