Samui reservation : Thai Festivels ,Ceremonies and Traditional,Thai New Year,Loy Krathong,New Year's Day Koh Samui Thailand.
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Songkran (Thai New Year) If
you like a New Year's party, Thailand is the place for you.
Samui people are blessed with no less than three annual
opportunities to ring in a new year with their European friends on
January 1st, with their Chinese friends in early February, and on
April 13, which has for centuries marked the first day of o f the
traditional Thai solar calendar. This last celebration is called Songkran, and it is one of the most joyous occasions in The
Kingdom.
The word Songkran comes from the
Sanskrit words for "New Year", and the Thai celebration was
probably imported with major aspects of Indian culture over 2,500
years ago.
Songkran in Thailand is a holiday
primarily dedicated to the family, and tourists may notice a much
slimmer staff manning the restaurants and hotels as every employee
who is able goes home to spend the day with his or her relatives.
Back in
the provinces huge meals are pre-pared, homes are fastidiously
cleaned, and sacred altars and images respectfully washed. Family
members who are scattered for the rest of the year by employment
or marriage come together to renew their bonds and exchange
gossip. Perhaps the most lovely rite associated with Songkran is
the wai khon gaa ceremony, where whole neighborhoods will line up
to pour water over the hands of the community's two oldest
members, giving and receiving blessings for the coming year.
Unfortunately, because over 90% of
the Thai people on Samui are originally from other provinces, it
is not easy to find these ancient and moving ceremonies here. The
most common manifestation of Songkran to be seen on Samui is the
practice of sat nam, which means gaining control of large
quantities of water, preferably chilled to just below freezing,
and an advantageous spot from which to surprise and drench passing
unwary pedestrians.
On April 13 every year the streets of
every town and village on the island are lined with giggling
teenagers armed with and arsenal of water guns, buckets. barrels ,
dippers, hoses and all manner of delivery vehicle with which to
launch their often icy-cold liquid missiles. Only police officers
in uniform are immune to attack; everyone else is expected to take
their punishment
with good humor. It is not uncommon to enter the post office, bank
or some other place of business and be greeted by a smiling clerk
wearing a sopping wet shirt and tie.
While we may be able to trace the
source of the holiday itself, nobody knows for sure why Thai
people delight in dousing each other in cold water on Songkran
day, or why it is apparently even more fun to douse strangers,
especially foreign strangers. What is obvious is that the practice
of throwing water around on one of the hottest days of the year
releases tensions, cooling the head along with the body. And
during this day a visitor has only two choices, 1) hide in his
room or 2)join in the fun and sling a little water of his own.
Loy
Krathong (Light Festival) Thailand's
waterways rivers, klongs, even hotel swimming pools will be ablaze
with dazing lights on the evening of Nov. 14, when the Kingdom
celebrates "Loy Krathong" one of the year's most-awaited
festivals.
The annual
festival, also celebrated in other neighboring countries, is held
on the full moon day of the 12th lunar month. Thais place great
importance in this event and while the best celebrations are said
to be held in Bangkok, Ayutthaya, Sukhothai and Chiangmai, the
event and while the best celebrations are said to be held in
Bangkok, Ayutthaya, Sukhothai and Chiangmai, the event is marked
with great funfair all over the Kingdom.
The festival is believed to have its
beginnings at least in Thailand in Sukhothai Province, north of
Bangkok, almost 800 years ago. A stone inscription from the
Sukhothai Period describes an ancient Loy Krathong festival :
"There are four main gates in the city of Sukhothai. On festive
occasions, people jam the city to witness the light festival in
progress. It's as if the city would burst." When the ancient
Sukhothai city was restored to its former splendor as the
Historical Park of Sukhothai, efforts were made to bring back
ancient festivals and their legendary festive atmosphere. This
brought back the light festival of Loy Krathong. It has remained a
major attraction since. "Loy" means to float, and "krathong"
means a leaf cup.
This
moniker seems apt as most floating objects you see during Loy
Krathong nights are flowers formed like cups, if not artificial
petals that look like cups in many angles. It is a most colorful
festival. In most areas where it is celebrated, you will see Thai
women resplendent in colorful attire, hair festooned with flowers,
and gaily-dressed men, also fully garbed, gather with floats in
their hands wherever there's water.
