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Events and Festivals
The
Gregorian calendar is the official calendar for the country, but Laos
also follows the lunar calendar. The Lao calendar is a mixture of
Sino-Vietnamese and Thai-Khmer calendars. It is based on the movement of
the sun and moon and is different to the Buddhist calendar used in
Thailand. New Year is in December, but is celebrated in April when the
auspices are more favourable. As in China, each year is named after an
animal. Weeks are structured on the waxing and waning of the moon and
days are named accordingly.
The
traditional Lao calendar, like the calendars of China, Vietnam, Cambodia
and Thailand, is a solar-lunar mix. The year itself is reckoned by solar
phases, while the months are divided according to lunar phases (unlike
the Western calendar in which months as well as years are decided by the
sun). The Buddhist Era calendar usually figures year one as 543 BC,
which means that you must subtract 543 from the Lao calendar year to
arrive at the Christian calendar familiar in the West (e.g., 1997 AD is
2540 BE according to the Lao Buddhist calendar).
Festivals
in Laos are mostly linked to agricultural seasons or historical Buddhist
holidays.
January :
Bun Pha
Wet
(December
or January)
is a
temple-centre festival in which the jataka or birth-tale of Prince
Vessantara, the Buddha’s penultimate life, is recited. This is also a
favoured time (second to Khao Phansaa) for Lao males to be ordained into
monk hood. The scheduling of Bun Pha Wet is staggered so that it is held
on different days in different villages. This is so that relatives and
friends living in different villages can invite one another to their
respective celebrations.
Boun
Khoun Khao
This is a harvest festival celebrated in most in villages and thanks is
given to the spirit of the land.
February :
Magha Puja
(Makkha Bu-saa, full moon) commemorates a speech given by the
Buddha to 1,250 enlightened monks who came to hear him without prior
summons. In the talk, the Buddha laid down the first monastic
regulations and predicted his own death. Chanting and offerings mark the
festival, culminating in the candlelit circumambulation of wats
(temples) throughout the country (celebrated most fervently in Vientiane
and at the Khmer ruins of Wat Phu, near Champasak). (LP)
Vietnamese Tet & Chinese New Year
is
celebrated in Vientiane, Pakse and Savannakhet with parties, deafening
non-stop fireworks and visits to Vietnamese and Chinese temples. Chinese
and Vietnamese-run businesses usually close for three days.
Sikhottabong Festival
This
religious festival is held at Sikhottabong stupa, located about 6 km
south of Thakhek.
Wat Phu
Festival
(Champasak) is annually held in the full moon of the 3rd month of
lunar calendar, on the grounds of the enchanting pre-Angkorian, Wat Phu
remains in Champasak. Festivities include elephant racing, buffalo
fighting, cock fighting and performances of Lao traditional music and
dance. The trade fair also showcases products from the southern province
of Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. Don’t forget your wallet and
your camera.
Boun
Khao Chi
This ceremony held at wats in the morning, when a special "bread made of
sticky rice" is offered.
March :
Boun Khoun
Khao
A local
harvest festival celebrated around local wats. (The time of year that
this is celebrated depends on the phases of the moon, thus it is listed
more than once.)
Boun
Pha Vet
At this ceremony an offering of donations is given and one's future is
read from a piece of paper drawn, during the three day-three night
festival.
April :
Boun Pi
Mai
is a public holiday typically lasting for three days. This is to
celebrate Lao New Year. The first month of the Lao New Year is actually
in December but festivities are delayed until April when days are longer
and there is more time to party. The festival also serves to invite the
rains. Pimai is one of the most important annual festivals, particularly
in Luang Prabang. Statues of the Buddha (in the "calling for
rain" posture) are ceremonially doused in water, which is poured along
an intricately decorated trench (hang song nam pha). The small stupas of
sand, decorated with streamers, in wat compounds are symbolic requests
for health and happiness over the next year. It is celebrated with
traditional Lao folk singing (mor lam) and the circle dance (ramwong).
Similar festivals are celebrated in Thailand, Cambodia and Burma.
May :
Labor Day
held on the 1st May is a public holiday.
Visakha
Puja
Celebrates
the birth, enlightenment and death of the Buddha and is celebrated in
local wats.
Bun
Bang Fai
(Rocket festival) is a Buddhist rain-making festival. The
festival lasts 2 days and is a worthwhile experience. This can be one of
the wildest festivals in the country (other than the New Year
festivities), with plenty of music and dance, processions and general
merrymaking, culminating in the firing of bamboo rockets into the sky.
In some places male participants blacken their bodies with lamp soot,
while women wear sunglasses and carry carved wooden phalli to imitate
men. The firing of the rockets is supposed to prompt the heavens to
initiate the rainy season and bring much-needed water to the rice
fields.
June :
Children’s Day
is generally celebrated at the beginning of either June or July is a
public holiday.
Khao
Phansaa
(June or July) Marks the beginning of the three-month Buddhist Lent,
which commences at the full moon in June or July and continues until the
full moon in October, this is considered a particularly auspicious time
for Lao men to enter the monk-hood and is marked by numerous ordination
ceremonies.
