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Vassil
Ivanov
Kunchev,
Levski,
whom
the
present-day
Bulgarians
consider
their
greatest
national
hero
of
all
times
and
epochs,
was
born
in
Karlovo,
a
prosperous
center
of
craft-industry
in
1837.
At
the
age
of
twenty
four
he
took
the
vows
of a
deacon.
The
lot
in
store
for
the
young
Bulgarian
was
obviously
not
the
one
of a
monk
living
in
resignation
to
the
world.
In
1862
he
fled
to
Serbia
and
enlisted
as a
volunteer
in
the
Bulgarian
legion
raised
by
Rakovski.
The
legion
took
part
in
the
Serbo-Turkish
hostilities.
Between
1862-1868
Levski
participated
in
almost
all
Bulgarian
armed
assaults
against
the
Ottoman
empire.
The
revolutionary
theory
which
took
form
in
Vassil
Levski's
mind
towards
the
end
of
the
60s,
turned
out
to
be a
leap
forward
for
the
Bulgarian
liberation
movement.
Levski
viewed
the
national
liberation
revolution
as a
concomitant
armed
upheaval
of
the
whole
Bulgarian
population
in
the
Ottoman
empire.
It
followed
that
this
uprising
had
to
be
well-prepared
in
advance,
with
all
adequate
military
training
and
proper
coordination
on
the
part
of
an
internal
revolutionary
organization
branching
out
into
committees
in
each
living
area.
That
organization
was
supposed
to
operate
independent
from
the
plans
or
the
political
combinations
of
any
foreign
powers
which,
as
known
by
previous
experience,
had
brought
only
trouble
and
failure
to
the
national
revolutionary
cause.
Levski
also
determined
the
future
form
of
government
in
liberated
Bulgaria
- a
democratic
republic,
standing
on
the
principles
of
the
Human
and
Citizen
Rights
Charter
of
the
Great
French
Revolution.
That
was
the
only
document
hitherto
known
to
guarantee
the
individual
freedom
of
expression,
speech,
and
association.
In
their
essence
Levski's
ideas
tallied
with
the
most
radical
ideas
of
the
European
bourgeois-democratic
revolution.
In
more
practical
terms,
in
1869
Levski
addressed
himself
to
the
task
of
setting
up
local
committees.
By
the
middle
of
1872
he
had
scoured
the
Bulgarian
lands
with
the
dedication
of
an
apostle,
and
succeeded
in
establishing
a
strong
network
of
committees
in
hundreds
of
Bulgarian
towns
and
villages
which
were
in
constant
contact
with
and
subordination
to
the
clandestine
government
in
the
town
of
Lovech.
They
provided
weapons,
organized
combat
detachments,
and
got
traitors
and
Turkish
officials
punished.
In
May
1872,
the
Bulgarian
Revolutionary
Central
Committee
and
the
Internal
Revolutionary
Organization,
convinced
that
a
coordination
of
the
efforts
would
be
for
the
general
good,
merged
into
one
organization.
Revolutionary
uplift
overwhelmed
the
whole
country.
This
enthusiasm
was
short-lived
as
only
a
few
months
on,
in
the
autumn
of
that
year,
during
a
robbery
of a
Turkish
post-office
meant
to
procure
money
for
weapons,
the
Turkish
police
picked
up
the
trail
of
some
committees
in
northeast
Bulgaria
including
the
organization
headquarters
in
Lovech.
Numerous
arrests
of
revolutionaries
followed,
threatening
the
organization
to
fall
through.
Karavelov
demanded
that
Levski
should
immediately
rise
the
Bulgarians
in
revolt.
Levski,
who
was
in
Bulgaria
at
that
time
and
was
well-aware
that
the
population
was
yet
unprepared,
refused
to
fulfill
the
order
and
tried
to
take
into
his
charge
all
documentation
belonging
to
the
organization
- a
safety
precaution
against
its
getting
into
Turkish
hand,
which
could
destroy
the
movement
completely.
Unfortunately,
he
himself
fell
in
the
hands
of
the
Turkish
authorities
who
put
him
on
trial
and
sentenced
him
to
death
by
hanging.
Levski
was
sent
to
the
gallows
in
Sofia
in
February
1873.
The
death
of
Vassil
Levski
- a
generally
recognized
leader
of
the
national
revolutionary
movement,
caused
temporary
crisis.
The
Bulgarian
Revolutionary
Central
Committee
was
groping
for
new
ways
and
means.
A
number
of
revolutionaries
undertook
actions
without
coordinating
them
with
the
underground
headquarters,
while
others
sank
into
apathy.

Special
Thanks
to
Magdalena
Anguelova |