





Every religion or culture all over the world has their own way to define and celebrate their new year. For example, the Chinese have the Imlek year and to celebrate it, have, as they called it in their own language, "Gong Xi Fat Choy". The Moslem societies have their Muharam year, and any of the people over the world using the Gregorian calendar, celebrate the New Year on January 1st.
The same thing also occurs in Bali, however the Balinese                        use many different calendar systems. They have adopted the                        Gregorian calendar for business and government purposes.                        But for the endless procession of holy days, temple anniversaries,                        celebrations, sacred dances, building houses, wedding ceremonies,                        death and cremation processes and other activities that                        define Balinese life, they have two calendar systems. The                        first is the Pawukon (from the word Wuku which means week)                        and Sasih (which is means month). Wuku consists of 30 items                        starting from Sinta, the first Wuku and end up with the                        Watugunung the last one. The Pawukon, a 210-day ritual calendar                        brought over from Java in the 14th century, is a complex                        cycle of numerological conjunctions that provides the basic                        schedule for ritual activities on Bali. Sasih, a parallel                        system of Indian origin, is a twelve month lunar calendar                        that starts with the vernal equinox and is equally important                        in determining when to pay respect to the Gods.
Westerners open the New Year in revelry, however, in contrast,                        the Balinese open their New Year in silence. This is called                        Nyepi Day, the Balinese day of Silence, which falls on the                        day following the dark moon of the spring equinox, and opens                        a new year of the Saka Hindu era which began in 78 A.D.
Nyepi is a day to make and keep the balance of nature.                        It is based on the story of when King Kaniska I of India                        was chosen in 78 A.D. The King was famous for his wisdom                        and tolerance for the Hinduism and Buddhism societies. In                        that age, Aji Saka did Dharma Yatra (the missionary tour                        to promote and spread Hinduism) to Indonesia and introduce                        the Saka year.
The lead upto Nyepi day is as follows:
- Melasti or Mekiyis or Melis (three days before Nyepi)
Melasti is meant to clean the pratima or arca or pralingga (statue), with symbols that help to concentrate the mind in order to become closer to God. The ceremony is aimed to clean all nature and its content, and also to take the Amerta (the source for eternal life) from the ocean or other water resources (ie lake, river, etc). Three days before Nyepi, all the effigies of the Gods from all the village temples are taken to the river in long and colourful ceremonies. There, they have are bathed by the Neptune of the Balinese Lord, the God Baruna, before being taken back home to their shrines. - Tawur Kesanga (the day before Nyepi)
Exactly one day before Nyepi, all villages in Bali hold a large exorcism ceremony at the main village cross road, the meeting place of demons. They usually make Ogoh-ogoh (the fantastic monsters or evil spirits or the Butha Kala made of bamboo) for carnival purposes. The Ogoh-ogoh monsters symbolize the evil spirits surrounding our environment which have to be got rid of from our lives . The carnivals themselves are held all over Bali following sunset. Bleganjur, a Balinese gamelan music accompanies the procession. Some are giants taken from classical Balinese lore. All have fangs, bulging eyes and scary hair and are illuminated by torches.The procession is usually organised by the Seka Teruna, the youth organisation of Banjar. When Ogoh-ogoh is being played by the Seka Teruna, everyone enjoys the carnival. In order to make a harmonic relation between human being and God, human and human, and human and their environments, Tawur Kesanga is performed in every level of society, from the people's house. In the evening, the Hindus celebrating Ngerupuk, start making noises and light burning torches and set fire to the Ogoh-ogoh in order to get the Bhuta Kala, evil spirits, out of our lives. - Nyepi
On Nyepi day itself, every street is quiet - there are nobody doing their normal daily activities. There is usually Pecalangs (traditional Balinese security man) who controls and checks for street security. Pecalang wear a black uniform and a Udeng or Destar (a Balinese traditional "hat" that is usually used in ceremony). The Pecalangs main task is not only to control the security of the street but also to stop any activities that disturb Nyepi. No traffic is allowed, not only cars but also people, who have to stay in their own houses. Light is kept to a minimum or not at all, the radio or TV is turned down and, of course, no one works. Even love making, this ultimate activity of all leisure times, is not supposed to take place, nor even attempted. The whole day is simply filled with the barking of a few dogs, the shrill of insect and is a simple long quiet day in the calendar of this otherwise hectic island. On Nyepi the world expected to be clean and everything starts anew, with Man showing his symbolic control over himself and the "force" of the World, hence the mandatory religious control. - Ngembak Geni (the day after Nyepi)
Ngembak is the day when Catur Berata Penyepian is over and Hindus societies usually visit to forgive each other and doing the Dharma Canthi. Dharma Canthi are activities of reading Sloka, Kekidung, Kekawin, etc.(ancient scripts containing songs and lyrics). 
