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(en) Greece, How to Organize an Insurrection
Date
Mon, 29 Dec 2008 14:17:46 +0200
We humbly present one of the first inside reports from participants in the upheavals that shook
Greece after the police murder of 15-year-old Alexandros Grigoropoulos in the anarchist
neighborhood of Exarchia on December 6. ---- This is only the first set of answers to come in from
our Greek comrades. We hope shortly to receive further perspectives from other elements of the
Greek uprising, so we can provide a comprehensive background on the context and dynamics of the
revolt. If you or someone you know is situated to give your own answers to these questions, please
email them to us at rollingthunder@crimethinc.com. ---- How were the actions coordinated within
cities? How about between cities? ---- There are hundreds of small, totally closed affinity
groups—groups based in longstanding friendship and 100% trust—and some bigger groups like the
people from the three big squats in Athens and three more in Thessaloniki.
There are more than 50 social centers in Greece, and anarchist political spaces in all the
universities of the country; also, the Antiauthoritarian Movement has sections in all major cities,
and there is a network of affinity groups of the Black Bloc active in all Greek cities, based on
personal relations and communicating via telephone and mail. For all of them, Indymedia is very
important as a strategic point for collecting and sharing useful information—where conflicts are
happening, where the police are, where secret police are making arrests, what is happening
everywhere minute by minute; it is also useful on a political level, for publishing announcements
and calls for demonstrations and actions.
Of course, we can’t forget that in practice the primary form of coordination was from friend to
friend through mobile phones; that was also the main approach used by young students for
coordinating their initiatives, demonstrations, and direct actions.
What kinds of organizing structures appeared?
a.) All sorts of small companies of friends were making spontaneous decisions in the streets,
planning actions and carrying them out themselves in a chaotic, uncontrollable manner: thousands of
actions taking place at the same time everywhere around the country…
b.) Every afternoon there was a General Assembly in squatted schools, squatted public buildings,
and squatted universities…
c.) Indymedia was used for announcements and strategic coordination of actions…
d.) The various communist parties also organized their own confederations of students…
e.) …And also, one especially influential federation was organized by the friends of Alexis, to
organize the students’ demonstrations and actions, the squatting of schools, and to publish general
announcements from the students’ struggle.
Were there any structures already in existence that people used to organize?
For the young students who were in the streets for the first time, and also for the immigrants
who participated, the telephone was more than enough; this produced a totally chaotic and
unpredictable element in the situations. On the other hand, for anarchists and anti-authoritarians,
the General Assemblies are the organizing tool they have used for the last 30 years during any kind
of movement. All affinity groups, squats, social centers, university occupations, and other
organizations have their own assemblies, as well. Some other participants included left political
organizations and left and anarchist university political spaces. During the fight, a lot of new
blogs appeared, and new coordinating networks of high-school students.
What different kinds of people have participated in the actions?
The majority were anarchists, half of them older ones, some at high risk as they had previous
charges for actions and would have to face custody if they were arrested. Beside them were
thousands of school students 16-18 years old. Alongside these groups were immigrants, thousands of
university students, many “gypsy” [Romani] kids taking revenge for social repression and racism,
and old revolutionaries with previous experience from other social struggles.
What different forms have the actions taken?
a.) Smashing, looting, and burning were the main actions that the young people used. They often
attacked the expensive shopping districts, opened the fancy luxury shops, took everything from
inside, and set fire to it in order to counteract the effects of the tear gas in the air. Many
turned cars upside down to serve as barricades, keeping the police at a distance and thus creating
liberated areas. The police used over 4600 tear gas bombs—nearly 4 tons—but people set countless
fires, enough to maintain areas in which you could breathe despite this chemical warfare waged by
the state against the people.
