Materials
스리랑카
ICH Materials 67
Photos
(6)-
Sri Lanka_2
Fishermen on poles, Weligama, Sri Lanka, 1994
Sri Lanka -
Sri Lanka_3
Beach, Hikkaduwa, Sri Lanka, 1994
Sri Lanka -
Sri Lanka_1
Harvest festival, Ihala Aturaliya, Sri Lanka, 1994
Sri Lanka -
New Year Festival as Living Heritage_3
In mid-April every year, Sri Lankans celebrate the Sinhala and Hindu New Year with distinctive rituals that fuse Hindu and Buddhist elements. With the introduction of Buddhism in the third century BCE, traditional Hindu New Year rituals were reinterpreted. While historians and sociologists believe these rituals were closely related to sun worship because they coincided with ancient myths about the sun moving from one celestial house to another the major rituals today embody a sense of cultural heredity and tradition.
Sri Lanka -
New Year Festival as Living Heritage_2
In mid-April every year, Sri Lankans celebrate the Sinhala and Hindu New Year with distinctive rituals that fuse Hindu and Buddhist elements. With the introduction of Buddhism in the third century BCE, traditional Hindu New Year rituals were reinterpreted. While historians and sociologists believe these rituals were closely related to sun worship because they coincided with ancient myths about the sun moving from one celestial house to another the major rituals today embody a sense of cultural heredity and tradition.
Sri Lanka -
New Year Festival as Living Heritage_1
In mid-April every year, Sri Lankans celebrate the Sinhala and Hindu New Year with distinctive rituals that fuse Hindu and Buddhist elements. With the introduction of Buddhism in the third century BCE, traditional Hindu New Year rituals were reinterpreted. While historians and sociologists believe these rituals were closely related to sun worship because they coincided with ancient myths about the sun moving from one celestial house to another the major rituals today embody a sense of cultural heredity and tradition.
Sri Lanka