(12/04/2013)

Thai people across the country are celebrating the Songkran Festival,
the traditional Thai New Year, which is sometimes referred to as the
“Water Festival” among foreigners.
The festival is a time when Thais splash water over
friends and other people to give them a New Year blessing. It is also a
great time to experience distinctive cultural activities.
Songkran is an occasion for family reunions, as well, when all the
family members living far from their hometowns visit their families. It
is sometimes compared to the Indian Holy Festival, the Chinese Ching
Ming, and the Christian festival of Easter. So it is the time of love
and care within the family.
The Songkran holiday 2013 is set from 12 to 16 April, with the highlight
of the celebration between 13 and 15 April. During the festival, people
perform a religious ceremony in memory of their ancestors. Many of them
go to the temple and heap up sand into mounds in temple compounds.
Bringing sand to a temple is considered a great merit and is popularly
practiced in northern Thailand.
Other activities include a thorough house cleaning, sprinkling of Buddha
images with scented water, merit-making ceremonies, the release of
caged birds and fish, pilgrimages to holy shrines, parades, dancing, and
traditional Thai games.
On this occasion, young people pour lustral water onto the palms of
their elders as a gesture of respect and present them with gifts. The
first day of Songkran, 13 April, is also observed as the National Day
for Older Persons.
The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration is organizing Songkran
celebration between 12 and 15 April at the Lan Khon Mueang plaza in
front of the City Hall. From 4:00 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. every day during
the period, the celebration features cultural performances, such as the
khon masked drama,
hun lakhon lek, or marionettes, an exhibition on the Songkran festival, and a bazaar of products from 50 districts of Bangkok.
In Chiang Mai, a key area of celebration, various activities are
scheduled for 12-17 April at Chiang Mai Night Safari, with an emphasis
on northern traditions. An elephant show is among the activities, which
also include games and folk performances.
Thailand abounds in traditions and festivals. The event that may reflect
“Thainess” the most is Songkran. It is the country’s merriest festival
and is widely observed across the nation. The water-splashing, the
highlight of the event, has made the festival famous around the world.
It is done to ensure that there will be an abundance of rain for the
coming rice-planting season, as well.
The Government is stepping up a road safety campaign between 11 and 17
April 2013, the period of Songkran celebration, in order to reduce road
accidents. More than 10,000 hospitals, under the Ministry of Public
Health, were told to be alert in case of emergency. Controls on
drunk-driving and alcohol consumption have been emphasized, as part of
the campaign.