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Where it's at
Sri Lanka has a large amount of Buddhist, Hindu, Christian
and Muslim festivals and around 26 public holidays a year.
The Kandy Esala Perahera is the biggest and most important
festival in the country. During the month of Esala
(July/August) they have 10 days of torchbearers, whip-crackers,
dancers, drummers and hundreds of elephants dressed up in
honour of Buddha's 'tooth relic'. All parade around the city
for ten nights, the last night is the biggest.
History
The point of this Perahera (meaning religious pageantry) is
to call other Sri Lankan Buddhists to come and pay homage
to the 'tooth relic' which is supposedly one of Lord Buddha's
teeth that was plucked from his ashes by a monk when he was
cremated in 583 BC. The Buddha died in northern India but
the area that the tooth was found became war torn around 301
AD and was given to Sri Lanka for safe keeping. As the capital
of the country moved so did the tooth, finally coming to Kandy
in 1592 where they have been celebrating this festival ever
since.
In 1998 the Tamil tigers set off a bomb that destroyed part
of the temple, which is still being restored. Since then security
has been tight at the festival, together with the fact that
it is one of the most venerated places of worship in the Buddhist
world.
What happens at the festival
The area the tooth is kept in is called the Dalada Maligawa.
Before the procession begins the dancers and elephant handlers
congregate in the temple grounds and finish getting ready.
Each night the chief elephant called the Maligawa Tusker
will carry a replica of the tooth relic from here although
the tooth itself remains at the temple. Each night at the
festival more and more elephants take part. There are more
and more dancers, more and more torchbearers and more and
more people. The casket is carried on the very last elephant
as it is paraded around for the entire city to see and takes
three to four hours for the whole procession. The celebration
lasts until its snaking path has moved full circle returns
back to the temple where it started.
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