WSJ, July 3 2015
Patriotism Trumps Economics for Many Greeks Ahead of Bailout Referendum
National pride, anger toward ‘Europe’ runs high outside Athens before vote
By MATINA STEVIS

ARGOLIS, Greece—In this fertile region of rolling hills covered in olive 
groves and citrus plantations, national pride is coming before financial 
considerations as people decide how they will vote in Sunday’s 
referendum on the country’s international bailout.

“My dignity as a human being and as a citizen of this nation has been 
brutally crushed by Europe,” said Andreas Mallios, a 50-year-old orange 
farmer, dragging on his cigarette at a roadside cafe. “I’m a European, 
my currency is the euro, but I say, no more: I’m also Greek and I’m a 
man, and I’m voting against this blackmail.”

The outside world sees Greece’s conflict with its creditors—the other 
eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund—as an economics 
argument about debt, austerity and reforms. But to many Greeks, 
especially those outside cosmopolitan Athens, feelings of national 
humiliation and dependency are playing a bigger role.

If Greeks vote “no” to their creditors’ demands, leaving the country at 
grave risk of bankruptcy and euro exit, the wounded national pride of 
many rural and small-town Greeks will have been a decisive factor. Most 
analysts expect a very close vote.

Mr. Mallios used to get 28 euro cents per kilogram (about 15 cents a 
pound) for the fruit he sold to wholesalers. He now gets around 8 cents 
per kilo, because of Greece’s economic collapse.

His financial loss, he says, is nothing compared with a mounting sense 
that his country is under attack from external forces.

“National dignity within the European family means that there is a 
proper dialogue among equals, not having the finger wagged at you and 
being told how to vote,” he says. “I don’t want to be part of this Europe.”

Patriotic language and fear of foreign enemies, real or imagined, has 
long characterized Greek political discourse, whether of the ideological 
left, right or center, says historian Thanos Veremis, author of what’s 
widely viewed as the authoritative tome on modern Greek history.

“Even now, there’s still a populist game going on, over which political 
party is more patriotic,” Mr. Veremis said.

Some 15% of the Greek electorate voted for outright nationalist parties 
such as the Independent Greeks and Golden Dawn in the January elections. 
Economic depression is making such messages more popular, especially 
among poorer Greeks.

Syriza, the main governing party, fuses nationalism with Marxism. It is 
calling on voters to reject the creditors’ conditions on Sunday.

“We say ‘no’ for a Greece that resists. We say ’no’ for democracy and 
dignity,” a softly spoken young woman says in a radio spot that has been 
airing here, paid for by Syriza.

“The only thing to fear is fear,” Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras says at 
the end.

The government says a “no” vote would empower it to drive a tougher 
bargain for bailout funds with less austerity, while securing the 
country’s future in the euro. Greece’s creditors have said a “no” vote 
wouldn’t soften their demands.

Away from the bustle of the Athens metropolis—home to about a third of 
Greece’s 11 million people—the emotional message resonates most strongly.

“Professionally, it would serve me better to vote in favor of this 
agreement” with creditors, says Nikos Ntakaris, 53, whose trucks deliver 
agricultural goods from Argolis to the rest of the country.

“Right now, I can’t even pay for my 11 trucks’ gasoline, with the banks 
closed,” he says. “But they have taken a proud nation and turned us into 
beggars. So I say no. That matters more to me than anything else.”

When the Greek Banks Reopen, Will All the Money Be There?
Syriza teamed up with the far-right Independent Greeks to form a 
majority government after elections in January, in an alliance some saw 
as peculiar given the distance between the two on the political spectrum.

But Mr. Veremis reckons they make a potent partnership that is 
successfully appealing to many Greeks’ emotions.

“Greece’s is the patriotism of the downtrodden people who have been 
hard-hit by a conspiracy of powerful players, and therefore their only 
way of taking revenge is blowing themselves up along with the citadel,” 
he says, alluding to patriots in the war of independence against the 
Turks who chose death over surrender.

Dimitris Panagopoulos, a 50-year-old farmer, says Greece’s creditors are 
punishing the Greek people for choosing a government European leaders 
don’t like. “There’s more to life than money,” he said. “I’m voting no 
on Sunday. I’d rather hold my head up high.”

As Greece’s creditors say no deal can be done before Sunday’s 
referendum, Charles Forelle reports on how Greeks are coping with a 
frozen banking system and only 60 Euros a day available at automatic 
teller machines. Image: AFP
Nationalist ire is especially directed against Germany, against which 
Greece fought in both world wars, and which many here feel is becoming 
their master.

“Germany wants a servile Greece,” says Petros Vlassis, a 60-year-old 
retiree.

As Europe’s biggest economy, Germany has been the driving force behind 
the stringent austerity and economic overhauls that creditors have 
imposed as the price of Greece’s rescue loans since 2010.

Posters adorning roads nationwide show a stern-faced German Finance 
Minister Wolfgang Schäuble with the slogan: “For five years he’s been 
sucking your blood, now tell him NO.”

“We want our true allies in Europe and the world to remember that we 
fought by their side against a country that twice tried to annex 
Europe,” says Mr. Vlassis. “What did we fight for? Not this.”

Write to Matina Stevis at [email protected]

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