Thailand’s cultural triumph
By Veena Thooprkrajae
One way to measure the success of the recently concluded Songkran festival is through data: the millions of revelers and the billions in revenue. But perhaps a truer metric lies in the departing words of overseas visitors.
As they ascend the “saddest escalator in the world” toward the Suvarnabhumi Airport departure gates—clinging to some of the "best moments" of their lives—their online posts tell the story. “No festival in the world makes you laugh with strangers within five minutes,” one traveler noted. “Are you kidding me? You can throw water at the traffic police who smile back at you,” marveled another. Others shared more or less the same unique experiences.
These snapshots capture what makes the Thai water festival incomparable. For a few days in April, social barriers vanish. The poorest can soak the wealthiest. Stockbrokers swap bespoke suits for floral shirts to dance in the streets. Across the kingdom, uniforms are mothballed in favor of collective joy.
Yet, Songkran is more than a street party. It is a time of merit-making at temples and a mass migration of office workers returning to their provincial roots. Seniors wait expectantly for their families. Students pay homage to their teachers, pouring scented water over their hands in a gesture of deep-seated respect. Seasonal delicacies appear on every corner.
If Songkran were merely about throwing water, any city on earth could replicate it. But Thailand’s celebration involves elements that money cannot buy and spectacle cannot simulate.
It is in the blood. This culture is forged through years of childhood excitement, the quiet bonding of youth, and the refined pride of adulthood. The sanook nature of the Thai people is the vital ingredient, built upon cultural pillars passed down through generations.
These traditional facets—such as Song Nam Phra (cleansing Buddha statues) and Rod Nam Dum Hua (seeking blessings from elders)—earned the festival its place on UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2023. This honor follows previous inscriptions for Khon (2018), Thai massage (2019), and Nora (2021).
While neighbors like Myanmar and Cambodia celebrate similar traditions, the Thai Songkran has emerged as the region’s most prominent cultural export, seamlessly integrating Thailand's "soft power" into a global brand. This year, the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) projected the festival would generate over 30.35 billion baht in revenue—a 6% year-on-year increase—drawing over 500,000 international tourists and sparking nearly 6 million domestic trips.
Yet the number and UNESCO designations cannot tell the whole story. Thailand’s Songkran remains unrivaled precisely because Thais never sought to rival anyone. It is a beloved tradition performed for its own sake. It should stay that way.