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

Meeting the Bulgarian children in Las Vegas on May 24

Children in the weekend school of "Vasil Levski" to celebrate the Day of Bulgarian Alphabet at the end of the school year on May 30

Diana Nikolova with the children from the Bulgarian school in Las Vegas

The Day of Cyril and Methodius and of Bulgarian education and culture is the most revered holiday among Bulgarian compatriots around the world. Centers of the festive activities are the Bulgarian schools, which spread love for the native language and culture among Bulgarian children born abroad.

"This is a day when we should remember not only the great ones, but also all of the Bulgarians, as each of us has a good Bulgarian heart," teacher Diana Nikolova says. She, together with her colleagues Yordanka Atanasova and Detelina Doneva from the First Bulgarian School "Vasil Levski" in Las Vegas, USA, are preparing with the children for May 24 and the celebration at the end of the school year. Students are impatient and many of them actively participate in the festive program, which they have been working on together with folk dance teacher Iva Slavova. But the official celebration there will take place on May 30, along with the end of the school year.

There is no official data on the number of Bulgarians in Las Vegas. The Bulgarian community has been growing dynamically over the past 10-15 years and is estimated to be 7,000-strong. The First Bulgarian School "Vasil Levski" opened exactly 10 years ago and the total number of students is about 80.


"It is an exciting experience when we start preparing for May 24," teacher Diana Nikolova has told Radio Bulgaria. “We focus on everything Bulgarian during this holiday. In the school children learn not only about the life and work of prominent Bulgarian writers, but also about Bulgarian traditions and history.”

Preserving Bulgarian language and the love for Bulgarian culture abroad is not an easy task, Ms. Nikolova says. The main difficulty stems from the foreign language environment that children grow in. "But despite everything, once they come to the Bulgarian school, they want to study Bulgarian language. We manage to make them ambitious and create lasting interest in them, because our language cannot be learned for a year,” the teacher says. She is grateful to the Bulgarian institutions that support schools abroad, but adds that they need more Bulgarian literature and more Bulgarian language classes.

Rumyana Panayotova successfully graduated from the school in 2020. It was not easy for her to combine weekend visits with classes in her regular U.S. school and gymnastics training. But she succeeded, encouraged by her parents to stay dedicated to Bulgarian language and culture.


"It makes me feel proud being part of the Bulgarian community and being able to communicate with my relatives and friends," she says. "Yes, we speak Bulgarian at home with mom and dad. With my brother and sister we speak mostly in English. I really like Bulgaria. I love the sea, the architecture. I really want to visit Bulgaria this summer."

Interviews: Maria Samichkova

English: Alexander Markov

Photos: courtesy of Maria Samichkova


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

Bulgarian pupils in Rome revive the memory of the first Bulgarian school in Chiprovtsi dating to 1624

An unusual opening of the new school year was made by the students and teachers of the Bulgarian school "Asen and Ilia Peikov" in Rome and Florence.  The event was attended by the Ambassador of Bulgaria to Italy H.E. Kostadin Kodzhabashev, as well as..

published on 9/18/24 3:15 PM

More than 80 craftsmen to demonstrate their skills at Veliko Tarnovo handicrafts festival

A six-day handicrafts festival in Veliko Tarnovo kicks off the celebrations of Bulgaria's 116th anniversary of independence , reports BNR correspondent Zdravka Maslyankova.  More than 80 craftsmen from all over the country will take part in the..

published on 9/18/24 7:50 AM
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