French designer Julia Chaigneau, living in Ahmedabad for two years, went viral after visiting Amritsar’s Golden Temple, stunned by its free langar serving all equally on volunteers alone no faith or status required.
Julia Chaigneau’s X post from early December 2025 has exploded online, amassing nearly 80,000 views, thousands of likes, and hundreds of shares across platforms like Instagram, Facebook, and news outlets.
The fashion designer, who relocated from France to Ahmedabad in 2023, described her Golden Temple visit on 2 December as “radically open and inspiring.” Her words-“It’s hard to wrap my head around the fact that everything is free for everyone. No religion, no status, no background needed. Just walk in. Eat. Be welcomed. And most of it runs purely on volunteers”-struck a chord globally.
Netizens flooded comments with praise: one called the hygiene “better than any restaurant,” while another lauded the “pure seva” after documentaries on the kitchen’s scale.
This isn’t isolated; Chaigneau joins a wave of foreigners documenting their langar experiences amid post-pandemic tourism booms.
Her post humanises the Golden Temple-Sri Harmandir Sahib-as more than architecture; it’s a living embodiment of equality where devotees, tourists, and the needy share meals cross-legged on the floor.

The Langar’s Monumental Scale
At the heart of Chaigneau’s awe lies the langar, the world’s largest free community kitchen, feeding up to 100,000 people daily-and over 300,000 on weekends or festivals.
Managed by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), it operates 24/7 with zero charge, relying on donations and an army of volunteers from dawn preparations to midnight clean-ups.
Fresh dal, rotis, rice, and kheer emerge from massive kadhais stirred by hand, served on steel thalis to queues that snake through the complex.
Chaigneau highlighted the “insane” logistics: volunteers chop vegetables donated by farmers, while others wash dishes in industrial-scale sinks.
Hygiene standards rival professional eateries-utensils boiled, floors mopped hourly-countering any outsider misconceptions. Social media reactions echoed this: “How is this even possible?” one user marvelled, mirroring Chaigneau’s sentiment.
No official SGPC statement has emerged, but their ethos shines through routine operations, serving diverse crowds from Amritsar locals to international pilgrims without discrimination.

Historical Roots of Radical Equality
The langar tradition began with Guru Nanak Dev Ji in the 15th century, who founded Sikhism amid India’s rigid caste system. Rejecting hierarchy, he gathered followers for communal meals, insisting all sat as equals-a direct challenge to social divides.
Guru Amar Das Ji institutionalised it, while Guru Gobind Singh Ji fortified it during persecutions. The langar sustained millions during the 1947 Partition riots, feeding refugees fleeing violence.
In recent crises-like COVID-19 lockdowns or floods-it distributed lakhs of meals, earning global acclaim. Today, it attracts over a million foreign visitors yearly to Amritsar, many posting videos of the orderly lines and heartfelt service.
Chaigneau’s story fits this continuum, her Ahmedabad base underscoring how Punjab’s legacy resonates across India. Post-pandemic, tourism has surged 30-40% at the Golden Temple, with influencers amplifying its message of ‘sarbat da bhala’-welfare for all.

Broader Cultural Resonance
Chaigneau’s reaction spotlights India’s soft power through lived experiences. As a foreigner immersed in Ahmedabad’s vibrant design scene, her shift from French sophistication to Sikh simplicity bridges worlds.
Similar tales abound: Japanese tourists praising efficiency, Americans noting sustainability (minimal waste, organic sourcing), and Europeans drawing parallels to universal human rights.
Yet challenges persist-rising visitor numbers strain resources, prompting SGPC calls for donations. Amid global polarisation, the langar models coexistence: Hindus, Muslims, Christians, atheists all partake.
Commentators link it to contemporary issues, like refugee crises or food insecurity, urging emulation worldwide.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
Julia Chaigneau’s viral wonder reaffirms the Golden Temple’s langar as a timeless beacon of empathy, where kindness dissolves barriers of faith, class, or nationality.
In an era of division, this volunteer-fueled haven champions harmony, dialogue, and selfless service-core to fostering inclusive societies.
The Logical Indian celebrates such stories as catalysts for positive change, inspiring us to weave threads of coexistence into daily life.
I visited the golden temple in Amritsar today.
— Julia Chaigneau (@juliachaigneau) December 2, 2025
The place is absolutely stunning but having a chance to see and eat at the biggest community kitchen of the world was insane.
It’s hard to wrap my head around the fact that everything is free for everyone. No religion, no status,… pic.twitter.com/vIdPwfbbby

