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PR, MARKETING & MEDIA DEPARTMENT
NEWSROOM DESK

I went to Svishtov to have a direct experience with children. I arrived in Vardim – a village in Svishtov Municipality - in the night. There were different interns of the Institute Perspectives that welcomed me warmly. The day after I moved with them in order to clean up the theatre of the village.

There – on the premises above the theatre - I met some little girls that didn’t know English language at all. They were preparing a show with their teacher; that invited me to join the dance. It was a beautiful moment: dance, or more in general art, has the power to unite different cultures characterized by different languages. Art is a very important form of communication for a first approach between cultures.


In the afternoon me and other interns moved to the area next to the theatre to stay with local boys that usually play and spend their summer there. Firstly, we played cards, practiced English language, especially numbers. Later, I proposed my activity to the girls of the group: it was a crossword puzzle about the vocabulary of the house to fix new words. At the end we talked a bit and we got to know each other better.

In the afternoon me and other interns moved to the area next to the theatre to stay with local boys that usually play and spend their summer there. Firstly, we played cards, practiced English language, especially numbers.

Later, I proposed my activity to the girls of the group: it was a crossword puzzle about the vocabulary of the house to fix new words. At the end we talked a bit and we got to know each other better.

For me this first direct experience with children in Vardim has been fundamental to get a first idea about the situation of young people in Bulgaria. I liked the group of guys with whom I got in touch: it seemed like a united group, definitely it would be very useful to these guys, organizing some activities to make them spend good in Vardim during the summer.














 

Giulia Ciccarelli, intern@ICDET

During the second weekend of July, I had the chance to visit Plovdiv with my internship mates. Thanks to the good weather (ok, it was very hot!), we saw one of the most famous and ancient cities in Bulgaria.

Plovdiv has an important cultural background from the Ottoman to the Roman Empire, as a matter of fact in the main square of the city, you can admire the Mosque, as well as the Roman Stadium. But that’s not all. In Plovdiv, the ancient ruins mix with the modern buildings and you can smell the energy and the history itself. We spent two days there, we walked a lot and we visited the churches and the old town. We enjoyed the colorful streets enhanced by wonderful graffiti and we were astonished by the landscape and the breath-taking view from the top of the ruins.

As Italian, I can’t stop thinking about all the common things with some Italian cities, because of the Roman heritage of course, that is still clearly present in this town. Starting from its position, Plovdiv was built on seven hills, like its Italian twin: Rome. Even the name of this city was different. After the Romans conquered the region, they chose Trimontium as the capital of the Roman Thracia and the city became one of the most important crucial points of the Balkan. The Roman Amphitheatre is probably the most important of the remaining ruins but there are also the Forum, the Odeon, the Aqueduct and some mosaics and other ruins throughout the city.

Together we discovered this town and we enjoyed the night in the city center where there is a touristic and lively atmosphere.

Plovdiv was also European Capital of Culture for 2019, together with Matera, a very old city in the South of Italy.

As you can see what seems so different and far away from your country and your culture, it’s actually so close and has a strong historic connection that goes beyond time.






 

Maria-Veronica Fiume, intern@ICDET

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