Archive for the ‘Bulgaria’ Category

Sofia’s choice

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

 Bulgaria; Sofia; The Apartment

Don’t pop them, Popa!

It’s Valentines Day in Sofia. But for the lone traveller like Bookpacking, they can console themselves that 14th February is also the feast day of St Trifon – crying into your glass is just fine today, as long as it’s wine at the bottom of it.

It’s an interesting day, hooking up with a couple of locals who work in travel & tourism for an informal tour of the town. Today the washed out colours of a European winter jarr with the E-number red of Valentines Day balloons from sellers  – like here in front of the Popa statue. A local landmark, it’s the place to meet if you’ve got a rendezvous.

The stone figure of a 14th Century religious leader made contrasts sharply with the vivid man-made material of 21tst Century tat. In front of the National Palace of Culture there is another one of those juxtapositions that seem to leap out at you in this region. A group of old people stand in front of a memorial, drinking wine and eating small pieces of some kind of sweetbread. With their heavy coats and a drooping flag, they are commemorating the death of General Hristo Lukov who was killed by communists. We shouldn’t get too sad though, because he was apparently pro-Nazi; history never seems to be neutral in this part of the world.

Meanwhile, in another part of the park, a PA system is pounding. Girls in modern dress are dancing on a stage in front of the dilapidated national monument while a young guy dressed as a giant condom hands out free prophylactics for what looks to be the Red Cross. The OAPs come from an era where the lucky few survived, the young people from an era where the unlucky few die. Will they come to monuments like this when they are that age, and reflect on past injustices while the younger generation parties on in ignorant bliss? One hopes they won’t have to.

Later, on the edge of town – past even the Panelka – we find ourselves at an obscure concrete monument full of bells. Some sort of UNICEF project to symbolise solidarity between the world’s children, it speaks of another century. With bells donated from countries which no longer exist or have been renamed, like the DDR or Kampuchea, it feels like time has stopped. Even the huge double-stacked tv’s in the security guard’s shack (to stop “gypsies” stealing the metal) look like they came from another era with their wood-effect sides.

There is no-one else here, and in the late afternoon gloom, the sentinel-like main tower cuts a dark angular silhouette against a uniformly grey sky. Dogs prowl and on the main road prostitutes stamp their feet as cars fly past on the dual carriageway. Horns sound as excited men impulsively leer, but no-one stops.

Walking through a field strewn with rubbish, to the start of the housing estate where the bus waits and a lone dog stands territorially on the potted tarmac, this feels like a frontier. Not so much the edge of town, as the edge of civilisation. An old game, with old risks, for those girls.

So when we get to back to town, and the safe warm confines of one of Sofia’s coolest ‘bars’ Apartment – “It’s not a bar, it’s the Apartment” – the soothing sea sounds in the aquatic-themed room we’re led to are all the more appreciated. Sinking into the sofa with a Leffe and some organic chocolate cake, we can reflect that the world changes. But not that much.