Sadbhavna Diwas: The Sadbhavana Diwas or Harmony Day is celebrated every year on August 20, memorializing the birthday of former Prime Minister of India Shri Rajiv Gandhi.
Sadbhavna Diwas
The term comes from – “Sadbhavana” meaning “good faith” and “bonafide” in English. Rajiv Gandhi’s thinking skill was modern and unique as the prime minister. August 20, 2023, marks the 79th anniversary of the birth of the former Prime Minister of India, Rajiv Gandhi.
Rajiv Gandhi had observed developed countries through many national and international projects he promoted. The fundamental theme of Sadbhavana Diwas was the promotion of federal unity and communal harmony among people of all religions and languages. Hence Sadbhavana Diwas is also termed as “Harmony Day”.
Sadbhavna Diwas was first celebrated in 1992, after the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi.
Rajiv Gandhi was born on 20th August 1944, and he was an Indian politician representative of the Indian National Congress. Rajiv Gandhi served as Prime Minister of India from 1984 to 1989. He was the youngest Prime Minister of India; he was only 40 years old when he was appointed as the Prime minister of India. He comes from the family of India’s greatest politicians. He was the grandson of the first Prime minister of India Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru and was the son of the first female prime minister of India Indira Gandhi.

Rajiv Gandhi, the youngest Prime Minister always promoted communal harmony, unity, and integrity in India. He was also considered as the Ambassador of Goodwill in the rest of the World. He belonged to a modern mindset and has always seeded the idea of India being a developed nation.
- He founded a central government agency called the Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya System in 1986 and empowered the rural areas of society by educating from class 6.
- As a result of his efforts, MTNL was founded in 1986 and distributes telephone calls to rural areas.
- Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first Prime Minister, was his grandfather.
- Indira Gandhi, Prime Minister of India, was his mother. After her assassination by her bodyguards., Rajiv Gandhi became the Prime Minister.
- After 1990, he introduced criteria for diminishing Licence Raj that permitted individuals or businesses to purchase funds, consumer goods, and imports without administrative restrictions.
- Rajiv Gandhi introduced voting rights at the age of 18 and also formed Panchayati Raj.
- He strongly encouraged youth power and said that the country’s development depends only on the awareness of the country’s youth, and started Jawahar Rozgar Yojana to give employment to the youth.
- Rajiv Gandhi was murdered in 1991 by a suicide bomber of the LTTE while participating in an election campaign.
- After his death, he received the highest civilian award in India, which is the Bharat Ratna.
Sadbhavana Diwas is celebrated to promote national unity, peace, empathy, and community harmony among Indians of all faiths.
Rajiv Gandhi National Sadbhavana Award
In 1992, the Rajiv Gandhi National Sadbhavana Award was established by the All-Indian Parliamentary Commission of the Indian National Congress to commemorate former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. This award is given annually to those who have devoted their lives to understanding and promoting the harmony of society.
This award represents a prize of Rs.10 Lakh and a prize. Some Rajiv Gandhi National Sadbhavana Awards winners are Lata Mangeshkar, Shubha Mudgal, Sunil Dutt, Amjad Ali Khan, Mohammad Azharuddin, Gopalkrishna Gandhi, and many more. Below is the list of former Rajiv Gandhi National Sadbhavana Award winners:
Rajiv Gandhi National Sadbhavana Award winners | Contribution | Year |
Jagan Nath Kaul | SOS Children’s Village of India Founder | 1995 |
Lata Mangeshkar | Playback singer | 1996 |
Sunil Dutt | Actor and Politician | 1998 |
Kapila Vatsyayan | History and Art scholar | 2000 |
S. N. Subba Rao | Founder of national youth project | 2003 |
Swami Agnivesh | Founder of Arya Sabha, worked against bonded labour | 2004 |
Nirmala Deshpande | Social activist, worked for the upliftment of women, and tribals | 2006 |
Hem Dutta | Communal harmony activist | 2007 |
N Radhakrishnan | Social worker and professor | 2008 |
Gautam Bhai | Member of Paunar Ashram and Social activist | 2009 |
Wahiduddin Khan | Peace Activist and Islamic Scholar | 2010 |
Spic Macay | Promoted Classical Music and culture among youth | 2011 |
D. R. Mehta | Founder of Bhagwan Mahaveer Viklang Sahayata Samiti, Jaipur and offers free limbs for the handicap | 2012 |
Amjad Ali Khan | Musician | 2013 |
Muzaffar Ali | Film Maker | 2014 |
Shubha Mudgal | Singer | 2016 |
Mohammad Azharuddin | Former Cricketer | 2017 |
M.Gopala Krishna | Retired IAS Officer | |
Gopalkrishna Gandhi | Communal Harmony, Goodwill and Peace | 2018 |
Rajiv Gandhi
At 40, Shri Rajiv Gandhi was the youngest Prime Minister of India, perhaps even one of the youngest elected heads of Government in the world. His mother, Smt. Indira Gandhi, was eight years older when she first became Prime Minister in 1966. His illustrious grandfather, Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru, was 58 when he started the long innings of 17 years as free India’s first Prime Minister.

