The Morning Call

Fate of ‘Sistine Chapel of socialism’?

Bulgaria wrestling with what to do with symbol of dark past

- By Andrew Higgins

BUZLUDZHA, Bulgaria — Like most Bulgarians of her generation, the young architect had little interest in or knowledge of her country’s communist past. But that changed when, during studies in Germany, she got asked about the “big UFO in Bulgaria.”

She said she heard there was a “very strange building” atop a mountain somewhere but that she “had no idea what it was.”

Her curiosity piqued, she found a photograph of the enormous, weird and, after years of neglect, crumbling concrete tribute to Bulgaria’s defunct Communist Party.

“It was love at first sight,” recalled the architect, Dora Ivanova. “As soon as I saw the picture, I knew I had to do something.”

Ivanova, 31, ditched her career as a commercial architect and, in the decade since, has poured her energy into saving from ruin one of the world’s strangest structures — a masterpiec­e of brutalist architectu­re that, in its Pharaonic dimensions, is both sinister and oddly beautiful.

Perched on a mountain in central Bulgaria, it looks like a grounded flying saucer, flanked by a 230-foot concrete tower that, when it was built, boasted the world’s largest and highest illuminate­d red star, which stopped shining decades ago.

Nikifor Haralampie­v, a conservati­onist from Bulgaria’s National Academy of Art who is working with Ivanova, described the building as the “Sistine Chapel of socialism.”

Standing in the rubblestre­wn main hall beneath a dome decorated with a red star and the slogan “workers

of the world unite,” he added, “I would not compare the quality of the artwork, but the idea was the same” — the glorificat­ion of an all-powerful system of faith.

The building’s original role as a communist shrine has meant that Ivanova, leader of the Buzludzha Project Foundation, has had to not only scramble for money to support her salvage work, but to wrestle with the question of how to deal with an unwanted and, in many ways, deeply ugly past.

What do you do with a building that was built to glorify an oppressive communist system but is now a wreck?

Should it be torn down in the spirit of reckoning with history — just as the statues of Confederat­e generals have been toppled in the United States and monuments to Soviet hegemony have been demolished across Ukraine, particular­ly since Russia invaded in February?

Or should it be restored to its former glory?

That is the wish of the building’s architect, Georgi Stoilov, 91, an unrepentan­t believer in communism.

Stoilov said at his home in the Bulgarian capital, Sofia, that the building was a reminder of “morally and materially superior times,” and he insisted that “we need to return it to the way it was when I built it.”

That, said Ivanova, is not going to happen, not least because it would cost too much in a country that ranks as the poorest member of the European Union. The Getty Foundation in Los Angeles, hailing the building as “a masterpiec­e of architectu­ral engineerin­g,” gave $185,000 in 2019 to fund a “conservati­on management plan.” It later provided a further $60,000 to help stabilize its collapsing mosaics depicting communist glory.

But restoring the whole monument would require millions of dollars, and even if there were enough money, Ivanova said, “our goal is not

to restore but to preserve and reuse” it as a venue for meetings, concerts and reflection, as well as a tourist attraction.

Her project, she said, “does not want to glorify the past” by returning to its original state a building that opened in 1981 as the Memorial House of the Bulgarian Communist Party at Buzludzha Peak, a cathedral-like shrine to the gods of Bulgaria’s secular religion — Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin and the Balkan country’s first communist leader, Georgi Dimitrov.

Ivanova said she instead wanted to simply stop the rot so that people can visit without being hit on the head by falling masonry and get a sense of a place that “whether you like it or not, it represents a lot about our history.”

She added, “We don’t want a museum freezing everything as it was, but a place for discussion about the past,” a rarity in a country that, blighted by corruption and economic hardship since the collapse of communism in 1989, has avoided a reckoning with its recent history.

“The idea is to overcome this silence — the shame of talking about what happened,” she said.

Unlike Poland, the Czech Republic and other former Soviet satellite states in Eastern Europe, Bulgaria never made a clean break from communism. The party purged its longtime boss, Todor Zhivkov, Bulgaria’s de facto leader from 1954 to 1989, and agreed to free elections in 1990.

But the party, rebranded as the Bulgarian Socialist Party, won those elections and survived as a significan­t political force, although it is far less popular today. It has resisted efforts to address communist-era oppression, focusing instead on the party’s glory years during World War II, when it rallied partisan fighters to resist fascism.

The complex, which took more than seven years and 6,000 workers to build, operated for only eight years. Originally the property of the Communist Party, it was nationaliz­ed in 1992. The state, all but bankrupt at the time, suspended funding, fired the last staff and left the building to the mercy of bad weather, vandals and thieves who, according to Ivanova, “stole everything that could be stolen.”

Ivanova and her team have erected a waterproof cloth screen in the main hall to block the rain and snow that had loosened some of the 2.5 million tessera, small blocks of stone and glass that were used to make the mosaics.

The next task, which will depend on fundraisin­g efforts, is to repair the roof originally covered in copper but stripped of that years ago by thieves, who also looted tons of marble, miles of wiring and all the windows. To help raise money for the job, Ivanova wants to open the main hall this year to paying visitors, provided their safety can be guaranteed.

The building’s exterior is already a tourist attraction, drawing more than 50,000 people last year.

“It is so bold and so brutal. I love this stuff,” said Alex Thompson, a British aerospace engineer and aficionado of “dark tourism” who recently made a pilgrimage up the mountain.

Benjamin Harper, a friend who traveled with him, said it reminded him of the partly destroyed grandstand in Nuremberg, Germany, from which Adolf Hitler reviewed Nazi rallies in the 1930s. “This place is hauntingly similar,” he said.

Tearing it down, said Haralampie­v, would delay a long-stalled reckoning with his country’s past.

“You walk around here, and you can see and feel the scale of what happened,” he said. “This is the best way to learn about the regime. OK, we hate the party, but it is our history.”

 ?? NANNA HEITMANN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Visitors at the Memorial House of the Bulgarian Communist Party in Buzludzha.
NANNA HEITMANN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Visitors at the Memorial House of the Bulgarian Communist Party in Buzludzha.

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