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Title: Anarchy in Exarchia
Author: Robert Appelbaum
Date: February 4, 2015
Language: en
Topics: Greece, story, The Baffler, Exarchia
Source: Retrieved on 15th January 2022, from https://thebaffler.com/latest/anarchy-in-exarchia

Robert Appelbaum

Anarchy in Exarchia

Just down the road from Kolonaki, the most fashionable district in

central Athens, lies Exarchia, a bohemian city within a city, home to

artists, students, intellectuals, shopkeepers, and, most notoriously,

anarchists. The neighborhood is a shrine to the art of graffiti—block

after block of it, in mere scribbles of slogans, in ambitious

allegorical paintings, in protest and in reflection, in naiveté and

wisdom, sometimes covering whole buildings from the ground floor up. The

neighborhood is a shrine as well as to the deterioration of urban life

in Athens since the crash of 2008: derelict houses, abandoned

storefronts, decaying roads and crumbling sidewalks.

At night, young people congregate on run-down Exarchia Square, a small

tree-lined triangular park surrounded by six-story apartment buildings,

cafes, and restaurants, standing around to drink beer, smoke cannabis,

listen to music if any is playing, and talk. I spoke to a handful of

them the other night: polite, educated kids in their twenties, most of

whom spoke passable English. All of them were unemployed; they lived

with relatives in other parts of the city and they were broke. They said

they were anarchists and that Exarchia was their real home. They call it

an “autonomous” district.

After a string of riots, beginning in 2008, when a fifteen-year-old boy

was shot and killed by an officer, the police have decided to keep out

of the area. You find the police at the periphery, armed with automatic

rifles, stationed by buses equipped with surveillance gear and more

weaponry. The police will not venture into the heart of the district if

they can help it, lest their presence incite more anti-establishment

violence. But they are prepared, if any of the anarchists and fellow

travelers embark on a demonstration and start marching, to keep them

contained in the Exarchia. Posh Kolonaki is not the only major bourgeois

district that abuts the Exarchia. Omonoia, a central shopping and

business quarter is next door as well. Syntagma Square and the seat of

the national government is not far off, either.

Greeks know that a chess game is being played in Europe, with their new

finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, playing the aggressive white knight.

He has been in Paris and London, and will be going on to Rome and

Berlin, trying to prepare the way for a defeat of austerity economics.

The next turn in the game will decide whether or not the white queen

will be put into play—which is to say, Spain. If Varoufakis and his

Syriza Party win the concessions they are seeking, Spain’s sympathetic

left-wing Podemos Party is likely to sweep into power by a large margin.

And though tiny Greece, with 11 million people, can be pushed around

easily enough, Spain has the fifth largest economy in the EU; its 47

million people could undo the whole Union.

A large majority of Greeks across the political spectrum probably

support Varoufakis’s efforts. His government has pledged to cancel the

privatization of the nation’s two main public seaports, re-hire 5,500

public workers (cleaners) who had been laid off at the command of the

Troika, and raise the minimum wage by 200 Euros a month. It says it will

turn the electricity back on in homes where residents had failed to pay

the bills.[1] If Varoufakis can win concessions from foreign bankers and

government officials, few people in Greece are going to be left unhappy.

But many will be surprised—and many fear that Varoufakis is only going

to make things worse, by forcing Greece out of the Eurozone and thereby

cutting off its financial lifelines. “Where is the money supposed to

come from if we leave the Euro?” one businesswoman asked me,

rhetorically, although Varoufakis has repeatedly said that he has no

intention of leaving the Euro. Anarchists are not sure whether to be

hopeful, either. “We have heard a lot of promises,” one young man said

to me. “Everybody makes promises.”

A lot of what Varoufakis has said and sworn to put into action thus far,

however, is not all that radical. Varoufakis’s main position is that

Europe should return to the Keynesianism that underlay its great

economic expansion in the mid-twentieth century. He is not far off, in

this respect, from American economists Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz.

But Varoufakis also realizes, as he explains in his book The Global

Minotaur, that we live in a post-Keynesian world. There is no way

anymore to enforce the fiscal and financial controls through which

Keynesians balance out matters like aggregate demand and monetary

supply. A deeper connection between economics and the tissues of social

life needs to be established—but what would that be?

Fun though it was to smoke cigarettes with the young anarchists, and as

inspiring as it was to see them express themselves with angry, ugly but

lively art and American-style folk music, I felt there was something

retrograde and inadequate about their movement, just as Varoufakis has

seen something retrograde and inadequate in the Keynesianism he admires.

A way forward, yes—a way forward is what we need. But who in the crowd

in Exarchia Square is ready to say what it would be?

[1] Correction: a previous version of this post mistakenly indicated

that the reforms promised by the new government had already come to

pass; this sentence has been clarified.