Main NI Index | Main Newspaper Index
Encyclopedia of Trotskyism | Marxists’ Internet Archive
From The Militant, Vol. X No. 23, 8 June 1946, p. 3.
Transcribed & marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for ETOL.
In losing Pantelis Pouliopoulos, who was shot in June 1943 at Nezero by the Italian imperialists occupying Greece jointly, with the Germans at that time, the Greek revolutionary workers’ movement lost its greatest figure.
The name of Pantelis Pouliopoulos is linked to the entire development of the Communist movement in Greece which had its beginnings soon after the victory of the Russian revolution of 1917.
Pouliopoulos began his revolutionary career in the ranks of the Greek army which fought in the war against the Turks in Asia Minor between 1920 and 1922. Influenced by the ideas of the Russian revolution, he denounced the imperialist character of this war, agitated for fraternization with the Turkish soldiers and organized the first Communist groups in the army.
He became a leading member of the young Greek Communist Party organized in 1920, was elected to its Central Committee and Political Bureau. After the defeat of the Greek army in 1922, he organized the movement of the war veterans upon which he left the imprint of revolutionary orientation.
Pouliopoulos represented the Greek Communist Party at the Fifth Congress of the Communist International.
In 1925 he became General Secretary of the Communist Party and remained in this post until 1927. In 1927 the crisis broke out in the Russian Bolshevik Party between the Stalinist faction and the Left Opposition led by Trotsky. The crisis shook the whole Communist International. In Greece, Pouliopoulos resolutely took his position in favor of the platform of the Left Opposition, which led to his expulsion from the Communist Party.
He founded an organ, Spartakos, which was the only organ to publish the fundamental documents of the Left Opposition in Greek and continued the struggle with several hundred workers, former members of the Communist Party who had remained faithful to the Leninist line.
Pouliopoulos considered himself in complete ideological agreement with Trotsky during his entire political life. The one exception was the position taken by the International Left Opposition in 1930, recognizing the Archeo-Marxist organization as the official section in Greece. Pouliopoulos regarded this organization as centrist and opportunist, and asked for supplementary political guarantees before the International Left Opposition recognized it.
Pouliopoulos and his group unreservedly joined the movement tor the formation of the Fourth International. His organization was represented at the Founding Congress of the Fourth International in 1938, accepting all of its decisions, including those relating to the means of unifying the Trotskyist movement in Greece.
In 1936 there was established in Greece the most terrible dictatorship. General Metaxas, the agent of King George II, abolished the parliamentary regime and unleashed a war to the death against the revolutionary movement of the Greek working class.
All the revolutionary organizations went completely underground. Pouliopoulos was the political and organizational inspirer of the movement. Beginning with August 1936, the police carried on intensive search for him and the Government published advertisements in all the newspapers offering substantial rewards for information leading to his arrest. Changing residence frequently, Pouliopoulos succeeded in escaping the traps set by the police, until 1939. In that year he was arrested and incarcerated in the prison on the island of Aigina.
The war came, the years passed. and Pouliopoulos, whose health was declining rapidly in the jails of Greek capitalism, thought only of the ideological rearmament of our movement for the problems posed by the imperialist war.
Transported along with other comrades in 1940 to the medieval fortress of Acronauplie, he organized a thorough discussion on our tactics in the imperialist war. Many Trotskyists confined in this fortress took part in the discussion. Pouliopoulos brilliantly defended there the Trotskyist position on the USSR. Comrades who have survived those terrible years, and later had occasion to read Trotsky’s book, In Defense of Marxism, were struck by the similarity of Marxist argumentation used by both, each in complete isolation from the other.
In 1943 Pouliopoulos, already very ill (he had contracted, tuberculosis in prison), left the fortress to enter a hospital in the city of Pireus. Comrades prepared plans for his escape, but they did not materialize. In May of that year Greek [1] partisans dynamited the great Bralos bridge near the town of Lamia. In reprisal the German and Italian military authorities ordered the shooting of hundreds of hostages among the political prisoners.
Pouliopoulos, probably selected by the Greek police, was among those chosen along with three other Trotskyist leaders: Comrades J. Makris, J. Xypolytos and Costas Yannakos.
He maintained his calm, his dignity, his revolutionary courage to the end, giving by his death an example which inspired the activity of young revolutionary militants. Led before the firing squad composed of Italian soldiers, he addressed to them a fiery speech in Italian; an appeal not to commit the crime of killing class brothers and of thus serving bestial imperialism.
THE SOLDIERS RESPONDED TO THE REVOLUTIONARY APPEAL OF POULIOPOULOS AND REFUSED TO FIRE ON THE HUNDRED POLITICAL HOSTAGES.
A struggle ensued between the soldiers and the officers commanding them. Witnesses of the scene say that Pouliopoulos was finally felled by officers.
These facts are today universally known in Greece. The heroic death of Pouliopoulos is venerated by the whole revolutionary vanguard of the country.
But Pouliopoulos was not merely a great revolutionary militant, he did not confine his service in the workers’ movement merely to political activity. Possessed of a vast general and Marxist culture, speaking fluently several languages — among them German, French, English and Italian—he translated into Greek many of the fundamental works of Marxism: Capital, the Critique of Political Economy, Anti-Duehring, etc.
Several works by L.D. Trotsky were also translated by him. Among them, Revolution Betrayed, published only recently by our Greek comrades.
Moreover, Pouliopoulos was the author of numerous articles, pamphlets and books dealing with general questions of Marxist theory as well as with current political problems in Greece. Among his writings an important place is occupied by his masterful reply to the opportunist People’s Front theses of the Greek Communist Party in 1935, which replaced the revolutionary socialist perspective in Greece with that of a “Popular Democracy,”
This work bears the title: Royalty, Republic, Communism, and constitutes the theoretical platform which distinguishes our movement in Greece as a revolutionary proletarian movement from the party of the “petty- bourgeois democracy” into which the Greek Communist Party had degenerated under the influence of Stalinism.
In the course of his revolutionary career, Pouliopoulos was arrested, sentenced and imprisoned many times. His whole life is an example of a great revolutionist who placed his whole ardor, his practical activity, all of his intellectual capacities at the service of the emancipating movement of the Greek and international proletariat.
Every June the Fourth International pays homage to the glorious memory of this great fighter of the world socialist revolution.
Main Militant Index | Main Newspaper Index
Encyclopedia of Trotskyism | Marxists’ Internet Archive
Last updated on 22 June 2021