Σάββατο 17 Νοεμβρίου 2018

HOW THE ATHENS POLYTECHNIC UPRISING IDEALS OF FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY LOST THEIR GLOW!

Σημείωση: Άρθρο για τους ξενόγλωσσους αναγνώστες του ιστολογίου μας (Faros News 2018)

  • Επιμέλεια: Ελένη Σοφού



By Philip Chrysopoulos

In November 1973, it had been six and a half years since Greece was placed under strict military rule. Opponents of the junta who took over in the April 21, 1967 coup were tortured, jailed, exiled, or under surveillance. The referendum that elected dictator Georgios Papadopoulos as President of the Republic and Spyros Markezinis as transitional Prime Minister in October, and the promise of elections to be held in February of 1974, could not appease the Greek people who wanted their freedom.
Greek students began the first demonstrations, in February and March of 1973. On November 14, 1973 students demonstrated at the School of Law and entered the Polytechnic School (Polytechneio) building on the corner of Patission and Sournari Streets, about 100 meters away from the National Archaeological Museum of Athens.
By evening, police asked them to leave the premises and the students decided to occupy the Polytechneio building. By word of mouth, more people heard about the uprising and joined the group at the school. A pirate radio transmitter was set up and a call went out, inviting all Greeks to come to the Polytechneio and protest against the junta.
Behind the microphone was 21-year-old student Maria Damanaki. The repeated phrase “Polytechneio here! Polytechneio here! This is the radio station of the free, fighting students, of the free, fighting Greeks!” still echoes eerily in the minds of those who heard the announcements in those strange, ominous days.
By Friday, November 16, the Polytechneio building and the surrounding area was packed with people who went to protest. Some had gathered out of curiosity, since it had been years since demonstrations were allowed. Police surrounded the area, stopping the influx of people to the building. The authorities started calling on the crowd to disperse, and threatened them with violence. Tension was high and there were reported shootings and killings of people by the police.
By nightfall, all the protesters moved inside the Polytechneio campus and the authorities decided to call in the army. By 1:30 AM a tank stood menacingly in front of the gate, with police repeating the calls for people to come out of the Polytechneio building and disperse, but the students and the rest of protesters did not budge.
The tank crashed the gate of the Polytechneio campus at about 3 AM, and some grainy footage shot by a Dutch reporter shows the vehicle tearing down and crashing through the main steel gate as people still clung to its railings.
From inside the building, the radio announcer was pleading with the soldiers to not carry out the orders of their superiors and hurt their “brothers”, his voice emotional as he recited the national anthem, before the tank entered the yard and the transmission ended.
The army and police let all protestors inside the Polytechneio to leave unharmed from the Stournari Street gate. The next day the dictatorship announced that no students had been killed once the police entered the Polytechneio, but reports lingered of 24 dead outside the campus itself. A year later, after democracy had been restored, a prosecutor confirmed that there had been no deaths inside the campus, a ruling that was a unanimously confirmed by all the rectors of the National Polytechnic School.
On November 25, just days after the Polytechneio uprising, brigadier Dimitrios Ioannidis staged a coup overthrowing Papadopoulos and Markezinis. The new dictator established an even more harsh regime which ended several months later upon the failed coup attempt in Cyprus that brought the Turkish Invasion to the island on July 20, 1974.

Polytechneio commemoration now turned to a routine event marred by anarchists

The Polytechneio uprising commemorations after the restoration of democracy were to be a grand celebration of democracy. However, the November 17 anniversary was soon marred by the divisive politics that brought the Civil War less than 30 years later.
After the restoration of democracy, Konstantinos Karamanlis, the winner of the first post-dictatorship elections, in a grand gesture for the unity of Greeks, legalized the Greek Communist Party (KKE) that had been outlawed after the Civil War. On the first Polytechneio anniversary, the slogan “EAM-ELAS-Polytechneio” marked the rally, claiming the students’ struggle as a struggle of the Left alone.
The KKE at the time was funded generously by the Soviet Union and there was plenty of money for propaganda. Soon, all the Polytechneio heroes were claimed by KKE, as if the only people who didn’t want the dictators were the KKE members and other leftists. Maria Damanaki, representing the Greek Communist Party, was elected MP. KKE propaganda had arbitrarily divided Greeks to leftists and junta sympathisers, as if there were no people standing on middle ground.
Up until the late 1990s, the highlights of the Polytechneio commemoration day were laying wreaths at the school gate that stands as a monument in the campus yard, followed by a rally culminating outside the U.S. Embassy with the shouting of anti-American slogans — because of CIA support of the colonels — and the occasional clash with the police.
By then, the Greek people had seen many people proclaiming themselves as Polytechneio heroes, capitalizing on their professed “fight against the junta”. They saw hardcore leftists selling out and becoming rich capitalists, discovering that some anti-junta heroes had actually done business with the dictators during those seven years. Even Maria Damanaki started as a KKE parliamentarian, then moved to the more conservative left, then to PASOK, and now serves in the European Commission. She is one of the many rebellious youths of Greece who ended up serving the establishment as years passed.
In part due to the appropriation of the Polytechneio struggle by the Left, in part because people were less interested in politics in the “roaring”, affluent 1990’s, and in part out of sheer boredom, the November 17 celebrations waned. Year by year, participation in the rally was diminished to just a few thousand people, with the vast majority of them being KKE members, including KKE youth.
After the tragic killing of Alexandros Grigoropoulos by police in December 2008 and from the 2009 commemoration day onward, the Polytechneio rally and related protests became the starting point for mindless destruction, vandalism and violence by anarchist groups. News reports on November 18 were essentially damage logs and accounts of injured police officers. Fewer and fewer people participated in the Polytechneio commemoration day each year.
Even politicians started to snub the wreath-laying ceremony in the campus courtyard. Every year there are fewer and fewer people. Even the leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has not gone to Polytechneio ceremonies on November 17 for the past three years.
Seeing that the politicians who made a career out of anti-Americanism and anti-capitalism are now in parliament, enjoying all the perks of power and capitalism, more and more people abstain from taking part.
In addition, the economic crisis has reminded Greeks that there are more important things than politics, and that political colors are not exactly what they appear to be. Greeks endured a harsh, crippling recession with the conservatives of New Democracy, the socialists of PASOK and the leftists of SYRIZA. They saw that in their everyday lives during the years of crisis, whoever is in power — left, center, or right — the bread on the table is always meager. The ideals of the Polytechneio uprising are not very important to them at present.
Now, only two days before the commemoration day, there is no official announcement about scheduled events for the day. The average Greek citizen knows what to expect on November 17: anarchists clashing with the police, firebombs, destruction of public and private property, injuries to policemen, and hollow statements by politicians. It is 45 years later — and Greeks find that the meaning of November 17 has been lost behind the smoke of Molotov cocktails, antisocial sloganeering and general apathy.

Πηγή:https://greece.greekreporter.com