Today is Babinden, Granny’s or Midwives’ Day, a popular feast day celebrating the elderly women who once helped women give birth.
The day, once marked on 21 January, old style, has lost many of its rituals of old, such as the bathing of the baby by the granny, a lavish meal for the young brides at the granny’s house. After pouring out water for the granny to wash her hands in, the women would gift her with shirts, stockings and cloth. The granny on her part would tie a red and white thread to the wrist of the child.
Babinden falls on 21 January, old style, the date which was declared a day of natal care, obstetricians and gynecologists in 1951.
On 22 November, the Association of Bulgarian Folk Ensembles Abroad (ABFEA) will present its project, 'Online Catalogue of Bulgarian Horo and Other Dances', in three European cities: Lyon, Munich and Copenhagen. 'Our goal is to preserve Bulgarian..
‘The Bulgarian horo is a kind of magic — an enchanted circle that pulses with the unique energy of our spirit, our traditions and our identity,’ says journalist Milena Milotinova, who recently presented her new documentary The Magic of the Bulgarian..
The Eastern Rhodopes come to life in the heart of Sofia – with authentic flavoуrs, music and craftsmanship . Residents of the Bulgaria capital have a chance to immerse themselves in the atmosphere of Momchilgrad Municipality and its cultural and natural..
+359 2 9336 661