Showing posts with label #Cambodian Water Festival Boat Racing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Cambodian Water Festival Boat Racing. Show all posts

17/11/2024

Cambodian Water Festival - last day Boat Racing








16. Nov. 2024. 
Last day of the Cambodian Water Festival 
បុណ្យអុំទូក (Bŏn Om Tuk) 
This part is Boat Racing
- No music, No editing, just a natural scene of video.


Cambodian Water Festival


Bon Om Touk (Khmer: បុណ្យអុំទូក, Bŏn Om Tuk, lit. "Boat Paddling Festival"), also known as the Cambodian Water Festival, is celebrated in late October or early November, often corresponding with the lunar Mid-Autumn Festival. It marks the end of the monsoon season. The festivities are accompanied by dragon boat races, similar to those seen in the Lao Boun Suang Huea festival.



The festival is celebrated over the span of three days and commemorates the end of the rainy season,[1] as well as the change in flow of the Tonlé Sap River. The festival attracts several million people each year. 

Some activities that take place at the festival are boat races along the Sisowath Quay riverfront, fireworks, and evening concerts.



The festival's celebrations occur over the span of three days, with the Royal Boat Race taking place on the first day. 

After the boat race, large lanterns are released as part of the "Bondet Bratib" ceremony at 6:00 pm as representatives from national institutions pray for peace from Preah Mae Kongkea or the Goddess Ganga. Each ministry has its lantern adorned with colorful lights and sets off fireworks to celebrate the river's rich glory.



The goddess originates from Hindu mythology surrounding the Ganges river in India. There is no Ganga river in Khmer, but the goddess is viewed as the mother of seas, rivers, streams, creeks, and lakes. She protects and provides the water for human and animal husbandry as well as the flow of sediments and fish. 

Cambodia also has a sacred river, the Tonle Sap, and festival goers communicate their love and respect for nature to the goddess through prayers of gratitude for her compassion. Prayers give thanks for happiness and for fruitful fishing in daily life.



The second day of the festival is the day of Og Ambok and involves the worship of the Moon. It takes place at twelve minutes past midnight and involves a lantern-lighting ceremony with prayers to Preah Purthisat, who invented the legend of the Moon rabbit. 

The Og Ambok ceremony involves playing a group game where members must make each other laugh; whoever lasts the longest wins and decides the loser. The loser must then eat Ambok with bananas until the end of the day.



On the last day, a ribbon is cut, signifying the end of the boat race and the Water and Moon Festival.


Reference From Wikipedia