Living in Denial in Greece

Advertisements
Advertisements

4 min read

FacebookTwitterLinkedInPrintFriendlyShare

We met a history teacher in Greece who denied the Holocaust and equated the murder of 300 Jews on a ship headed for Auschwitz to death by natural disaster.

My husband and I recently visited the Greek island of Santorini. White stucco hotels and blue-domed restaurants nestle into cliffs. Cobbled streets form a labyrinth; small doors hide beneath secret staircases. Sounds of cutlery clink in the cafés and blend with a dozen languages. The Aegean Sea stretches below; not even cruise ships disrupt its serenity.

And it was in the Aegean Sea – off the coast of Santorini – the Jews of Crete vanished 73 years ago.

Crete, the largest Greek island, had a Jewish community for over 2,000 years. They survived centuries of war and natural disaster, but in 1944, the Germans arrested the remaining 300 Jews (including 100 children). The Jews suffered horrible conditions before being locked in the holds of a cargo ship called The Tanais. The ship set out for mainland Greece and from there the Jews would go to Auschwitz by train. But The Tanais never reached the mainland. The British fired four submarine torpedoes into what they believed was an enemy merchant ship. The Tanais sank within minutes.

Only seven Jews from Crete survived the war.

Although many Greek civilians (and some highly ranked church officials) attempted to save Jews, the Germans murdered 81 percent of the Jewish population. Today, less than 6,000 Jews live in Greece.

According to the Anti-Defamation League, Greece has become one of the most anti-Semitic countries in Europe. During the early 1980’s, neo-Nazis formed The Golden Dawn Party. It is now the third largest political party in Greece. Ilias Kasidiaris, one of the party leaders, said: “History has not yet given a final verdict on Hitler.” The Golden Dawn Party uses Nazi imagery and denies both the Holocaust and existence of gas chambers. Michael Arvanitis, a Golden Dawn MP, is adamant that Germans never targeted Jews other than for use as labor. He claims photographs of burning bodies only serve as evidence that Jews – along with many others – died from typhus.

In 2014, Holocaust denial became a crime in Greece. (The law also covered denials of other genocides.) The Greek Parliament has 300 members. Ninety-nine showed up on the day of the vote. Fifty-five were in favor of the law.

Fifty-five out of 300.

While my husband and I were on Santorini, we sat in a cafe with a spectacular view of Mount Thera, the volcano down below. We began to chat with a man from Athens who taught history in a high school. He was eager to talk about the devastating effect Mount Thera had on the ancient Minoans when it erupted in 1600 BC. Most Minoans on Crete died from the volcanic blast; those who survived were weakened and conquered by invaders. “Imagine that,” the man said. “An entire civilization wiped out by a volcano. Such a tragedy.”

A memorial to the Jews of Crete, representing a ship with ladders for sails and doves perched on the sails.

Later in the conversation, I asked if he knew exactly where The Tanais sank in 1944. He rolled his eyes and echoed sentiments of The Golden Dawn Party. “The Jews were sent off to work. So were the other Jews. And the Germans didn’t kill them. A British submarine torpedoed the boat. It just happened. Like the volcano and the Minoans.”

Not only did this man’s views lurch into Holocaust denial territory, in his mind, the Jews died in a military attack, and the Germans did not blow up that ship. Looking for someone to blame? Blame the British.

Or perhaps he meant: Blame no one. Mount Thera’s eruption destroyed the Minoans, and we don’t make moral judgments about volcanoes. Similarly, the deafening explosion of The Tanais with shards of metal flying and lungs filling with water just happened. No need to point fingers.

It was disturbing to witness how one could simply deny the responsibility for one’s choices. Human beings chose to force three hundred people onto The Tanais and send it into waters patrolled by British submarines. The Germans had a plan, and plans have consequences. Life’s segments are like a series of standing dominoes. The first to fall sends the others tumbling.

On that beautiful day in Santorini, with the sky so blue and the sun blazing orange, my husband and I met a man who taught history to children. Someone who denied the existence of mass murder. Someone who believed death by volcanic catastrophe was morally equivalent to the death of 300 Jews on a cargo ship with Auschwitz the final destination. Someone who couldn’t understand that not only does God judge us by our choices and the history we create, He judges us by what we choose to remember.

Something to keep in mind as we approach Rosh Hashanah and face our own personal judgment.

Click here to comment on this article
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
EXPLORE
LEARN
MORE
Explore
Learn
Resources
Next Steps
About
Donate
Menu
Languages
Menu
Social
.