This Monday, March 31 will mark my seventeenth consecutive Nyepi on Bali, and Ive photo documented each of the past 16 years except for two of them when the parades of Ogoh Ogoh were banned.
Nyepi is of course the Balinese New Year and Indonesia is only place on earth where New Years is a public holiday four times a year
Jan 1, Chinese New Year, Muslim New Year, and Balinese Nyepi. We can all thank past President Gus Dur for making the Chinese New Year part of our annual New Year Celebrations.
Nyepi day is the day of silence, inner reflection, meditation, and fasting. When I say silence, I am not kidding, as even the international airport, Ngurah Rai, is totally closed down...no flights in, or out. There are no cars or motorbikes on the road, and everyone is expected to be home, quiet, with lights off, TV off, no phones, no walking about...virtually a day of total silence. Even tourists are obligated to adhere to the severe restrictions of Nyepi.
Nyepi eve, called Tilem Kesanga, is a night of all out insanity, noise, and carrying on of all sorts led by the magnificent ogoh ogoh...those demonic creatures paraded up and down the streets of virtually all villages in Bali. Every village in Bali takes great pride and care in the making of their ogoh, ogoh. These are paraded, up and down the streets mounted on an elaborate bamboo frame, much like those used to carry sarcophagi during cremation ceremonies. At the end of the night, most are burned.
Even the smallest of villages may make as many as five ogoh, ogoh, and the kids make their own, the ogoh, ogoh anak anak. The Balinese are experts at handing down their traditions from generation to generation and thats just one of the many remarkable aspects of Bali.
The Balinese are wonderfully creative in explaining the why of what goes on here to their kids. Having three of my own with my Balinese wife, I have heard this explanation many times:
The idea of Nyepi Eve, with all the ogoh, ogoh, the noise, the bamboo bombs, the yelling, the fireworks, is to attract the attention of all the evil spirits in the world to Bali on the last day of the lunar year. When they arrive, just before dawn on Nyepi Day, we are all hiding and quiet. The evil spirits look around, and finding nothing of interest, they leave for another year. Only in Bali could a child's tale cause a major international airport to close for 24 hours!
You can read more and view several photos here:
http://www.homeinbali.com/forum/topic/6730-nyepi-lagi/
Simply click on the thumbnails to bring to full size, and please keep in mind that this link will not be available on Monday, March 31 in observance of Nyepi.
Selamat hari raya Nyepi tahun Baru Saka 1936!