Thrasivoulos Marakis grew up listening to tales concerning the grandfather he was named after however by no means met – together with how the tall man was executed throughout World War II Nazi reprisals in Greece.
For many years, the one picture Marakis had of his grandfather got here from a worn household portrait image.
But final month one other {photograph} emerged. An on-line public sale contained {a photograph} displaying his grandfather strolling calmly towards a firing squad alongside different prisoners.
The picture shook the Marakis household and has stirred highly effective feelings throughout Greece, the place the execution of 200 prisoners by Nazi occupation forces on May 1, 1944 stays one of many nation’s most poignant symbols of wartime resistance.
For Marakis, the images carry a deeply private that means.
“They went to their deaths with their heads held high so that we could be free today,” he stated.
On Thursday, the Culture Ministry introduced the chilling images of the execution – the primary verified photographs ever made public – after buying the gathering from a non-public collector in Belgium.
Marakis, who lives on the island of Crete, stated he acknowledged the tall, broad-shouldered man on the entrance of 1 group – sleeves rolled up, striding ahead together with his head held excessive – as his grandfather, 40-year-old dairy farmer Thrasivoulos Kalafatakis.
He confirmed the picture to aged kinfolk and their buddies, together with a 97-year-old girl who lives regionally.
“That’s when I got the final confirmation,” he informed The Associated Press. “It was very moving for the family – deeply, deeply moving.”
The {photograph} reveals prisoners strolling beneath guard in the direction of the Kaisariani firing vary in Athens, the place they had been executed in teams of 20 in a reprisal for a resistance ambush that killed a German commander in southern Greece.
The Greek authorities bought the archive from a Belgian collector for 100,000 euros ($115,700). It contains 262 images taken by German Wehrmacht lieutenant Hermann Heuer, who was stationed in Greece in 1943–44, together with wartime banknotes and press clippings from the interval.
Presenting the fabric in Athens, Culture Minister Lina Mendoni stated the pictures present highly effective documentation of Nazi occupation insurance policies and restore particular person identities to victims lengthy recognized primarily by way of written accounts.
“The value of this collection is immense,” Mendoni stated. “The photographs…are priceless, because they give a face and a visual dimension to historical testimonies.”
“What matters is how the Greeks faced the Nazi system with courage,” she added.
Several images present the prisoners’ closing moments.
One sequence depicts vans transporting detainees alongside filth roads from the Haidari jail camp outdoors Athens to the firing vary east of the town heart. Another picture reveals the lads getting into the taking pictures vary, the place piles of coats are stacked close to the gate.
Valentin Schneider, a researcher on the University of Athens’ Department of History and Archaeology who helped confirm the pictures, stated the element was important.
“Most likely it was on the orders of the German army,” Schneider stated. “To make the bullets penetrate more easily, they asked them to remove their coats and heavy clothing.”
Other images seize moments not often documented: one reveals the moment the pictures are fired, whereas one other depicts the executed prisoners mendacity on the bottom, all fallen backward.
Historians say such visible information are extraordinarily uncommon.
During the Nazi occupation of Greece from 1941 to 1944, German commanders regularly ordered executions of hostages or civilians after resistance assaults.
Many of the prisoners killed at Kaisariani had been arrested years earlier by Greece’s prewar authoritarian authorities for communist political exercise and remained imprisoned when German forces occupied the nation.
The 200 prisoners had been shot in response to the ambush and killing of a Germany navy commander in southern Greece by resistance fighters.
The archive additionally reveals one other aspect of the German officer who took the images. Among the pictures are scenes from Heuer’s non-public life – together with swimming close to Athens, visiting the Acropolis and spending time together with his household after returning to Germany.
Stavroula Fotopoulou, the top of the Culture Ministry’s division of antiquities and cultural heritage, stated the images mirrored a broader system inspired by the Nazi regime.
They “created a powerful propaganda machine, not only with professional photographers in the propaganda units, but by encouraging everyone – soldiers and their families – to take photographs,” she stated. “Why? So these images could be sent back home and build the impression of the Wehrmacht’s successes.”
Mendoni stated the official identification of individuals proven within the images will start instantly. Digital copies might be offered to households of the victims in addition to establishments and museums that request them.
“In that moment, the Greeks – and these people in particular – showed true greatness,” Mendoni stated. “They reacted with bravery and dignity. That’s what we must hold on to.”
Marakis stated the pictures present his grandfather “stood by his beliefs and his ideology. He never renounced them”
He added: “If he had renounced them, he would have lived longer.” [AP]