Greece: Joblessness has surpassed 20% and the Greek Orthodox Church says it is feeding 250,000 people a day
0 views
Skip to first unread message
-Pastor-Dale-Morgan-
unread,
Feb 10, 2012, 5:49:15 PM2/10/12
Reply to author
Sign in to reply to author
Forward
Sign in to forward
Delete
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
Perilous Times
Greece: Joblessness has surpassed 20% and the Greek Orthodox
Church says it is feeding 250,000 people a day
Helena Smith in Athens guardian.co.uk, Friday 10 February 2012 18.53 GMT
A homeless man in Athens. The graffiti reads: 'We shoud not live
as slaves.' Photograph: Simela Pantzartzi/EPA
The Eurozone finance ministers' message to Greece on Thursday
night was stark: there will be no new bailout – and the Greek
nation will go bankrupt – unless Athens finds a further €325m of
budget cuts, on top of the €3.3bn of austerity measures already
promised.
There will have to be yet more cuts in a country already reeling
from an unprecedented squeeze on spending that has been
accompanied by higher taxes.
And that, undoubtedly, will mean more customers at Klimaka, a red
building in the heart of the capital that is a shelter for the
homeless.
Few institutions have better first-hand experience of the impact
of Greece's austerity measures – and few have better first-hand
knowledge of Klimaka – than Lambros, an out-of-work plasterer who
joined the ranks of Greece's unemployed when poverty caught up
with him last year.
"From one day to the next, the economic crisis hit me," says the
55-year-old father of two. "Suddenly I was fired without any
compensation from the company I was working at. Two months later I
couldn't even afford my rent," he sighed. "All my savings had gone
on paying medical bills for my late wife."
Evicted from his flat, the softly spoken plasterer then joined the
thousands of Greeks, hit by job losses, wage cuts, tax rises and
runaway prices, who have been forced to move outdoors.
"I didn't want to burden my children with my problems because they
have problems, too. I didn't want to sleep on the streets either.
So for four months I slept in my car," he says pointing to a
battered, bag-filled Toyota outside the shelter. Until, that is,
he could no longer afford petrol for the vehicle that had become
his home. "Then I heard about Klimaka. But it was a big step
asking them for a bed. I felt very ashamed."
A new underclass has emerged in Greece as the debt-stricken
country, wrestling with the spectre of bankruptcy and the demands
of international creditors, grapples with its worst crisis in
modern times. A recession that began with the global financial
downturn in 2008 but which has worsened dramatically as a result
of EU and IMF-dictated austerity in the past two years, has left
20,000 Greeks without a roof over their heads, according to social
workers and NGOs.
In a nation where joblessness is now more than 20%, with no family
untouched by it, the sight of people sleeping on pavements and
park benches, in metro stations and shopping arcades, doorways and
cars, is the most visible sign yet of an economy in freefall. More
than 10,000 people have been decanted on to the streets of Athens,
home to the vast majority of Greece's 11 million population. The
government has just announced emergency aid for the destitute and
the Greek Orthodox Church has revealed it is feeding 250,000
people a day.
"Before the crisis, homelessness wasn't visible in Greek society
and was very low compared to other EU countries," explained Ada
Alamanou, Klimaka's spokeswoman. "But in the last few years it has
increased by 25%. We call them the 'new homeless' because it is a
rise that can be attributed solely to economic reasons," she said.
"They are not people who have psychological problems or are
suffering from drug and alcohol abuse. They are people who haven't
been able to pay off their credit cards and mortgages. The crisis
is hitting the middle class."
Even before Greece's debt drama, a fifth of its population lived
under the poverty line with Greeks among the lowest income-earners
in the EU. Now over a third can be considered officially
impoverished, according to the statistics agency Eurostat.
As temperatures plunged to some of the lowest levels in living
memory this week, municipal officials rushed to accommodate the
homeless in hostels, hotels and other emergency centres. At night,
groups of doctors and social workers took to the streets offering
blankets and first aid. Educated professionals, too shamefaced to
want to speak, now stand in line with immigrants from developing
countries waiting for food handouts from the town hall.
"We are very close to this becoming a full-blown humanitarian
crisis," said Giorgos Apostolopoulos, who heads Athens' municipal
homeless shelter. "If these economic policies continue the
situation will get a lot worse. It's shocking. Well-dressed people
who own laptops and mobiles are finding themselves with nothing,
out on the street."
Austerity has not only exhausted the Greeks. Anger is also
mounting, evidenced by yesterday's protests. The prospect of more
cost-cutting reforms – required, say creditors, to avoid a default
in March when the country has to repay €14.5bn in maturing bonds –
recently prompted Greece's spiritual leader, Archbishop Ieronymos,
to warn of a "social explosion".
Making a rare public intervention in a letter to the prime
minister, Lucas Papademos, he said: "Homelessness and even hunger
– phenomena seen during the second world war – have reached
nightmare proportions. The medicine we are taking has proved fatal
for the nation. More painful and more unjust measures are now set
to follow along the same, hopeless course."
Unions, too, have predicted that the reaction to yet more
austerity will be "uncontrollable".
But in adversity, there has also been an extraordinary outpouring
of solidarity. Klimaka's courtyard, like that of the municipal
shelter, is brimming with boxes of blankets, clothes and food
dispatched by other Greeks wanting to help their countrymen in
need.
"The troika [debt inspectors from the EU/IMF and ECB] come and
go," said Spyros Grigoratos, one do-gooder emerging from his BMW
with sleeping bags and jackets for the refuge. "They fiddle with
numbers and don't know or care about the real situation on the
ground. The real answer is not more austerity. That way lies
chaos."
For Greeks such as Lambros the latest measures are a wakeup call,
but not for those who will suffer from them most. "If they want to
take the last ten cents away from us, which they have clearly
shown they want to do, they will have to pay the consequences. One
fine day nothing will be the same again because people like me and
them," he says pointing to others in the shelter, "will act."