Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Bulgaria, seen by young patriot

БНР Новини
Photo: Blagorodna Georgieva

The number of young people, leaving this country has never been subject of any statistics, but we know that about 1/10 of the high school graduates /5,000 – 6,000 students/ legalize their diplomas with the ministry of education each year, most likely with the idea to study at foreign universities. The large scale emigration of people, aged mainly 25 – 50 has a dramatic impact on Bulgaria’s economic and political systems. Petya Ilieva is 25 and a bachelor in psychology at the St. Kliment Ohridski University, where now she studies for her master degree in Psychology of Labor Organization. Is it possible that young people get motivated to stay and is it an easy decision?

“This choice of mine has never been questioned, as I have always wanted to live in Bulgaria”, Petya explains. “I had to spend time in Greece and Germany some time ago, but I didn’t like it. I have always wanted to develop my skills here. My current job is in the HR selection sphere – it is a pretty responsible thing, as both the applicants and our customers – Bulgarian and foreign companies, should be satisfied.”

Petya is involved in different volunteer campaigns in her leisure time. She belongs to the volunteer formation of the Sofia Municipality’s Firefighting Dept. In 2014 she didn’t hesitate for a moment and took part in the mission after the floods in the Asapruhovo neighborhood near Varna and also in Mizia /northwest Bulgaria/. She remembers how the locals drank coffee at the café and look with surprise at the dozen of young people, covered with mud and soot, walking in their boots under the burning sun. They asked them how come they traveled all the way from Sofia. Petya is also sensitive towards the problems of the Bulgarian communities abroad and in her opinion the state doesn’t care enough, in terms of financing of Bulgarian schools and community centers and their activities in other countries. The young girl is also interested in Bulgarian history, full of heroic and tragic moments. She believes that we should be proud of the fact that we have managed to preserve our nation as an ethnic element, still continuing to exist. The young lady has a bit strange, to some people, way to express her patriotism…

Снимка

“I began with the tattoos at the age of 19. My first tattoo was the Pliska rosette – an ancient totem of the Dulo dynasty – the establishers of the Bulgarian state. Then Bulgarian embroidery followed on my left wrist and a Glagolitic inscription, saying: Time Passes by, Bulgaria Remains. Then the two lions of the old blazon etc. – a total of 7 tattoos, all related to my country. I dream about the welfare of this people. I dream about young people, motivated to stay and not being ashamed, when they go abroad. I dream of us being proud with our Bulgarian origin, with the fact that we are perhaps the heirs of the oldest nation in Europe, of the country that has never changed its name after its establishment in 681. This territory has been Bulgaria as of more than 1,300 years now. My slogan: Forward and Up,” the girl says in conclusion.

English version: Zhivko Stanchev




Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

The election is over, when will the next election be?

Voting by force of habit. Voting with the last ounce of hope that tomorrow everything will be all right and we shall only be talking to each other about elections in four years’ time. Voting with a sense of bitterness – at politicians, at our own..

updated on 10/28/24 2:38 PM
Nadya Stoyanova

Nadya Stoyanova, Boston: We all carry Bulgaria in our hearts, elections are a moment when we can prove it

Bulgarians who gathered in front of the polling station in Norwalk, Connecticut - USA danced a traditional horo dance, we learned from Nadya Ullman, a member of the board of directors of the Bulgarian Center in New England , USA. Election day there..

published on 10/28/24 10:35 AM
Polling station in Las Vegas

Fewer and fewer Bulgarians vote in Las Vegas

Why I vote - a question that guides our actions on election day. "People who can't answer don't generally vote," says Ventsy Georgiev. He is a member of the Las Vegas polling station, USA. He says that nearly 7,800 Bulgarians live in this American city ,..

published on 10/28/24 9:13 AM