When the thousands of people on the streets realized that the black smoke of the fires could
cancel out the white smoke of the tear gas, they used the tactic of burning everything at hand as a
protection from the tear gas. Other techniques included the smashing of the pavement with hammers,
to produce thousands of stones for people to use as projectiles; and, of course, the personal
initiative of producing and throwing molotov cocktails. This last tactic was used especially to
force the riot police to fear and respect the demonstrators, and also as a way of controlling the
space and time of attack and escape.
b.) Attacks with sticks, stones and molotov cocktails were carried out against countless banks,
police stations, and police cars across the country. In smaller cities, the banks and the police
were the primary or only targets, as the small-scale society and face-to-face relations discouraged
the smashing of shops, with the exception of a few multinational corporate franchises.
c.) Hundreds of symbolic occupations were carried out in all kinds of public buildings, municipal
offices, public service offices, theaters, radio stations, TV stations, and other buildings by
groups of 50-70 people. Also, there were many symbolic acts of sabotage and blockading of streets,
highways, offices, metro stations, public services, and so on, usually accompanied by the
distribution of thousands and thousands of pamphlets to people in the area.
d.) Every day there were silent protests, art happenings, and non-violent actions in front of the
parliament and in all cities. Most of them were brutally attacked by the police, who used tear gas
and arrested people.
e.) Leftists organized concerts in public spaces with the participation of underground bands and
also politically conscious pop stars. The biggest one in Athens involved more than 40 artists and
drew over 10,000 people.
f.) Controlled student demonstrations were organized by the Communist Party. Many of these
attracted much less participation than the chaotic spontaneous student demonstrations.
How many of the participants in the actions have been involved in similar actions earlier? For
how many of them do you think this is their "first time"?
Many thousands of people were experienced anarchist insurrectionists, anti-authoritarians, and
libertarian autonomists; half of them were older anarchists who come into the streets only in very
important struggles, as most of them have previous charges. There were also many thousands of young
people who were radicalized over the last three years in the course of the social struggles for
Social Insurance and against the privatization of education, and also in the huge spontaneous
demonstrations that took place during the fires that burned almost 25% of the natural areas of
Greece in the summer of 2007. We estimate that for about 30% of the people, this was their first
rioting.
Which of the tactics used in the actions have been used before in Greece? Did they spread in the
course of this rebellion? If they did, how did it happen?
Most of the tactics used in this struggle have been used for a long time now in Greece. The most
important new characteristic of this struggle was the immediate appearance of actions all over the
country. The assassination of a young boy in the most important area of anarchist activity provoked
an instantaneous reaction; within five minutes of his death, anarchist cells all over the country
had been activated. In some cases, the police were informed much later than the anarchists about
the reason they were facing attacks from the people. For Greek society, it was a surprise that the
majority of young people in the country adopted the tactics of “anarchist violence, smashing and
burning,” but this was a result of the generalized influence that anarchists’ actions and ideas
have had in Greek society over the past four years.
Have any conflicts emerged between participants in the actions?
The Communist Party separated itself from anarchists and leftists, and organized separate
demonstrations. Also, the announcements that the Communist Party published, their appearances in
the corporate media, their speeches to the parliament, and the negative propaganda that they
carried on against all leftist organizations prove that they are a real enemy of any kind of
efforts for social change.
What is the opinion of the “general public” about the actions?
What is called “general public” during a period of tele-democracy is something that needs a lot
of discussion.
Generally speaking, the “general public” feel fear when the TV says that we were “burning the
poor people's shops,” but the people know well what kind of shops exist in the expensive districts
where the riots took place; they feel fear when the TV says that angry immigrants came out to the
streets and looted, but also they know that the immigrants are poor and desperate, and also that it
was only a minority of them that came to the streets. There were many artists, theoreticians,
sociologists, and other such personages who offered explanations about the revolt, and many of them
were beneficial for our causes; some were probably trapped by their need to participate in the
spirit of the times, while others were using the situation as an opportunity to honestly express
their real ideas. The "general public" is angry about the murder of a 15-year-old boy by a police
officer, and they hate the police much more than before; anyway, nobody liked the police in the
first place. The majority of “normal” people in Greece don't trust the right wing government or the
past (and probably future) socialist government, and they don’t like the police, expensive shops,
or banks. Now a new public opinion is appearing that offers all the social and ethical
justifications of revolt. If it was difficult to govern Greece before, now it will be much more
difficult.
