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

Life Together in Targovishte, Romania:

Bulgarian community celebrates all Bulgarian holidays and has a museum of the first settlers

700 ethnic Bulgarians live there

Bulgarians in the Romanian town of Targovishte celebrate traditional holidays together.
Photo: Facebook/Asociatia Balgarski Izvori

"Matej Vojvoda" is the name of a district in the Romanian town of Targovishte. A Bulgarian community of nearly 700 people lives here, united by the association Zaedno ("Together").

In the building of the association there is a museum of the Bulgarian community in the town, which preserves the history of the first 57 Bulgarian families who settled in Dâmbovița County 171 years ago, reports BTA.

The museum exhibitsold documents, items of everyday life and folk costumes. A shirt with embroidered roses 100 years old, a 1930 photo of the first gas station in this Bulgarian neighborhood, a horse harness from 1910 and a saddle from 1935 are but a few of the exhibits. A list of the municipality provides information on how many Romanians with Bulgarian roots lived there in 1940 and what their family and property status was.

"When they settled in the county, the Bulgarians became known for growing vegetables and for their traditional Bulgarian banitsa, which unlike the Romanian pastry is salty," the founders of the museum told BTA. It opens its doors on a symbolic date - November 30, the Day of Bulgarians in Targovishte.

From the website of the association "Together" http://www.zaedno.ro/ we also learn that at the end of 1854 the Bulgarian settlers, together with the locals, made a full-scale renovation of the Church of St. Niphon and created a cemetery on land donated to the community. And in 1890, priest Nikolae Grigore Arama founded a mixed school, which was later moved to a new location on land donated by industrialist Joseph Samuili.The latest data of the National Statistical Institute of Romania show that the ethnic Bulgarians in Romania number 5 975.

According to the Bulgarian deputy in the Romanian parliament Georgi Nakov, relations between Bulgaria and Romania are developing very well, both economically and culturally.

"I think that we are now seeing a very clear manifestation of Bulgarian national consciousness in Romania," Georgi Nakov told our colleague Vladimir Mitev in a special interview for Radio Bulgaria. - It was also manifested in the celebrations on the occasion of 3 March 2023. During the same week, the Kukeri (so-called Kuchi) festival in Brăneşti and the Horse Easter in Targovishte took place. Shortly before, Trifon Zarezan was celebrated in the village of Izvoarele. The communities of Băleni Sârbi and Targovishte are rather geographically similar, but Izvoarele is quite different. In Banat we are several communities, but we are part of the same Bulgarian national minority."

The festivities strengthen not only the official relations between Romania and Bulgaria, but also the relations among the citizens, Georgi Nakov further pointed out. His words are confirmed by Ambassador Radko Vlajkov, who at the reception at the Embassy for Bulgaria's March 3 National Day in Bucharest said "We, Bulgarians and Romanians, have rediscovered each other."

In the coming days stay tuned for more interesting information about the relations between Bulgaria and Romania in Vladimir Mitev's interviews for Radio Bulgaria.


Photos: Facebook/zaedno.ro, BTA, Facebook/Asociatia Balgarski Izvori
Compiled by Veneta Nikolova

English version: Elizabeth Radkova



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

Bulgaria has voted! Where are we heading to now?

Election fatigue, extremely low voter turnout (just over 30%), more young people at the polls and a fragile, barely perceptible hope for stability and political normality. This is how we can describe the past election Sunday for..

published on 6/10/24 4:11 PM

Bulgarians in UK: The civil servants Sofia send for the elections are unnecessary

Voter turnout among the Bulgarians living in London was very low, Svetlana Kaneva, chair of the "Luton" section in the English capital, told Radio Bulgaria. She summarizes the impressions of her colleagues from another four areas in..

published on 6/10/24 12:35 AM

Elections in Bulgaria are over, but compatriots in the USA continue to vote

There are 55 polling stations where Bulgarians across the ocean can exercise their right to vote in the early parliamentary vote. "We only vote for the National Assembly, i.e. for a party or coalition, we do not have the..

published on 6/9/24 10:38 PM