Classroom lesson · Festival · 🇷🇸 Serbia

New Year in Serbia

Fireworks twice - on January 1st and again on January 14th

New Year fireworks over Belgrade with the Danube river in the foreground

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Serbia celebrates New Year twice. The first New Year is on the night of 31 December into 1 January, the same as most of the world. The second is on the night of 13 January into 14 January - the 'Serbian New Year', based on an older calendar. Both nights have fireworks and parties.

Tell me more

Why two New Years? Hundreds of years ago, most of the world used a calendar called the Julian calendar. Then most countries switched to a newer one - the Gregorian calendar - which moved dates by about two weeks. Some Serbian traditions kept the old calendar, so they have their own New Year almost two weeks after the modern one.

The 31 December celebration looks much like New Year's Eve elsewhere. Children eat late dinners with their families, watch the countdown on television, and run to the windows at midnight to see the fireworks. Streets fill with people in coats and woolly hats counting down together.

The Serbian New Year on 13 January is sometimes called 'the small New Year'. It is more relaxed than the big one. Friends meet in restaurants and squares, brass bands sometimes play, and people pour outside again at midnight for another show of fireworks. By that point, January feels like a long party.

Children sometimes write down their wishes for the year on 31 December - and then check them on 13 January to decide which ones still feel true. Two New Years means two chances to start over.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What might be good - or tricky - about having two New Years?
  2. 02If you had a 'second chance' New Year two weeks after the first, what would you want to change about your first wish?
  3. 03Different cultures use different calendars. Does that change what 'today' even means?
Try this

Classroom activity

Write down three wishes for the next two weeks - tiny ones, like 'I will finish my book' or 'I will say hello to one new person'. Put them in an envelope. Two weeks later, open and see what came true.