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BistraStoimenova
FollowThe UFO
The story of the place:
In case you are not a Bulgarian, you probably don't know that place exists - it is one of the symbols of the Bulgarian Commun...
Read more
The story of the place:
In case you are not a Bulgarian, you probably don't know that place exists - it is one of the symbols of the Bulgarian Communist (now Socialist) party. At the very end of the 19th century a guy called Dimitar Blagoev (also known as Diadoto - meaning the Grandfather) founded the political movement on Buzludzha peak (which is a few kilometers away from the iconic Shipka peak).
During the Communist regime (somewhere around the 1960s) the comrades from the party decided to build a monument that would be more spectacular than the one at Shipka. So they did – the monument was a real piece of Socialist Realism – full of mosaics, frescoes of the Comrades and the memorable history of the Party. Why did they choose the UFO look, no one knows. It was used for decades but then, in 1989, the regime fell and Buzludzha was left to decay.
The monument became famous once again when some foreign photographers managed to sneak in and show to the world the state to which it’s reduced to.
Read less
In case you are not a Bulgarian, you probably don't know that place exists - it is one of the symbols of the Bulgarian Communist (now Socialist) party. At the very end of the 19th century a guy called Dimitar Blagoev (also known as Diadoto - meaning the Grandfather) founded the political movement on Buzludzha peak (which is a few kilometers away from the iconic Shipka peak).
During the Communist regime (somewhere around the 1960s) the comrades from the party decided to build a monument that would be more spectacular than the one at Shipka. So they did – the monument was a real piece of Socialist Realism – full of mosaics, frescoes of the Comrades and the memorable history of the Party. Why did they choose the UFO look, no one knows. It was used for decades but then, in 1989, the regime fell and Buzludzha was left to decay.
The monument became famous once again when some foreign photographers managed to sneak in and show to the world the state to which it’s reduced to.
Read less
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