Chhayanaut honoured with Tagore Award

Chhayanaut president Sanjida Khatun receives India’s prestigious Tagore Award at Pravasi Bharatiya Kendra in New Delhi. Photo: UNB
Chhayanaut president Sanjida Khatun receives India’s prestigious Tagore Award at Pravasi Bharatiya Kendra in New Delhi. Photo: UNB

Chhayanaut, a cultural organisation of Bangladesh, was honoured with India's prestigious Tagore Award on Monday for the year 2015 by Indian president Ram Nath Kovind, reports UNB.

While handing over the award at a function held at Pravasi Bharatiya Kendra in New Delhi, president Kovind said cooperation between Bangladesh and India in recent years in connectivity and developmental projects and in people-to-people engagement is blessed by the ethos of 'Gurudev' [Rabindranath Tagore].

Chhayanaut president Sanjida Khatun received the award, which carries Rs one 10 million, a citation and an exquisite handicraft item, said Bangladesh high commission in New Delhi.

In her award acceptance speech which began with a Tagore song, Sanjida Khatun said Chhayanaut was honoured to receive the recognition named after Rabindranath from the Indian government.

"You've given us more than an award. You've inspired us to continue to pass on our cultural heritage and strive for fellowship and harmony," she said.

Speaking on the occasion, the Indian president said this Award is a celebration of Indian traditions of culture and of our civilisational wealth - whether in literature or music, art or drama, sculpture or handicrafts, design or digital art.

"Each region in our country has a distinct cultural identity. Yet, in its essence, culture does not divide - it unites and harmonises all of India and all of humanity," Press Information Bureau (PIB) of India quoted him as saying.

Congratulating the awardees, prime minister Narendra Modi said it was Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore who understood the strength of diversity of our country and inculcated it in his Rabindra Sangeet.

The prime minister said Gurudev is respected internationally. The character and message emanating from the works of Gurudev transcend time and circumstance.
Modi added that in view of the conditions which prevail in the world today, it has become even more relevant to propagate the message of harmony and peace of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore.

The Indian president also presented the Tagore Award for Cultural Harmony for the years 2014 and 2016 to Rajkumar Singhajit Singh and Ram Vanji Sutar respectively, on the same day.


The Tagore Award for Cultural Harmony was introduced in 2012 and the first two recipients were sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar and composer Zubin Mehta in 2012 and 2013.