VULKO
CHERVENKOV was one of the many Bulgarian communists to whom the
Stalin-style Soviet socialism was the only development model. Born
in 1900 in Zlatitsa, he joined the communist party at the age of
nineteen. In 1923 he took part in the September uprising, was sentenced
to death, immigrated to the Soviet Union and worked with the Comintern.
In Moscow he was provided with dogmatic political education. Being
highly intelligent, he quickly stood out as one of the Bulgarian
communists best acquainted with communist ideology after September
9 1944.
Chervenkov embarked on his way to the top in the summer of 1941.
As a member of the Bureau of the Central Committee of the Bulgarian
Communist Party in exile in Moscow, he was responsible for the underground
communist radio station Hristo Botev. He returned to Bulgaria in
October 1944 and until 1962 was permanent by a member of the Politbureau.
Chervenkov was a Stalinist hard-liner, very keen on party discipline.
For a while he was in the shadow of Ceorgi Dimitrov, Vassil Kolarov
and Traicho Kostov, concealing his ambitions to get to the top.
A stern person, firmly convinced in the rightness of the party line,
Chervenkov was an active participant in the suppression of the non-communist
political opposition and supported violence and physical retribution
on political opponents. Locked up in concentration camps and prison
cells, they either died or became firm opponents of the regime.
After Vassil Kolarov's death in 1950 Vulko Chervenkov not only
became prime minister, but took the helm in the communist party
as well, getting himself elected as general secretary. By becoming
President of the National Council of the Fatherland Front he came
to hold all the strings in the state.
Chervenkov got to the top with Stalin's support. His coming to
power marked the end of a violent struggle in which the former emigrant
communists, closely' related to Stalin's regime, got the upper hand
over the local communists who started to lose ground after the execution
of Traicho Kostov. Though devoting his life to politics, Chervenkov
remained a reticent man. To his close associates he used to say
that a politician who spoke too openly about everything aroused
mistrust: a point of view indicative of Stalin's schooling, demanding
the erection of a wall of communist ideology between the leader
and ordinary people.
After Chervenkov's downfall the party accused him of having implanted
the personality cult in Bulgaria. Indeed, he established a personal
regime in both the state and the party structures. His personality
was above anyone and anything. During his rule democracy, freedom
of ideas and self-criticism were nothing but empty phrases, non-
existent in political life.
At the regular party congress in early 1954, the results of the
first five-year plan were reported with much enthusiasm, while in
fact the forcible incorporation of land into cooperatives was devastating
Bulgarian agriculture.
The complete dependence on the Soviet Union and the implicit obedience
to the Kremlin-imposed internal and foreign political line made
the idea of a "people's democracy" as the official form
of government utterly senseless. Stalin's death in 1953 made Chervenkov's
position more vulnerable. Having gained the support of the new Soviet
leader Nikita Khrushchev, Todor Zhivkov gradually removed Chervenkov
from all posts by 1962. For a while he was even expelled from the
communist party. Chervenkov died in 1981.
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