Tuesday, 13 April 2010

CAMBODIA CELEBRATES KHMER TRADITIONAL NEW YEAR FROM WEDNESDAY

http://news.brunei.fm/
via CAAI News Media

Apr 12th, 2010

PHNOM PENH, April 12 (NNN-AKP) — The Cambodian people will celebrate this week from April 14 to 16 their traditional New Year.

Cambodia’s traditional New Year, “Chaul Chhnam Thmei” generally falls in around mid April or the Chet, the fifth month of the Cambodian lunar calendar during which peasants are relieved of their farm work after the dry-season rice harvest.

Three days before new year’s eve, houses and pagodas are decorated with flowers, fresh, plastic or paper, with multiform lamps, candles, colored papers, incense sticks and small paddy or rice mounds (formerly built of sand as a symbol of good harvest) which later will be carried to pagodas as an offering to monks.

On New Year eve an exorcist rite is held to pray for the happiness and prosperity in the coming year. Everything is well arranged in advance in each family so that people can be free from kitchen work during the festive days.

During the New Year festival which lasts for three days, Cambodians especially the aged, go to pagodas, where usually traditional music is played by an orchestra called “Pinpeat”, to make offerings to monks and pray for the souls of their ancestors.

Young people are the most to enjoy the New Year festival. They dance day and night the Roam Vong (the most popular dance in Cambodia), or join in different games such as “Chol Chhoung” (knotted scarf throwing-participants group, themselves in two-one male and one female-members of each group, standing in a line take turn to throw the knotted scarf to the other side.

Those who fail to catch the scarf have to sing a song, “Angkunh” (nut-throwing similar to the billiard game but on the ground instead of the table).

Nowadays, several traditional games such as gushing colored water at passer-by as a wish for luck, or bamboo canoe race, etc. are no longer seen in the country excluding few northwestern areas such as Siem Reap, Battambang, but other entertainments such as artistic performances, film shows, circus, etc.

In the country-side, long-handle guitar singers are often invited to sing in praise of legendary or real heroes or heroines, or of revolutionary exploits. People would gather either in pagodas to worship, or in public parks to contemplate the natural beauty.

In urban centers, people, in their Sunday best, stroll around public gardens, and in parks, visit splendid sites and historical monuments or see expositions.

In the past three or four decades, Cambodian, urban people and countrymen alike, preferred picnicking or visiting ancient temples, including Angkor Wat, during the New Year holidays.

Meanwhile, the Royal Family has given donation to some 504 poor families from Samaki Meanchey and Kampong Tralach districts of Kampong Chhnang province.

The donation was given by Queen-Mother Norodom Monineath Sihanouk, accompanied by Cambodian Red Cross President Mrs. Bun Rany Hun Sen, in a ceremony held at Kampong Tralach.

On the occasion, Queen-Mother conveyed best wishes from King Norodom Sihamoni and King-Father Norodom Sihanouk to the people. She also praised the CRC president for her attention to the poor and her cleverness in mobilizing humanitarian force among the public.

Each of the 504 families received rice, noodle, can fish, clothes, mosquito net, blanket, mineral water and a certain amount of money. — NNN-AKP

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