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Childhood memory of speech in Bulgaria

Posted by Dormantaccount4 - December 19th, 2023


When I was a child, before coming to the US, I said something in Bulgaria while speaking with my father, my mother was somewhere at work at the time, she was a teacher in mathematics.


Anyway I told him that "People need people."


Later on my mother arrived and I told her the same thing, though she probably doesn't remember and asked my parents "Do you think of someone said this on television that there would be less crime in Bulgaria?" My mother replied in Bulgarian "mnogo" which translated into english means "A lot [less crime]."


After that I told my father maybe he could contact some friends he has if he knows someone who works for tv broadcast at the time, and for a moment between the rainbow lines that show nothing is being broadcasted someone, without saying my name, had put a painting on TV and spoke without anyone being visible on screen, he said "Hora imat nushda ot hora." (People need people.)


The painting was mostly black color, with some dark blue, white, and gray clouds at the top half of the screen. The bottom of the painting was too dark to make out anything, as if it were nighttime and no one can see where they are.


I don't know exactly why they chose this painting to appear while someone says the words, an adult male with a deep voice, and it was only broadcasted once. Many people were at work during those hours, so I guess only young children at the age before school starts and their mother, or grandparents taking care of them saw it.


Somehow I think it reduced crime in Bulgaria during the 90's.


Obviously I'm not in a good mood or enjoyable state to write this accurately, grammar and spelling and syntax, so feel free to edit it the way I saw the other speeches edited on another person's internet in Bulgaria. I tried writing it.


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