Bulgaria's town of Pernik is situated only 35 km southwest of Sofia and everyone knows it as the "town of black gold" or "the town of miners". In recent years, however, the appearance of Pernik has been changing and we increasingly associate the town with its noisy, colorful and multifaceted festival "Surva", which took its name from an ancient folk tradition of chasing away winter with a lot of noise and scary animal masks.
Since time immemorial, in the first and coldest month of the New Year, men in this part of Bulgaria have paraded in the streets masked in scary costumes known as mummers (called in Bulgarian "kukeri, survakari, babugeri"), with heavy clappers on their waists, whose ritual procession has the important role of driving away devils and starting life from scratch in the new year.
The masquerade parades start on Friday, January 24, and will continue on Saturday and Sunday, January 25 and 26, so that everyone can show the tradition of their region to the audience.
"Every year the festival has a different vision and we try to make it different every time, but the motto of these masquerade games remains unchanged, and it is "Rejoice during Surva". This is also the invitation - so come to Pernik on January 24, 25 and 26, so that we can all rejoice and have fun together at this most colorful, noisiest and largest carnival in our country, and in Europe!"
You can see more photos from earlier editions of the festival in the gallery below.
All Bulgarian masquerade games originate from the ancient rituals related to the birth of the sun around Christmas. With the adoption of Christianity, in order not to defile the newborn God, the custom was blurred. In the western..
The Roma community in Bulgaria is celebrating Vasilyevden /or Vasilitsa, Bango Vasili (literally the Lame Vasil)/, also known as the Roma New Year , reports the Amalipe Foundation. The Roma New Year combining in its traditions Christmas with St...
Today is Babinden (Midwives' Day) - one of the most beloved and authentic Bulgarian holidays deeply rooted in local folk tradition . Celebrated on 8 January in the new style calendar and January 21 in the old style, it is dedicated to the women who used..
+359 2 9336 661