Latest update March 26th, 2026 12:30 AM
(Kaieteur News) – On this Diwali holiday in Guyana, we extend warm wishes to all our brothers and sisters, especially those for whom this sacred occasion holds special meaning. As the nation gathers in prayer and reflection, our collective hope is simple, yet profoun, that the light of Diwali shines across this land, piercing the darkness that too often surrounds us, and illuminating every heart, every home, and every corner of our shared destiny.
Diwali is more than a festival of lamps. It is a timeless call to rise above darkness — the darkness of greed, inequality, and moral blindness. It is a reminder that even a single flame can stand against the vast night. In a country so rich with promise — where oil gushes beneath the earth and gold glitters in our soil too many still live in shadow. Too many children study under leaking roofs, too many citizens struggle unseen, unheard. The true light of Diwali must reach them too.
This is the deeper truth the festival compels us to face: the wealth of Guyana belongs to all Guyanese. Not to a chosen few, not to those already powerful and comfortable, but to every man, woman, and child whose hopes are tied to this land. When prosperity is shared, when the light touches every home, then and only then can we say Diwali’s message has truly come alive among us.
The light of Diwali is not bound by religion or ritual. It transcends temples and shrines, reaching into the human spirit itself. Whether Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Bahá’í, or of any other faith, we are all bound by that universal truth that light is life, that goodness is strength, and that compassion is the most sacred offering we can make. Beneath the colour of our skin, the pulse of our blood beats the same rhythm of humanity. We breathe the same air. We are one people.
It is good to plan for oil and gold, for roads and skyscrapers. But let us remember not a drop of oil nor a pennyweight of gold can add a single hour to a human life. Let us, therefore, invest as deeply in our souls as we do in our soil. Let the light we kindle in our homes be the same light that burns in our daily conduct in honesty, fairness, and care for others.
For there is still much darkness in Guyana. It takes many forms corruption, hypocrisy, selfishness, indifference. Some who speak the loudest about festivals of light are often the same who move in the shadows. Diwali calls on us to go beyond words and gestures to live the light, not just light the lamps. Let deeds replace speeches, let truth replace pretense.
Guyana yearns for illumination, not only of streets and temples, but of conscience and governance. Let every Guyanese be a diya, a lamp that burns against deceit and despair. When we let that light shine, no darkness can prevail.
This Diwali, may we not only celebrate light but be the light.
Let it shine on and beyond this day. Let it shine for all of Guyana.
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