Anarchists vandalise Eleftherios Venizelos statue in Thessaloniki

Eleftherios Venizelos graffiti statue Thessaloniki April 2022 anarchist

Anarchists vandalised a statue of Eleftherios Venizelos in the centre of Thessaloniki.

The vandalisers spray-painted the back of the historic statue with the Anarchist symbol, as see in photos and videos from GRTimes.

It should be noted that this statue has become a target in the past (2018), when criminals painted the nails of his left hand green.

Who is Eleftherios Venizelos?

Eleftherios Venizelos (Ελευθέριος Κυριάκου Βενιζέλος) was named the most prominent politician in Greece’s modern history. Born on the 23rd of August 1864 in Chania, Crete he was the fifth child of Kyriakou Venizelou and Stylianis Ploumidiaki.

Venizelos was an eminent leader of the Greek national liberation movement, remembered for his promotion of liberal-democratic policies.

As the leader of the Liberal Party, he was elected several times as Prime Minister of Greece, serving from 1910 to 1920 and again from 1928 to 1933.

He had a profound influence on Greece’s internal and external affairs and is credited with being “the maker of modern Greece.”

His first entry into the international scene was with his significant role in the autonomy of the Cretan State and later in the union of Crete with Greece. Soon, he was invited to Greece to resolve the political deadlock and became the country’s Prime Minister.

Venizelos initiated constitutional and economic reforms that set the basis for Greek society’s modernisation and reorganised both army and navy in preparation for future conflicts.

Before the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913, Venizelos’ catalytic role helped gain Greece entrance to the Balkan League, an alliance of the Balkan states against Ottoman Turkey. Through his diplomatic acumen, Greece doubled its area and population with the liberation of Macedonia, Epirus and the rest of the Aegean islands.

In World War I (1914–1918), he brought Greece on the side of the Allies, further expanding the Greek borders. However, his pro-Allied foreign policy brought him in direct conflict with the monarchy, causing the National Schism.

The Schism polarized the population between the royalists and Venizelists and the struggle for power between the two groups afflicted the political and social life of Greece for decades. Following the Allied victory, Venizelos secured new territorial gains, especially in Anatolia coming close to realising the ‘Megali Idea.’

In the vital elections of November 1920, Venizelos was defeated and he withdrew from politics to return after the Asia Minor disaster of 1922.

With two of his radical initiatives (1923) – the mandatory exchange of Greek and Turkish populations and the Treaty of Lausanne which defined the boundaries between Greece and Turkey – he changed the orientation of Greek policy and laid the foundations for peaceful development.

His last term of office as Prime Minister (1928-1932) was a period of stability and creativity. His major achievement was the signature of the pact of friendship between Greece and Turkey (1930).

The end of his career was marked by the attempt against his life (June 1933) and the failed “Venizelist” coup of March 1935. He went into self-exile in Paris where he died on the 18th of March 1936.

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