Festival hub
Buddhism has no single festival calendar – the tradition splits across three main streams (Theravada, Mahayana, and Vajrayana), each of which has historically anchored its observances to different cultural calendars. Theravada Buddhism, the dominant tradition in Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, and parts of Vietnam, sets its calendar by the Buddhist lunisolar calendar in which the year begins around mid-April. Mahayana Buddhism, the majority tradition in China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, and Taiwan, uses the Chinese lunar calendar (and in Japan, since 1873, the Gregorian calendar with traditional dates kept in some temples). Vajrayana Buddhism, dominant in Tibet, Bhutan, Mongolia, and parts of Nepal, uses the Tibetan calendar, a distinct lunisolar system whose new year (Losar) typically falls in February or March.
Despite the calendar variety, one festival is approximately universal: Vesak (also Buddha Purnima, Buddha Jayanti, Wesak, or Buddha Day), which commemorates the birth, enlightenment, and death (parinirvana) of Gautama Buddha and falls on the full moon of Vaisakha (the second Buddhist month, typically May). The 1950 World Fellowship of Buddhists conference in Colombo formalized Vesak as the most important shared festival across schools, and the United Nations recognized it as an international observance in 1999. In Mahayana traditions, Buddha's birth, enlightenment, and parinirvana are observed on three separate days: Hana Matsuri (Flower Festival, April 8) for the birth; Bodhi Day (December 8 in Japanese tradition, or the Chinese Laba Festival on the 8th day of the 12th lunar month) for the enlightenment; and Nirvana Day (February 15) for the parinirvana.
The Buddhist year is also shaped by Uposatha days (the four lunar quarters – new moon, first quarter, full moon, last quarter), when laypeople traditionally observe additional precepts and visit monasteries; by Vassa, the three-month rains retreat (roughly July through October), during which monks remain in monasteries; and by the Kathina ceremony at the end of Vassa, when laypeople offer robes and supplies. There are roughly 500 million Buddhists worldwide, with the largest concentrations in China (about half of the global total), Thailand, Japan, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Cambodia, South Korea, and Taiwan.
Most Buddhist festivals are anchored to lunar months, with the specific calendar varying by tradition. Theravada festivals follow the Theravada Buddhist calendar (closely related to the Hindu lunisolar calendar) – Vesak, Magha Puja, and Asalha Puja all fall on full moon days. Mahayana East Asian Buddhism follows the Chinese lunar calendar for most observances, though Japan moved to the Gregorian calendar in 1873 and now observes Bodhi Day on December 8 and Hana Matsuri on April 8 by civil date. Tibetan Vajrayana uses a distinct lunisolar calendar in which Losar typically falls in February or March, sometimes coinciding with Chinese New Year and sometimes a month later. Songkran and Theravada New Year are solar – tied to the sun's transit into Aries, which falls April 13–15.
Vesak is observed in different ways across Buddhist Asia. Sri Lankans hang lanterns (Vesak kuudu) and decorate streets with elaborate pandals; Thais visit temples for the Wian Tian candlelight procession; Indonesians gather at Borobudur for a sunrise observance and lantern release; Mahayana communities in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Malaysia bathe Buddha statues and free captive animals. Japan separates the three commemorations into Hana Matsuri (April 8), Bodhi Day (December 8), and Nirvana Day (February 15). Songkran in Thailand becomes a multi-day water-throwing festival; Cambodia's Choul Chnam Thmey and Laos' Pi Mai are similar new-year water festivals.
For comparable lunar-calendar observances, see the Chinese festival hub and the Hindu festival hub. For other major spring full-moon festivals, see Pesach in the Jewish festival hub and Easter in the Christian festival hub.
Why is Vesak on different dates in different countries? Because Theravada and Mahayana traditions use different lunar calendars, and some countries fix Vesak to a specific civil date while others use the actual full moon of Vaisakha.
Is Vesak a public holiday? Yes, in most Buddhist-majority countries – Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia – and recognized as an international observance by the United Nations.
What is the typical Vesak greeting? In Sinhalese, "Suba Vesak Mangalyak Wewa"; in Thai, "Sukhasanti Wisakha"; in English, simply "Happy Vesak" or "Happy Buddha Day."
What is Vassa? The three-month rains retreat – roughly mid-July to mid-October – during which Buddhist monks remain in their monasteries to study, meditate, and teach laypeople.
How are the three Mahayana commemorations of the Buddha different? Hana Matsuri marks the birth (April 8), Bodhi Day the enlightenment (December 8), and Nirvana Day the parinirvana (February 15) – split rather than combined as in Theravada Vesak.
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