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Quote of the day by Diljit Dosanjh: 'I'll keep spreading love no matter what they say' when Punjab's biggest global star proved that love travels further than criticism ever could

Times of India Published Jul 8, 2026 Reviewed Jul 8, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Diljit Dosanjh was born on January 6, 1984, in the village of Dosanjh Kalan in Jalandhar, Punjab, India.
1984 · Diljit Dosanjh birth date
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Diljit Dosanjh made history in 2023 as the first Indian-born artist to perform at Coachella, according to Live Nation.
1 first-time milestone · Indian-born artist Coachella debut
Live Nation
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Diljit Dosanjh's 'Aura World Tour' North American leg, which began in April 2026, included a stadium show in Vancouver and concluded in San Francisco in June 2026, according to Live Nation.
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Live Nation
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Diljit Dosanjh drew more than 90,000 fans across his October 2025 'Aura' tour dates in Australia, making him the first Punjabi artist to headline and sell out stadiums across Australia, according to Live Nation.
more than 90000 fans · Aura tour Australia dates
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Diljit Dosanjh received an International Emmy Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in 2025 for his role as Amar Singh Chamkila in the Imtiaz Ali film of the same name, marking a significant moment for Indian representation on the global awards stage.
1 nomination · International Emmy Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actor
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Diljit Dosanjh's September 12, 2025 show at Wembley Stadium in London sold out the moment tickets went on sale, according to Jambase.
1 sold-out show · Wembley Stadium concert
Jambase
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Diljit Dosanjh's 2024 'Dil-Luminati Tour' became the highest-grossing Indian concert tour ever, according to reports.
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Diljit Dosanjh is having a year that is quietly reshaping what is possible for an Indian artist on the world stage. His 'Aura World Tour' kicked off its North American leg in April 2026 with a stadium show in Vancouver, making stops across Canada and the United States before wrapping in San Francisco in June, according to Live Nation.

The European leg, announced just last week, includes nine dates across Germany, Ireland, France, Austria, Italy, the Netherlands, and England, with his September 12 show at Wembley Stadium in London selling out the moment tickets went on sale, as reported by Jambase. And just this week, his human rights drama 'Satluj,' in which he portrays activist Jaswant Singh Khalra, was pulled from streaming in India days after its release amid a censorship battle that has put him squarely at the centre of one of the most significant conversations about artistic freedom in the country right now, according to Deadline.

Through all of it, a line he spoke on stage in Brisbane in October 2025 has only grown more meaningful with every passing week.The quote of the day reads, "I'll keep spreading love, no matter what they say."Meaning of the quote of the day by Diljit DosanjhDiljit Dosanjh made this statement on October 29, 2025, during his 'Aura' tour concert in Brisbane, Australia, as part of the run that made him the first Punjabi artist to headline and sell out stadiums across Australia, drawing more than 90,000 fans across the dates, according to Live Nation.

The Brisbane show was one of the biggest nights of that run, and in the middle of it, between the songs and the spectacle, he stopped and said something that had nothing to do with the performance and everything to do with why he was there.The line is deceptively simple. Eight words. But the context around it gives it real weight.

Diljit has spent his career navigating criticism from multiple directions simultaneously. Early in his career, he was told that Punjabi music could not travel beyond its regional audience. He was told that an artist who refused to compromise his identity, his turban, his faith, his language, could not build a global following.

He was told, implicitly and explicitly, that who he is was too specific, too rooted, too particular to speak to the world at large.He ignored all of it. And then he proved all of it wrong, at Coachella, at Madison Square Garden, at Wembley Stadium, at sold-out arenas across four continents.But the "what they say" in his Brisbane statement is not just about industry doubters.

It also carries the weight of the more politically charged scrutiny he has faced in recent years.During his landmark 2024 'Dil-Luminati Tour' in India, he was publicly criticized by political figures for allegedly promoting drug culture through his lyrics, a charge he rejected directly from the concert stage, asking the audience whether they had ever seen him promote drugs and receiving a roaring response.

His film 'Satluj,' now pulled from Indian streaming amid what the filmmakers have described as government pressure, adds another dimension to what it means, for him specifically, to keep spreading love no matter what they say. The love he spreads is not just music. It is also the stories he chooses to tell, about justice, about history, about the people his community remembers.Diljit Dosanjh: from a village in Punjab to Wembley StadiumDiljit Dosanjh was born on January 6, 1984, in the village of Dosanjh Kalan in Jalandhar, Punjab, India, and began singing kirtan at local gurdwaras as a student before releasing his first song in 2004.

In the two decades since, he has grown into one of the most commercially successful and globally recognized artists in the history of Indian music, building a career that spans Punjabi music, Bollywood, independent film, and now international arenas, all while maintaining the cultural identity that his critics once told him would hold him back.He made history in 2023 as the first Indian-born artist to perform at Coachella, a moment that was widely described as a turning point for the global visibility of South Asian music, according to Live Nation.

His 2024 'Dil-Luminati Tour' became the highest-grossing Indian concert tour ever, according to as per reports. In 2025, he received an International Emmy Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actor for his role as the legendary Punjabi singer Amar Singh Chamkila in the Imtiaz Ali film of the same name, marking a significant moment for Indian representation on the global awards stage.

That same year, Vogue readers named him best dressed at the Met Gala, where he arrived in a custom ivory sherwani and turban that became one of the most photographed looks of the night.His fifteenth studio album 'Aura,' released in October 2025, launched the world tour that has since taken him from Australia to North America to Europe.

And through every stage, every milestone, every controversy, every censorship battle, he has kept doing the same thing he said he would do from that stage in Brisbane. Spreading love. No matter what they say.Read the latest Entertainment News and Celebrity updates. Download the TOI App.

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