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

At two schools in the UK – in Portsmouth and Bournemouth - Bulgarian children learn to read and write in their native language

7
Photo: private library

Ten years ago Maya Nikolova emigrated from Bulgaria to Great Britain. There, she met several young families from Bulgaria who wanted their children to practice their native language. But in Bournemouth, where Maya lives, there was nowhere they could do that. That is why the ambitious Bulgarian lady decided to set up a Bulgarian school. While she was starting the paperwork, according to British and Bulgarian law, she was contacted by Margarita Dimitrova from a town nearby, Portsmouth, who offered to set up a school there as there were a lot of people who wanted their children to attend. And so, in 2017, two Bulgarian weekend schools opened doors in the two towns, both named after the prominent figure from the Bulgarian National Revival, Vasil Aprilov.

“During the first year,” Maya Nikolova remembers, “we started out with 22 children, and through the years their number has grown. We now have 44 children registered for the new school year.”


There are around 1,000 Bulgarians living in Bournemouth and Portsmouth, and the children studying their native language are aged 5 to 12. The younger children study all subjects because they need to learn new words from all spheres of life. The study of the Bulgarian language and literature, following the mandatory curriculum of the Ministry of Education, starts in grade 1, whereas the older pupils study “Man and Society”, history and geography of Bulgaria.

“We have introduced “Work and creativity” and “Surrounding World” as interest clubs, in which we have included work with natural materials, we also present Bulgarian traditions and holidays which are very different from those in Britain,” Maya Nikolova says. “All children who finish the school year successfully are given certificates. Very few of the families are going to return to Bulgaria, but this document is valid for Bulgarian schools.”

A philologist and accountant by profession, Maya Nikolova really puts her heart into what she is doing. Her ideas include pen pals of the same age and virtual tours of Veliko Turnovo, the town where she was born.

“One of my ideas is already fact,” Maya Nikolova says. “The first letters written by Bulgarian children from Luxembourg and Cornwall in England have been received. We are now trying to popularize this initiative with schools in Bulgaria, because it is good for our children to be in contact with children their own age living in a Bulgarian environment, and we are hoping to see schools in Bulgaria, as well as in Britain join in.”

Parents from three towns nearby where there are around 200 Bulgarian families have also said they want their children to study Bulgarian. That is why Maya Nikolova is hoping to open a branch of the weekend school there.


“The most important thing we want to teach the children is respect and tolerance of any language, love of the Bulgarian language and pride that they are part of a great nation,” Maya Nikolova says. “It is my dream to see these children create history themselves that will go down in the textbooks.”

Photos: courtesy of Maya Nikolova



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

Apollonia Arts Festival celebrates 40 years since its creation

A few years before we, Bulgarians, felt the breath of freedom that reached us with the fall of the Berlin Wall, musicians, artists, writers, theater artists performed for the first time on the stages of the Apollonia Arts Festival in Sozopol. The..

published on 8/26/24 11:29 AM

“Thracian mysteries” presents the life, culture and beliefs of the ancient tribes that once inhabited the Bulgarian lands of today

For the fourth time, the “Thracian mysteries” festival offers a journey back in time to thousands of years ago with reenactments in which viewers are able to come in contact with the rituals, way of life and beliefs of the ancient tribes that once..

published on 8/23/24 11:33 AM

The visual story of Mykolaiv: Tattoos of War, a photographic evidence from Ukraine

Five photo series show the horrors of war in the Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv . The exhibition "The Visual History of Mykolaiv: Tattoos of War" will be presented today at 7pm as part of the 11th FotoFabrika Festival and will be on show until 23 September..

published on 8/23/24 7:45 AM