From the DW:
“Greek anti-Nazi resistance hero
Manolis Glezos dead at 97”
Glezos, a prominent Greek whose
act of defiance against Nazi occupation during World War Two was a rallying cry
for the country's resistance movement, died on Monday, authorities said. Greek
wartime icon Glezos died from heart failure on Monday after being hospitalized
earlier this month for other ailments, Greece's state television ERT announced.
Glezos had been placed in emergency care in November with respiratory problems,
according to news reports.
An icon of the Resistance: On May 30, 1941, during Nazi Germany's
occupation of Greece, the 18-year-old Glezos and his 19-year-old friend
Apostolos Santas, a law student, climbed onto the Acropolis in the middle of
the night and tore down the Nazi flag, replacing it with a Greek flag. The
pair's act of defiance in removing the swastika from the Athenian Acropolis,
considered by many to be a symbolic birthplace of Western democracy, made him
one of the country's most revered figures. The Nazis, who did not discover the
identity of the young activists until 1942, condemned in absentia the
perpetrators to death. Glezos was ultimately imprisoned and tortured, but
escaped execution. Santas died in 2011. "Hitler had said in a speech that
'Europe is free.' We wanted to show him that the fight was just
beginning," Glezos told AFP news agency in a 2011 interview, recalling how
he and Santas managed to steal the flag. After the war, "Greece conquered
its freedom, but not its independence," he said. Following World War Two,
he was repeatedly elected to Greece's parliament, representing communist,
socialist and leftist parties over a 60-year period. His activism and staunch
defense of democracy landed him in jail numerous times during the Greek Civil
War and later the Cold War. During Greece's economic crisis that began in the
late 2000s, Glezos opposed his government's austerity measures and campaigned
to force Germany to repay money it was forcibly "loaned" by Greece
during the war.
Prominent voice of the
anti-austerity movement: With his white
mane of hair and bushy moustache, Glezos remained a recognizable fixture in
leftist politics. Already in his 80s, he braved police tear gas at protest
rallies against crippling austerity cuts imposed in exchange for international
bailouts that kept the Greek economy afloat between 2010 and 2015. In 2014, the
91-year-old statesman was elected to the European Parliament with the leftist
Syriza party, becoming the body's oldest deputy. He resigned from the post the
next year. Upon being asked what had kept him at the forefront of politics for
so long, Glezos told Reuters news agency in 2012 that it was the memories of
dead comrades. "Before every battle, every protest, we told each other:
'If you live, don't forget me'. I am paying a debt to those I lost during those
difficult years. My only regret is that I haven't done more."
Outpouring of respect from across
party lines: Leftist SYRIZA leader and
former Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras described Glezos as "brave, upright,
a fighter until the very end." Though Glezos remained staunchly leftist
throughout his life, prominent figures from the right, including Prime Minister
Kyriakos Mitsotakis, immediately honored his memory. "The death of Manolis
Glezos leaves the Greeks poorer. But his life has left Greece richer, because
his example … is a guiding light that arms us with strength so that we may
remain united through difficult times like the present," Mitsotakis said
on Monday. "Together with every Greek, I bow my head in respect at the
memory of Manolis Glezos," added Mitsotakis, who is aligned with the
center-right New Democracy party. The prime minister described Glezos as a
"symbol of our nation's freedom."
^ The world has lost a symbol of
Greek Resistance against the Germans with the passing of Manolis Glezos. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/greek-anti-nazi-resistance-hero-manolis-glezos-dead-at-97/a-52959404
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