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

Baba Marta speaking Bulgarian in Milan... and not just that!

Photo: FB Centro linguistico e culturale Qui Bulgaria

Bulgarians, Romanians, Moldovans and Macedonians are going to welcome the arrival of spring with a festival called "Balkan Spring in White and Red". The event will take place in Milan on February 24th and is dedicated to March 1 – the day when we give our beloved people an amulet for health made of white and red threads. In Bulgaria, it is called "martenitsa", in Romania and Moldova the holiday is called Marţişor, and in North Macedonia the amulet is known as "martinki.” In 2017 martenitsa became part of the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, following a collective nomination by the four countries, a fact that provoked the Balkan communities in Milan to organize a common holiday.

"Actually at the beginning there were the martenitsa workshops at the Bulgarian School in Milan. After the proposal for the registration of martenitsa as cultural heritage at UNESCO, Maria Gancheva, vice-president of our center suggested we extend our activities in order to include other nations who share this tradition," Gergana Hristova, President of the Bulgarian language and cultural center and the Bulgarian Sunday School in Milan says.


For the third consecutive year, the Balkan holiday is organized in cooperation with the Italian-Romanian Cultural Center – Milan, the Moldovan Vatra Neamului Association – Milan and the Macedonian Cultural Association "Stone Bridge". The event will take place under the auspices of the Milan Municipality and the Consulates General of Bulgaria, Romania and Moldova in the Italian city. The jury with the help of experts and the parents of children from the Bulgarian school will choose the best martenitsas made by children. The festival will end with a Bulgarian folk dance workshop, under the leadership of folk group "Veselie".


"Balkan Spring in White and Red" will be a day full of events–“a valuable lesson for children of the Balkan communities in Milan on solidarity and sharing common cultural values ​​and traditions. This is the way cultural legacy can continue to be passed on from generation to generation, casting a bridge between the deep roots of tradition and the cosmopolitan feeling of community," the organizers say.

English: Alexander Markov

Photos: FB Centro linguistico e culturale Qui Bulgaria


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

How much of the Bulgarian cultural heritage in Ukraine has been preserved remains unclear

The usurpation of cultural heritage is one of the many inevitable consequences of any military conflict, both historically and today. Until the end of the war in Ukraine, it is impossible to adequately analyse the extent of the damage caused to the..

published on 11/15/24 12:00 PM

Balkan developments

Athens plans to modernise the Greek army by 2030 Greece's Defence Minister Nikos Dendias presented the plan for changes in the army to the parties in parliament. The reforms will cover all three branches of the military. By 2030, 33 units..

published on 11/15/24 10:15 AM
The forum at the National Museum of Archeology

The Untold Stories of Bulgarians programme gathers the legacy of our compatriots as ancestral memory

A short video kaleidoscope of the "untold stories" of worthy Bulgarians - scientists, entrepreneurs, engineers, artists - who have contributed to our country's good image in the eyes of the world opened an unconventional public forum that showcased the..

published on 11/14/24 12:48 PM