- Athens Polytechnic uprising
The Athens Polytechnic uprising in 1973 was a massive demonstration of popular rejection of the
Greek military junta of 1967-1974 . The uprising began onNovember 14 ,1973 , escalated to an open anti-junta revolt and ended in bloodshed in the early morning ofNovember 17 after a series of events starting with atank crashing through the gates of the Polytechnic.The causes
Greece had been, since
April 21 ,1967 , under the dictatorial rule of the military, a regime which abolishedcivil rights , dissolved political parties andexile d, imprisoned andtorture d politicians and citizens based on their political beliefs Fact|date=July 2008.1973 found the junta leader Papadopoulos having undertaken a "liberalisation" process of the regime, which included the release of political prisoners and the partial lifting of censorship, as well as promises of a new constitution and new elections for a return to civilian rule. Opposition elements including
Socialist s were thus given the opportunity to undertake political action against the junta.Fact|date=July 2008The junta, trying to control every aspect of politics, had interfered with student syndicalism since 1967, by banning student elections in universities, forcibly drafting students and imposing non-elected student union leaders in the national student's union, EFEEFact|date=July 2008. These actions eventually created anti-junta sentiments among students, such as
Geology studentKostas Georgakis who committed suicide in 1970 inGenoa ,Italy as an act of protest against the junta. With that exception, the first massive public action against the junta came from students onFebruary 21 ,1973 .On
February 21 ,1973 law students went on strike and barricaded themselves inside the buildings of the Law School of theuniversity of Athens in the centre ofAthens , demanding repeal of the law that imposed forceful drafting of "subversive youths", as 88 of their colleagues had been forcefully drafted. Thepolice were ordered to intervene and many students were reportedly subjected to police brutality. The events at the Law School are often cited as the prelude to the Polytechnic uprising.Fact|date=July 2008The student uprising was also heavily influenced by the youth movements of the sixties, notably the events of May 1968.Fact|date=July 2008
The events
On
November 14 ,1973 students at the Athens Polytechnic ("Polytechneion") went on strike and started protesting against the military regime ("Regime of the Colonels"). As the authorities stood by, the students, calling themselves the "Free Besieged" (Greek: Ελεύθεροι Πολιορκημένοι, a reference to a poem by Greek national poetDionysios Solomos inspired by the Ottomansiege ofMesolonghi ), barricaded themselves in and constructed a radio station (using laboratory equipment) that repeatedly broadcast across Athens: "Here is Polytechneion! People of Greece, the Polytechneion is the flag bearer of our struggle and your struggle, our common struggle against the dictatorship and for democracy!" [http://www.athensnews.gr/athweb/nathens.print_unique?e=C&f=12502&m=A01&aa=3&eidos=A Etho Polytechneio] Text in Greek: Εδώ Πολυτεχνείο! Λαέ της Ελλάδας το Πολυτεχνείο είναι σημαιοφόρος του αγώνα μας, του αγώνα σας, του κοινού αγώνα μας ενάντια στη δικτατορία και για την Δημοκρατία, transliterated as: "Etho Polytechneio! Lae tis Elladas to Polytechneio einai simaioforos tou agona mas, tou agona sas, tou koinou agona mas enantia sti diktatoria kai gia tin Dimokratia") [] .Leftist , later to bepolitician ,Maria Damanaki was one of the major speakers. Soon thousands of workers and youngsters joined them protesting inside and outside of the "Athens Polytechnic". In the early hours ofNovember 17 1973 , the transitional government panicked, [http://www.athensnews.gr/athweb/nathens.print_unique?e=C&f=12982&m=A11&aa=2&eidos=A "Past present" and quote:"Markezinis had humiliated himself by 'requesting' Papadopoulos to reimpose martial law in the wake of the November 17 uprising at the Athens Polytechnic" ] , "Athens News", 4 October 2002] sending atank crashing through the gates of the Athens Polytechnic. Soon after that, Markezinis himself had the humiliating task to request Papadopoulos to re-impose martial law. Prior to the crackdown, the city lights had been shut down, and the area was only lit by the campus lights, powered by the university generators. AnAMX 30 Tank (still kept in a small armored unit museum in a military camp in Avlonas, not open to the public) crashed the rail gate of the Athens Polytechnic at around 03:00am. In unclear footage clandestinely filmed by a Dutch journalist, the tank is shown bringing down the main steel entrance to the campus to which people were clinging. Documentary evidence also survives, in recordings of the "Athens Polytechnic" radio transmissions from the occupied premises. In these a young man's voice is heard desperately asking the soldiers (whom he calls 'brothers in arms') surrounding the building complex to disobey the military orders and not to fight 'brothers protesting'. The voice carries on to an emotional outbreak, reciting the lyrics of the Greek National Anthem, until the tank enters the yard, at which time transmission ceases.According to an official investigation undertaken after the fall of the Junta, no students of