How important to the context of these events is the legacy of the dictatorship in Greece? How
does it influence popular opinions and actions in this case?
In 1973, the young people were the only ones who took the risk to revolt against the
seven-year-running dictatorship; even if this was not the only cause of the end of dictatorship, it
remains in the collective memory that the students saved Greece from the dictators and the
domination of the US. It is a common belief that young people will put themselves at great risk for
the benefit of all, and this produces a feeling of hope and a tolerance of the students’ actions.
Of course, this story is now an old story and though it influences the background of the fights, it
is not mentioned in reference to this conflict.
Another influence comes from the student struggles of 1991 and 1995 against the privatization of
education, which succeeded in changing the plans of the government and saved public education until
today. Granted, the revolt of 2007 was probably the apex of the anarchist movement in Greece until
now, as it appeared all around the country and with a great deal of influence on the actions and
slogans and ideas of a general part of the society; but the earlier student struggles, especially
in Athens in 1991 were more visible and more generalized.
Do you think troubles in the economy are as important in these events as the corporate media is
saying?
The young people from the many rich areas of Athens also attacked the police stations of their
areas, so even the class war Marxists have serious troubles to explain what is happening: the
separation of the rich and poor doesn't seem to matter as much as long-existing solidarity and
participation in the fight for equality and social justice.
On the other hand, Greeks between the ages of 25 and 35 cannot make families and have children,
because of the economy. Greece is the most underpopulated society in all Europe. But we don't talk
about that here as the cause of the revolt. Young people are angry and they hate the police,
capitalist cynicism, and the government in a natural, instinctual way that doesn't need
explanations or a political agenda. The local media tried not to speak in depth about social
conditions here the way the English, French, or US media have. The local corporate TV stations
attempt to pass off lies about chaotic “masketeers” with no ideas and no social identity, because
the moral influence of anarchists is so strong now in this society that if they start to talk
seriously about our ideas on television, society could explode. With the exception of some TV
programs and newspapers, most of the mass media are trying to separate economic issues from the
chaotic revolt.
Even the leftists from the May ’68 generation, when they speak to the media, say that the
smashing and the riots are not political expressions of the needs and the hopes of the people—that
the anarchists and young people don't have the ability to express a political agenda, and the
people need other kinds of political representation. Of course, all this has little influence on
the young people who will participate in the social struggles of the future, as after this struggle
there exists high tension and a great distance between the younger people and any kind of political
leadership or authority.
What other motivations, besides anger against the police and the economy, do you think are
driving people to participate?
The personal and collective need for adventure; the need to participate in making history; the
chaotic negation of any kind of politics, political parties, and “serious” political ideas; the
cultural gap of hating any kind of TV star, sociologist, or expert who claims to analyze you as a
social phenomenon, the need to exist and be heard as you are; the enthusiasm of fighting against
the authorities and ridiculing the riot police, the power in your heart and the fire in your hands,
the amazing experience of throwing molotovs and stones against the cops in front of the parliament,
in the expensive shopping districts, or in your small silent town, in your village, in the square
of your neighborhood.
Other motivations include the collective feeling of planning an action with your best friends,
making it come true, and later hearing people tell you about this action as an incredible story
that they heard from someone else; the enthusiasm of reading about some action that you did with
your friends in a newspaper or TV program from the other side of the planet; the feeling of
responsibility that you have to create stories, actions, and plans that will become global examples
for the future struggles. It is also the great celebrative fun of smashing the shops, taking the
products and then burning them, seeing the false promises and dreams of capitalism burned in the
streets; the hatred for all authorities, the need to take part in the collective ceremony of
revenge for the death of a person that could have been you, the personal vendetta of feeling that
the police have to pay for the death of Alexis across the whole country; the need to send a
powerful message to the government that if police violence increases, we have the power to fight
back and society will explode—the need to send a direct message to society that everyone has to
wake up, and a message to the authorities that they have to take us seriously because we are
everywhere and we are coming to change everything.
