The fascinating story of Tagore’s unknowingly contribution to the Russian-language song, Poslednyaya Poema or the Last Poem, however, stayed inconspicuous outside the erstwhile Soviet region for many years until an Indian entrepreneur, Suvra Chakraborty, from Tagore’s birthplace of Kolkata, discovered the fascinating connection during a business visit to, of all places, Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, by a sheer stroke of luck. In his eponymous recent documentary, Last Poem, Chakraborty, the owner of Kyiv-headquartered AMC Overseas, highlighted the previously unknown story of Tagore’s only Russian song after tracing back the origin of the song through his personal interviews with both Rybnokov and Zokirov. The documentary narrated the story of how a timeless song evolved for years into a totem of culture and universalism. The song is also a profound testimony that Tagore has been a pivotal power to transcend the barriers of languages, cultures, regions, countries and continents and has been an ultimate global citizen.