Bharat is a culture of celebrations and festivals. The aims of these festivals are to develop human relations and make meaningful expressions of noble emotions. Shravani or Raksha Bandhan has an important place in these festivals.

The festival, which has been prevalent since the Vedic era, establishes and restores education, health, beauty and cultural values. It is celebrated as Sankalp Parv to atone for and protect values of life. This is the basis of the happiness and prosperity of life.

Raksha Bandhan is observed on the last day of the Hindu lunar calendar month of Shravan, which typically falls in August month of Gregorian Calendar. The word “Raksha Bandhan” in Sanskrit literally means “the bond of protection, obligation, or care,”- this expression is now principally applied to this ritual. Until the mid-20th-century, the expression was more commonly applied to a similar ritual, also held on the same day, with precedence in ancient Hindu texts, in which a domestic priest ties amulets, charms, or threads on the wrists of his patrons, or changes their sacred thread, and receives gifts of money; in some places, this is still in the practice.

There are two major festivals which are celebrated on the day of Shravani Purnima-Shravani or Upakarma and Raksha Bandhan. Raksha Bandhan means to be bound to protect. The sutra symbolises the identity of holy love, the unbreakable faith of the brother and sister.

This festival of Rakhi is also known as Rakhadi, Saloni, Shravani.