As the krathongs meander while making
their way downstream, you'll often see little boys swim to them to
retrieve the tiny cargo of coins before releasing them down the
"river of no return". Explanation of the festival's significance
vary. One belief is that as the floats embark on their journey,
they take with it the owner's misfortunes. Most Thais also believe
the floating of the krathong is a yearly sloughing off of all the
sins and calamities that have befallen a person. On a lighter
note, it's also believed that lovers can forecast the fortune of
their romance by watching their krathong float downstream to
gather.
Krathongs
that remain together into the darkness, promise life-long
partnership. This custom's religious significance is somewhat
debatable, though. Some say Loy Krathong is an act of remission to
the goddess Mae Khongkha, the mother of water. Western
psychologists say it symbolizes the egg's prenatal consciousness
of its journey of the ovary down the fallopian tube to conception,
a legend (for explanation) quite common to Eastern and Western
cultures. The Biblical story of Moses in the Bulrushes is similar.
Whatever its significance, you shouldn't fail to watch or join in
a Loy Krathong festival for a once in a life time experience.
Check out the hotels or your travel agent for a schedule.
Loy Krathong
Song
Thai version
English
version
Wan Pen Duan
Sip Song
Nam Koh Nong Tem Taling
Rao Tanglai Shai Ying
Sanuk Ganjing Wan Loy Krathong
Loy Loy Krathong
Loy Loy Kratong,
Loy Krathong Gan Laew
Koh Shern Nong Kaew
Ook Ma Ram Wong
Ram Wong Wan Loy Krathong
Ram Wong Wan Loy Krathong
Boon Ja Song Hai Rao Suk Jai
Boon Ja Song Hai Rao Suk Jai
November
full moon shine
Loy Krathong
Loy Krathong
And the water high
In the gold river and the Klong
Loy Loy Krathong
Loy Loy Krathong
Loy Krathong is here
And everybody full of cheer
We're together at the Klong
Each one with his Krathong
As we push away we pray,
We can see a better day
The New Year's Day
The International New Year Day has been adopted. On the first
of January, people offer food to monks at the temple or at a
particular site designated by government offices of private
organizations. In Bangkok, the Phramaane ground and the lawn
in front of the district offices are popular places.
The Traditional New Year Celebration This is also called "Trut"
celebration. Trut means "to be cut" or "to end". So this
simply indicates that a year has come to the end, according to
the lunar calendar adopted from the Indians. The ceremony
covers the last two days of the old year and the first day of
the new year. The ceremony began during the Sukhothai period
and lasted until the reign of King Rama V. Later, it was
combined with the Songkran festival. Trut is celebrated
separately only in some rural villages.
Like in most ceremonies, people make merit by offering food to
monks and going to listen to a sermon at the temple. The
purpose is to have a good start for a new period in life and
to preserve an old Thai tradition.
The "Sart" Festival "Sart"
is derived from an Indian word meaning autumn or the fall
season. It falls on the end of the tenth lunar month. In India
this is the time for the harvesting of grains and fruit and
thus a time to rejoice. Originally, this was a Brahministic
festival but now it is celebrated in the Buddhist wat, i.e.,
the main activity involves the making of merit to monks.
However, the tenth lunar month is
not harvesting time in Thailand. So farmers usually plant a
special type of glutinous rice which can be reaped at this
time to make "flat rice" of "khow mow", a main ingredient in
the preparation of "Krayasart", a type of dessert very similar
to granola bar with peanuts. There are also other types of
sweet made from rice. All these special delicacies for the
festival are to be offered first to monks for merit-making and
then enjoyed by the people.
Ceremonies organized by the government Ploughing
Ceremony
This ceremony is intended to demonstrate the significance of
the rice farming occupation as well as to boost the morale of
farmers all over the country. During the ceremony the Farming
Lord, or Phraya Raek Na, will plough a piece of land
designated on the Phramane Ground near the Grand Palace to
signal the beginning of the ploughing season. He will also
offer and assortment of food to the cows used in the ceremony.
The choice of food made serves as a basis for the forecast of
the amount of rainfalls and the prospect of the rice harvest.
The ceremony, performed now early in May of every year, is not
much different from the one performed in the old days.
