Chattanooga Times Free Press

Thai New Year is celebrated with buckets, water guns

- BY ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL AND JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHA­I

It’s water festival time in Thailand where many are marking the country’s traditiona­l New Year, splashing each other with colorful water guns and buckets in an often raucous celebratio­n that draws thousands of people, even as this year the Southeast Asian nation marks record-high temperatur­es causing concern.

The festival, known as Songkran in Thailand, is a three-day shindig that starts Saturday and informally extends for a whole week, allowing people to travel for family celebratio­ns. The holiday is also celebrated under different names in neighborin­g Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos, which like Thailand have population­s that are predominan­tly Theravada Buddhist.

Songkran is immensely popular — predicted this year to attract more than 500,000 foreign tourists and generate more than $655 million in revenue, according to the state tourism agency. Past Thai government­s have been reluctant to call for dialing down the fun even during crises such as droughts and the pandemic

Though the festival originated as a way to pray for a rainy season that helped crops and included activities such as cleansing images of the Buddha and washing the hands and feet of elders, Songkran is now often associated with public drunkennes­s, sexual assault in the guise of merrymakin­g, and a spike in traffic fatalities, noticeable to the point that the extended holiday has been dubbed the “seven dangerous days.”

The festival usually falls at the hottest time of the year when temperatur­es can creep above 104 Fahrenheit.

But this year, the unusual heat wave, with expected record temperatur­es for the next few months, has triggered apprehensi­on. The United Nations Children’s Fund warned Thursday the sweltering weather could put millions of children’s lives at risk, asking caregivers to take extra precaution­s.

 ?? AP PHOTO/WASON WANICHAKOR­N ?? A man is splashed Saturday during the Songkran water festival to celebrate the Thai New Year in Prachinbur­i Province, Thailand.
AP PHOTO/WASON WANICHAKOR­N A man is splashed Saturday during the Songkran water festival to celebrate the Thai New Year in Prachinbur­i Province, Thailand.

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