Diljit Dosanjh Tells Calgary Protesters to Keep Showing Flags
diljit dosanjh used his Calgary stage on Friday night to address alleged pro-Khalistani protesters and told them to keep showing flags if they were doing it for Punjab. The moment came during his Aura 2026 concert, where he also spoke at length about death, fear, and forgiveness.
Calgary Stage Response
“Jinne jhande dikhane, dikhai challo... Je Punjab di khatir menu jhande dikhaune ne, tan roz hi dikhayi chalo,” he said, drawing a hard line against disruption while refusing to back away from the crowd reaction around him. He made it clear he would not allow chaos at the venue.
The line landed inside a wider run of Aura concerts that has kept Dosanjh in the news. He has also faced hate online over charges of being anti-India, and the Calgary exchange showed he was answering that backlash from the stage rather than letting it stay on social media.
December 2025 Death Talk
“I have already left this world,” Dosanjh said while speaking in Punjabi during the same Calgary show. He added, “I don't have any fear of death,” and said, “Last December, I was trying to get out of this body.”
He went further: “There is nothing to be afraid of…. I have already left this world. This is the truth. I am standing on this stage, and this is my God….I have no fear of death, and I don't have any animosity towards anyone. I love everyone. Love, respect, and forgiveness. I am trying to bring these into my life as much as I can.”
What The Crowd Heard
The Calgary show gave fans two different kinds of theater in one night: a direct answer to protesters and an unusually blunt speech about mortality. For a concertgoer, the practical takeaway is simple — Dosanjh is not treating the flag-waving disruption as something that will push him off message or off stage.
That makes the Aura run easier to read going forward. If the same mix of politics, online backlash, and onstage confrontation follows him to later dates, audiences are likely to hear more of the same stance: no chaos, no retreat, and no softening of the language he used in Calgary.