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European Researchers Night

20 YEARS OF EUROPEAN RESEARCHERS’ NIGHT: SKOPJE HOSTS THE CERN EXHIBITION

 

The EU Delegation and Europe House yesterday, with an event held at Diamond Mall, marked the European Researchers’ Night 2025. The event represented the final step in a series of activities organized by Europe House across the country. This year is a jubilee for science, as all over Europe 20 years of the European Researchers’ Night are being celebrated, making 2025 a significant moment in promoting science. That is why the main event this year, the exhibition “CERN and the Universe: The Science that Connects Us”, was realized in cooperation with one of the world’s most important scientific institutions – CERN, the leading center for nuclear and particle physics, as well as with the Institute of Physics at the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in Skopje.

 

At the opening of the exhibition, speeches were delivered by the EU Ambassador, H.E. Michaelis Rokas, Prof. Dr. Mimoza Ristovska from the Institute of Physics at the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Dr. Tadeusz Kurtyka from CERN, as well as Jan Stojanovski, a student at the same faculty, internationally recognized in physics and mathematics and a representative of the new generation of young researchers. In his address, Ambassador Rokas emphasized: “The purpose of this event is to spark curiosity among young people and encourage them to aspire to careers in science and technology. Through exhibitions like this one, we show that science is not abstract – it is alive, a living practice that affects us all. At a time when disinformation and conspiracy theories too often dominate public discourse, such initiatives demonstrate the EU’s commitment to fact-based knowledge and critical thinking. As the renowned Polish-French physicist and chemist, Nobel Prize laureate Marie Skłodowska-Curie said: ‘Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less.’” Dr. Tadeusz Kurtyka from CERN added: “I would like to express my gratitude to Europe House and the scientific community of Skopje for the decision to dedicate this event, as part of the European Researchers’ Night, to the CERN exhibition. I hope that this exhibition will contribute, even if in a small way, to the activities of Europe House that lead towards your country’s EU membership and promote the priorities and initiatives dedicated to the younger generation. I sincerely hope that this exhibition will serve as a bridge for deepening ties and strengthening cooperation between CERN and Macedonian scientists, and let me add that we would be delighted to welcome you as our guests at CERN!”. Prof. Dr. Mimoza Ristovska, who spent the entire year of 2020 at CERN in Geneva, stated: “While today at this exhibition we see the scientific results and technologies that emerged from CERN for the benefit of humanity, let us remember that behind them stands the European spirit of cooperation among peoples, carefully nurtured by someone.” Jan Stojanovski, student and young researcher, said: “I am especially proud that in our country there are scientists who work in different fields and who are part of international teams. From participating in competitions, I have seen that there are also many young people who are ready to dedicate their lives to science. I hope they will continue on that path and develop this noble calling.”

 

 

 

Over the next two weeks, the exhibition “CERN and the Universe: The Science that Connects Us” will give visitors the opportunity to explore the history of the universe and particle physics, take part in virtual tours of CERN’s accelerator, and visit the children’s science corner where, through play, children can learn about atoms and the periodic system.

Activities marking the European Researchers’ Night were also held in Bitola, Struga, Ohrid, Tetovo, Veles, Kriva Palanka, Kumanovo, and Strumica, where parallel programs with different initiatives were realized, all in the spirit of science and research. In Bitola, citizens had the chance to experience virtual reality; in Struga and Ohrid, activities were organized under the motto “Science by the Shore”; in Strumica, children and high school students engaged in creating scientific experiments; while in Veles, a scientific “treasure hunt” was carried out. In Kriva Palanka and Kumanovo, students took part in laboratory sessions and were awarded a symbolic “young scientist passport.” In rural schools in the Tetovo region, young people participated in laboratory workshops, and it is planned, through Europe House, for students from Kochani to travel to Skopje to visit the CERN exhibition. Additionally, within the program, another event is planned – a masterclass by Dr. Tadeusz Kurtyka from CERN on the topic “CERN, the Large Hadron Collider and Future Particle Accelerators”, to be held at the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in Skopje.

