Public holidays in Ethiopia

The following are public holidays (የኢትዮጵያ:ብሔራዊ:በዓል) in Ethiopia. Many holidays follow the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.[1]

DateEnglish nameAmharic name (በአማርኛ)Remarks
January 7
(Leap year: January 6)
Ethiopian ChristmasGenna (ልደተ-ለእግዚእነ/ ገና)
January 19EpiphanyTimkat (ብርሐነ:ጥምቀት)
March 2Victory at Adwa Dayየዓድዋ:ድል:በዓልCommemorates Ethiopia's victory over Italy in 1896.
March 28Day of LamentHazen (የቀይ:ሽብር:መታሰቢያ:ቀን)Commemorates Red Terror (Also called candle festival). Always held two months before Derg Downfall Day.
moveable in springGood Friday Siklet (ዓርበ:ስቅለት)
moveable in springEaster Fasika (ብርሐነ-ትንሣኤ/ፋሲካ)
May 1International Workers' Day
May 5Ethiopian Patriots Victory Dayየአርበኞች ቀንCommemorates the 1941 entering of Emperor Haile Selassie into Addis Ababa, who returned to the throne after 5 years
May 28[2]Derg Downfall Dayደርግ:የወደቀበት:ቀንCommemorates the end of the Derg junta in 1991.
September 11
(Leap year: September 12)
New Year's DayEnkutatash (እንቁጣጣሽ/የዘመን:መለወጫ/አዲስ አመት)
September 27
(Leap year: September 28)
Finding of the True CrossMeskel (ብርሐነ-መስቀል)

In addition, the following Muslim holidays, which may take place at any time of the year, are observed as public holidays:

DateArabic nameAmharic name
moveableRamadan (ረመዳን)
moveableMawlid (መውሊድ)
moveableEid al-Fitr (ዒድ:አል:ፈጥር)
moveableEid al-Adha (ዒድ:አል:አድሐ)

References

  1. "Festivals & Holidays". www.ethioembassy.org.uk. Retrieved 30 September 2016.
  2. "Derg Downfall Day in Ethiopia". www.timeanddate.com. Retrieved 2016-11-03.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.