July :
Khao Phansaa
(also Khao Watsa, full moon) is the beginning of the traditional
three month "rains retreat" during which Buddhist monks are expected to
station themselves in a single monastery. At other times of year they
are allowed to travel from wat to wat or simply to wander in the
countryside, but during the rainy season they forego the wandering so as
not to damage fields of rice or other crops. This is also the
traditional time of year for men to enter the monk hood temporarily,
hence many ordinations take place.
August
: Haw Khao Padap Din
(full moon) is a sombre festival in which the living pay respect
to the dead. Many cremations take place, bones being exhumed for the
purpose, during this time and gifts are presented to the Sangha so that
monks will chant on behalf of the deceased.
Boun
Kao Padabdinh
is the time when offerings are made to the dead.
September : Boun Ok Phansaa
is the end
of Buddhist Lent and the faithful take offerings to the temple. It is
held during the 9th lunar month in Luang Prabang and the 11th
lunar month in Vientiane and marks the end of the rainy season. Boat
races take place on the Mekong River with crews of 50 or more men and
women. On the night before the race small decorated rafts are set afloat
on the river. This is another worthwhile festival that deserves a photo.
Boat
Racing Festivals
Kammouan
This
festival will be held in Sebangfai District, and will include exciting
boat races on the Sebangfai River, a trade fair of agricultural products
and local handicrafts, and traditional Lao music and dance performances;
at the same time, citizens will make offerings to the dead in order to
share merit with them.
Luang Prabang
This
festival includes boat races on the Mekong River and a trade fair in
Luang Prabang City; during the Khao Salak festival, citizens visit local
temples to make offerings to the dead in order to share merit with them.
Champassak
Held in
association with Ok Pansa, which marks the end of the monks’ three-month
fast and retreat during the rainy season; a long-boat racing competition
is held in order to worship the river spirits
Vientiane
The water
festival held during Ok Pansa is spectacular; on the first day at dawn,
donations and offerings are made at temples around the city; in the
evening, candlelight processions are held around the temples and
hundreds of colourful floats decorated with flowers, incense and candles
are set adrift down the Mekong River in thanksgiving to the river
spirits; the next day, a popular and exciting boat racing competition is
held on the Mekong.
Khammouan
A Boat
Racing is held on the Sebangfai river during this month as well as a
trade fair of agricultural products, local handicrafts, traditional Lao
music and dance performance. During the festival citizens donate
offerings to the dead in to share merits.
October
: Awk Phansaa
(Awk Watsa, full moon) celebrates the end of the three-month
rains retreat. Monks are allowed to leave the monasteries to travel and
are presented with robes, alms bowls and other requisites of life. On
the eve of Awk Phansaa many people fashion small banana-leaf boats
carrying candles, incense and other offerings, and float them in rivers,
a custom know as Lai Hua Fai, similar to Loy Krathong in Thailand.
Bun Nam
(water festival) A second festival held in association with Awk
Phansaa is Bun Nam (water festival). Boat races (suang heua) are
commonly held in towns located on rivers, such as Vientiane, Luang
Prabang and Savannakhet; in smaller towns these races are often
postponed until National Day (2 December) so that residents aren’t
saddled with two costly festivals in two months.
That
Luang Festival & Trade Fair
(October or
November) Vientiane
This
religious festival is held in and around That Luang Stupa, the national
symbol of Laos, where hundreds of monks gather to accept alms and floral
arrangements from the people; the festival includes a grand fireworks
display at night and a trade fair, showcasing Lao products, takes place
during the day.
November : Boun That Luang
is celebrated in all Laos’ thats (stupas) although most enthusiastically
and colourfully in Vientiane. As well as religious rituals, most
celebrations include local fairs, processions, beauty pageants and other
festivities worth seeing.
That
Luang Festival
(full moon) takes place at That Luang in Vientiane. Hundreds of
monks assemble to receive alms and floral votives early in the morning
on the first day of the festival. There is a colourful procession
between Wat Si Muang and Pha That Luang. The celebration lasts a week
and includes fireworks and music, culminating in a candlelit
circumnavigation of That Luang.
December : Hmong New Year
is
celebrated in areas where the Hmong tribes live and is a colourful
affair.
Lao
National Day
is celebrated on the 2nd of the month and is a public
holiday. Lao national and communist hammer-and-sickle flags are flown
all over the country. Celebration is mandatory, hence poorer communities
postpone some of the traditional Awk Phansaa activities–usually
practised roughly a month earlier, until National Day.
That
Inhang Festival
(Savannakhet) This festival is held on the grounds of the
splendid That Inhang stupa, located just outside the city of
Savannkakhet; an international trade fair including exhibitions of
tourism, products from Laos, Thailand and Vietnam and performances of
traditional Lao, Thai and Vietnamese music and dance are held. The fair
also includes a sports competition, complete with football, boxing and
tennis matches and local traditions like drumming competitions.
Lao
Public Holidays
New Year
1st January
Army National Day January
Makhabusa Day February
Women International Day March
Lao Popular Revolutionary Party Day March
Lao Buddhist New Year 13-16 April
Labor International Day
May
Visakhabusa Day May
International Children’s Day June or July
Khao Phansa Day July
Constitution Day August
Khao Padab Din Day August
Power Seizing Day August
Khao Salak Day September
Oak Phansa Day October
Boat Racing Festival Day October
Teachers National Day October
That Luang Festival Day October
National Day December
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