By marking the European Researchers’ Night and through the partnership with CERN and the Institute of Physics at the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, the EU Delegation and Europe House once again emphasized their strong commitment to science, research, and innovation. Through such events, science is not only brought closer to the public, but young people also see their future as part of the European scientific community. The events aim to give visibility to talented young researchers, connect them with global scientific practices, and provide them with inspiration for new ideas and achievements. This initiative highlights the importance of making science accessible to everyone, whether they are pupils, students, or curious citizens eager to learn more.

The exhibition “CERN and the Universe: The Science that Connects Us” at Diamond Mall in Skopje remains open to the public until October 15. All interested are invited to visit, discover fascinating facts about the universe and particle physics, and experience science up close through interactive content and educational activities.

 

THE PRESPA REGION – THE RENAISSANCE OF THE SOUL

Resen is a bustling city, snug between the Prespa and Ohrid Lakes, where you begin to feel the smell of the Mediterranean and the surrounding colourful landscape. Resen, surrounded by the tranquillity of the water and the tempting succulent scent of crisp and juicy apples, tells us a story that heightens all our senses and brings us back to ourselves, to the rebirth of our spirit, to the Renaissance of the soul.

Resen is a small and charming town with significant cultural landmarks, such as the “Drаgi Tozija” Cultural House, which was built from 1905 to 1912 as the saray-palace of Ahmed Niyazi Bey, one of the leaders of the Young Turk Revolution. Today, it houses the Resen ceramic colony, home to many world-famous ceramic artists, and the permanent exhibition of the artwork of the Macedonian painter Keraca Visulcheva. The architecture of the palace is breath-taking. The locals are doing everything they can to protect the rich historic fabric and withstand the ravages of time. On your way out of the saray-palace, you cannot stop thinking how the city has an exceptionally rich heritage of historic buildings, still unknown to many, and how the locals care deeply about their little town.

Leaving Resen, you head off on a fascinating drive through a spectacular landscape conveying all the hues of nature, mesmerized by the vast reflection of clouds drifting on the glass horizon of the Prespa Lake. From here on, the beauties of nature seem to feel uplifting and nourishing for the spirit.

First stop – the village of Kurbinovo and the 12th-century church St. George (Sv. Gjorgji), renowned for its fresco of the Archangel Gabriel, commonly known as ‘the Angel of Kurbinovo.’ Traces of the influence of the artistic mastery of the 12th-century Byzantine fresco-painting, later on, can be seen in the world-famous Italian Renaissance cathedrals of Tuscany. – This is a story the locals know by heart and share proudly with visitors. Not far below the country road, we were pleasantly greeted by a goat herd that seemed strikingly curious about our camera lens. They skilfully captured our attention and very soon became the stars of our travelogue.

Next stop – the village of Ljubojno. The beautiful village charmed us even more when we learned the two legends of how it got its name. The first legend tells a Shakespearean ‘Romeo and Juliet’ love story but with a happy ending: two feuding families forbade the romance of their two children, so the boy and the girl ran away and settled in a new neighbourhood, which they called Ljubojno (literally: feeling or showing love). The second legend is about Ljuba, the first innkeeper in the village, who served excellent wine. Customers would go into her inn and loudly say: “Ljubo, vino” (Ljubo, [give us] wine). Today, Ljubojno is a village with traditional architecture and several monasteries that you can only admire, holding the Prespa Lake in the palm of its hand.

Time seems to have stopped in these places, but when travelling through them, time seems to fly. Somehow, these tranquil little places leave a lasting impression on your soul, vividly reminding you of the rich cultural heritage of our country!

As Goran Stefanovski put it:

“You can’t ask me not to feel part of the deepest and oldest world when Heraclea is my home; when Ohrid is my home; when Via Egnatia, the only motorway that existed in Europe between the 5th and 15th centuries, traversed along my grandmother’s house in Bitola. You can’t say that everything is on your side and nothing on ours.”

 

*The visit to the Prespa region was organised within the scope of the EU with You in Resen Project.

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