The Youth of Communism versus The Youth of Democracy- Who is better?

When first starting this blog, I thought that it would focus more on the different aspects of the life during communist and democratic times. However, in time the idea of the blog shifted to something much broader and much more important- i.e. which youth is better? The following question was rooted in all the videos, interviews and sound files that the blog consisted of. Although those provided much information about the moral values of each generation and its lifestyle, the answer to the question is still rather complex.
The truth of the matter is, many people, especially from the older generation blame the so-called “chalga” culture for the downfall of today’s youth. This culture promotes each unmoral value that one could think of- money as the main virtue, cars as a margin to judge people, clothes showing the social status etc. Additionally, chalga is promoted by the Bulgarian mobsters who, as I explained in one of my blog posts, are considered to be the high class and elite of today’s society.
Chalga culture shouldn’t be confused with the chalga music where its roots lay. Chalga really is the most listened type of music in Bulgaria. However, the people that take it seriously and base their moral values on it aren’t the majority of today’s youth. As pointed out in the interviews of Popov and Andonov, only uneducated, coming from poor families and lacking real perception people can take seriously this kind of culture.
Why is that so much of a problem? Because many young men and women who were born poor, try to get into the “high class society” of the mobsters, by using precisely the chalga culture as their inspiration and guiding light. As a result, people perceive this part of the youth of Sofia coupled with the young people coming from the provinces as the majority of today’s young community. Throw in the numerous Bulgarian criminals and suddenly, everyone seems unmoral and mercantile.
What the critics of today’s society don’t recognize, however, is how evolved is today’s youth compared to the one of the communism. Young people today have the technologies of the future at their disposal and more importantly, they know how to use them. More than 60% of the Bulgaria’s youth speaks another language and even two. Additionally, with the opening of the borders after the fall of communism, Bulgaria has “opened” itself towards millions of new opportunities- both for business and education. The latter are being explored and used on a daily basis by today’s youth.
In contrast, the youth of communism didn’t posses the technologies of today. They were closed to the rest of the world, apart from the other communist countries. As a result, the views of the youth of that time were limited. They only knew the “small world” of Bulgaria, which they inhabited. Coupled with the fact that moral values and restrictions were imposed on them by the communist regime, it is no wonder they perceive themselves as less degraded. The truth is, though, that if they possessed the means of communication, information and were living in a globalized world, as today’s youth, they wouldn’t be that different from the latter.
Many critics would also assert that today’s education is worse than the one at communist times- both in high schools and universities. While that may be true, up to a point, the fact is that the Youth of today shouldn’t be blamed for it.
In conclusion, although the majority of my blog posts were negative and attacked the youth of today it was due to the fact that I wanted to show how older people and the media were shaping the general public opinion. If I have to answer with one sentence to the main question of the blog, however, it would be- The youth of today’s Sofia is much better than the youth of communism.

The video below encapsulates precisely these ideas, the rest is explained by the narrative. Enjoy:

Interview with Anton Meliov

Today I present you Anton Meliov and a little footage of spending Friday night in one of Sofia’s most popular clubs Yalta. Despite the fact that the music there is not chalga, the Youth Of Sofia is still the same. Which serves as further evidence as to the fact that, the chalga culture can only be partially blamed for the degradation of today’s youth. The rest of the video is pretty self explanatory.

Check it out, below:

Interview with Severina Mangusheva

Lately, I’ve noticed that my blog posts are becoming increasingly negative and derrogative of what Bulgaria and its youth has achieved. In order to brighten up the situation, without using fake positivity I’ve made this interview with an person who is not only intelligent but also a realist. Severina Mangusheva is not only a student from Sofia that works hard and earns her own income but also, part of the Youth Of Sofia. But while our other “heroes” presented in the blog are quite negative, she is part of the positive side of the new post-communist generation.

Check out the interview and presentation with her, below:

Lately…

I haven’t updated the blog with new interviews…The reason for that is because I am trying to merge two of them with Bilyan Popov and Krasimir Lekin, each of whom are taking a contrasting position. So, stay tuned…

P.S. Additionally, tomorrow I will post my impressions of Sin City ( one of Sofia’s most prominent clubs) where the Youth of Sofia usually goes out.

For additional information on Sin City . Also, you can look at the video of the local mobster molesting a girl in that club,which a posted a couple of entries ago

The past few days…

I was in Munich, taking a break from Bulgaria. While doing that I noticed many differences between the Youth of Munich and the Youth of Sofia. Although, it is not concretely relevant to the topic that this blog discusses, the comparison itself is still interesting. In the next couple of days I will post my opinion about the differences between the Youths in the two cultures…

Sodom and Gomor in the center of Sofia…

is the name of the video that you will find below. It is an extract from a TV show, on the topic of what gangsters in Bulgaria are doing and how they are above the law. The interesting part for us, however, is not the behaviour of the “gangster”. It is the behaviour of the young lady that is the “heroine” of the video… The question that arises after watching the video is: who is guilty- the one that provides the bread or the one that eats it? Feel free to discuss this matter and the video itself.

Jump to the 1:06 mark for the footage:

A look in the past

While in the previous posts just plain theory was used, today I am switching things. I will be using something practical, something real. It is an interview with Krasimira Todorova, member of the board of the directors of Pireus bank. Apart from evidently being a succesfull woman, she can provide us with the fundamental knowledge for our comparisson. Concretely speaking, it is the perspective of the communist-grown society or in other words the parents of the “Youth of Sofia“. The interview deals with something essential for the average young men or women in Bulgaria– Friday night and how to spend it in Studentski Grad.
The interview itself was taken in Sofia, in the Hilton hotel’s restaurant on the 12th of September.
The link is below:

And below you can find the translation in English:

Quick summary of the development of Bulgaria after democracy (or how we all learned to love money)…In other words, some background information

After the fall of communism, Bulgaria served as a role model of what would be later called “transitional democracies“. Translating this term into common language- people’s expectations of quick welfare and building up of a functioning market economy weren’t met. Quite the contrary, Bulgaria plunged itself in a 10 year period during which entrepreneurs stole what they could via the means of privatization of national property. Those same entrepreneurs formed the Bulgarian mafia, which dominated not only all of the business areas at that time but also was perceived as the high-class of the “society”. Here precisely hides the link to the situation of our youth. The life of the gangsters in the 90s was associated with the driving of fast and expensive cars, visiting trendy places and last but not least a specific music genre developed for their tastes-chalga. The latter praised all the above mentioned qualities and was the emanation of what the lifestyles and values of Mafia members were at that time. The problem is that even though nowadays, the situation has changed and gangsters do not dominate and show off that much, chalga music and the lifestyle it looks up to are still trendy. Not only that but they have affected the youth of Sofia and twisted their values and understandings of the world, downgrading them to one simple word that drives them forward to the night clubs, bars, restaurants etc. Money.

Misleading and explaining

Reading the title of this blog- “youth of Sofia” one may think that this is another beautful tale of how great is to be young. Or some rebellious 90s inspired rant against the older generations. The truth is, however, that this blog will deal with young people but it is going to be written from an older and maybe,seemingly, outdated perspective. “Youth of Sofia” will deal with how the adolescents of Sofia live, how they perceive a good experience, what they value. All of those are in connection with Sofia’s night clubs,bars, coffee shops, restaurants and etc. Describing those will be in connection with the main question that this blog will try to answer- what happened to the so-called children of the democracy in Bulgaria? Did they grow up to fulfill the expectations of their parents- to be better people than them ?