Songkran Festival

The Songkran Festival is a holiday that starts on April 13th every year in Thailand and celebrates Thai New Year. It’s also not only one of the most famous holidays in all of Thailand but is well known all over the world. The festival starts on the 13th of April every year and lasts for two days–until the 14th or 15th of April.

This is a holiday that attracts tourists from every corner of the globe and is known for the big water festival that is a part of the celebrations known as the Songkran Water Festival. The name of this holiday, Songkran, comes from a Sanskrit word that means “astrological passing,” and it coincides with the rising of the astrological sign of Aries on the astrological charts. It also coincides with the New Years’ on other calendars of Southern and Southeast Asia.

The History Of Songkran

According to Buddhist tradition and scripture, Songkran started with the death of Kapila Brahma. This story starts with a wealthy man who was belittled by his drunken neighbor because he had no songs. The rich man was humiliated by these torments and decided to beseech the Moon and Sun gods to grant him a son of his own.

All of his prayers went unnoticed, however, but then one day he offered cooked rice to the tree god living in a banyan tree. After he did so, the tree god asked Indra to grant his wish. This child was named Thammabal and he proved to be quite a clever child indeed. This child knew bird language, taught people how to avoid the downfall of sin, and also learned three Vedas.

When Kapila Brahma learned about the cleverness of Thammabal, he wanted to test the child to see how clever he really was. The god offered him a chance to answer a riddle. Whoever answered the riddle first would wind the contest and the loser would have his head chopped off. The riddle was as follows: “Where hides the glory (Sri) of men in the morning, all during the day, and finally, in the evening?”

Thammabal thought about it for 6-days, but couldn’t seem to come up with a solution to the riddles. This is when he decided to lay underneath a sugar palm tree and overheard a conversation that was taking place between two pairs of eagles who were planning to dine on his corpse once he lost the best.

The female eagle asked of the male eagle whether he knew the riddle or not. The male eagle answered:  ” The Sri appears on the face in the morning, so people wash their face. At noon, the Sri appears on the chest, so people spray it with perfume. In the evening, the Sri goes to the feet, so people wash their feet in the evening.” The boy memorized this answer and gave it to Kapila Brahma the following day. This resulted in Kapila Brahma losing the best, so he called his seven daughters and told them they had to cut off his head.

When Kapila Brahma’s daughters showed up he told them that if his head fell to the earth, then it would cause a fire that would engulf the world. If his head was tossed into the air carelessly, then the life-giving rains would stop, and if his head was dropped into the sea, then the ocean would dry up. To avoid these disasters, he told his daughters that they had to place his head on an elevated phan. His head was then stored in the cave in Mount Kailash.

Ever since one of Kapila Brahma’s children and angels form a procession when the Sun enters Aries. One of his daughters takes the phan that has Kapila Brahma’s head and either sits, stands, reclines, or sleeps on the back of an animal. In the morning, she will stand on the back of the animal, at midday, she will sit, and at sunset, she will sit down.

Between the setting of the sun and midnight, she will lie down on her animal mount but still keeps her eyes open. After midnight, she’ll sleep. The procession lasts for 60-minutes around Mount Meru and the first day of this period is known as Maha Songkran. In 1989, the Thai Cabinet fixed Songkran between April 12th and April 14th.

Songkran Celebrations & Customs

Before the first day of this festival, known as Maha Songkran (usually shortened to just Songkran), Thai people prepare for the festivities by cleaning their homes. Once that’s done, they can begin with the holiday festivities.

One of the most beloved traditions of this holiday is for people to mix fragrance into the water and then use that water to anoint their Buddha statues. People also pour this water on the highest-ranking Buddhist monks. This is believed to bring the people who do it good luck.

In some parts of Thailand, a Buddha statue is paraded down the street, and all the people in attendance fling water at it. Another tradition is that all houses are cleaned out for the New Year. The Songkran Water Festival is one of the biggest parts of this holiday. At this festival, residents splash each other with water and engage in various good-natured “water fights.” During these fights, they use their hands, water guns, and buckets to splash each other with water.

Where is it celebrated?
Thailand (National holiday)
When is it?
This year (2024)
Next year (2025)
Last year (2023)