Christmas in Sri Lanka

- Advertisement -

Although Sri Lanka is a mostly Buddhist country (only 7% of people are Christians) Christmas is celebrated as a public holiday by everyone. Most Christians in Sri Lanka are Catholics. There has been influences from several different European countries. Sri Lanka (it was also called Ceylon) was ruled by the Portuguese from 1505 to 1650, the Dutch from 1658 to 1796 and the British from 1815 to 1948.

For Christians in Sri Lanka, the Christmas season starts on 1st December when people let off fire crackers at dawn!

The streets are decorated and the shopping centers have large Christmas Trees in them. Big companies have Christmas parties and large hotels have Christmas dinner dances.

The Christians go to Midnight Mass services all over the country. They also invite friends, both Christian and non-Christian to their homes for parties.

New Year is also widely celebrated with more fire crackers! There are also Midnight Mass services for New Year.

In Sri Lanka Santa is called Naththal Seeya.

In Sinhala, spoken in Sri Lanka, Merry Christmas is ‘Suba Naththalak Wewa’ (සුබ නත්තලක් වේවා)

Hot this week

Sri Lanka Imposes Tough New Penalties on Illegal Fishing as Tensions Over Indian Vessel Incursions Persist

(Commonwealth of India)—As frustration continues over repeated incursions by...

UK Sees First Rise in Clinical Trial Applications After Years of Decline

(Commonwealth_Europe) Despite years of concern about the UK's decline...

Hundreds of Plants Blooming in UK Winter: A Stark, Visible Signal of Climate Breakdown

Across the United Kingdom this winter, an astonishing number...

Corrected Data Shows Rapid Arctic Snow Loss as Improved Satellites Misled Climate Records

Over the years, advances in satellite technology made it...

India Automobile Sales 2025: SUVs, Commercial Vehicles and Tractors Lead Robust Year-End Surge

The calendar year 2025 witnessed the Indian automobile industry's...
- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -sitaramatravels.comsitaramatravels.com

Popular Categories

Commonwealth Union
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.