LAOS celebrate several annual festivals called " Boun" particularly enjoyable and beautiful aspects of the traditional Lao lifestyle . Most festivals are connected with religion and the yearly rice farming cycle; while the timing of the festivals is calculated according to the Buddhist lunar calendar.
14TH – 16TH APRIL LAO NEW YEAR( BOUN PI MAI LAO)
EVENTS & FESTIVALS IN XIENG KHOUANG
KUD CHIN & TET VIET OR ( CHINESE & VIETNAMESE NEW
YEAR)
JANAURY –FEBRUARY
CHINESE AND VIETNAMESE LUNAR NEW YEAR is celebrated with
parties , fireworks and merit making at temples .Chinese and Vietnamese
businesses usually close for 3 days.
During the week of 14th -16th in
APRIL, the whole country celebrates, Buddha images are cleansed with sacred
water and in the temples , offerings of fruit
and flowers are made. People take to the streets splashing water on one
another and having parties everywhere . In Xieng Khouang, boat races take place
at the Supanouvong Lake some years. Be advised that during Pi Mai Lao most
businesses and government offices are closed.
28th APRIL – 20TH MAY ROCKET FESTIVAL
( BOUN BANG FAI)
Boun Bang Fai is a rainmaking and fertility festival that
takes place just before the rainy season. Villagers make rockets from bamboo
and homemade gunpowder and parade their colourful rockets noisily around the
village before they are shot into the sky to “ fertilize” the clouds and bring
rain, which in turn , feeds the rivers and fields.
22nd JULY BUDDHIST LENT ( BOUN KHAO PANSA)
This festival, held on the full moon , marks the beginning
of Buddhist lent, a 3 month period where monks are required to stay within
their temple to pray and meditate. Lao men are traditionally ordained as monks
during this time.
4th SEPTEMBER BOUN KHAO PADAP DIN
Special offerings are made to the deceased on the new moon
of the 9th lunar month; this ceremony is an offering of the
Ancestors’ Spirits . It is a tradition that at this time of the year those
spirits are believed to have been released from the “ plain of hell” to receive
offerings.
19th OCTOBER END OF BUDDHIST LENT ( BOUN ORK
PANSA)
Held on the full moon, this festival celebrates the end of
Buddhist lent. In the evening small banana leaf boats called heua fai are
launched onto the river and lake; they are filled with colourful incense,
flowers a, candles and a small amount of money to bring luck and prosperity.
25th DECEMBER -15TH JANUARY HMONG NEW YEAR ( BOUN KINCHIENG)
Hmong New Year, Xieng , Khounag’s most colourful festival
attract crowds of people from around the province, as well as Hmong from
overseas. The festival is celebrated in December , starting from the 15th
day of the ascending moon to give thanks to ancestors and spirits at the end of
the annual agricultural cycle. Traditionally it lasts 10 days, bringing people
together from many villages and it is here that young people typically find a
husband and a wife. The celebrations involve colourful displays of traditional
Hmong instruments such as the teun –flute , the Hmong Khaen and leaf blowing.
Other festivities include the Makkhon ( cotton ball ) throwing ceremony as part
of a charming courting ritual, along with crossbow competitions and traditional
games such as bull fighting and top spinning.
Khmu New Year is celebrated within the Khmu communities in
late December following the annual rice harvest.
THE BACI CEREMONY
Spiritualism and ritualistic practices are important to most
Lao people. The Baci is an ancient pre Buddhist ritual traditionally conducted
by Tai speakers. The Baci is the most popular Lao traditional ceremony
celebrated at special events, whether a marriage, a homecoming, a welcome, a
birth or even to help cure sickness. It involves the ritualistic tying of
cotton threads to ensure blessings of the spirits on specific persons, activities,
or places. It is an important gesture of reconciliation and is believed to
restore the natural order of things.