It will be a non-working day tomorrow in the entity of Republika Srpska (RS), the sixth since the start of this year.
According to the entity government’s decision, January 14 is a non-working day when the New Year is celebrated according to the Julian calendar.
The Ministry of Administration and Local Self-Government stated that the RS authorities, local self-government units, public enterprises, institutions and others that mark the New Year according to the Julian calendar will not work tomorrow.
Since the beginning of the year, non-working days in the RS were January 1 and 2, then January 6 and 7 and January 9.
In several communities and towns in the RS, the same as it was in previous years, celebrations will be organized to mark the New Year according to the Orthodox Church Calendar.
Orthodox believers will mark the New Year’s on the Julian calendar tonight. Many municipalities and towns in the Republika Srpska will organize celebrations. Orthodox believers will have the opportunity to enjoy concerts in Trebinje, Novi Grad, Gradiska, and on Jahorina Mountain.
In Banja Luka, a reception will be organized in the Temple of Christ the Savior. The New Year’s program will be held in front of the temple and will begin at 20:30 o’clock.
Exactly at midnight, a prayer for the Orthodox New Year is planned.
The Old New Year or the Orthodox New Year is an informal traditional holiday, celebrated as the start of the New Year by the Julian calendar. In the 20th and 21st centuries, the Old New Year falls on January 14 in the Gregorian calendar.
This traditional dating of the New Year is sometimes colloquially called “Orthodox” because it harks back to a time when governments in Russia and Eastern Europe used the Julian Calendar, which is still used by some jurisdictions of the Orthodox Church. The Orthodox Church’s liturgical year actually begins in September.