Christmas Eve, a day of humility, thankfulness and hope. Though not all people in Bulgaria observe the Nativity fast throughout the entire period designated – 40 days - all families sit down to a festive meal together. To several generations, the people who grew up in the period from the 1940s till the 1980s, celebrating Christmas was fairly unknown or was an intimate, family affair. In recent decades we have been reverting to tradition and it would be no exaggeration to say that every school, cultural centre, museum organizes reenactments of ancient rituals. It would be impossible to tell you about all customs and traditions, connected with Christmas Eve, but we shall offer you songs of yore that convey the spirit of this day.
When Bulgaria was converted to Christianity in the 9th century, the traditional and the Christian calendar converged, especially on major fetes. The Christian saints started to appear in folk songs, as did the infant Jesus.
At the beginning of December, the Christmas Eve and Nativity rituals were presented at the Regional Library in Blagoevgrad to an audience of children aged 10-11. Reenactments of the scene “Around the hearth on Christmas Eve” were also organized in the Regional Museum of History in Turgovishte. The Tradition and Folklore children’s club in Pleven put on the show for children Koledari, presenting the Christmas Eve meal and what it includes, different customs, with fun and games that everyone could join in. Alongside demonstrations of traditional Bulgarian customs and rituals, in Plovdiv, European capital of culture in 2019, visitors will be able to see the scene of the birth of the infant Jesus in the manger, reenacted by last-year students from the National School for Performing and Screen Arts. Of course, it is in villages that folklore traditions are revived most colourfully, even if it is villages in the outskirts of Sofia like Bistritsa, Vladaya, German, Lozen.
English version: Milena Daynova
It's Ignazhden! On St Ignatius' Day, 20 December, we honour the memory of St Ignatius the Theophorus. In the Bulgarian calendar St Ignatius' Day (Ignazhden) is not only a religious but also a folklore holiday. According to national tradition, it is..
Eight authentic Bulgarian traditions and skills, passed down through generations, have been added to the National Representative List of Bulgarian Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, becoming part of Bulgaria's Living Human Treasures. "This..
Halva, this sweet temptation with an oriental twist, is a welcome delicacy on the Bulgarian table, especially on holidays. Judging by the descriptions of Western travellers, halva was a common dessert in Bulgarian lands as early as the 16th century. The..
Clocks and bells will ring out in the center of Stara Zagora on Saturday, when the city will host the XXIV Masquerade Games Festival . The event will..
+359 2 9336 661