Are political parties succeeding in co-opting energy from the uprising?
In “real” numbers, the Socialists have increased their lead over the right wing government,
gaining an 8% lead in the polls; the “European Social Forum communists” lost 1% even though they
helped the revolt, but still they are in third place with 12%; the Communist Party has 8%, the
Nationalist neo-fascists 4.5%, and the Green Party is holding steady at 3.5%.
It is also interesting that the leader of the Socialists appears now to be regarded as first in
"capability to govern the country" after many years with much less popularity than the right wing
prime minister. The riots had a great effect on the political scene: the political parties seemed
unable to understand, explain, or react to the massive wave of violence and participation from
every level of society. Their announcements were irrelevant to what was really happening. Their
popularity decreased dramatically among the younger population, who don’t see themselves in the
logic and the politics of the political parties and don't feel represented by them.
What has been the role of anarchists in starting and continuing the actions? How clearly is their
participation seen by the rest of society?
Over the past few years, anarchists have created a network of communities, groups, organizations,
squats, and social centers in almost all the major cities in Greece. Many don't like each other, as
there exist many significant differences among the groups and individuals. This helps the movement,
though, as the movement now can cover a great variety of subjects. Many different kinds of people
find their comrades in different anarchist movements and, all together, push each other—in a
positive, if antagonistic, way—to communicate with society. This communication includes creating
neighborhood assemblies, participating in social struggles, and planning actions that have a
meaning for the general society. After 30 years of anti-social anarchism, the anarchist movement in
Greece today, with all its problems, limitations, and internal conflicts, has the capability to
look outside of the anarchist microcosm and take actions that improve society at large in ways that
are readily apparent. Of course, it will take a lot of effort for this to be obvious, but day by
day nobody can deny it.
As for the role of anarchists in starting and continuing the actions… especially at the
beginning—Saturday and Sunday, December 6 and 7—and also in the continuation after Wednesday,
December 10, the anarchists were the vast majority of those who carried out the actions. In the
middle days, especially on Monday when the destructive Armageddon took place, students and
immigrants played a very important role. But the vast majority of students found it easy to feel
satisfied after one, two, or three days of smashing, and then went home or attended demonstrations
with a more pacifist atmosphere. Likewise, immigrants had to face a very strong backlash from
locals, and they were afraid to return to the streets.
So the 20,000 anarchists in Greece started it, and continued it when everybody else returned to
normality. And we have to mention that the fear of returning to normality helped us to keep up the
fight for ten days more, putting ourselves into great danger as acts of vengeance for the
assassination of our comrade transformed, in our fantasies, into preparations for a general strike.
Now European society knows once and for all what a social insurrection looks like, and that it is
not difficult to change the world in some months.
But you need all the people to participate and play their roles. The young people of Greece sent
an invitation to all the societies throughout Europe. We are awaiting their responses now.
How much visibility do anarchists have in Greece in general? How “seriously” is anarchism taken
by the majority of Greek people?
In a way, you can say that it is just three or four years now since anarchists started to take
themselves “seriously” so we are seen that way in the broader society. It is only in the past few
years that we have succeeded in expanding beyond the limitations of the anti-police strategy that
had characterized our efforts for 25 years. According to that strategy, we attack the police, they
arrest people, and we do solidarity actions, over and over again. It took us 25 years to escape
from this routine. Of course, the anti-police attacks and fights continue, and the prisoner
solidarity movement is stronger than ever, but the anti-social element inside the anarchist
movement is under conscious self-control and we can speak, care, and act for the benefit of the
whole society now, using actions and plans that can be comprehended much more clearly by at least a
part of the society.
