Toronto Star

VILLAGE SEEKS A NEW DRAWN

In Bulgaria, a shrinking town hopes murals of famous people will keep it alive,

- RICK LYMAN THE NEW YORK TIMES

“It’s a natural pairing,” Stefana Gospodinov­a, a 64-year-old resident of the remote Bulgarian village Staro Zhelezare, said of herself and Brigitte Bardot, the French femme fatale. “I am mistaken for her all the time.”

The two may not exactly look alike, but they do share a love for animals. Hence the depiction of Gospodinov­a and her mule alongside Bardot and her horse in a photoreali­stic mural painted on a whitewashe­d wall.

Staro Zhelezare, population 400, is like so many other Eastern European hamlets withering in the face of low birth rates and the exodus of young adults to more prosperous points west. Except for the murals, which two Polish artists, Ventzislav and Katarzyna Piriankov, began painting a few years ago in hopes of starting a revival.

The idea, Piriankov said, “was to use the village as our canvas and to transform it into a work of art.” A rotating group of students were in Staro Zhelezare recently for the second summer in a row building what the artists call their “Village of Personalit­ies.” This summer, they planned to add murals of Gandhi, Lincoln and Cleopatra.

Already, there is Che Guevara, depicted with Yordan Arabadzhie­v, 68, who sees himself as having a similar revolution­ary spirit flowing through his veins because his family were partisans resisting the Nazis in the Second World War.

“I’d much rather meet Che than any living king or queen,” Arabadzhie­v said.

Yanko Mitev, who spends his days wandering the village, on the other hand, did not recognize the faces painted beside him. They were Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church; Sheikh Mo- hammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum of Dubai; Boris III, the former czar of Bulgaria; and a generic Orthodox Jew in a black hat and side curls.

His companions were good, Mitev said later, because he dreams of a world where “people live in peace and get along.”

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 ?? DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Yordan Arabadzhie­v poses near his portrait, alongside one of Che Guevara.
DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/THE NEW YORK TIMES Yordan Arabadzhie­v poses near his portrait, alongside one of Che Guevara.

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