Current News

Current News

 "Boston Herald" - Bulgarian doc making American dream come true

"Boston Herald" - Bulgarian doc making American dream come true

4/10/2007 12:32:59 PM

Dr. George Dimov, pictured with wife Magdalena and son Daniel, worked his way back to a medical career in America.


By Joe Fitzgerald
Boston Herald Columnist

Monday, April 9, 2007 - Updated: 01:45 AM EST

Frank Conahan, while delighted with the work of his young assistant, George Dimov, remembers being stunned when the latter pulled him aside one day to ask if he would recommend him for an internship.
“He was like an aide, bringing patients in and out of rooms, something kids can do after six months of school,” Conahan, a physician with a thriving practice in Norwood, explained. “Though he appeared to be much more advanced than that level, I still couldn’t believe what I was hearing. So I said, ‘George, that’s a big step; how could I possibly do that?’ And that’s when he told me, ‘Actually, I am a doctor.’ ”

Dimov then related a remarkable story.
He had been a general practitioner in Plovdiv, the second-largest city in Bulgaria, where his wife, Magdalena, enjoyed a career as a dentist.
“But Bulgaria is not America,” Dimov said. “I had read about America in books, seen it in the movies, and knew it was a magnet for people from all over the world. I loved the American spirit, the ultimate freedom, the ultimate opportunities you have here. But because we were a Communist country, it was not possible for us to leave. So America was just a dream.”
Then Communism collapsed and a lottery system was instituted, allowing winners to emigrate.
“In 1998 I won a green card, allowing me to take my wife and our son, Daniel, who was 3, to America,” Dimov said. “It was very hard saying goodbye; in fact, we cried, leaving for a world we really knew nothing about, except that it was a land where dreams came true.
“We arrived in Tampa in 1999 with five bags of clothes and $2,000 my mother gave us from her savings. Neither of us spoke a word of English and we knew our credentials would not be accepted. Yet arriving here was one of the best days of my life.”
He began washing dishes, busing tables, working in a factory, “and we both got jobs at a nursing home where we changed diapers and gave baths to old people.”
With his first check he purchased a textbook on anatomy.
“It took me 14 hours to read six pages,” he recalls. “I found more than 500 words I did not understand, though the medical terms were familiar because they come from Latin. I was basically learning the language by studying, and by the time I finished my 10th book my English had improved significantly.”
Magdalena threw herself into studying, too, and by 2002 was accepted at BU. So they packed up and came to Boston, where George found work delivering pizzas while continuing to pound the books at home.
“But I thought I should be associated with the medical field,” he said. “So when I found Dr. Conahan was looking for an assistant, I applied, but I told him I was hoping to become a nurse, never mentioning I was a physician in Bulgaria. I was afraid he’d be concerned I might start talking to patients, discussing their medications and treatments, which is not how it’s done in this country.”

 

He stayed with Conahan for two years while Magdalena studied full-time at dental school.

Today, at 37, she’s practicing in Portsmouth, N.H.
And George, 38, known as Georgui in his native land, is wrapping up a residency in Augusta, Maine, closing in on his dream of becoming a doctor in America.
In the meantime he became a U.S. citizen.
“I’ve been a physician for 30 years,” Conahan, 60, mused. “And I have to ask myself, if our country ever got turned upside down, would I be able to go to a foreign country, not speaking a word of its language, and start all over again, beginning with the most menial jobs? That’s what these two professionals did, reminding me of how much we take for granted.”
Dimov, however, figured he was just doing what needed to be done.
“I love Bulgaria, and part of me will always be Bulgarian,” he said. “Though it was devastated by the Communists, it’s a beautiful country. But America is paradise, as long as you’re willing to work, study and learn the language. And you need a little luck, too.
“That’s me, a very lucky guy.”
4.5 M Tourists to Visit Bulgaria in 2005
Bulgaria expects some 4.5 million foreign tourists in 2005, reads the Tourism Development Strategy, Deputy Minister of Economy Dimitar Hadjinikolov informed in Varna. US$2 million revenues to the f...
President Kwasniewski Cruised on a Warship
Poland's President Aleksander Kwasniewski and his Bulgarian counterpart Georgi Parvanov cruised on a warship from the coastal city of Varna to Nessebar. The missile corvette 'Lightening&#...
Hundreds to Observe the Mars' Radiance
  The observation of the Great Alignment of Mars and the Earth with the 15-cm telescope in the planetarium in Smolyan town will start from today on. The doors of the biggest planetarium in this c...
The First Museum of Bagpipes Was Established
The establishment of the unique and only of the kind in Bulgaria Museum of the Bagpipes is one of the most attractive ideas in the pre-election campaign of Dancho Kiryakov, nominee for the post of ...
UNESCO 's Secretary General will pay an official visit to Bulgaria
Mr. Koichiro Matsuura, the Secretary General of the United Nations Education, Science and Culture Organisation (UNESCO), will pay an official visit to Bulgaria from 26 to 28 August 2003 on the invi...
The Karayan Festival takes place in Plovdiv
The unique cultural event, based on the model of the famous Vienna Film Festival, started in the year 2001, inspired by Vladimir Vladigerov, the artistic director of the festival. The then-program ...
The Thracian Heritage
The Thracian Heritage
8/20/2003 12:00:00 AM
As we have learned from an article in the SEGA newspaper, dated Aug.25th 2001, the ancient Thracian tombs in Bulgaria are over 15,000. Unfortunately, only 1000 are explored by scientific expedition...
Let?s talk again about the Old Town
Let?s talk again about the Old Town
8/19/2003 12:00:00 AM
We will try to create a fusion of two different articles in the today?s issue of the Maritsa newspaper: the one from page 10, dedicated to Eng. Bozhidar Todorov and his project (which is, unfortuna...
Bulgarian alloy for dentures
Bulgarian alloy for dentures
8/18/2003 12:00:00 AM
/based on an article in the Maritsa Newspaper/A team of metallurgists of the KCM Joint-Stock Company, Plovdiv, has processed and clinically tested gold alloy for metal-ceramics used in the dentist...
?Scene at a Crossroads? Theatrical Festival in Plovdiv
The festival is organized as a mutual project with the International Institute of Mediterranean Theatre ? Madrid, and has annual issues ever since 1997. Leading Bulgarian theatres play their curren...