The Quiet Kingdom of Jawai
Between Jodhpur and Udaipur, SUJÁN JAWAI has spent more than a decade proving that wild leopards, Rabari herdsmen and ten very good tented suites can share the same granite hills.
Between Jodhpur and Udaipur, SUJÁN JAWAI has spent more than a decade proving that wild leopards, Rabari herdsmen and ten very good tented suites can share the same granite hills.
There is a version of the Indian safari that involves park gates, permits and a convoy of jeeps converging on one weary tiger. Jawai, to our lasting relief, is the other version. In open country roughly halfway between Jodhpur and Udaipur (165 kilometres from the first, 160 from the second, about two and a half hours by road from either), leopards roam wild among granite formations the camp describes as a billion years old, sharing the landscape with village life as, the camp will tell you, they have done for centuries. SUJÁN calls this one of India's most enchanting wildernesses. We would go further: it is the most civilised wild place in Rajasthan, precisely because the camp refuses to treat the animals as a show.
SUJÁN JAWAI opened to guests in December 2013, under Anjali and Jaisal Singh, whose company runs SUJÁN's three wilderness and safari camps in Rajasthan. They call it their most ambitious conservation tourism project to date, and the phrasing matters. Conservation is not the garnish on the safari here; the camp exists so that the leopards, and the people who live beside them, can carry on exactly as they are.
The tents make the point quietly. There are just ten tented suites in all, from a rock-facing tent for two to a private encampment with its own entrance, and the canvas never upstages the country. The particulars are on the JAWAI stay page below; the point here is the restraint.
The camp states that these hills hold one of the world's highest densities of leopard, alongside antelope, boar and more than 240 species of birds. Twice-daily wilderness drives go out with the camp's expert guides, and the field team has completed a guide training and mentoring programme with Adam Bannister covering everything from geology to sighting management. The birding alone would justify the journey: flamingos, demoiselle cranes and bar-headed geese can be seen from the reservoir wetlands to the granite hills, with eagle owls and kingfishers in residence.
What makes Jawai singular is not the cats but the arrangement. The Rabari, nomadic herdsmen who have grazed these hills for generations, still tend their livestock through them, and the camp's walking safaris go out in their company. The camp counts nearly 300 temples and shrines in the region, and in local belief the leopards of Jawai are the guardians of this area, holding a semi-divine status in the eyes of the community. It is hard to think of anywhere else on earth where the apex predator is also the neighbourhood deity. Riders, meanwhile, can take to the landscape on the camp's Marwari horses, Rajasthan's legendary breed.
By the group's own count, 82 per cent of the team come from Rajasthan, the vast majority from rural communities; it supports 12 schools totalling 10,842 students, runs a Mobile Medical Unit giving 20,000 people annual access to free medical care, and reaches 15,400 people through its sanitation and recycling programmes. The camps hold Platinum LEED certification, SUJÁN says. A line SUJÁN proudly reprints from the FT's How To Spend It says it plainly: if India and conservation are increasingly joined in the travel world's consciousness, it is largely thanks to Jaisal and Anjali Singh.
Drive from Jodhpur or Udaipur, or take the train from Jaipur to Falna, half an hour from camp. Come between November and February for cold mornings and a warm sun in the daytime. Then let the hills do the rest.






Six tents facing the granite, each with a private deck and writing desk. All set-menu meals and twice-daily shared-jeep wilderness drives are included.
Two tents on a shared plinth and verandah, for families or a group of four. Same inclusions as the camp: all meals and shared-jeep drives.
The camp's honeymoon favourite, set apart with a private heated pool, its own lounge and dining tent, a private butler and private jeep drives.
A private encampment in its own right: three double bedrooms, private pool, boma and dining area, private butler and private jeep drives, separate entrance.
Members only (joining is free, three taps on WhatsApp). Our concierge replies personally, arranges SUJÁN JAWAI for your dates — your booking is confirmed directly with the property.
Stays featured in the Journal are part of the Indiaesque collection. All information believed correct as of 8 July 2026. Errors and omissions excepted.
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