Katerina Cilka
Katerina Cilka (Bulgarian: Катерина Цилка) was a Protestant missionary from Bansko, abducted for ransom by a detachment of the Inner Macedonian Revolutionary Organization in 1901 and released in 1902.
Katerina Cilka | |
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Katerina Cilka | |
Born | 1868 |
Died | 22 June 1952 |
Occupation | nurse, teacher, missionary |
Biography
She was born as Katerina Dimitrova Stefanova (Bulgarian: Катерина Димитрова Стефанова) in Bulgarian Protestant family in the Ottoman Empire's town of Bansko in 1868. Cilka was a sister of the Sofia University Professor Constantine Stephanove. She moved to the United States to study at the Northfield Seminary and the Charity Nursing School of the Presbyterian Hospital (New York City). Cilka met in New York and married Grigor Cilka, an Albanian Protestant who studied at the United Theological Seminary. They returned to the Balkans and settled in Korçë. In the summer of 1901, Cilka helped Ellen Stone, who had to take a short training course for Bulgarian teachers in primary Protestant schools in her native Bansko. On September 3, 1901, Yane Sandanski and Hristo Chernopeev's chetas abducted both Stone and Cilka.[1] Their captivity lasted 4 months and became known as the Miss Stone Affair. They were set free on February 2, 1902 near the town of Strumica. After the Balkan Wars, she and her husband moved to Sofia. There Grigor died after the First World War from the Spanish flu. After his death, she went to live in Albania. She died in Tirana on June 22, 1952.[2]
References
- For Freedom and Perfection (the life of Yané Sandansky), Journeyman Press, 1988, ISBN 978-1-85172-014-9, p. 71.
- Richard Cochran, Katerina Tsilka, Institute for Albanian and Protestant studies, 2014, р. 48