
Every year, the birth anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore, Asia’s first Nobel laureate, is celebrated on May 7 across India.
However, West Bengal and the Bengali diaspora globally observe his birth anniversary on Pochishe Boishakh, with a grand cultural festival. This year, Pochishe Boishakh is today, May 9.
Interestingly, Tagore's birthday is celebrated twice each year — reflecting the coexistence of the globally recognised Gregorian calendar and the traditional Bengali calendar.
According to the Gregorian calendar, Tagore was born on 7 May 1861, in the Jorasanko mansion in Calcutta (now Kolkata). Consequently, the Government of India, educational institutions outside Bengal, and the global community officially mark May 7 as his birth anniversary.
However, in the traditional Bengali calendar (the Bongabdo), Tagore was born on the 25th day of the first Bengali month, Boishakh. This specific day is culturally immortalised as Pochishe Boishakh (literally translating to the 25th of Boishakh).
This dual observance highlights both a nationwide tribute to the Nobel laureate and a deep regional cultural connection in eastern India and Bangladesh.
Unlike the Gregorian calendar, which has a fixed progression of dates, the Bengali calendar is tied to solar cycles. The starting date of the Bengali New Year (Pohela Boishakh) fluctuates slightly on the Gregorian calendar, usually falling on April 14 or April 15.
Because the starting point shifts, the 25th day of Boishakh also moves when mapped against the modern English calendar.
In 2026, Pohela Boishakh was celebrated on April 15. Counting 25 days forward from that starting point brings us exactly to May 9.
Therefore, according to the Bengali almanack (Panjika), the true astrological and cultural anniversary of Tagore’s birth falls today.
This is why you will see cultural programs, poetry recitations, and musical tributes peaking on May 9 this year across West Bengal, Tripura, and Bangladesh.
In 2026, Rabindranath Tagore’s 165th birth anniversary will be observed on:
May 7 (Gregorian calendar) – across India
May 9 (25th Boishakh) – in West Bengal and Bangladesh
Rabindra Jayanti is far more than a mere birthday; it is a celebration of Bengal's cultural awakening. Rabindranath Tagore, affectionately known as Gurudev or Kabiguru, reshaped Bengali literature, music, and art in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
His vast body of work includes:
While the dates may differ, the essence of the celebration remains identical.
Whether you commemorated the Bard of Bengal on May 7 or are participating in the vibrant Pochishe Boishakh festivities today on May 9, the day serves as a powerful reminder of Tagore's enduring philosophy of universal humanism, boundless creativity, and intellectual freedom.
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