As the harbinger of a generational change in the country, Shri Gandhi received the biggest mandate in the nation’s history. He ordered elections to the Lok Sabha, the directly elected house of the Indian Parliament, as soon as mourning for his slain mother was over. In that election, the Congress, got a much higher proportion of the popular vote than in the preceding seven elections and captured a record 401 seats out of 508.
Such an impressive start as the leader of 700 million Indians would have been remarkable under any circumstance. What makes it even more unique is that Shri Gandhi was a late and reluctant entrant into politics even though he belonged to an intensely political family that had served India for four generations – both during the freedom struggle and afterwards.
Shri Rajiv Gandhi was born on August 20, 1944, in Bombay. He was just three when India became independent and his grandfather became Prime Minister. His parents moved to New Delhi from Lucknow. His father, Feroze Gandhi, became an M.P., and earned a reputation as a fearless and hard-working Parliamentarian.
Rajiv Gandhi spent his early childhood with his grandfather in the Teen Murti House, where Indira Gandhi served as the Prime Minister’s hostess. He briefly went to school at Welham Prep in Dehra Dun but soon moved to the residential Doon School in the Himalayan foothills. There he made many lifelong friendships and was also joined by his younger brother, Sanjay.
After leaving school, Shri Gandhi went to Trinity College, Cambridge, but soon shifted to the Imperial College (London). He did a course in mechanical engineering. He really was not interested in ‘mugging for his exams’, as went on to admit later.
It was clear that politics did not interest him as a career. According to his classmates, his bookshelves were lined with volumes on science and engineering, not works on philosophy, politics or history. Music, however, had a pride of place in his interests. He liked Western and Hindustani classical, as well as modern music. Other interests included photography and amateur radio.
His greatest passion, however, was flying. No wonder then, that on returning home from England, he passed the entrance examination to the Delhi Flying Club, and went to the obtain a commercial pilot’s licence. Soon, he became a pilot with Indian Airlines, the domestic national carrier.
While at Cambridge, he had met Sonia Maino, an Italian who was studying English. They were married in New Delhi in 1968. They stayed in Smt. Indira Gandhi’s residence in New Delhi with their two children, Rahul and Priyanka. Theirs was a very private life despite the surrounding din and bustle of political activity.

But his brother Sanjay’s death in an air crash in 1980 changed that. Pressures on Shri Gandhi to enter politics and help his mother, then besieged by many internal and external challenges, grew. He resisted these pressures at first, but later bowed to their logic. He won the by-election to the Parliament, caused by his brother’s death, from Amethi in U.P.
In November 1982, when India hosted the Asian Games, the commitment made years earlier to build the stadia and other infrastructure was fulfilled. Shri Gandhi was entrusted with the task of getting all the work completed on time and ensuring that the games themselves were conducted without any hitches or flaws. In fulfilling this challenging task, he first displayed his flair for quiet efficiency and smooth coordination.
At the same time, as General Secretary of the Congress, he started streamlining and energising the party organisation with equal diligence. All these qualities came to the fore later in far more testing and trying times.
For no one could have ascended to power – becoming both Prime Minister and Congress President – in more tragic and tormenting circumstances than Shri Gandhi did in the wake of his mother’s brutal assassination on 31 October, 1984. But he bore the awesome burden of personal grief and national responsibility with remarkable poise, dignity and restraint.
During the month long election campaign, Shri Gandhi travelled tirelessly from one part of the country to the other, covering a distance equal to one and a half times the earth’s circumference, speaking at 250 meetings in as many places and meeting millions face to face.
A modern-minded, decisive but undemonstrative man, Shri Rajiv Gandhi was at home in the world of high technology. And, as he repeatedly said, one of his main objectives, besides preserving India’s unity, was to propel it into the twenty-first century.