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The Steep Decline of Bulgaria’s Population in its Post-Soviet Era

A tobacco factory in Vidin, Bulgaria, abandoned after it was privatized following the fall of communism. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

Kanitz is a village near the Serbian border, quickly approaching extinction; of approximately 50 houses, only three are populated — totaling its inhabitants to six. This is an abandoned school in Dunavtsi. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

One of 6 residents, 73-year-old Tsvetana Mitrova holds her donkey (and means of transport, via carriage) Puncho, in Kanitz. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

Georgi Petrov, 59, holds his face in his hands in Sinagovtsi, a village of declining population in Bulgaria. Petrov, who used to work at a local mill but is now unemployed, hasn’t been able to afford plaster for his home for several decades. He recently buried his mother, making the cement monument himself, also due to lack of funds. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

Dogs battle in front of a tobacco factory in Vidin, Bulgaria, abandoned after it was privatized following the fall of communism. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

This is an abandoned school in Dunavtsi. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

Veselka Tsvetanova Zhivkova takes a smoking break in Sinagovtsi, a village of declining population in Bulgaria. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

Kanitz is a village near the Serbian border, quickly approaching extinction; of approximately 50 houses, only three are populated – totaling its inhabitants to six. This is the only town near Kanitz that has a hospital – Rabrovo – to which residents must go in case of a medical emergency. Boys play near a rusty bus stop decorated by an old poster for BSP, Bulgaria’s Socialist Party. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

Kanitz is a village near the Serbian border, quickly approaching extinction; of approximately 50 houses, only three are populated – totaling its inhabitants to six. This is a military hat with a five-pointed star (a symbol of communist rule) next to a newspaper, in an abandoned house, in Kanitz. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

A decayed, abandoned building in the center of town in Vidin. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

This is the site of the abandoned regional airport of Vidin. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

A tobacco factory in Vidin, Bulgaria, abandoned after it was privatized following the fall of communism. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

This is a look inside an abandoned house, in Kanitz. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

This fence leads to an abandoned house, in Kanitz. Image by Yana Paskova. Bulgaria, 2014.

It was the gripping decay of airports, schools, and businesses that once stood as pillars of prosperity that grabbed Bulgarian-born photojournalist Yana Paskova. After the fall of the Berlin wall and communist rule in Bulgaria in 1989, much of the country’s infrastructure and jobs also weathered away, and with them, the population steadily declined over the next 25 years. Paskova recently revisited Kanitz, a small Bulgarian village along the Serbian border to document just a fraction of the impact depopulation has had.

Bulgaria has the most extreme population decline in the world — mostly due to post-1989 emigration — combined with a high death rate and low birth rate. There are so few people of child-bearing age here that population statistics project a 30-percent decrease by 2060, from 7.2 million to just over 5 million. In other words, Bulgaria’s population declines by 164 people a day, or 60,000 people a year; 60 percent of them aged over 65. Experts on distribution of E.U. funds cite the high concentration of investments and resources in certain regions at the expense of others as a contributing factor.

In 2012, depopulation pushed 172 towns to the verge of extinction, and completely erased 24 from Bulgaria’s map. I explored one such village on the Serbian border. Of approximately 50 houses, only three were populated, totaling its inhabitants to six. I was also grabbed by a regional airport, now completely defunct, a former tobacco factory, and an abandoned school. As depopulation further saps the nation of its men and women, these visions of severe structural and industrial decay sadly become increasingly common – and so, with each visit, I witness more and more of my country vanishing.