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Visiting the Sts. Cyril and Methodius High School in Tsaribrod

Photo: Красимир Мартинов

The high school in the Serbian town of Tsaribrod has a 134-year history. Founded in 1891 when the town was part of Bulgaria, it continues to educate children of both Bulgarian and Serbian origin to this day.

As soon as you step onto the school grounds, you will be impressed by the well-maintained building, renovated sports facilities and magnificent monument dedicated to Saints Cyril and Methodius in the courtyard. Headmaster Bratislav Stamenov tells us that the school was completely refurbished four years ago at a cost of over €2 million, funded by the Serbian government.

Headmaster Bratislav Stamenov
Despite our lack of an appointment, Bratislav Stamenov welcomes us warmly. He himself is of Bulgarian ethnicity. He graduated in history from the University of Veliko Tarnovo in 1999. After working for some time as a teacher in the predominantly Bulgarian village of Zvonce, he has been a history teacher at the high school in Tsaribrod since 2005, becoming headmaster in 2020.

‘We’re a secondary school – grades nine through twelve – with both a general education programme and a vocational tourism focus,’ says Bratislav Stamenov. ‘Since 2009, we’ve brought back teaching in the mother tongue, and now eight out of our twelve classes are taught entirely in Bulgarian. Even students who have never studied Bulgarian before manage just fine.


We study Bulgarian literature too – alongside classics like Ivan Vazov, Elin Pelin, and Lyuben Karavelov, we also explore the work of modern Bulgarian writers, like Georgi Gospodinov. Our school library has over 25,000 books, more than half of which are in Bulgarian.


We are a state-run school under the patronage of the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Serbia and follow the Serbian education system. We still don’t have a full set of translated textbooks, but our teachers translate the lessons themselves, which is actually the hardest part of the job.”

Miodrag Dzunov, librarian and French language teacher.

So we visit the library at the Tsaribrod High School to find out what books the students are reading. There, we meet Miodrag Džunov, a French teacher. He comes to Tsaribrod twice a week and spends the rest of his time teaching French and English at the Dushan Radovic primary school in the municipal centre of Pirot, to which Tsaribrod belongs. Miodrag also has Bulgarian roots in the Tsaribrod area. As he does not yet speak Bulgarian fluently, we speak in Serbian. We ask him if the children in Tsaribrod enjoy reading and whether they use the library.


"Yes, the students read here. Mostly textbooks in Bulgarian and Serbian. That's what they need for school, so that's what they go for. The most popular authors are Ivan Vazov and Ivo Andrić.”


We are curious about the status of French at Sts. Cyril and Methodius School in Tsaribrod.


'French is taught as a second foreign language here,' explains Miodrag Džunov. "The first foreign language is English. However, some students have chosen to study Russian instead. I have been working here for more than 11 years. The school is very well equipped: the classrooms are modern and renovated with up-to-date technology, and we also use information technology, which enhances the education we provide.

The Erma River Canyon, Serbia.

The secondary school in Tsaribrod follows the Bulgarian tradition of holding proms every year around 24 May. The graduating class organises the celebrations and their parade down the main street of the town is spectacular — a celebration of youth and beauty that brings residents and visitors to Tsaribrod together from near and far. Many of the Tsaribrod graduates continue their studies at Bulgarian universities.


‘Most of the graduates continue their studies in Bulgaria,’ says high school principal Bratislav Stamenov. ‘As part of the Bulgarian national minority, they have the opportunity to study under Decree 103 of the Bulgarian Council of Ministers, which gives preferential conditions to young people from Bulgarian communities abroad when applying for university.’



Photos: Krasimir Martinov
Editor: Elena Karkalanova
Posted and translated in English by E. Radkova


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