Death in the morning: how one pensioner’s suicide has traumatised Greece

“He did not rebel from his couch. He was a beautiful man, he will live on
in history,” said Pannayotta, a housewife in her late 50s, living on
the same street as the pensioner.

The incendiary suicide note Mr Chritoulas left behind urging young Greeks to
rise up has also struck a chord with millions of people who see their highly
indebted nation’s social fabric being torn apart by economic recession and
externally imposed austerity measures.

“I cannot find any other form of struggle except a dignified end,”
he wrote. “I believe that young people with no future will one day take
up and hang this country’s traitors in arms in Syntagma Square just as the
Italians hanged Mussolini in 1945.”

Violent clashes with riot police followed the suicide and protests continued
last night as hundreds of demonstrators gathered around the tree where he
died brandishing placards proclaiming “may his last act be a new
beginning”.

The rallying around Mr Christoulas has been fuelled by senior Greek
establishment politicians who initially sneered at his motives and even
implied that there might suspicious motives of circumstances behind his
suicide.

The offices of Panos Beglitis, a former Socialist defence minister were
attacked after he took to the Greek airwaves to deny that the death of Mr
Christoulas was linked to political class’s handling of the economic crisis.

“We cannot however connect his suicide with the country’s current
financial plight. Besides we do not even know if he amassed debts or whether
his children had a hand in it,” he said.

With elections looming next month, Lucas Papademos, the technocrat Greek Prime
Minister appointed under EU pressure late last year, moved to try and damp a
furious reaction. “In these difficult times for our country we must all
– the state and its citizens – support those next to us who are in despair,”
he pleaded.

Emmy Christoulas, the pensioner’s daughter, has refused to discuss whether her
father was severely ill or worried about how to pay his medical bills and
insisted that political motives were the driving force behind his decision
to kill himself.

“His act was a political act,” she said.

Ms Christoulas said that her father had given “no indication” of his
plans, either to her or his estranged wife, and that political anger was the
overriding reason for his suicide.

“In a handwritten letter my father left, he tells me everything. A letter
left for me in the house and another, which he kept with him,” she
said. “The dimension my father wanted to give to this incident was
contained in his (suicide note).”

Neighbours near his neat first floor apartment on Vasili Logothetidi street
described Mr Christoulas as a “wonderful man, a true Hellene” who
had become politicised last summer by spreading protests across Greece.

Adonis Rizos, a friend of over 30 years standing, who sat with the pensioner
on the evening before he killed himself in spring sunshine on Bellou square
opposite the pharmacy store sold by Mr Christoulas in 1994.

“He did not give any sign he was going to do this. We were shocked and
surprised. He chose to commit suicide as a political act. We give him credit
for that. The politicians who created this terrible situation should shut up
about him, they are not worthy to say his name,” he said.

One other neighbour, who did want to be named said that Mr Christoulas had
talked of going to hospital on the day he killed himself amid rumours that
he was in the “late stages of cancer” and feared not being able to
pay medical bills on a pension reduced by government cuts.

“He had a serious health problem but did not talk about it. Maybe he did
have cancer but he wanted his death to be a political protest that is clear,”
said the man.

As protesters gathered around a growing shrine where the pensioner shot
himself on Wednesday, Father Stavros Papachristos, theologian and a Greek
Orthodox Church priest, called on European officials to give Greece some
respite.

“The EU must take off the pressure. We cannot handle it anymore. Europe
must understand that millions of Greeks are dying slowly,” the priest
said.

Father Papachristos refused to condemn the pensioner for the sin of taking his
own life. “The church cannot accept suicide. But in this particular
situation it is different; they forced him,”

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