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Sri Lanka

Festivals
Sri Lanka Tourism
80 Galle Road, Colombo 3, Sri Lanka
Tel: +94 11 243 7059/60
Fax: +94 11 244 0001
E-mail: info@srilankatourism.org

Sri Lanka
Website: www.srilankatourism.org
A land like no other

Excitement
This is one of Asia’s most
remarkable spectacles, held

All Year Long
but once a year. However,
thanks to its diversity of
religions, Sri Lanka offers at

The massive elephant, almost entirely covered with
richly embroidered cloth, leads the spectacular procession
least one festival each month
at a stately pace, proudly bearing an illuminated howdah
as Buddhists, Hindus,
containing a gilded casket. Within sits a replica
Christians and Muslims
of the sacred relic, the Tooth of Lord Buddha,
celebrate both religious and
a focal point of Kandy’s stunning ten-day
national occasions.
pageant, the Esala Perahera.

Every month, the day of the full moon or poya is a
The Hindu community also celebrates in
national holiday. Tiny oil lamps symbolising Lord
January, during the harvest festival of
Buddha’s enlightenment flicker as worshippers flock to
Thai Pongal. Homes are cleaned and decorated,
temples to pray and offer flowers.
farm animals bathed and sometimes adorned, and
special dishes prepared.
Buddhist temples throughout the country celebrate their
pageant or perahera at different times of the year, parading
The full moon of Navam (usually in February), is the
a sacred object or relic through the streets. The colour and
occasion of yet another glittering Buddhist perahera,
excitement are almost palpable as drummers, musicians,
held at the beautiful Gangaramaya temple beside a lake
dancers and acrobats join men bearing flaming torches
in the centre of Colombo.
and officials robed in sumptuous medieval costumes.
Also in February, National Day commemorates Sri
The full-moon festival of Duruthu, normally held in
Lanka’s gaining independence from British rule on
January, commemorates the visit of Lord Buddha to
4 February 1948, with military parades, pageants and
Kelaniya. The temple at Kelaniya, nine km from the
religious services.
heart of Colombo, commemorates the event with a grand
perahera.
The Sri Lankan New Year is celebrated by both Sinhalese
and Tamil communities between 12-14 April. To ensure
good fortune in the coming year, traditional rituals are
observed and various activities take place
at astrologically auspicious times. Houses are spring-
cleaned, new clothes worn and newly harvested rice
cooked in milk in new pots. Traditional games and
music are enjoyed, and passing visitors are invariably
invited to join in the celebrations.

The festival to mark the birth,
enlightenment and passing away of
Lord Buddha, is celebrated with unique
splendour on the full moon of Vesak
(usually in May).
The festival mingles devotion
and alms-giving with spectacular displays and
entertainment. For visitors, the week-long celebration
offers an exceptional opportunity to experience
Sri Lanka’s religious and cultural traditions, as the
holy occasion is celebrated with great joy and colour.
While the Kandy perahera at this time is
the most dramatic of all, the Esala full

Huge bamboo-framed paintings or pandals pulsate with
coloured lights, dramatically retelling the stories of Buddha’s
moon (in July or August), commemorating
life. Stages are set up in the villages and suburbs of every
the first sermon of Lord Buddha, sees
town, with choral groups, folk
celebrations in Buddhist temples
singers, drummers and clowns
throughout the island. Convenient temples for
entertaining the crowds.
visitors include several near Colombo (at Bellanwila,
Beautifully crafted lanterns
Kotte and Nawagamuwa), and at Hanguranketa,
known as koodus transform
Gadaladeniya, Embekke, Lankatilleke, Badulla and
private homes, commercial and public buildings, hotels
Mahiyangana in the Hill Country. The celebration at
and places of worship into a fairyland of lights and colours.
Mahiyangana, east of Kandy – where locks of Lord
Buddha’s hair are believed to be enshrined in a dagoba
When the full-moon festival of Poson falls in June, the
– is unique for the participation of the aboriginal
arrival of Buddhism in the 3rd century BC is celebrated
Veddah tribes people.
with great fervour, particularly in Mihintale, where the
King was converted by the monk Mahinda, and also
at the ancient capital of Anuradhapura.

One of the most remarkable festivals of the year takes
place during Esala at Kataragama in the remote southeast,
near Yala National Park. This ancient pilgrimage site
colourful three-week
is revered by Hindus (who come to honour the powerful
festival, also during
war god, Skanda), as well as by Buddhists, Muslims and
July/August. The
Christians. During the two-week festival, thousands of
shrine of the Hindu
Hindu devotees bear chariots, pierce their flesh with
god Vishnu at Dondra (the
hooks, walk on beds of red-hot coals and commit other
southernmost point of the country),
acts of penitence, generally in repayment of vows.
is the focal point of a spectacular procession with many
low-country folk dances, traditional rituals and a lively
Also during July or August, the Hindu festival of Vel
handicraft fair.
takes place in Colombo. A spectacular gilded chariot is
pulled between one of the capital’s most impressive
One of the loveliest Hindu festivals of the
Hindu temples in Sea Street, and temples at Bambalapitiya
year is Deepavali, the Festival of Light,
and at Kathiresan. All along the route, which is decorated
generally celebrated in November to
with banana trees and palm fronds, stalls sell sugar cane,
fruit, handicrafts and souvenirs.
celebrate the triumph of good over evil.
Thousands of oil lamps are lit to decorate temples, homes
Other Hindu festivals are held near Chilaw, on the
and gardens, while special foods (including sweetmeats),
northwest coast, at the Munneswaram temple and at
and new clothing are enjoyed.
the sea-side shrine of Udappuwa. Near Jaffna, an
important Hindu shrine at Nallur holds a remarkably

Muslim festivals involve prayers in mosques,
December marks the start of the pilgrimage
distribution of alms and family-oriented celebrations
season to Sri Pada or Adam’s Peak. Until
with special food. The end of the fasting month,
April, thousands of devout Buddhists,
Ramadan (or Ramazan), is celebrated roughly every
11 months. The Prophet Mohammed’s birth is
Hindus, Christians and Muslims scale this
celebrated with the Milad-un-Nabi, while the Haj
2,234 metre mountain, where a large
or pilgrimage to Mecca is also commemorated.
footprint at the summit is believed by
Buddhists to have been left by Lord
Buddha. For the Hindus, it is the footprint
of the god Shiva, while Muslims and
Christians believe it was left by Adam.

Christians celebrate Christmas with carol singing,
Christmas trees, decorations, cards and gifts, with
midnight services held on Christmas Eve. Christmas
Day and New Year’s Eve are celebrated in traditional
style at tourist hotels throughout the country.
For further information, please contact
Sri Lanka Tourist Board or click onto www.srilankatourism.org