Governments, language institutions, scholars and cultural organisations across Africa and beyond marked World Kiswahili Language Day 2026 on 7 July, celebrating the growing influence of Africa’s most widely spoken indigenous language.
Established by UNESCO in 2021, the annual observance honours Kiswahili as the first African language to have its own international day. It also recognises the language’s role in promoting peace, multilingualism, regional integration and sustainable development.
This year’s celebration was held under the theme “Kiswahili for Peace, Solidarity and Global Economic Diplomacy.” The main event took place at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris, where policymakers, diplomats, academics and cultural experts discussed how Kiswahili is helping to shape education, trade, diplomacy and dialogue between cultures.
UNESCO said the programme also included the Second International Conference on Kiswahili, exhibitions and high-level discussions that highlighted the language’s growing contribution to regional integration and international cooperation.
Across Africa, many organisations held their own events to mark the day.
One of them was an online celebration organised by Swahili Afrika and the Pan African Centre for Cultures and Languages (PACCL). The event featured Gambian language policy expert Dr. Lang Fafa Dampha as the keynote speaker. Held under the theme “Kiswahili: The Language of Diplomacy, Trade, Culture and African Unity,” the programme brought together diplomats, academics, students, journalists and language advocates from across the continent in both English and French.
In another message marking the day, Professor Pacifique Malonga, ACALAN Kiswahili Commissioner and Secretary General of AFRICASIA (ABI), congratulated everyone promoting Kiswahili around the world. He encouraged governments, institutions and language advocates to continue working together to strengthen Kiswahili as a shared African heritage.
Today, more than 200 million people speak Kiswahili across East, Central and Southern Africa. It is an official language of the African Union, the East African Community and the Southern African Development Community. Its international recognition grew even stronger in 2025 when UNESCO adopted Kiswahili as the seventh official language of its General Conference.
For the African Union’s Agenda 2063, Kiswahili is much more than a language. It is a tool for bringing Africans closer together. It supports trade, strengthens diplomacy, promotes cultural exchange and helps build a shared African identity.
As Africa works towards greater unity and integration, World Kiswahili Language Day reminds us that investing in African languages is also investing in Africa’s future.