Children’s Day

holiday
print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Top Questions

What is the purpose of Children’s Day celebrations?

When do most countries celebrate Children’s Day?

Why is Children’s Day celebrated in India on November 14?

What is the significance of November 20 for Children’s Day?

How is Children’s Day observed in Japan?

Children’s Day, any of the various holidays in honor of children that are celebrated on different dates in countries throughout the world. In general, Children’s Day festivities promote children’s human rights and welfare, recognize children’s contributions to society, and celebrate the joys of childhood. These holidays often emphasize the importance of educating children and of protecting them from harm. A significant proportion of countries celebrate the holiday in early June or mid- to late November. Countries have various local traditions regarding special food, dress, and activities on Children’s Day.

International and World Children’s Days

Some countries celebrate Children’s Day on June 1, particularly countries that were previously part of or affiliated with the Soviet Union. The June 1 date originated at the 1925 World Conference for the Well-Being of Children held in Geneva. The conference passed a resolution to celebrate an International Children’s Day on June 1. Delegates at the Women’s International Democratic Federation meeting in Moscow in 1949 made a similar decision to establish such a holiday on June 1.

In 1954 the United Nations (UN) established Universal Children’s Day with the purpose of improving children’s welfare. The UN urged all countries to celebrate children and promote their well-being on this holiday, with traditions and activities of their own choosing. The holiday was renamed as World Children’s Day and established as November 20 in 1959. That date coincided with the UN General Assembly’s adoption of the Declaration of the Rights of the Child, which defines the human rights of children. On World Children’s Day in 1989 the UN General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child. This document, intended to protect the human rights of children, has been ratified by every country in the world except, as of 2025, the United States.

In China and Russia

China and Russia, along with many other communist and post-communist countries, celebrate Children’s Day on June 1, following the decision at the 1949 Women’s International Democratic Federation meeting in Moscow. In Russia the holiday is observed with games, readings, classes, and visits to cultural institutions, such as museums and zoos. In China parents and teachers give children gifts and treats, including toys, snacks, and money in red envelopes, called hongbao, which are also given to children at other Chinese holidays, such as Chinese New Year. The holiday is celebrated with educational activities, sports tournaments, field days, and special performances such as talent shows.

In India

Children’s Day, or Bal Diwas, is celebrated on November 14 in India. This date honors the birth anniversary of Jawaharlal Nehru, a leader of the Indian Independence Movement and India’s first prime minister. Nehru was fond of children, who called him Chacha (“Uncle”) Nehru. In December 1949 he wrote a note to children in the popular magazine Shankar’s Weekly in which he stated, “I like being with children and talking to them and, even more, playing with them. For a moment I forget that I am terribly old and that it is a very long time ago since I was a child.” Nehru also wrote about playing with children in other countries and declared, in a way that speaks to his larger political concerns for social harmony, “For children everywhere are much the same; it is the grown-ups who imagine they are very different and deliberately make themselves so.”

His birthday began to be celebrated by Indians as Children’s Day by the mid-1950s. In 1953 Nehru observed in a letter that Children’s Day had been celebrated on his birthday in Delhi with various festivities, including a parade of children, and he remarked of that sight: “It was the India of tomorrow and the day after, on the march, and the picture of this future was heartening.” In his Children’s Day broadcast on November 14, 1957, Rajendra Prasad, India’s first president, lamented that most government time was consumed by adults’ concerns, but in contrast it is, “a welcome idea to have one day every year to be celebrated as Children’s Day when all questions pertaining to children and child welfare would receive special attention.” The popular but not official holiday in India recognizes children’s rights and children’s potential, promotes child welfare and education, and celebrates childhood. Educational events and cultural performances are held in India on this day.

In Japan

Children’s Day (Kodomo no hi) is celebrated on May 5 in Japan. The holiday, which was formally established by the Japanese government in 1948, promotes children’s health, happiness, and good fortune. Japan’s Children’s Day is part of the Golden Week of four closely spaced national holidays. To celebrate Children’s Day, families display traditional items that symbolize strength and success, including samurai armor or helmets, dolls of famous warriors, and streamers shaped like carp, called koinobori. Families take special baths, called syobuyu, in water sprinkled with iris leaves and roots, which are thought to ward off evil and bring good health. They eat kashiwa mochi, rice cakes filled with sweet adzuki bean paste and wrapped in oak leaves, and chimaki, dumplings wrapped in bamboo leaves. In the past May 5 was the date of a holiday called Boys’ Day (Tango no sekku). Many Japanese citizens still celebrate May 5 in the form of that earlier male-specific iteration. There is also a holiday called Girls’ Day (also Doll Festival or Hina Matsuri), which is celebrated on March 3 with displays of hina dolls.

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.

In addition to the main Children’s Day, Japan celebrates another holiday that honors children: the Seven-Five-Three Festival (Shichi-go-san), a tradition rooted in the Shintō religion. The festival celebrates children who are three, five, and seven years old. It is held on November 15 (the sum of three, five, and seven). These three numbers are considered lucky and these ages are considered important milestones for Japanese children. Japanese citizens mark this festival by taking their children to a Shintō shrine and praying for the children’s health and happiness. During the festival, some children wear suits and dresses, while others dress in traditional Japanese clothing, including kimonos, obi (belt-like garments), tabi (sock-like garments), zori (sandals) and, for boys, hakama (trousers) and haori (jackets). Children receive candy called “one-thousand-year sweets” (chitose ame) in the lucky colors of red and white. The candy comes in bags decorated with cranes and turtles, which symbolize longevity. On this day, adults and children also make paper cranes to give to others.

In the United States

In the United States, Children’s Day is sometimes said to be observed on the second Sunday of June, although dates have varied widely. Despite the popularity of similar holidays around the globe, the holiday has not caught on in the popular imagination in the U.S. The unofficial holiday’s origin lies in a church observance held in 1856 (some sources claim 1857) by pastor Charles Leonard of the Universalist Church of the Redeemer in Chelsea, Massachusetts. Over time, a few other American communities adopted his idea. Like Children’s Days in other countries, the holiday is dedicated to children’s welfare and rights and a recognition of their contributions. American parents are encouraged to spend quality time with their children, and politicians make declarations concerning children’s welfare. Political leaders have occasionally switched the date of the holiday. In 1995 Pres. Bill Clinton officially declared October 8 to be National Children’s Day. In 2001 Pres. George W. Bush declared a National Child’s Day to be on the first Sunday in June. Pres. Barack Obama then declared November 22 to be National Child’s Day in 2009, and he later adjusted it to November 20, matching the United Nations’ date, in renewed declarations in subsequent years of his presidency. Despite such presidential proclamations, Children’s Day, or variants thereof, is not officially or popularly observed in the United States.

Karen Sottosanti