May Week


May Week is the name used in the University of Cambridge to refer to a period at the end of the academic year. Originally May Week took place in the week during May before year-end exams began. Nowadays, May Week takes place in June after exams, and is a cause for great celebration amongst the students of the University. Highlights of the week include bumps races, May Balls, June Events and garden parties.

History

May Week festivities were originally held in May, in the final week before exams; however, the May boat races, also known as the May Bumps, moving toward June, right after exams to celebrate the year end.

Suicide Sunday

Suicide Sunday is the name used at Cambridge University to refer to the Sunday immediately after the end of the spring term. By this Sunday, all students have finished exams but most of the results have not been published, so it is traditionally a period of nerves and suspense. The name, however, refers to the celebration of the end of exam term, in contrast to Caesarian Sunday on the day before the early May Bank Holiday which celebrates the birth of exam term. A student-led campaign in 2015 encouraged use of the name ‘May Week Sunday’ instead, though ’Suicide Sunday’ continues to persist among students and the public.
The event is for current students of the University of Cambridge but is frequented by former students that indulge in the student lifestyle.
The Cardboard Boat Race is a main attraction to Suicide Sunday, offering an alternative to the many garden parties and more serious boating. The first race was in 2010, with three boats from Magdalene College. In 2011, the race was opened to other colleges.

May Week Alternative

is an award-winning, 'feel good' initiative set up by undergraduates at Cambridge University to encourage students to celebrate the end of the academic year through charitable endeavours. In the organisation's first 3 years, it attracted the support of approximately 650 students, and raised £150,000, protecting almost 180,000 people from malaria according to the Against Malaria Foundation.

Aims

The organisation states three main aims:
  1. Direct impact: MWA seeks to raise money for AMF and in doing so transform tens of thousands of lives by providing life-saving anti-malaria nets.
  2. Put charity at the heart of May Week celebrations: The initiative attempts to equip students with a positive framework which allows them to celebrate May Week by making the world a better place. By inviting students to see charity as a central and positive part of the May Week experience, MWA believes it can 'unlock huge philanthropic potential'.
  3. Inspire students with a bold, positive vision for giving: By inviting students to engage with significant giving through this explicitly positive, celebratory context, May Week Alternative hopes that students will develop philanthropic tendencies which they will take forward into their future careers, rather than seeing charity as a burden.

    Chronology

In 2020, the cancellation of all May Balls and other May Week events as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic lead to the creation of . Co-hosted by May Week Alternative, Cambridge Rag, and the May Ball Presidents' Committee, this virtual celebration of May Week featured over 500 performers from across the university in a four and a half hour livestream, attracting over 10,000 viewers. Over the course of the evening, over £7,000 was raised to support Addenbrooke's Charitable Trust and the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk.