đ° Full Story
The Dalai Lama won his first Grammy Award at the 68th annual ceremony on Feb. 1, 2026, taking the prize for Best Audiobook, Narration and Storytelling Recording for Meditations: The Reflections of His Holiness the Dalai Lama.
The 90-year-old spiritual leaderâs 10-track album, released last August, blends his recorded reflections with music and features contributions from Rufus Wainwright (who accepted the award on his behalf), Maggie Rogers, Andra Day and Indian sarod performances by Ayaan Ali Bangash.
Producer Kabir Sehgal said he curated the project from more than 100 hours of talks.
The win drew warm congratulations from Indian political figures and leaders in the Tibetan exile community, who hailed its global reach.
Beijing strongly criticised the award, with the Chinese Foreign Ministry calling it âanti-China political manipulationâ and reiterating its stance that the Dalai Lama is a separatist and that China reserves the right to approve his successor â a long-running flashpoint in Sino-Tibetan relations.
đ Based On
đ€ Social Media Insights
Social Summary
Cold War-era U.S. covert support for Tibetan resistance is a confirmed historical factor that helps explain deep-rooted geopolitical tensions between China and the Dalai Lama's supporters, and thus contextualizes Beijing's strong reaction to the Grammy win.

















đŹ Commentary