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

Ethnic Roma and Bulgarian children playing football together in Concordia Club

БНР Новини

For two years, a children's football club has been giving an open lesson to the Bulgarian society on tolerance and mutual acceptance. Respect and mutual help are the magic words, thanks to which ethnic Roma children and children from poor Bulgarian families have formed a strong team.

The Concordia Bulgaria Foundation decided to establish a football club after having successfully organized an international children's football tournament three years ago. For this purpose, a professional coach was hired and 40 children from the Roma neighborhoods and the foundation’s social institution for children without parental care were selected. The municipality has provided a stadium for free. Thus, in the past year the team, consisting of 70% Roma and 30% Bulgarian children, for the first time took part in a children’s championship, placing 9th.

Снимка

Снимка“Our team is comprised of children from our social institution, Roma children from the Orlandovtsi and Hristo Botev neighborhoods in Sofia and children from the Hadzhi Dimitar quarter,” Petar Krumov from the foundation says. "Initially the children were separated in several groups and it took us half a year to create a team of them so they can acquire social skills. But today I can gladly say that they are all friends and have begun to support themselves not only on the pitch. They even created a group in social networks and go out together outside of the institution and outside the neighborhood. The other positive thing is that the children of our team started to maintain very good contact with children from other teams without tension and are very well received.”

Снимка

Petar Krumov cannot say who is responsible for ethnic tension and fights like the recent case in Asenovgrad. He adds that for his eight-year activity in the foundation he has seen aggression from both ethnic Roma and Bulgarians but he has been pleasantly surprised by the parents of the children in the team.

“I thought we would have problems with the parents, but these people turned out to be of great help to the team," Petar Krumov says. “When needed, they help us maintaining the pitch, solving problems and always want to be fully involved in everything we do. Most of these children do not have very high grades in school, but they have not dropped out and the parents are also responsible for that. We maintain continuous contact with them and we also help them with learning. When a child in the team needs pedagogical help, we provide teachers for them. But nothing happens without parents' consent.”

Sport remains the best means of overcoming ethnic prejudices, Petar Krumov believes.

Снимка

“In sports, it is proven that ethnicity and religion are irrelevant and only personal qualities matter,” he says. “If a player has darker skin complexion, it does not make him a worse player and other people and spectators respect him only because of his qualities. That is why sport is one of the few options for socializing these children. First of all, we want to teach them hard work, teamwork, fair play. Winning is not as important as playing in the best way you can, respecting the opponent, knowing that this is an environment that can support you together with the family. We also motivate children to study, as one of the rules to be part of the team is not to drop out of school.”

In the new season, Concordia Club has new goals - entering the top six of the children’s championship and creating a second team of children born in 2004.

English: Alexander Markov
Photos: Concordia Club


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

An aerial view of the St Sophia Basilica. The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral can be seen in the background.

Sofia - more modern than ancient in the eyes of foreign tourists

St. Sophia - the church that gave the Bulgarian capital its present-day name - is dwarfed by St. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral , which towers in the centre of the square of the same name. With its white façade, gleaming gold and green domes and beautiful..

published on 9/17/24 8:20 AM

"For" or "against" mobile phones - an open question in Bulgarian schools

A few days before the start of the new 2024-2025 school year, the idea of ​​a complete ban on mobile phones in school is emerging in public space . The main reasons for such a decision are the low success rate in school, the absent-mindedness of..

published on 9/16/24 1:41 PM

Folklore groups, cooks and artisans from Bulgaria, Serbia and Greece to take part in the "Balkantea" festival in Sozopol

More than 10 folklore groups, cooks and artisans from Bulgaria, Serbia and Greece will gather at the "Balkantea" festival in Sozopol from 16 to 18 September.  The event will be officially opened by the Mayor of Sozopol, Tihomir Yanakiev, at the..

published on 9/16/24 9:05 AM