Athens Polytechnic uprising

1973 student uprising against the Greek junta From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Athens Polytechnic uprising occurred in November 1973 as a massive student demonstration of popular rejection of the Greek military junta of 1967–1974. It began on 14 November 1973, escalated to an open anti-junta revolt, and ended in bloodshed in the early morning of 17 November after a series of events starting with a tank crashing through the gates of the Athens Polytechnic. It is believed that approximately 40 people were killed by the Greek army on that day, and more than 2,000 were injured. This was the first event in a series of political crises that ultimately led to the fall of the junta in the summer of 1974, just a few months later.

Date1417 November 1973
Location
37°59′16″N 23°43′54″E
Caused byJunta's authoritarianism
GoalsFall of the Junta
Quick facts Date, Location ...
Athens Polytechnic uprising
Εξέγερση του Πολυτεχνείου
Part of the Greek junta and the Cold War
Protesters outside the Athens Polytechnic on Patission Street
Date1417 November 1973
Location
37°59′16″N 23°43′54″E
Caused byJunta's authoritarianism
GoalsFall of the Junta
MethodsStudent protest
Resulted inUprising suppressed:
  • Junta is preserved but weakened
  • Dozens of students murdered
  • International backlash
  • Attempts at liberalization by Georgios Papadopoulos, which results in another coup launched by hardliner Dimitrios Ioannidis
  • Founding of the far left terror organization 17N and revival of anarchism in Greece
  • Break between the Greek youth and traditional leftist parties until then (notably Communist ones)
Parties
Lead figures

Non-centralized leadership

Greece Georgios Papadopoulos
Greece Spyros Markezinis
Greece Panagiotis Sifnaios
Greece Panagiotis Therapos
Greece Nikolaos Dertilis

Casualties
Deaths40 (24 identified, 16 unidentified)[1]
Injuries2,000+ (1,103 verified)[1]
Close
The old gate

The uprising had a lasting impact on Greek politics; it marked a break between the Greek youth and traditional leftist parties (KKE), and it also saw the beginning of the revival of Greek anarchism. The repression faced by students gave rise to the terrorist organization 17N.

Background

The first massive public action against the Greek junta came from students on 21 February 1973, when law students and anarchists[2] went on strike and barricaded themselves inside the buildings of the Law School of the University of Athens in the centre of Athens, demanding repeal of the law that imposed forcible conscription.[3]

An anti-dictatorial student movement was growing among the youth, and the police utilised brutal methods and torture towards them, in order to confront the threat.[4]

November events

14 November

The entrance of the National Technical University of Athens

On 14 November 1973, students at the Athens Polytechnic (Polytechneion), radicalized by the nascent Greek anarchist circles[2] went on strike and started protesting against the military junta (Regime of the Colonels). As the authorities stood by, the students were calling themselves the "Free Besieged" (Greek: Ελεύθεροι Πολιορκημένοι, a reference to the poem by Greek poet Dionysios Solomos inspired by the Ottoman siege of Mesolonghi).[5][6][7] Their main rallying cry was:

Bread-Education-Liberty!
(Psomí-Paideía-Elefthería)

An assembly formed spontaneously and decided to occupy the Polytechnic. The anarchist group that had just formed at the university, notably thanks to the actions of Christos Konstantinidis[8] and Nikos Balis, occupied a central place in this movement,[9][10] Konstantinidis, in particular, succeeded in having the occupation extended into the night of the first day, which set the movement in motion for the long term.[11] They adopted the following motion in the 14 November General Assembly:[12]

The autonomous assembly of workers located in the premises of the Polytechnic School calls on workers to occupy places of production and to create factory and strike committees with the ultimate goal of establishing workers' councils. The minimum program of the workers' councils is the destruction of wage labor, the state, capitalism, and politics.

