Showing posts with label Sofia Bulgaria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sofia Bulgaria. Show all posts

Saturday, June 03, 2017

On June 3, 1987, from Sofia to Belgrade (and Budapest) by rail.


Previously: Sightseeing in Sofia with the ghost of Leonid Brezhnev.

On this day in 1987, I took no photos. June 3 was a travel day, and it turned out to involve a great deal more mileage than I expected at the beginning.

Pictured above is a page from the July 1992 edition of the Thomas Cook European Timetable. It's the oldest copy of those timetables still in my possession, but the schedule probably was little changed from 1987.

For those who planned on traveling by train, the Thomas Cook was a worthwhile investment. I spent hours poring over the schedules, and much later, wrote a short appreciation.

The blessed return of a personal Bible.

If my recall is to be trusted, by midday on June 2 I'd decided that while there was much of potential interest in Bulgaria, it would have to wait for next time (which unfortunately still has not arrived).

I wanted to give Belgrade (Yugoslavia) another chance, and move in the general direction of Hungary.

The ticket counter at Sofia's central station issued me a second class ticket without seat reservations, good for the 417-kilometer, seven-hour trip. The price was about $12.

Let's hope I packed sandwiches.


One memory stands out. We stopped at a station somewhere in Bulgaria, and on the adjoining track was a local train going in the opposite direction. It had a 3rd class car, seldom seen outside the East Bloc, filled with crude wooden benches without a stitch of upholstery.

It might have been 1937.

The train arrived in Belgrade before 4:00 p.m., and I was determined to improve on the muddled bearings of my previous brief visit. This time I knew where the youth hostel was located, quickly found the right tram to take me there, and arrived at the address only to find the building in the process of being demolished, a decision ostensibly made since the publication date of my guidebook.

Once again, absolutely no elderly women were waiting at the station with offers of cheap rooms. Unable to avoid hotel prices beyond my budget, and stubborn to the last, it was back to the ticket window, this time for an overnight train from Belgrade to Budapest (another 375 kilometers sleeping in a seat), then prior to departure, across the street to one of the neighborhood greasy spoons for an evening meal.

On Thursday morning, I was in Budapest. The following three weeks were spent in Hungary, and while the country may have been a socialist nightmare for its inhabitants, it proved to be budget traveler's dream playground.

Next: 30 years ago today ... experiencing Sopron, Hungary.

Friday, June 02, 2017

30 years ago today, sightseeing in Sofia with the ghost of Leonid Brezhnev.


Previously: 30 years ago today, sightseeing in Sofia (photos).

Thirty years ago, upon returning to Indiana from my summer travels, I processed my slides and organized them in carousels to view in dark of night with ample beer and the occasional frozen pizza.

Since the number of slides I possessed eventually far exceeded the available carousels, they were removed and packed into trays.

Yesterday while digitizing the slides it abruptly dawned on me that they were not arranged chronologically. Apparently I'd seeded them to make good slide shows. Fortunately I'd numbered the slides first, in pencil. Viewing them chronologically makes far more sense during those instances when Google's street view is needed to help me remember what is before my eyes.

This brings me to the statue of Leonid Brezhnev pictured above, which I took somewhere in a public park while in Sofia on June 2, 1987 (above). In retrospect, and logically, it must have been near the Soviet war memorial.

Of course, Brezhnev was leader of the USSR for 18 years until he died in 1982. At the time, it wasn't apparent that Brezhnev's departure from the scene would pave the way for Gorbachev, the Soviet Union's collapse, Yeltsin and Putin, but this essay explains the road map.

The Death of Leonid Brezhnev and the Long Battle for Russia's Future, by Brian Whitmore (The Atlantic)

On November 10, 1982, Leonid Brezhnev died, sparking a generational change in the Soviet leadership and setting in motion an ongoing cycle of reform and reaction in Russia that remains incomplete and inconclusive to this day. The players' names have changed as has the lexicon, but the fundamental issue remains essentially the same: how to carry out essential reforms when said reforms threaten the existing elite's continued dominance.

Here are two magical photos of Brezhnev culled from the web (thanks, Thomas). First, the Soviet leader meets Marshall Tito for fun in the Yugoslav woods, circa 1970. Brezhnev looks ready to draw his pistol, but Tito is amused.


Then, arguably the finest photo ever taken of a world leader in his dacha.


Things were so much simpler then.

Next: On June 3, 1987, from Sofia to Belgrade (and Budapest) by rail.

Thursday, June 01, 2017

30 years ago today, sightseeing in Sofia (photos).


Previously: Five days in Skopje with the greatest seismologist of them all

Thirty years ago today, I arrived in Sofia, capital of the People's Republic of Bulgaria. I'd taken a bus from Skopje in Yugoslavia, probably via Kumanovo and Kyustendil. Nowadays it's a three-and-a-half hour trip. Back then, navigating the border crossing took at least ninety minutes, and the roads weren't as good.