From the religious and philosophy point of view,  Nyepi                        is meant to be a day of self introspection to  decide on                        values, eg humanity, love, patience, kindness,  etc., that                        should kept forever. Balinese Hindus have many  kind of celebrations                        (some sacred days) but Nyepi is, perhaps the most  important                        of the island's religious days and the  prohibitions are                        taken seriously, particularly in villages outside  of Bali's                        southern tourist belt. Hotels are exempt from  Nyepi's rigorous                        practices but streets outside will be closed to  both pedestrians                        and vehicles (except for airport shuttles or  emergency vehicles)                        and village wardens (Pecalang) will be posted to  keep people                        off the beach. So wherever you happen to be  staying on Nyepi Day in Bali, this will be a good day to spend indoors.  Indeed                        Nyepi day has made Bali a unique island.
Nyepi is a religious event. Bali is a Hindu society, one that  believes         in the karmapala principle, according to which the  dynamics of life,         and of Man’s individual fate, is set in motion  by ‘action’.         Man is in the midst of a Samsara cycle of  incarnations, each of which         is determined by the quality of his  actions (karma) in his existence.  His ‘ideal’ is         thus to put  the system to rest, to control one’s actions, and thus         to subdue  one’s inner demons. Only in such a way can Man hope to         achieve  ‘deliverance’ from his cycles of life (moksa) and         eventually  merge with the Oneness of the Void, the Ultimate Silence of          Sunya.
The Day of Silence is a symbolic replay of these philosophical  principles.         At the beginning of the year, the world is ‘clean’.  It has         been cleansed in the previous days. All the effigies of  the gods from         all the village temples have been taken to the sea  or to the river in         long and colourful ceremonies. There they  have been bathed by the Neptunus         of Balinese lore, the god  Baruna, before being taken back to residence         in their shrines of  origin. On the eve of Nyepi all villages also         hold a large  ceremony of exorcism at the main village crossroad, by lore         the  meeting place of the demons.
There at the crossroads a Siwa priest addresses the gods, a Buddha  priest,         the middle world and a Sengguhu priest the netherworld.  At night the         demons of the Bali world are let loose on the roads  in a carnival of         fantastically crafted monsters - the  Ogoh-Ogohs.
Thus,  on the day of Silence, the world is clean and everything starts          anew, Man showing his symbolic control over himself and the ‘force’ of          the world.  Hence the mandatory religious prohibitions of mati          lelangon (no pleasure), mati lelungan (no traffic), mati geni (no  fire         or light) and mati pekaryan meaning that nobody may  undertake any work,         even Ngurah Rai airport remains closed for  business for one day of the         year.
There is more than mere religion, though, to Nyepi. Twenty years ago,          there was still fun to it. Traffic was discouraged, but there  were almost         no cars anyway, and people would walk freely around,  visit friends and         the like. But now, Nyepi has become a  demonstration of identity. Faced         with urbanization, large-scale  migration of non-Balinese to the island         and a withering of its  agrarian basis, not to mention the millions of         tourists visiting  the island, the Balinese use Nyepi to remind all those         visiting  guests of who exactly is ruling the land.
And they do it so gently, as with almost everything Balinese, in the          most peaceful manner. Think of the Balinese demons. Which other  people         in the world take its demons in the streets in a  non-political carnival,         as the Balinese do in the Ngrupuk  cavalcade of the night preceding Nyepi?
This cavalcade of demons is as relaxed as Nyepi proper is serious.  The         parade is held all over Bali, but the most fantastic one is  undoubtedly         that of Denpasar. There all the banjar (ruling  village heads) neighborhood         participants and hundreds of youth  associations make their own Ogoh-Ogoh         monsters. Banjar  neighborhoods and youth associations, who raise a special         ‘tax’  for         the purchase of the needed glue, bamboo and cowhide, make  the Ogoh-Ogoh.         Some work at it for weeks on end and spend  millions of Rupiah on their         creations, hoping to have the most  beautiful effigy of the village or         of the entire neighborhood.
Some are giants from the classical Balinese lore, while others are  guitarists,         bikers or even AIDS microbes. All with fangs,  bulging eyes and scary         hair. Thus, when they all come out at  sunset, illuminated by torches         and with the accompaniment of the  most demonic gamelan music (bleganjur)         of the Balinese  repertoire, Denpasar becomes another, gentler Rio Den         Janeiro.  Heading for Gaja Mada street and the Puputan square, they surge          suddenly by the hundreds, more ‘horrible’ the ones than the          others, each carried on the shoulder of four to thirty youths, jerking          this way or that way so as to give the impression of a dance, or  suddenly         turning in a circle, much to the fascination of the  spectators.
This         is not a small procession, it lasts for three to four  hours, as if Bali         has an inexhaustible pool of demons. All the  Ogoh-Ogohs eventually head         for the Puputan square, where they  are burned. The world is then cleansed         and ready for the day of  Silence, a day without demons.
Today’s Ngrupuk festival has lost some of its symbolic religious          meaning. Youth see it as an occasion for merriment and creativity,  travel         agents as a business opportunity, Banjars and youth  associations as a         means to assert their ’superiority’. Fights  sometimes erupt         with politics never far beneath the surface. For  this reason the present         tendency is toward the control of the  Ngrupuk festival and its demons.
Let’s us hope, though, that the Balinese demons will always remain          as gentle as they have throughout the centuries and that the world  at         large can be inspired by Nyepi, a very sacred and  inspirational day of         peace.





















