Many actions, like the attacks on supermarkets and the free distribution of stolen products to
the people, became very popular and well-accepted. The attacks on banks, especially now following
the economic crisis, are well-accepted also, and the attacks on police stations have been adapted
and utilized by high-school students around the country. In one way or another, we have been the
first subject in the news for the last 15 days. Generally speaking, with our participation in
students’ or workers’ struggles and also in ecological struggles, every week some action taken by
anarchists attracts attention and offers visibility to the anarchist movement.
This doesn’t mean that “anarchism” is taken seriously by the majority of Greek people, as most
people still believe the lies of television that describe us as “masketeers” and criminals, and
also the majority don’t have any idea about how an anarchist society could ever function—that
includes most of the anarchists, also, who refuse to address this question! But our actions,
critiques, and ideas have strong influence now on left and progressive people. It’s not possible
anymore to say that we don't exist, and now our existence radicalizes the majority of the younger
generation.
What role have subcultural groups—like punk, squatting, and so on—played in making the uprising
possible?
After ’93 we had a strong tendency in the Greek anarchist movement—accompanied by many serious
internal fights—that eliminated the influence of “subcultural” styles inside the movement. This
means that there is no punk, rock, metal or whatever anarchist identity in the Greek anarchist
movement—you can be whatever you like, you can listen to whatever music you like, you can have
whatever style or fashion you like, but that is not a political identity.
In the street fights this month, many “emos” participated, together with hippy freaks and ravers,
many punks, heavy metal boys and girls, and also trendy, normal kids and students that like Greek
music or whatever. It has to be social and political consciousness, social critiques and collective
understandings that bring you to participate in the anarchist movements, not fashion. Of course,
for at least the last 19 years the Void Network and similar collectives have played the role of
offering a cultural introduction to radical political spaces. Such groups organize many
cultural/political events, festivals, and parties every year and have the power to attract
thousands and thousands of people to underground cultures. But even Void Network doesn't create
subcultural identities, doesn't separate the different subcultures, and tries to organize events
that include most of the underground cultures. It’s true, though, that the majority of the people
in the scene attend and participate in most of the events of the d.i.y. underground culture; many
events are organized every month in liberated spaces.
What things have made the anarchist movement healthy in Greece?
The separation from subcultural identity politics made people understand that to call yourself an
anarchist it takes much more serious participation, planning, creativity, and action than just
wearing a t-shirt with the antichrist on it and walking around in punk concerts drinking beer and
taking hypnotic pills. Now there is an understanding that to call yourself an anarchist you have to
come to demonstrations, to come out into the streets with banners and black or red-and-black flags,
shouting slogans together and manifesting an anarchist presence. Also, that you should participate
every week in one, two, or three different assemblies with people for one, or two, or three
different preparations of different actions, plans, or struggles to call yourself an anarchist. You
have to be friends with people you trust 100% to plan anything dangerous, you have to be aware and
informed about anything that is happening in this world to decide what the proper course of action
is, you have to be crazy and enthusiastic, to feel that you can do incredible things—you have to be
ready to give your life, your time, your years in a struggle that will never end. It is healthy not
to have expectations, because then you don’t get disappointed. You don’t expect to win. You are
used to appearing, fighting, and then disappearing again; you know how to become invisible as a
person and visible as collective power; you know that you are not the center of the universe, but
that any time you can become the center of your society.
In what ways do you think the anarchist movement in Greece could be better or stronger?
