Thai Water Festival Songkran

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Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple
Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple, Georgetown, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia

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Details

Thai Water Festival Songkran will be organized at Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple (Lorong Burma, Pulau Tikus) on 13rd April 2016 - 15th April 2016 (Wednesday - Friday).

* For more information, please visit this website http://www.malaysia.travel/en/my/events/2016/4/thai-water-festival-songkran

Songkran is a traditional Thai festival that is also celebrated in Penang. Devotees wash away bad luck by splashing water on each other.

Location

Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple
Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple, Georgetown, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia

Penang Thai Community
Penang Island has traditionally been called Koh Maak (or “Number One Island”) by the Thais, not surprising given that Penang was at one time part of a Siamese vassal state together with Kedah which was also known as Saiburi. In a letter to the Government of India in Bengal in 1793 (seven years after the establishment of Penang as an East India Company settlement), Captain Francis Light described the main communities in Penang and noted the presence of 100 Burmese and Thais.
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http://t2u.asia/e/5210 

Thai Water Festival Songkran

Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple
Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple, Georgetown, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia
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Event Expired
Thai Water Festival Songkran will be organized at Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple (Lorong Burma, Pulau Tikus) on 13rd April 2016 - 15th April 2016 (Wednesday - Friday).

* For more information, please visit this website http://www.malaysia.travel/en/my/events/2016/4/thai-water-festival-songkran

Songkran is a traditional Thai festival that is also celebrated in Penang. Devotees wash away bad luck by splashing water on each other.

Location

Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple
Dhammikarama Burmese Buddhist Temple, Georgetown, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia
 
Penang Thai Community
Penang Island has traditionally been called Koh Maak (or “Number One Island”) by the Thais, not surprising given that Penang was at one time part of a Siamese vassal state together with Kedah which was also known as Saiburi. In a letter to the Government of India in Bengal in 1793 (seven years after the establishment of Penang as an East India Company settlement), Captain Francis Light described the main communities in Penang and noted the presence of 100 Burmese and Thais.
Event Links
http://t2u.asia/e/5210 

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