|   Major
          Holidays:  ChristmasNew Year's Day
 Hari Raya Puasa
 Thaipusam
 Chinese New Year
 Wesak Day
 Kaamatan Festival
 Gawai Festival
 Festival of San Pedro
 Flora Festival
 Malaysia Festival
 Mooncake Festival
 Deepavali
 | 
   Thaipusam (late January
          or early February)  The Entrance of the Batu Caves
 Thaipusam, a day of consecration to the
          Hindu deity, Lord Murugan, sometimes also called Lord Subramaniam.
          A feature of the festival is the carrying of a kavadi, a frame decorated
          with colored papers, tinsels, fresh flowers, and fruits as a form of
          penance. In Kuala Lumpur, Hindus carrying the kavadi make the annual
          pilgrimage to the Batu Caves in Selangor,
          where the kavadi is carried up the 272 steps to the entrance of the
          great cave and deposited at the feet of the deity.   On
          the eve of Thaipusam, the grounds of Batu Caves are transformed into
          a fairyland of lights. Kavadi-carrying begins after sunset. Devotees
          and penitents carry Kavadis, which are gaily decorated wooden or steel
          paraphernalia. Some have entered a trance, and pierced their cheeks,
          tongues, or foreheads. The next day they will return to their ordinary
          lives, cleansed. Open-door observers of the kavadi do not have to participate
          in this ritual unless they really, really want to. Apart from the mortification
          of flesh, other forms of devotion are practiced, such as honey or milk
          offerings.
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