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Kataragama

Kataragama (Sri Lanka)

Practical information on Kataragama

  • Encounters with locals
  • Place or Religious Monument
  • Festivals
5 / 5 - 2 reviews
How to get there
6hrs by car from Colombo
When to go
In summer
Minimum stay
One day

Reviews of Kataragama

Anne Vergnaud Seasoned Traveller
19 written opinions

Kataragama: a holy town for the people of Sri Lanka.

My suggestion:
Visit here to watch a puja taking place.
My review

Though this destination is well-known to all the different kinds of Sri Lankan pilgrims, tourists are rare in Kataragama. Add it to your Sri Lanka itinerary.

Kataragama is a place of worship dedicated to a protector god who provides protection for just about anything: people even bring their car registration plates to be blessed here. I had the great fortune of coming here when the puja festivals were taking place, with me the only tourist present.

I watched parades of elephants and also observed the Sri Lankans presenting offerings of flowers and fruit at the feet of the statues and getting a coloured mark placed on their foreheads. I also watched them cracking open coconuts and burning the oil, taking part in parades, singing and playing music, and all in a mood of a joyful exuberance and accompanied by the smell of incense.

Offerings made for the Puja ceremony
Anne Vergnaud Seasoned Traveller
19 written opinions

Kataragama: a holy town for the people of Sri Lanka.

My suggestion:
Visit here to watch a puja taking place.
My review

Though this destination is well-known to all the different kinds of Sri Lankan pilgrims, tourists are rare in Kataragama. Add it to your Sri Lanka itinerary.

Kataragama is a place of worship dedicated to a protector god who provides protection for just about anything: people even bring their car registration plates to be blessed here. I had the great fortune of coming here when the puja festivals were taking place, with me the only tourist present.

I watched parades of elephants and also observed the Sri Lankans presenting offerings of flowers and fruit at the feet of the statues and getting a coloured mark placed on their foreheads. I also watched them cracking open coconuts and burning the oil, taking part in parades, singing and playing music, and all in a mood of a joyful exuberance and accompanied by the smell of incense.

Offerings made for the Puja ceremony