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On the shores of the Indian Ocean, in South Africa, there is a town with a population of three million, a city as vibrant as if it has brought together the entire world in one place. But that is what the whole of the Republic of South Africa is like, and that is why it is called “The rainbow nation”.
It is there, in Durban, that Angelina Popisakova-Samsonova lives with  her family. She says that in the space of two and a half years she  has started to feel Africa is her home – because of the warm human  relationships. “South Africa is now in the process of change, it is still  seeking to find its place as an economic power in the world, and the pandemic has  only made this more difficult,” Angelina Popisakova says. She is there,  together with her husband and their two children, out of an adventurous family  spirit, but also because of the beautiful nature of this generous faraway  continent. 

“When I came here I had a clash with reality,” she says in an interview for Radio Bulgaria. “I have graduated film directing and I practiced it for 10 whole years in show and entertainment at different TV stations. I thought I was well up to standard professionally, but as it turned out the experience I had was useless in the new world I found myself in. Here racism and prejudice are very strong and when it comes to hiring, being white is not an advantage. So now I teach German at a kindergarten. On the whole life is not as social as it is in Eastern Europe. People are friendly, they smile at you but there is no tradition of being together. There are a lot of Bulgarians in Durban and one of my big regrets is that there is no Bulgarian school here. Besides, the Bulgarian community is very fragmented. It is a well-known fact that there is a high crime rate here, so people tend to restrict their contacts. We, Bulgarians who live here, live between the home, work and the children’s school – a very safe triangle where it is not very likely to meet up with fellow countrymen. I can’t go out for coffee with friends in the neighbourhood, and that is very difficult to get used to here.”

Angelina says that when you live in a foreign country you surround  yourself with all kinds of things that remind you of Bulgaria. Even in  Africa she went back to Bulgarian embroidery and she says it gives her much  pleasure. “Just as we want to be open to the world and to things different, we  want to nurture a love of the Bulgarian language and all things Bulgarian in  our children,” she says. 

“It is our plan to absorb all things colourful, the people and the nature of Africa, and then with everything we have learnt, to go back to Bulgaria. I would very much like to leave a fraction of Bulgaria in Africa - by setting up a branch of the Bulgarian Sunday school here, where we live.”
South Africa is home to many storks and swallows, many of which migrate here from Bulgaria in autumn. The bill-clattering of the storks is a fond memory that instantly reminds Bulgarians of their home country.
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