Hostel Europe
Ed. Libros.com © 2018, 370 pages, 14x21cm.
Hassan is 51 years old, he is from Morocco. At the age of 19, he left his country hidden in a ship that took him to Málaga, Spain, and since then he has lived and worked almost two thirds of his life illegally in five different countries of the European Union. The last nineteen years were spent in Germany. He worked in the market for buying and selling cars until he was deported in mid-2013 to Morocco. About a year later, on May 26, 2014, he came to Bulgaria with hope – and some conviction – that in three weeks he would be in Germany celebrating his daughter’s 13th birthday. However, his plans went wrong.
Both in the Arab neighborhood of Sofia and in the creepy hostel where he sleeps, Hassan meets dozens of Syrians fleeing an increasingly widespread civil war, Afghans and North Africans in the same situation. They all come face to face with an economic, social and political situation in Bulgaria and Europe that is adverse to them and with an overwhelmed asylum system. Some of the guests call it Hostel Europe because, according to them, it is a metaphor for the Europe they meet as soon as they set foot on Bulgarian territory; a European Union in crisis and more concerned with shielding its borders and protecting itself from the jihadist threat than with integrating refugees and enforcing human rights legislation.
Interrupted Childhood
“Childhood Interrupted” portrays the daily lives of the thousands of Syrian children who, during 2014 and 2015, have lived in refugee camps in Bulgaria or have crossed the Balkan borders on foot in order to reach Western Europe.
Room 409
On April 5, 1992, Bosnian Serb snipers killed two protesters from room 409 of the Holiday Inn hotel, inaugurating a nearly four-year siege on Sarajevo. On March 1, 2021, as there is no February 29 on the calendar, the independence of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992 and the 25th anniversary of the end of the siege are commemorated on the same day.
L’Aquila, a missed opportunity
In the early morning of April 6, 2009, at 3.32 am, an earthquake of magnitude 6.3 on the Ritcher scale devastated the Italian city of L´Aquila, capital of the central region of Abruzzo. A decade later, the reconstruction progresses slowly, the city is almost empty and with hardly any soul.
The Bulgarian Loop
Chronicle of a trip in full pandemic from Bosnia to Bulgaria, a country installed in the protest, which now feels the same discontent with the right-wing government as six years ago with the socialist one.




