Ten days, 7 flights and dozens of meetings with Bulgarians in Colombia,
    Argentina, Chile and Brazil – this is the brief summary of the last
    trip to South America of the Executive Director of the Executive
    Agency for Bulgarians Abroad, Raina Mandzhukova.

    “Last
    year, we received an invitation to celebrate the 100th anniversary of
    the resettlement of Bessarabian Bulgarians and Gagauz in Brazil,
    planned for April 25. This topic is not only close to our hearts, but
    the Agency is of crucial importance for the popularization of this
    information in Bulgaria in general. In 2010, within the framework of
    our publishing program, Jorge Cocicov‘s book “Immigration in
    Brazil and Uruguay: Bessarabian Bulgarians and Gagauzes” was
    published, and it unleashed the interest of researchers in this
    topic. We knew that we had Bulgarians in Brazil, but the general
    public did not know that some of them were Bessarabian Bulgarians,
    who had once moved from Bulgaria to Bessarabia, and then to Brazil.
    In addition, the Agency supported Polya Stancheva’s film “And They Reached the End of the World”, which tells the story of
    Bulgarians in Argentina, and in the meantime, the film team won funds
    under the “Mobility” program of the Ministry of Culture,
    which gave them the opportunity to travel to Argentina to present it
    there. I was invited to be part of the team that would present it,”
    said Raina Mandzhukova in a special interview for Radio Bulgaria.

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    On
    the eve of the trip, the book by PhD student from the New Bulgarian
    University, Angela Georgieva, “Communication Art in Migration –
    Volume One: South America”, was published, which supplemented
    the substantive part of the program. “For ten days, we managed
    to meet with Bulgarians in four countries and present two products,”
    the executive director of the Agency for Bulgarians Abroad said. The
    first meeting was in Bogota where a three-hour stay at the airport
    allowed the delegation to invite representatives of the Bulgarian
    community in Colombia.

    “One
    came – Nestor Slavov, musician, trombonist, who has been living there
    for years. I am very grateful to him for coming, because he told
    extremely interesting and important things about the Bulgarians in
    Colombia. They are mostly musicians or specialists in various fields,
    but they maintain ties with each other and their biggest problem is
    the lack of an embassy and the need to resolve consular issues in São
    Paulo. They raised questions about acquiring Bulgarian citizenship.”

    The
    most intense program was in Argentina, where Raina Mandzhukova was
    welcomed as someone who kept her promise made during the first visit
    of an agency representative there in 2023.

    “The
    least I did after my visit to Argentina at that time was to change
    the Agency’s country representative, appointing a person who speaks
    Spanish. Because these are descendants of Bulgarians who left at the
    beginning of the 20th century and their knowledge of the Bulgarian
    language has faded very much. I had no idea how positive this
    decision would turn out – now I saw on the spot that people are very
    grateful that communication with the Agency has become much more
    direct and active over these years.”

    Mandzhukova
    also recalls some events in Bulgaria that have occurred as a result
    of this active dialogue, such as the welcoming of Erica Perales to
    Bulgaria. Now preparations are underway for the visit of another
    compatriot – from the Ivan Vazov Cultural Association in Berisso,
    who, like Erica, will spend two months in Bulgaria.

    “The
    most important thing is that for a year now there has been a Sunday
    school in Argentina, which became possible thanks to another of our
    partners – the chairwoman of the Spiritual Mirror association, Ms.
    Tania Kostadinova. The fact there is an online school in Argentina,
    which is a branch of the Bulgarian school in Skopje, is unique and
    about thirty children in Argentina are already studying Bulgarian,
    under a program funded by the Bulgarian Ministry of Education and
    Science,” Mandzhukova says.

    The
    central event – ​​the presentation of Polya Stancheva’s film
    and Angela Georgieva’s book – took place in the “Golden Hall”
    of the Ministry of Culture of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires –
    an important gesture by the local authorities towards the Bulgarian
    community there.

    Speaking
    chronologically about her meetings in South America, Raina
    Mandzhukova reaches Chile, where there is no Bulgarian organization:

    “But
    on the other hand, we have many Bulgarians. From the doyen of the
    community, Margarita Ganeva, who has been in Chile for over 40 years,
    to several young musicians who have been in the country for 3-4
    years. They were very happy that a representative of the state was
    with them. Many suffer from the lack of an embassy. We have
    identified a number of actions to make this relationship more
    direct.”

    The
    Bulgarian Sunday School in São Paulo was the next exciting stop for
    the head of the Agency for Bulgarians Abroad, where with director,
    Mihail Krastanov, she discussed the current problems facing the
    educational institution.

    “Beyond
    the emotional, I really saw that these Bulgarians, like the
    Bulgarians in Argentina, although their knowledge of Bulgarian has
    faded quite a bit, continue to feel connected to Bulgaria. And
    on the occasion of the anniversary of the resettlement, they have published this book: “1926-2026: A Short Version of the History of
    the Resettlement”, with a very interesting cover, on which a ray
    of sunshine passes through Brazil, Bulgaria and Bessarabia. At the
    Agency for Bulgarians Abroad, we will check the possibilities of
    publishing this book in Bulgarian.”

    See also:

    Bessarabian Bulgarians in Brazil have not forgotten their roots

    Writer Zdravka Evtimova: For Bulgarians abroad, Bulgaria continues to be a good remedy

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