Difference between revisions of "Grigoris Lambrakis"

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'''Gregoris Lambrakis''' (Γρηγόρης Λαμπράκης) ([[April 3]] [[1912]]–[[May 27]] [[1963]]) was a [[Greece|Greek]] [[politician]], [[physician]], and member of the faculty of the School of Medicine at the [[University of Athens]].
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#REDIRECT[[Gregoris Lambrakis]]
 
 
Lambrakis was born in [[1912]] in the village Kerasitsa, in the [[Arcadia prefecture]] of the [[Peloponnese]]. He had been elected to the Greek parliament in [[1961]] as a candidate of the Pan-democratic Agrarian Movement of Greece on the ticket of the Eniaia Dimokratiki Aristera (EDA) which was Greece's farthest left party besides the outlawed communists.
 
 
 
A member of the National team who broke the Greek record for the long jump and the triple jump, he studied medicine at the [[University of Athens]]. Lambrakis was a pacifist who used his Parliamentry immunity to march unmolested in a walk for peace, from [[Marathon]] to central [[Athens]] after it had been banned by the police who had beaten up the other marchers. It was this march that brought him to the forefront of Greek politics, making him a hero of the left and an enemy of the right.
 
 
 
Lambrakis' ideals captured the imagination of the Greek left who after a quarter a century of opression by the right in the name of fighting communism, were ready to embrace his goals of peace and a nuclear-free world. Unfortunately these ideals and Lambrakis' speeches incited the right-wing to hysteria, believing him to be a communist and a danger to pro-America Greece.
 
 
 
A plot was hatched to set him up and murder him after a speech in [[Thessaloniki]] in [[1963]]. Using two hired thugs in a three wheeled vehicle, one drove and the other in the back with a club knocked him over the head in plain view of the police and a large number of people. A young magistrate by the name of [[Christos Sartzetakis]] was given the task of investigating the incident and give proof that his death was an accident. But Sartzetakis courageously implicated the leaders of the police in a conspiracy to murder Lambrakis and uncovered a secret organization of right-wing thugs used for dirty work, controlled by the police and perhaps higher. Like the Kennedy assassination and Watergate rolled into one, the Lambrakis murder eventually brings down  premier [[Constantine Karamanlis]] and his pro-American government. Though never implicated in the murder, the perception was that even if Karamanlis was not a part of it, he should have had more control over the police. Lambrakis funeral was massively attended and just hours after his death composer [[Mikis Theodorakis]] founded the [[Lambrakis Youth Movement]], the first mass-movement of its kind in Greece. The letter '''Z''', which means '''zei''', or in English ''he lives'' became the rallying cry of the Greek youth who found their voice following the Lambrakis murder, a voice that would move the country towards the left, or at least to the center when [[Georgios Papandreou]]'s Center Union won the next election.
 
 
 
But 4 years later when the government was overthrown by the military Junta of [[April 21]] [[1967]] one of the many things they banned was the letter Z. In [[1969]] [[Costa-Gavras]] released the [[Z (film)|movie Z]], about the Lambrakis murder and investigation. It won numerous awards including best foreign film and was nominated for an oscar for best picture. Still on the list of many critic's best movies of all time, Z is a must see for anyone who wants to understand Greece of the fifties and early sixties and the man who might have become a great leader instead of a martyr.
 
 
 
The [[Athens Classic Marathon]], run every year in November and gaining popularity, is dedicated to Grigoris Lambrakis.
 

Latest revision as of 17:32, November 19, 2005

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