144 years have passed since the self-sacrificing campaign of emblematic Bulgarian poet and revolutionary Hristo Botev and his detachment of revolutionaries who went on a march from the town of Kozloduy on the bank of the Danube River to the Balkan Mountain close to Vratsa. The commemoration of the historical events, which grew into organized celebrations, has long been an integral part of public life in the Vratsa region /Northwestern Bulgaria/ through which Botev and his associates passed. This year, however, due to the spread of Covid-19, the traditional events in memory of the heroes have been postponed. It has only been announced that there will be a sports relay race on June 2, reports the correspondent of the Bulgarian National Radio in Vratsa, Iva Antonova.
The annual commemorative celebrations in honour of Hristo Botev took place  even during the two world wars, and their beginning, although informal, was  laid even before Bulgaria’s Liberation from the Ottoman Rule in 1878.
Very little is known about the first celebrations marking Botev’s memory after  the Liberation of Bulgaria. A witness to the events of that time, the priest  Nikola Petrov, claims that he was the one to place the wooden cross on Milin kamak  (Milin stone locality) during the Russo-Turkish war. This first memorial sign  marked the place where on 18 (30) May 1876, at the end of the April Uprising,  Botev's detachment entered into a fierce battle with the Turkish bashibozuk and  about a hundred soldiers of the regular troops. More than twenty of Botev's  rebels left their bones on the Milin Kamak mountain hill, but the losses of the  Turks were greater due to the more favourable position of the Bulgarian detachment.  Immediately after the Liberation, in 1879, the teacher Toma Mladenov called for  celebrations on the Kozloduy shore, from where the rebels started their march  to the Balkan Mountain, and in 1882 a votive sign was placed there. 
"In the following years 1884-85 the most sincere  and selfless celebrations were held, in which the population of the Vratsa  region participated," Miroslava Topalova, curator in the New History department  at the Regional History Museum in Vratsa, told the BNR. 

"In 1937, to commemorate the feat of Hristo Botev  and his detachment, a 30-metre reinforced concrete monument with a cross on it  was erected on Okolchitsa peak. The place was chosen for the monument because  it is visible from everywhere. In 1949 the upper part of the monument was  rebuilt into a five-pointed star, and in 1992 it was restored to its original shape.  Since 1946, a national tourist march is organized in the footsteps of the Botev  detachment – starting from the town of Kozloduy to Okolchitsa peak”, says  Miroslava Topalova, adding: 
“In 1961, the rock on which Hristo Botev died on June  2, 1876, was turned into a memorial with a text engraved in it: "Your  prophecy has come true - you are alive!" In addition to Kozloduy, at Milin  Kamak and the towns and villages through which Botev's detachment passed,  solemn celebrations are held in Vratsa as well. With the help of donations, on  May 27, 1890, the first sculptural and architectural monument after the  Liberation erected to perpetuate the memory of the hero in the Principality of  Bulgaria was placed in the town centre. 
The opening ceremony was attended by  Prince Ferdinand 1, Prime Minister Stefan Stambolov, as well as Hristo Botev’s  mother, wife and daughter. Even then, in front of the monument to the voivode, survivors  from the Botev's rebels and pilgrims gathered on the square. Funeral services  and prayers are held every year, scenes from the detachment's battle path are  re-enacted, there are fireworks, a torchlight procession, sports demonstrations  and competitions are held”. 

This year, however, all events have been cancelled due  to restrictive measures. So far, the municipality of Vratsa has announced that  despite Covid-19 the traditional march on the path of Botev's detachment - from  Kozloduy to Okolchitsa - will take place. On June 2, cyclists, football players  and other members of sports clubs from Vratsa will walk on the path within the  space of 6 hoursin a relay race. The athletes will  hand over the flag of the revolutionaries, so that it will be flown over the  glorious peak shortly before the sirens sound, which, as always, will take  place throughout Bulgaria at exactly 12 o'clock at noon. 
Compiled by Gergana Mancheva
English Rossitsa Petcova 
Photos: BGNES archive, Iva Antonova, BNR archive
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