Fifty people continue to live in the Bulgarian village of Botevo. The Thracians were the first to settle in the lands of the village near Vratsa (Northwestern Bulgaria), before the Romans left their mark in the area. After the Liberation of Bulgaria its inhabitants opened a school where 30 boys and 16 girls studied. Today there are no children in the village - the youngest citizen is 50-years-old and the average age is near 75. Soon only historical data might be the only thing to remind of the village and its people.
"We are cut off from the world," former mayor Yoshka Mihaylova says. “In order to go to the municipal center, we must find someone to drive us, because there are no buses. We want little things - to have electricity, water, a doctor. We do not want bars, cafes, restaurants, cinemas - just to live in peace. Our village is very nice and for all the residents of Botevo it represents Bulgaria. We don't go anywhere, this is our country, what else could we want?"
Since the outbreak of the coronavirus epidemic, no resident of Botevo has been ill. Deputy Mayor Sonya Nenkova explains this phenomenon by saying that people live in a closed community. Still, the village has its problems.
"Our biggest problems are with the electricity distribution company and the telecommunications companies," she says. “Sometimes there is no electricity for a whole day and having no internet connection in the 21st century seems unreal. If we had children in the village, I don't know how they would have studied online. In Botevo, two or three people have cars and help the whole village when necessary. A doctor comes to us once a week and they bring us bread four times a week. There are no job opportunities - only from the municipality under employment programs, if there were any. And yet this is the most beautiful and peaceful village with its forest, a dam, river. Its inhabitants are intelligent and educated people."
People in Botevo are proud of their fellow townsmen, famous with their successes in art, medicine, military work. Among them is 95-year-old Sava Tsonovski, master of Bulgarian watercolor.
"I am like a migratory bird - in the winter I live for five months in Sofia and I live in the village for 7 months", the artist says. “In Sofia I feel tied up while in the countryside I have freedom. In Botevo I do everything, for example I mow the grass in the yard... I love my native village very much, I love the field with the distant horizon and the bright strip that connects it to the sky; I love nature.”
Hristo Mermerski, author of 13 books in the field of healing and healthy eating, was born in Botevo. His son, Yonko Mermerski, is a professor of chemistry and interpreter in Washington.
"Every time I go to Botevo, I start crying. It is very sad that this pretty village which used to be bustling with life where children were making noise in the street, has become nearly desolate and nature is taking over everything. I sincerely hope that at least God will somehow help for the reviving of this Bulgarian region.”
Compiled by: Diana Tsankova /based on interviews by Katya Borisova and Nedka Lilkova from BNR-Vidin/
English: Alexander Markov
Photos: BNR-Vidin
The opportunities for high-quality higher education in French in Bulgaria will be presented during an educational exhibition in Skopje. The event is part of the campaign "Continuons en français - let's study in French in Bulgarian..
April 8 is the day when Roma people around the world celebrate their identity. " International Roma Day is a time to show that we are part of the Bulgarian nation, of the European community and contribute to the development of local, but also global..
Every Bulgarian school abroad has its own story, and that of the Rodna Stryaha Bulgarian school in Cyprus began in 2015. Its foundations are built on the dream of a Bulgarian teacher - when one day Bulgarian children decide to return to their..
The group cycling tour along the tourist route of the Black Sea Route Epic Tour 2025 started today . According to the extreme sports website 360mag.bg, a..
Cambridge Day 2025 - one of the leading events for English language teachers in Southeast Europe - takes place today at the Balkan Hotel in Sofia. For..
Students block the entrances to the Radio and Television of Serbia For 12 days now, students and citizens have been blocking the entrances to..
+359 2 9336 661