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Thursday, April 25, 2024

Greeks put woes aside to aid hapless refugees

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ATHENS—Their own wages and pensions have been slashed by the debt crisis, but thousands of Greeks are putting their own economic woes aside to help desperate refugees trapped in the country by the Balkan border blockade.

People old and young, from couples with babies to pensioners and teenagers, came to Athens’ Syntagma Square on Sunday loaded with bottles of water, medicine, pasta, nappies and clothes.

Panagiotis, a 32-year-old accountant, was just one of those determined to help.

Stranded. A child carries a received blanket in a makeshift camp at the Greek-Macedonian border near the village of Idomeni where thousands of refugees and migrants are stranded on March 6, 2016. AFP

 

“Greek people know what it is to be a refugee,” said Panagiotis, a volunteer with the Red Cross at the Sunday donation organised by a social solidarity network.

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“My grandmother came from Turkey in the 1920s. She had to leave everything there and she arrived in Thessaloniki with nothing. A lot of people in Greece have grandparents who experienced this exodus. This is maybe why we are helping those people,” he said.

With Greek state services overwhelmed by the arrival of around a million people in a year—most en route to countries in northern Europe—the support of volunteers and private donations has been invaluable in helping aid groups manage the crisis.

Like Panagiotis, many donors say they are motivated by the suffering of family relatives who became refugees themselves in the 20th century when Turkey progressively expelled a sizeable Greek minority from Istanbul and Asia Minor.

Yiorgos and his wife have came to Syntagma Square with bags of food and clothes after seeing television images of migrants stuck at Idomeni on the Greek side of the Greek-Macedonian border where over 13,000 people are camping in miserable conditions waiting to cross.

The Macedonians are only allowing a few hundred people through every day, while thousands more continue to arrive from Turkey.

“The only thing we want is to help those people. We saw them on TV in Idomeni. A friend of mine says that we stopped being human as soon as we became citizens ourselves,” said the 70-year-old pensioner.

Alexandra Fitas, a 22-year-old sociology student, brought packets of pasta. 

“I heard about it through some friends on Friday. I couldn’t bring more, but if everybody brings a little we can make something good,” she said.

Not everyone has been so eager to help. Some refugees coming from the islands say they were offered food and water at exorbitant prices and asked to pay shop owners to charge their cellphones. 

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