The
ancient Macedonians, a branch of the Dorians that settled in the
northern periphery of ancient Greece, were known as a hardened
people. It's no coincidence therefore that their most famous king
conquered more or less half of the then known world. All around the
Middle East there are still traces of it to be found. There even seem
to be a few villages somewhere in the wilds of Pakistan where it is
said a kind of Greek is spoken. Alexander achieved much indeed, but
he died too young out in Babylon to consolidate his empire and
without taking care of his succession. He wasn't that great after
all. As soon as he died his generals began fighting each other over
Alexander's legacy as a result of which the empire split up. In
recent history some people, even some historians, doubted whether the
Macedonians were Greek, but the violent quarrel amongst Alexander's
generals is typical for the endemic discord which characterises the
Greeks from ancient times until today.
Part
of the present day Greeks, broken in spirit by sky-rising
unemployment, one pay-cut after the other and a wave of new taxes
introduced by a panicking government, seems to have resigned itself to
waiting until the economy will have collapsed completely or until the
drachma will be reintroduced with everything it may bring: famine,
civil war, even more mass emigration or Utopia. Another part
frantically supports the trade unions which seem to think that
strikes are the only adequate answer to the collapse of Greece's
economy. It's like a doctor prescribing continuous bleedings to cure
a patient suffering from anaemia. Anyone who seriously looks at the
situation in Greece must conclude that the medicine which is being
forced on the country (austerity, austerity and again and again
austerity) is terrifyingly counterproductive, destroying the social
fabric of society.
There
is no sign however of the Greek people uniting to face the problems
caused by successive Pasok and Nea Democratia governments and by the
harsh and stupid medicine sprung from the poisonous belief in
neoliberalism prescribed by the European Union, the European Central
Bank and the IMF. The Greeks are as deeply divided as ever. You would
expect them to have set up a government of national unity to head off
disaster as the British did at the outbreak of the Second World War.
Instead they remain bickering amongst themselves. There's always hope
of a change for the better, for less shouting and more listening in
parliament, but whether the elections of January 26 are going to
bring about that change is rather a rhetoric question I fear.
Foto: Kees Klok
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