Athens Polytechnic were killed during the incident. Total recorded casualties amount to 24 civilians killed outside Athens Polytechnic campus. These include 19-year oldMichael Mirogiannis , reportedly shot to death by officerG. Dertilis , high-school studentDiomedes Komnenos , and a five-year old boy caught in the crossfire in the suburb of Zografou. The records of the trials held following the collapse of the Junta document the circumstances of the deaths of many civilians during the uprising, and although the number of dead has not been contested by historical research, it remains a subject of political controversy. In addition, hundreds of civilians were left injured during the events. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/november/25/newsid_2546000/2546297.stm BBC: On this day] quote: "It follows growing unrest in Greece, and comes eight days after student uprisings in which 13 people died and hundreds were injured.". ]Ioannides' involvement in inciting unit commanders of the security forces to commit criminal acts during the Athens Polytechnic uprising was noted in the
indictment presented to the court by the prosecutor during theGreek junta trials and in his subsequent conviction in the Polytechneion trial where he was found to have been morally responsible for the events.Aftermath of the uprising
On
November 14 , the uprising triggered a series of events that put an abrupt end to the regime's attempted "liberalisation" process underSpiros Markezinis . the Greek political landscape and failed repeatedly. Ironically, in his biographical notes published as a booklet by supporters in 1980 it is mentioned that he attended Polytechneion, the prime Engineering School in the country, but did not graduate.Taxiarkhos Dimitrios Ioannides , a disgruntled Junta hardliner, [http://www.athensnews.gr/athweb/nathens.print_unique?e=C&f=12502&m=A01&aa=3&eidos=A "Greece marks '73 student uprising"] , and:"the notorious Brigadier Dimitrios Ioannidis now serving a life sentence for his part in the 1967 seizure of power - immediately scrapped a programme of liberalisation introduced earlier" and: "His was but to do the bidding of a junta strongman who had never made a secret of his belief that Greeks were not ready for democracy." "Athens News", 17 November 1999] Ioannis Tzortzis, University of Birmingham [http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/hellenicObservatory/pdf/TheMetapolitefsiThatNeverWas.pdf "The Metapolitefsi that Never Was: a Re-evaluation of the 1973 ‘Markezinis Experiment’"] quote 1: Thus the students ‘had been played straight into the hands of Ioannidis, who looked upon the coming elections with a jaundiced eye. quote 2: Ioannidis said to Pattakos ‘we are not playing. We shall have a dictatorship, send all our opponents to exile on the islands and stay in power for thirty years!’] used the uprising as a pretext to re-establish public order, and staged a counter-coup that overthrewGeorge Papadopoulos andSpiros Markezinis onNovember 25 the same year. Military law was reinstated, and the new Junta appointed GeneralPhaedon Gizikis as President, and economistAdamantios Androutsopoulos as Prime Minister, although Ioannides remained the behind-the-scenes strongman.Ioannides' abortive coup attempt on
July 15 1974 against ArchbishopMakarios III , then President of Cyprus, was met by an invasion of Cyprus byTurkey . These events caused the military regime to implode and ushered in the era ofmetapolitefsi .Constantine Karamanlis was invited from self-exile inFrance , and was appointed Prime Minister of Greece alongside President Phaedon Gizikis. Parliamentary democracy was thus restored, and the Greek legislative elections of 1974 were the first free elections held in a decade.17 November, the date of the event, later became the name of a Greek terrorist group, in reference to the uprising.
Legacy
November 17th is currently a school holiday in Greece. Schools and universities stay closed during the day. The central location for the commemoration is the campus of the Polytechneio. The campus is closed on the 15th (the day the students first occupied the campus on 1973). Students and politicians lay wreaths on a monument within the Polytechneio on which the names of Polytechneio students killed during the
Greek Resistance in the 1940s are inscribed. The commemoration day ends with a demonstration that begins from the campus of the Polytechneio and ends at theUnited States embassy .The student uprising is hailed by many as a valiant act of resistance against the military dictatorship, and therefore as a symbol of resistance to tyranny. Others believe that the uprising was used as a pretext by
Taxiarkhos Dimitrios Ioannides to put an abrupt end to the process of ostensibleliberalization of the regime undertaken bySpiros Markezinis .Metapolitefsi
Metapolitefsi refers to the period in Greek history after the restoration of democracy, subsequently to the fall of the Junta in 1974.Expand-section|date=May 2008
Citations and notes
See also
*
History of Modern Greece
*Greek military junta of 1967-1974
* Metapolitefsi (Μεταπολίτευση)
* [http://www.athensnews.gr/athweb/nathens.print_unique?e=C&f=12936&m=A08&aa=1&eidos=A The boy who braved the tanks]
* [http://www.athensnews.gr/athweb/nathens.print_unique?e=C&f=13231&m=A10&aa=1&eidos=s Athens by Night]
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