It is only simplified. The origin
of the ceremony certainly is Brahminism. The Phraya Raek Na
at the present time is usually the Permanent Secretary of the
Ministry of Agriculture. Those who attend the ceremonies
include not only Thai and foreign dignitaries but also
farmers, who often try to collect the rice seeds sown on to
the field during the ceremony. They believe that these rice
seeds are sacred and will bring blessing to their fields if
they are mixed with the regular seeds they have themselves
prepared for the season.
Celebration of the Constitution
Day The
Constitution Day is the 10th of December, which is the
anniversary of the day King Rama VII granted the First
Constitution of Thailand to his people in 1932.
Royal ceremonies
These are ceremonies which are organized jointly by the
government and the Office of the Royal Household according to
tradition which has been passed on through generations.
Coronation Day
This falls on the 5th of May the anniversary of the
day His Majesty King Bhumibol ascended to the throne. Usually
His Majesty would make merit to monks in the Grand Palace in
honor of the deceased monarchs of the Chakri Dynasty.
His Majesty’s
Birthday Anniversary
This falls on the 5th of December. It is also
considered the Thai National Day
Her Majesty’s Birthday Anniversary
This falls on the 12th of August.
On these auspicious occasion, their Majesties the King and the
Queen would make merit according to the royal tradition.
The Thai people always join in the celebration by organizing
special events and performances to express their love and
gratitude to Their Majesties.
Festivals & Public Holidays (Overview)
1st
January
New Year's Day Celebrations for the start of the new year
10th
January
Children's Day On the second Saturday in January every year,
there is a special celebration for children. Many places
let children go in free or half price on this day.
16th
January
Teacher's Day On the 16th January every year, all of the
schools in Thailand are closed for the day as a
special tribute to the teachers.
11th
February
Makha Buchaa Day The full moon of the third lunar month marks the
occasion when 1250 of the Buddha's disciples came to hear
him preach. This day is a public holiday.
28th
February
Chinese New Year
2nd
April
HRH The Princess's
Birthday
6th
April
Chakri Day A public holiday, commemorating King Rama I who
was the first of the Chakri kings.
13th
14th
15th
April
Songkran Festival During April 13-15, everyone celebrates the
traditional Thai new year. In every home, Buddha images
are washed with rose scented water. People also pay
respects to their elders by pouring a little water over
their hands. Outside, people go a little wilder and
buckets of water are thrown over everything that moves.
1st
May
National Labor
Day
A holiday for
some factory and office workers.
5st
May
Coronation Day A public holiday to commemorate the coronation of
the king and queen in 1946.
11th
May
Ploughing Day An important ceremony to mark the official start
of the rice-planting season.
17th
May
Visakha Bucha Day The full moon of the sixth lunar month is the
most important date on the Buddhist religious calendar. It
celebrates the Buddha's birth, enlightenment and death.
Every year on this day, teachers from our school take part
in a candle-lit procession around the main chapel of a
local temple. They carry with them flowers, three incense
sticks and a lighted candle. They walk around the chapel
three times in a clock-wise direction. Afterwards they
listen to a sermon from a monk. This day is also a public
holiday.
19th
July
Khao Phansa Day Buddhist holiday
28th
July
HRH The Crown Prince's
Birthday
12th
August
HM The Queen's Birthday Celebrations for the Queen's birthday. This day
is also Mother's Day and a public holiday.
23th
October
Chulalongkorn Day A public holiday, on 23rd October,to commemorate
King Rama V who did a lot of important things for
Thailand. His many accomplishments include the abolition
of slavery, the construction of the railways, the
establishment of the post and telegraph services and the
creation of the ministerial system.
3rd
November
Loy Krathong The most picturesque of the Thai festivals is
held on the full-moon of the 12th lunar month. Little
candle-lit krathongs are launched onto the water as an
offering to Mother Water. People apologize for polluting
the water and promise to do better in the future.
5st
December
HM The King's Birthday Celebrations for the King's birthday. This day is
also Father's Day and a public holiday.
10th
December
Constitution Day A public holiday to commemorate the start of the
constitutional monarchy in1932.
31st
December
New Year's Eve Celebrations to welcome the start of the new
year.