Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Bulgarian children in Vienna create online book about Vassil Levski

“To Vassil Levski with love”. That is the title of a small book by the children from the Saints Cyril and Methodius Bulgarian-Austrian school in Vienna, in which they share their thoughts about the Apostle of Freedom, as he is known in Bulgaria.

In this pandemic year, when in-person events and meetings have been few and far between, the students from the Bulgarian school in Vienna decided to put together drawings, essays and interviews in an online book. It is their way of marking the 149th anniversary since the hanging of Vassil Levski.


“At a staff meeting we handed out the assignments and it took us two-three weeks to put the material together,” Simona Zaharieva, a teacher at the school says. “The smallest children drew pictures, the older children did interviews and stories, and the oldest of them wrote poems and texts.”


And while they are listening to stories or putting together material the children find out more about Vassil Levski, and try to identify with his character traits, the qualities that make us human – in the past and in our day.

“He has done a lot for his country, he was kind, brave and strong, he helped a lot of people, he fought for Bulgaria to be a free country, and he was the only one who could jump over a big gully” – that is how the children from the Bulgarian school in Vienna describe Vassil Levski. Here is what they say about him:


Samul, 10: I would like to make a long jump like he did, and to be brave like him.

Hristo, 12: The modern heroes who resemble Levski are teachers and athletes.

Anna, 10: What made the biggest impression on me while I was copying the portrait were his blue eyes, his blonde hair, his kind expression.

Pressian, 10: I first heard about Levski from my parents who told me he was a great man and a role model because he teaches us to never give up.

Maria Marina, 10: I know there exist modern heroes though I have never met them. I would like to be kind like Levski and to help people.

Simeon, 10: He can serve as an example of honesty and bravery, I too have these qualities.


According to Simona Zaharieva Vassil Levski is a national symbol and every person in Bulgaria should know about him, possess something connected with him and fight for freedom. Levski was hanged on 18 February, 1873, and on that date the pupils will have a special lesson, and continue the conversation about the role played by individuals in history, about the importance of Levski and the qualities that set him apart from all other people.

Almost 400 Bulgarian children – from kindergarten up to the 12th grade – study the Bulgarian language, history and traditions at the Bulgarian school in Vienna. Some of these children are actually the children of the first students at the school, Simona Zaharieva proudly says.


“We are constantly working on different things,” she says further. “The school has an anniversary, so we are organizing an international competition “The Bulgarian school – 30 years”. We are going to have a ceremony, as well as a conference. We very much hope we shall be able to hold the events we are planning, because in these pandemic times long-term planning is a difficult thing.”

Photos: courtesy of Simona Zaharieva



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Happy 89th, Radio Bulgaria!

On February 16, Radio Bulgaria celebrates its 89th anniversary . Throughout these years, our multilingual media has been not only a channel of information, but also an invaluable link with our audience around the world. Today, Radio Bulgaria offers rich..

published on 2/16/25 7:35 AM

Todor Tokin: BNR's Foreign Broadcasts was not a channel of communist ideology, on the contrary!

At various times in its existence, the BNR's Directorate of Foreign Language Broadcasts, now known as Radio Bulgaria, the multimedia multilingual platform of Bulgarian National Radio, was more than just a workplace for a number of popular journalists...

published on 2/16/25 7:15 AM
Кирил Вълчев

BTA unveils a unique font on its anniversary

February 16, 2025 marks the 127th anniversary of the first bulletin of the Bulgarian Telegraph Agency, signed by its first director Oscar Iskander. The agency was established in 1898 by a decree of Prince Ferdinand I. Just like 127 years ago, today the..

published on 2/16/25 6:10 AM