We are sending off a difficult year, full of unexpected events and changes. In isolation or simply observing social distancing, whether or not theyagree with the measures against the as yet new virus, people are thinking about the future, hoping for better prospects.
We, Bulgarians, invariably turn to customs and rituals from the distant past, all the more so on holidays or in difficult moments. We often wonder why this is so. Maybe we want to feel the spirit of the patriarchal way of life, which seems much more orderly in terms of its value system. Or we do it in the hope that the rituals our ancestors believed in will be at least a little bit helpful to us, too.
On the last day of the old year, Radio Bulgaria reminds you of the beliefs and customs associated with crossing the border between the outgoing and the incoming year. You will learn what Bulgarians used to put on the festive New Year’s eve table which should be plentiful and rich, what is the difference between the carol singers (koledari) and the survakari, as well as other important moments of the folklore holiday.
Read more in the publication "Crossing over from the old to the new year" from the archives of Radio Bulgaria.
Edited by Albena Bezovska
The heart and rhythm of the Bulgarian spirit – with these words we can metaphorically define the National Festival of Bulgarian Folklore. Traditionally, since the distant 1965, the event has been organized once every five years on the first weekend of..
The number of Bulgarian folk dance ensembles abroad is growing and, alongside Bulgarian schools, they are among the key centres that unite compatriots overseas and preserve their connection to their roots. Recently, some of these dance troupes returned..
A Bulgarian amateur folk choir based in Italy has returned to Bulgaria for its debut performance before a home audience. Most members of the choir, named Beli Rozi (White Roses) , have lived in the southern Italian city of Pescara for over a decade...
+359 2 9336 661