The Annual Conference on Cultural Diplomacy 2014

A World without Walls; Opportunities for Peace Building in a Time of Global Insecurity

Berlin; November 7th - 10th, 2014
Held Parallel to the Berlin Celebration of the 25th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall"
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November 10th: As Bulgaria would prove on this day, even the most hard line Communist leaders were not immune to the revolutionary changes sweeping throughout Europe.

Communist Party leader Todor Zhivkov, who had ruled Bulgaria with an iron first for nearly 34 years, resigned.

While he resigned publicly, a vote by the Communist Party Central Committee effectively forced him out of office, where he was replaced by Foreign Minister Petar Mladenov, who was more open to initiating reform throughout the country.

The Central Committee's decision was a response to the growing public protests that were forming throughout the country.  Where once opposition to the government was dealt with swiftly and brutally, brazen and outspoken civil rights groups such as Eco-Glanost openly defied the government and proved to ordinary Bulgarians that they could stand up to the repressive regime. 

Within days of Zhivkov's resignation, tens of thousands protested the Communist government. They tore up pictures of Zhirkov and demanding democratic changes be implemented.

The protesters' demands for change would pay off. In June of 1990, Bulgaria would hold its first free elections since 1946. Bulgaria, which for years existed as one of the most hard line of Soviet Satellite States, would re-invent itself as a fledging democracy. One which would see stabililty and progress as the years of Communist rule faded into memory.