The sun, deified since ancient times, gives life to all living things and is responsible for nature’s rebirth. Under its miraculous rays crops and fruit ripen, newborn animals grow up, and people show gratitude and hope to enjoy its gracious power again and again. The light of the sun also symbolizes goodness, knowledge, spirituality. Its round shape, as a symbol of the divine, can be seen in the way our ancestors built their settlements, in the path of ritual tours (of carolers, for example), in the shape of bread…
On weekdays and holidays, our daily bread is not only part of the table, the customs, the life of Bulgarians. According to traditional beliefs, bread sanctifies everything it touches including the objects used in its preparation and serving. One of these sacred objects, which is sung about in a number of folk songs, is the sieve. In Bulgarian language, the word sieve (sito) itself is associated with the words satiety and fullness, and hence - with wealth and prosperity. The sieve is part of many Bulgarian customs and ritual practices. It is used for divination, magic, but also for breaking spells. It is also believed to be a symbol of the feminine principle. The article "Give away with the sieve for a full year - the sieve in songs, rituals and magical practices" from the collection of Radio Bulgaria tells about this seemingly ordinary assistant of the housewife during the patriarchal way of life.
Editor: Albena Bezovska
Ukrainian sculptor Mykhailo Parashchuk was born on November 16, 1878. He crafted the ornaments of some of the most emblematic buildings in the Bulgarian capital. Mykhailo Parashchuk was born in the village of Varvaryntsi, at the time within..
On October 19, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church honors the memory of the humble hermit from the Rila mountain and heavenly patron of the Bulgarian people and Bulgarian doctors. Called "an earthly angel" and "a heavenly inhabitant" during his lifetime,..
On the sixth day after the beginning of the summer fasting dedicated to the Theotokos, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church celebrates the Transfiguration of the Lord, one of the twelve feasts of the Lord . And as the Bulgarian tradition dictates, the church..
+359 2 9336 661