Festival
 
Ethiopian Festival
 
 
 
 
 
Epiphany (Timket) - Timket, feast of Epiphany is the greatest festival of the year falling on the 19 January just two weeks after the Ethiopian Christmas. It is actually a three-day affair beginning on the eve of Timket with dramatic and colourful processions. The following morning the great day itself, Christ's baptism in the Jordan River by John the Baptist is commemorated. Since October and the end of the rains, the country has been drying up steadily. The sun blazes down from a clear blue sky and the festival of Timket always takes place in glorious weather.
 
 
Finding of the True Cross (Meskal) - Meskal has been celebrated in the country for over 1600 years. The word actually means "cross" and the feast commemorates the discovery of the cross upon which Jesus was crucified by the Empress Helena, the mother of Constantine the Great. The original event took place on 19 March 326 AD. but the feast is now celebrated on 27 September. Many of the rites observed throughout the festival are said to be directly connected to the legend of Empress Helena. On the eve of Meskal, tall branches are tied together ... Read more
 
 
 
 
Ethiopian New Year (Enkutatash) - Ethiopia still retains the Julian calendar, in which the year is divided into 12 months of 30 days each and a 13th month of 5 days or 6 days in leap year. The Ethiopian calendar is 8 years behind the Gregorian calendar from January to September and 7 years behind between September 11 and January 8.

Enkutatash means the "gift of jewels". When the famous Queen of Sheba returned from her expensive jaunt to visit King Solomon in Jerusalem, her chiefs welcomed her bolts by replenishing her treasury with inku or jewels. The spring festival has been celebrated since this early times and as the rains come to their abrupt end, dancing and singing can be heard at every village in the green countryside. Enkutatash is not exclusively a religious holiday. Today's Enkutatash is also the season for exchanging formal new year greetings and cards among the urban sophisticated - in lieu or the traditional bouquet of flowers.
 
 
Ethiopian Christmas (Genna) - Christmas, called Lidet, is not the primary religious and secular festival that it has become in Western countries. Falling on 7 January, it is celebrated seriously by churches service that goes on throughout the night, with people moving from one church to another. Traditionally, young men played a game similar to hockey, called genna , on this day, and now Christmas has also come to be known by that name.
 
 
Eid Al-fatir ( Breaking of Ramadan Fasting)Muslims in Addis Ababa showed at the city stadium early in the morning to celebrate the day through prayers.Ethiopian Islamic Affairs Supreme Council President Sheik Mohammed Amin Jemal, on the occasion called on the Muslim community to continue the kindness they showed during the fasting month throughout the year, emphasizing the need to support each other.Kindness to one another and supporting the needy are not supposed to be limited to the month of Ramadan, the President added, they need to be ... Read more