The anarchist group leading the uprising quickly tagged the university and placed their banner at the entrance, until it was removed by communist militants who did not support the movement.[10]

In contrast, two main student parties, the Marxist pro-Soviet A-AFEE and Rigas, did not endorse the movement.[13] A Coordination Commission of the Occupation (CCO) was formed but had loose control over the uprising.[14] Anarchists were labeled as provocateurs by the Communist Youth of Greece because they voiced slogans that were not directly tied to the students' demands (such as advocating for sexual freedom, social revolution, and the dismantling of the State).[15] The connection to the French 1968 movement was evident.[15] Historian Kostas Kornetis, reviewing the inter-leftist dynamics at play during the uprising and the lack of support by the Communist parties, noted:[15]

The occupation largely bypassed the two main left-wing student organizations, and therefore there was no effective control of the direction that it took or of the students’ demands for the first day and a half. The occupation was not within the scope of the leadership of the pro-Moscow communists, which considered it 'an irresponsible and hasty move of an intense leftist character'. In fact, A-EFEE distanced itself from the venture from the very beginning, as it disliked unorganized action, which could get out of hand. [...] Rigas more or less shared this attitude, although without expressing a clear-cut position, as it was not ready for such an eventuality.

Police had gathered outside but did not manage to break into the premises.[16]

15 November

During the second day of the occupation (often called "celebration day"), thousands of people from Athens poured in to support the students.[16] A radio transmitter was set up using laboratory equipment, enabling the occupations to run a pirate radio station, over which they ran broadcasts with requests for solidarity and aid. Maria Damanaki, then a student and member of A-EFEE, popularized the slogan "Bread-Education-Freedom".

The Communist parties, having seen the success of the revolt, attempted to take control of it.[17] They established a committee that excluded the anarchists and threw them out of the buildings, preventing them from entering, in order to seize control of the uprising.[17] They were also in conflict with the anarchists because they did not appreciate their intersectional slogans, which called for sexual liberation, feminist slogans, or the abolition of the State, setting up patrol groups to remove them.[17]

The demands of the occupation were anti-imperialistic and anti-NATO.[18] Third parties that allied themselves with the student protests were the construction workers (who set up a parallel committee next to CCO) and some farmers from Megara, who coincidentally protested on the same days in Athens.[19]

16 November

On Friday, 16 November, the CCO proclaimed that the students were aiming to bring down the junta. During the afternoon, demonstrations and attacks against neighbouring ministries took place. Central roads were closed, fires erupted and Molotov cocktails were thrown for the first time in Athens.[20] Students barricaded themselves in and that repeatedly broadcast across Athens:

Polytechneion here! Polytechneion here! People of Greece, the Polytechneion is the flag bearer of our struggle and your struggle, our common struggle against the dictatorship and for democracy![21][22]"

17 November

In the early hours of November 17, 1973, the transitional government sent an AMX-30 tank crashing through the gates of the Athens Polytechnic.[23][24] Soon after that, Spyros Markezinis had the task of requesting Georgios Papadopoulos to reimpose martial law.[23]

An official investigation undertaken after the fall of the junta declared that no students of the Athens Polytechnic were killed during the incident. However, 24 civilians were killed outside the campus. These included 19-year-old Michael Mirogiannis, reportedly shot to death by officer Nikolaos Dertilis, high-school students Diomedes Komnenos and Alexandros Spartidis of Lycée Léonin, 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 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 injured during the events.[25]

Legacy

A sculpture commemorating the uprising
Gate of the Polytechnic, 17 November 2011

An annual march commemorates the uprising, starting near the grounds of the Polytechnic.[26] In 1980, the police killed two people in an attempt to prevent marchers from passing by the American embassy in Athens, the traditional end point of the march in protest to the CIA's role in supporting the coup.[27][28] The now-defunct far-left organization Revolutionary Organization 17 November, named after the last day of the Polytechnic uprising. After the transition to democracy, the group's chief hitman, Dimitris Koufontinas, attempted to assassinate figures associated with the junta, also titling his memoir-manifesto "I Was Born November 17th" (Γεννήθηκα 17 Νοέμβρη).[29][30]

The students' struggle had a lasting effect on Greek anarchism.[31] This event marked the revival of anarchism in Greece and democratized anarchist positions within the country.[31] It also marked a break between the Greek youth and the traditional leftist parties of the time, such as the Communist Party of Greece (KKE).[31]

See also

Citations

Sources

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