Snejana Iovtcheva
Program Coordinator and Registrations
snejana@bg-school.org
Following our long tradition, the students of the Bulgarian Saturday School in Boston welcomed Grandma Marta “Baba Marta” and participated in the beloved March 1st folklore festivities. The students and teachers welcomed the beloved guest with poems, songs and happy faces. This year, two wonderful women, who are grandmothers of our students, impersonated the charming guest and they were delighted by the warm welcome in our classrooms.
In the early morning, Sofia Reed's great-grandmother, the 86-year-old Grandma Vesa, toured all the classrooms. Sofia’s great-grandma is visiting her great-granddaughter here in Boston and she gladly agreed to visit our school. The young students were very interested in Grandma Marta's life in Bulgaria and asked many questions. Grandma Marta told them about the white storks, which begin to return to Bulgarian in March and announce the onset of Spring.
In the afternoon, the grandmother of 4th and 8th grade students Mila and Martin Andreev took on the role of the cheerful guest. She is also currently visiting her grandchildren in Boston and happily joined the Saturday classes at the Bulgarian School to share the wonderful March 1st custom with the children from Boston.
We are grateful to the parent organization and the parents who took care of making martenitsas, for coordinating with the teachers, as well as for the wonderful photos with Grandma Marta.
Some facts about the Bulgarian Martenitsa custom:
Every year on March 1st, Bulgarians prepare and exchange Martenitsas - red and white amulets, tassels, bracelets - to celebrate and welcome Spring.
The custom is to wish good health and prosperity to the person when you give the martenitsa.
In Bulgarian schools and daycares, it is usually Grandma ‘baba’ Marta , who visits and ties mastenitsas to all children.
The person wears the martenitsa until the first day of spring and then ties the martenitsa on a branch of a flowering tree.