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Sinhala and Tamil New Year Festival -
Mid April
Sri Lankans celebrate their National New Year Aluth Avurudu in mid april
after the Harvest is done. The sun moving from the House of Pisces to
the Aries signals the dawning of the Sinhala and Tamil New Year. The New
Year begins at the time determined by the astrologers. Not only the
beginning of the new year but the conclusion of the old year is also
specified by the astrologers. And unlike the customary ending and beginning
of new year, there is a period of a few hours in between the conclusion of
the Old Year and the commencement of the New Year , which is called the
nonagathe (neutral period). During this time one is expected to keep off
from all types of work and engage solely in religious activities.
April is the month of reveal and revelry, the most intoxicating of the 12
months of the year, when Lanka and her people of the prepare to celebrate
new beginning in harmony with mother nature. It is the season of the
Avuruddha, the annual new year celebration by the Sinhala and Tamil people
of the island, a great national festival which has persisted in all its
traditional glory for no less than 2,000 years. Recognized officially and
observed countrywide as the National New Year, the celebrations take seven
days, varying only slightly from the age old venerable traditions which are
still observed to the letter by Sri Lankan's of all ages and social
background.
Perhaps one of the remaining authentic folk celebrations in the world, the
avuruddha stands as a monument to a people whose lives, to a large extent,
still revolve around the grace of mother nature and her most domineering
subject, the sun. The traditions new year celebrations in mid-April
originated as a harvest thanks giving, the high-point of the annual
production cycle. Interwoven closely with the first astrological phase of
the sun, it is timed to coincide with the first partakings of the season's
blessings, namely rice.Astronomically, it is celebrated on the day on which
the sun passes from Meena Rashiya (Pisces) to Mesha Rashiya (Aries), when
Sihalese and Tamils bid farewell to the year passed an usher in a brand new
one with prayers, meritorious deeds, traditional observations and seemingly
unending celebrations.
The new year falls on the 13th or 14th day of April, preceded by at least
two weeks of preparations, devoted largely to shopping and the making of a
hundred-and-one varieties of sweetmeats. Schools have their holidays during
the month of April, so children are often the willing helpers in and around
home, getting the household ready for the eventful day.
Over the years, Sri Lanka too has become commercial minded, this factor
being symbolized each year around this time with shops and sidewalks densely
packed with every imaginable item deemed necessary for having a jolly good
time. Cloths play an important part in the holiday buying-spree, tradition
carried through once again, for in the past, it was after the harvest that a
family received new clothes. It is still customary for each member of the
family to receive at least one suit of clothes to mark the occasion.
The Avuruddha is heralded by the constant lighting of fire crackers and the
unmistakable call of the koel bird, populary known as the koha which coos
only once a year-at this time. Pay some attention to the multitude of sweet
aromas flowing from country kitchens, which get crowded with clattering
damsels preparing an assortment of coconut oil-based sweetmeats, which are
high on the traditional holiday menu.
The day prior to the Sinhala and Tamil New year is one of anticipation. City
bus and train stations are crowded with people in a hurry to get to their
homes. Most people return to their ancestral homes, obviously with a longing
to celebrate the holidays in much the same way they did as children. Cooking
is completed, the hearth cleaned, fires extinguished, with fresh pots and
pans now awaiting the preparation of the first meal of the new year. The
ensuing period, astrologically prescribed is a time for complete relaxation.
All activities are suspended and a lull ensues, as a nation waits for the
dawning of the new year.
The new year approaches with a pre-determined time for pre -paring the
ceremonial first meal. Dressed in the year's lucky colour, facing the
auspicious, as the thunder of fire crackers, as housewives prepare a dish of
Kiribath made from the first batch of the year's harvest of rice. Kiribath
or milk rice , is Sri Lanka's quintessential festive food; an unsweetened
rice pudding cooked in cream of coconut and placed reverently at the head of
the table, right benith an equally revered coconut oil lamp.
The whole family will sit for the first meel, soon after transacting some
business, referred to traditionally as ganudenu, or the act of receiving and
giving. The time now is at its most auspicious, so it is believed that
whatever is initiated at this time will undoubtedly yield fruits. Frames
will plant a tree, students will read a book, etc.The clock-watching is now
over. The next day or two will mark the most joyous period of the year;
playing, eating, drinking, merry making and visiting relatives and loved
ones.
there will be very few shops and restaurants open during this time, with the
whole country seeped in celebration. The fun and frolic will continue till
it is time for anointing with herbal oil, the auspicious time which falls
roughly about three days after the Avuruddha. Hear, an adult member of the
family will prepare a very special herbal oil and anoint family members,
with blessings for a wonderful year to come. with it, Avurudhu comes to an
end and Sri Lanka gets back to its normal pace of life.
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