I remember very few concrete details from my brief time in Sofia, although I can clearly recall being the only American on the bus, with only seven passengers altogether from Skopje. At the border, the Yugoslavs yawningly waved us through. The Bulgarian police were uptight and seemed about the confiscate my Let's Go: Europe book, but they relented and the subversive budget travel text remained with me.

The language barrier was daunting. Only Russian was useful as a foreign language, and fortunately I knew numbers and a few words. Like Russian, Bulgarian is written in the Cyrillic alphabet. At least I could decipher place names and street signs.

From the bus station in Sofia, I walked directly to the tourist bureau. Following the fashion of many such bureaus in the East Bloc, it wasn't particularly welcoming. The bureaucracy was stifling, and the terms of the mandatory daily currency exchange were baffling.

In effect, visitors had to have verification of "approved" accommodation for each night's stay, or face fines. I'd been led to believe that rooms in private homes were available, if dependent on the whim of tourist office staff. I was due for a lucky break, and got one.

My room was in the flat of a pensioner with lots of books written in languages I didn't know how to read. It was within walking distance of everything I'd have time to see. I slept on the couch, and it cost only a few dollars per night.

Given the mandatory exchange, there was ample cash left over to eat functional meals and drink draft beer in the workers' cafeteria located on my street. Meat, potatoes, a vegetable and two beers ran three, maybe four dollars. These were marvelous institutions, pleasingly egalitarian and unparalleled for people watching.

The first two sets of "then/now" photos illustrate how much things can change after three decades. In 1987, the expanse of yellow painted bricks in Battenberg Square (called 9 September Square during the Communist era) was filled with people strolling, not cars. The building to the left is the former royal palace, now the National Gallery of Art.

The Google street view images are from 2015.


You can see the structure with columns to the right has disappeared entirely. It was the Georgi Dmitrov mausoleum, where the Bulgarian Communist leader's embalmed corpse functioned as the main attraction of a pilgrimage site comparable to Lenin's tomb in Moscow. In 1990, Dmitrov's remains were cremated and buried, and in 1999 the mausoleum was dynamited.


I desperately wanted to visit the official museum of Bulgarian Communism, which reportedly contained the prison pajamas and shaving kits of Dmitrov and other iconic figures, but it was already closed on Monday by the time I made it there, and it never opened on Tuesday. I'm guessing it has since been liquidated, too.

At any rate, a short walk from the mausoleum brought me to the spectacular Alexander Nevsky Cathedral

"Designed in the Neo-Byzantine style, the church can hold 10,000 people and is one of the largest Eastern Orthodox cathedrals in the world."


The cathedral was built in honor of Russian soldiers who died in the war to liberate Bulgaria from the rule of Ottoman Turkey (1877-78). Cultural affinities help to explain why Bulgaria was among the more loyal Soviet satellites.

Next, two buildings facing the cathedral. There is no explanation for my taking this photo apart from a fascination with the gold-painted bricks, mocha stucco and a pleasing overall ambiance of Balkan-ness.


My room was a walk-up somewhere along this street. The group wielding flags was walking toward St. Nedelya Church. There were various aggregations parading through downtown that evening, leading me to surmise an organized propaganda show of some variety.


According to my notes, all museums and churches were closed on Tuesday. There was little opportunity to go inside, and so I must have spent the entire day walking.

In front by the subway stop is the medieval Church of St. Petka of the Saddlers. Up the street is the Banya Bashi Mosque. A synagogue also was nearby, though during the Communist era it rarely opened. For more about the oppression of religion in Bulgaria from 1949 through 1989, this excerpt from the Library of Congress is informative.


Just to the right of the sunken church and a block away was a secular cathedral: Communist Party headquarters, one of three buildings dubbed the Largo, and built in the 1950s. Here the red nerve center can be seen over the rooftops, complete with the standard issue red star.


It took some doing to unravel the next photo. I can't recall even seeing the seated lion sculpture behind what was intended as a vignette of Sofia street life. In fact, the lion marks the entrance to Bulgaria's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.


Finally, there is Sofia's Monument to the Soviet Army -- and it still stands in 2017. The main soccer stadium's lights are seen behind the heroic statuary.


Click through the article at Wikipedia to see what has happened in recent years to the sculpture at the base: "Soviet Army soldiers as the American popular culture characters: Superman, Joker, Robin, Captain America, Ronald McDonald, Santa Claus, Wolverine, The Mask, and Wonder Woman."


On Wednesday, 3 June 1987, I took a train to Belgrade and unexpectedly ended up in Budapest on Thursday morning. More about this another time.

Next: Sightseeing in Sofia with the ghost of Leonid Brezhnev.