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

Father and son cross Atlantic Ocean in support of organ donation

Photo: Facebook / NeverestOceanRow

To donate your organs in order to save life when your life ends is one of the highest forms of empathy. You leave a piece of yourself to an unknown person who has been waiting for years for the miracle to happen and receive organ transplant.

We don’t know when and how we will be gone from this world and we don’t always have the opportunity to give our consent to become organ donors. The fateful decision is often in the hands of the relatives who find it very difficult to donate the organs of the diseased. Bulgaria ranks last in the EU in terms of number of transplants per one million people. That is why patients who are waiting for a transplant sometimes seek salvation abroad. There are more than 1,150 Bulgarians who are currently waiting for a transplant.

Recently, Bulgarian high-school student Maxim and his father Stefan Ivanov set a world record after rowing in the Atlantic Ocean in Neverest boat. Their expedition was dedicated to a special cause aimed at supporting organ donation. The Bulgarian rowers supported the National Campaign “Yes! For Life”.

For their heroism demonstrated during the trans-Atlantic journey in support of organ donation Stefan and Maxim were awarded a gold badge of honor by the Bulgarian Ministry of Health.

It turned out that according to the official register of Ocean Rowing Society, Maxim is the world’s youngest rower to successfully cross an ocean:

“We actually had a lot of ideas for at least three or four different causes. I had to make the decision and I have been holding this initiative dear since the moment I learned about it. This is the perfect cause- we do not raise money or beg for sponsors. The idea that one may donate life after his death is really exceptional.”

Maxim and his father Stefan set off from Portimão (Portugal) and rowed 8,230 kilometers (4,444 nautical miles) to Barbados. In the course of 105 days, each one of them rowed six times a day. Their only connection with the mainland was via a satellite phone. They sent emails to Maxim’s mother and she informed them on a regular basis about the campaign and peoples’ feedback.


“We talked to many people and learned that they really support the idea of organ donation” – Stefan Ivanov explains. – It does not cost anything to the relatives of the diseased, but meanwhile can save lives. There is a solution to the extremely difficult problems of our compatriots and we must find it together. We should ask ourselves whether we are strong enough to take such decision and if the answer is yes, to share this decision with our relatives.”


English version: Kostadin Atanasov

Photos: Facebook / NeverestOceanRow


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

Willow wreaths and balcony seedlings for St Lazarus Day at the Botanical Garden in Sofia

The University Botanical Garden in Sofia (49 Moskovska Street, opposite the monument to Vasil Levski) will be hosting a spring festival on 27 April - the day on which Orthodox Christians in Bulgaria celebrate Lazarovden (St Lazarus' Day). The..

published on 4/27/24 7:05 AM

2/3 of Bulgarian youth aspire to higher education, OECD survey shows

In Bulgaria, 71 per cent of 15-year-olds expect to graduate from university and 45 per cent expect to have a managerial or professional position by the time they are 30.  Both expectations are below the survey average compared to other countries..

published on 4/26/24 5:14 PM

The Biggest Bulgarian Horo Dance to be held in Copenhagen in May

Exactly in one month - on May 26th at 11:00 am in the capital of Denmark - Copenhagen, the 10th anniversary edition of "The Biggest Bulgarian Horo" will take place.  The event is organised by the folk dance group "Dilmana". The event will once again..

published on 4/26/24 4:24 PM