The following are public holidays in Tuvalu.[1]
Date | English name | Tuvaluan name |
---|---|---|
1 January | New Year's Day | Tausaga Fou |
Second Monday in March | Commonwealth Day | |
moveable in autumn | Good Friday | |
moveable in autumn | Holy Saturday | |
moveable in autumn | Easter | |
moveable in autumn | Easter Monday | |
Second Monday in May | Gospel Day | Te Aso o te Tala Lei |
Second Saturday in June (can vary if appointed differently) |
King's Official Birthday | |
First Monday in August | National Children's Day | Aso Tamaliki |
1 October (public holiday continues 2 October) | Tuvalu Day | |
Second Monday in November | Heir to the Throne's Birthday | |
25 December | Christmas Day | Kilisimasi |
26 December | Boxing Day |
Also, the regions observe the following regional holidays:[2]
Date | Atoll/Island | Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
8 January | Nanumea | Te Po o Tefolaha | The day Nanumea embraced Christianity brought by the London Missionary Society through Samoan pastors.[3] |
11 February | Nukufetau | Te Aso o Tutasi | Honors the Tutasi school. |
16 February | Nui | Bogin te Ieka (Day of the Flood) | Commemorates the Tsunami that struck the island on that day in 1882.[4][5] |
15 April | Nanumaga | Aho o te Fakavae | |
23 April | Funafuti | Te Aso o te Paula (The day of the bombing)[6] | Commemorates the day during the Pacific War (World War II) when 10 to 20 people took refuge in the concrete walled, pandanus-thatched church from a Japanese bombing raid.[6] Corporal Fonnie Black Ladd, USMCR, persuaded them to get into dugouts, then a bomb struck the building shortly after.[7][8] |
moveable in May | Nukulaelae | Aso o te Tala Lei | Island-specific Gospel Day. |
17 September | Niutao | Te Aso o te Setema | |
21 October | Funafuti | Cyclone Day | Commemorates Cyclone Bebe's destruction of Funafuti in 1972.[9][10] |
25 November | Vaitupu | Te Aso Fiafia (Happy Day) | Commemorates 25 November 1887 which was the date on which the final instalment of a debt of $13,000 was repaid to H. M. Ruge and Company.[11] |
References
edit- ^ "Public Holidays Act". Pacific Islands Legal Information Institute. 2008. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ^ Lalua, Silafaga (3 January 2007). "Island special public holidays". tuvalu-news.tv. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
- ^ Te Po o Tefolaha
- ^ Sotaga Pape (1983). "Chapter 10 – Nui". In Laracy, Hugh (ed.). Tuvalu: A History. Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific and Government of Tuvalu. pp. 74–75.
- ^ "Nowhere to run. Tuvaluans consider their future after Tropical Cyclone Pam". Report from International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies. 17 April 2015. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
- ^ a b Latif, Justin (26 April 2024). "Te Aso o te Paula: Tuvalu community remember WWII bombing attack". Pacific Media Network. Retrieved 26 April 2024.
- ^ Ladd, Fonnie Black (2001). The Wholesale Rescue. Valley Farm Publications (January 1, 1986).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Melei Telavi, Tuvalu A History (1983) Ch. 18 War, U.S.P./Tuvalu, p. 140
- ^ Resture, Jane (17 May 2004). "Tuvalu and the hurricanes". Retrieved 23 April 2014.
- ^ "Funafuti natives celebrate Hurricane Bebe". tuvalu-news.tv. 23 October 2006. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
- ^ Kalaaki Laupepa (1983). "Chapter 11 – Vaitupu". In Laracy, Hugh (ed.). Tuvalu: A History. Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific and Government of Tuvalu. p. 82.