“The Unknown Famine: Athens 1941-1942” Exhibition & Conference

“The Unknown Famine” photography exhibition will be presented by MEP Stelios Kouloglou (GUE/NGL, Syriza) on Tuesday, 28th of March at the European Parliament in Brussels. The exhibition marks the 75th Anniversary of Athens’ Famine and represents an homage to its victims.

In the everyday Greek language the word "occupation" indicates famine and hunger due to the harsh situation the Greek population faced during these years. The Great famine of Athens was a disaster that struck the capital city of Greece after the country’s capitulation to the Axis powers in WWII and particularly in the first year of the Nazi occupation (1941-1942). 75 years later, this exhibit represents an homage to the famine’s thousands of victims featuring 41 rare archive prints.

According to historical data, the financial exploitation of Greece by the Nazis led to an astonishing hyperinflation and devaluation of the drachma which resulted to extreme poverty.

As reported in the records of the German army the mortality rate only in Athens reached 300 deaths per day during December 1941, while the estimates of the Red Cross were much higher, at 400 deaths while in some days the death toll reached 1000. As stated in “Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941-44” by the British historian, Mark Mazower, this was the worst famine the Greeks experienced from ancient times.

28.3.2017

 

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