Background
Vela Peeva was born on March 16, 1922 to ethnic Bulgarian parents Peyo and Katerina in the village of Kamenitsa, today a neighbourhood of Velingrad.
Vela Peeva was born on March 16, 1922 to ethnic Bulgarian parents Peyo and Katerina in the village of Kamenitsa, today a neighbourhood of Velingrad.
In 1941, she was accepted at the University of Sofia, where she studied Pedagogy and Geography. However, she did not graduate, as she chose to be a partisan instead.
In 1939, Vela joined the Worker"s Youth League, a communist organization. When Gera fell ill of a cold in 1944, Vela volunteered to take her place in an assignment. The assignment was to collect food from the village of Ladzhene and sneak it up to the partisans in the mountains.
After she and Stoyo Kalpazanov had collected the food, they were betrayed on the way back and Stoyo was captured.
Vela, seriously wounded, managed to escape and crawl away to a cliff, which she hid under for forty days. A local forest worker brought her food and medicines, and when Vela was just healing, he feared he would be discovered by the fascists and betrayed her.
Vela was surrounded by the fascists and is believed to have turned her gun on herself to avoid being captured alive. After killing her the fascists beheaded her body and strode around the nearby villages with Vela"s head impaled on a spike.
After beheading Vela, the fascists went to Stoyo Kalpazanov"s cell and began interrogating him about the whereabouts of the remaining partisans.
However, he remained loyal to them, and refused to give any information. He was shot for this. Following her death, Vela was named a Bulgarian national heroine by the communists and her birthplace was turned into a museum.
Her sister, Gera, who had meant to take her place in the anti fascist activities, wrote a book about her years after her death.