We need to find more intelligent ways of explaining our ideas to people. We need techniques of
political communication with all of society, better and stronger ways to make the “political
translation” of our actions and put the whole struggle in its social context. In a tele-democracy,
where the politicians are nothing more than television superstars, our refusal to communicate with
or through the mass media is healthy, but we need to find new ways to overcome the mass media
“consensus reality,” the media propaganda against us, and find ways to explain the causes of our
actions to society. As long as whatever the TV shows “exists” and whatever doesn't appear on TV
“doesn't exist,” we will be there with our crazy ideas, the dangerous actions and the street fights
to break the normality of the TV program, we will use the negative advertisement of our actions to
kidnap the fantasies and dreams of the common people. But how can we explain our positive ideas to
everyone? How can we help people cease to trust the media? How can we come into contact with
millions and millions of people?
It will take millions and millions of posters and free pamphlets, traveling hand by hand in the
streets; it will take millions of invitations for demonstrations and participation in social
struggles; it will take more free public services in sections that the government don't want or
cannot cover—free anarchist doctors and teachers, free food, free accommodation, information,
underground culture, and so on—that can bring people closer to our ideas. It will also take more
and more squats and social centers. If you can start a squat, that is better, but even if it’s not
possible to squat in your town, rent a building with your friends, take care of the bureaucracy,
make a collective, start an assembly, and put the black or red-and-black flag in the entrance.
Start offering the people of your city a living example of a world without racism, patriarchy, or
homophobia, a place of equality, freedom, and respect for differences, a world with love and
sharing. We need more “Autonomia” in the insurrectionism of the Greek anarchist movement, to make
it shine as a paradigm of a new wave of social life and demonstrate this novel survival methodology
in the metropolis.
How effective has police repression been in shutting down the anarchist movement? How have people
resisted it?
The dreams and plans of the insurrectionists came true: a huge wave of participation “overpassed”
the anarchists, and for many chaotic days people traveled and fought in the city like never before,
in an unfamiliar time and space of existence.
In the same days, of course, they came face to face with the limitations of insurrection. The
people now spend many hours in long discussions about how to expand popular understanding and
invent practices, actions, and methods that will sustain and enrich the struggle. Many people think
about ways that will bring really close all the different elements of this revolt. The police
repression didn't play a more important role in the conclusion of the riots than physical fatigue
did. All of us share a feeling of completion and a feeling of beginning, and these are feelings
that the police can not touch.
What do you think the final result of the events of December will be?
Ongoing struggle! A never-ending fight for political, social, and economic equality! Constant
expansion of freedom!
In the future, neoliberal governments in Greece and throughout Europe will think very seriously
before attempting to implement any kind of economic or social change. The riots in Athens and the
economic crisis ended the cynicism of the authorities, banks, and corporations, radicalized a new
generation in Greece, and gave our society a chance to open a dialogue about the massive social
struggles of the future.
As the slogan of December 2008 in Athens and Exarchia goes:
WE ARE AN IMAGE FROM THE FUTURE
Questions answered by Void Network (Theory, Utopia, Empathy, Ephemeral Arts); posed by agents of
the CrimethInc. ex-Workers’ Collective
Appendix I: Links to the Blogs of the Occupied Universities
-This is the blog of the Polytechnic University that was in the center of the riots, 200 meters
from the area where Alexis was assassinated. Here you can find links for most of the squats and
initiatives that were organized in schools, universities, and many public buildings during the
revolt in all country.
-Though most of it is in Greek, this is the blog from the squatted Athens School of Economics,
which accommodated hundreds of different anarchist, autonomist, libertarian, utopian and
antiauthoritarian movements, actions, and groups. It is located 500 meters away from Polytechnic
School in the center of Athens.
-Again, most of it is in Greek, but this is the blog from the first ever occupation of the
building of the General Federation of Greek Workers, a syndicalist institution that has functioned
as an obstacle to workers’ struggles for the past 90 years. The building is located between the
Economics University and the Polytechnic School.
-Though it seems that it wasn’t used as much for political work and the sharing of ideas as the
other blogs, this is the blog of the squatted University of Law in Athens, the main center of the
Anti-Authoritarian Movement and many other leftist groups.
_________________________________________
A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E
By, For, and About Anarchists
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