A silent, but practical apology to the 50.000 Jews of Thessaloniki, who were absent from the celebrations of the liberation of the city from the Nazis, on October 30, 1944, was expressed on Sunday 3.11.2019 with a performative march and reading of texts and poems.
Citizens of Thessaloniki responded to the call of organizations that co-organised the event entitled maximum absence/guilty silence/silent apology and participated in the march in honor of the dead-absent, silently as an expression of inner personal apology.
The march started from Eleftherias Square, with the presentation of photos from the Black Saturday of July 1942, the beginning of the displacement and extermination of the Jews of Thessaloniki.
Then, crossing Nikis Avenue, the participants in the Silent Apology Procession stopped at Agia Sophia Square where George Ioannou's description of the day of the liberation of Thessaloniki was read. Via Egnatia Odos, the march ended at the AUTH campus, at the Jewish Cemetery monument, where poems were read and songs performed.
More: SILENT MEMORIAL MARCH FOR THE JEWS OF THESSALONIKI WHO LOST IN THE HOLOCAUST
On 27.10.2019, the President of the Republic Mr. Prokopios Pavlopoulos inaugurated the new wing of the Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki.
Present at the event were - among others - the Deputy Minister of the Interior (Macedonia-Thrace) Theodoros Karaoglou, the regional governor of Central Macedonia Apostolos Tzitzikostas, the mayor of Thessaloniki, Konstantinos Zervas, the deputies of the ND, Stavros Kalafatis, Kostas Giulekas, Stratos Simopoulos, the MPs of SYRIZA, Sokratis Famellos and Alexandros Triantafyllidis, the ambassador of Israel to Greece, Yossi Amrani, the Rector of AUTH Nikolaos Papaioannou, representatives of the other diplomatic authorities, religious, military, academic authorities and bodies.
More: OPENING OF THE NEW WING OF THE THESSALONIKI JEWISH MUSEUM
On 5.9.2019, the following interesting article was published in the Jerusalem Post about the Israelite Community of Thessaloniki and the summer camp - Permanent Educational Seminary of Israel Scouts of Greece (DESIE) of the Community.
ARTICLE FOR THE SUMMER CAMP OF THE JEWISH COMMUNITY OF THESSALONIKI
Against all odds, however, this wasn't to be the final chapter of this proud and resilient community, one of the oldest in the annals of Jewish history. I know because I experienced what the survivors wanted to be otherwise, in a camp of a very different nature than that in which so many were eradicated.
More: JERUSALEM POST ARTICLE ABOUT THE SUMMER CAMP OF I.K. THESSALONIKI
DAILY 19.8.2019, by Stavros Tsima: One of the most emblematic buildings in the center of Thessaloniki, with reference to the German Occupation, was bought by a group of Israeli businessmen to become a luxury hotel. It is about the historical hotel "Vienna", on 2-4 Egnatia Street, in the area of Vardari (today's Democracy Square), which was ordered by the German authorities, who installed parts of their services on its premises. Its owner reported to "K" that interrogations were being carried out by the Germans in the basement of the building and on his roof he found an anti-aircraft machine gun and German sirens warning of attacks by allied planes. The deal for "Vienna", which currently houses a private college, has already been signed while Israeli interest in the purchase of another building, also with a heavy Holocaust-related historical charge, the neoclassical of the former Ionian Bank (now Alpha ) in Eleftheria Square, which during the Occupation housed the "heart" of German power in Thessaloniki, the Wehrmacht garrison.
68 additional memorial stones were laid on Saturday 1stη June 2019 at the 1st Boys' Gymnasium of Thessaloniki in memory of the student victims of the Holocaust. A confrontation with oblivion, a valuable guide for the future.
Walking down Vasilissis Olgas Street in Thessaloniki you now stumble upon the dark past of the city. One hundred and forty-nine bronze stones inscribed with the names of the Jewish students of the 1st Boys' Gymnasium are placed in the ground outside the school to remind them of the harsh route of their transportation by the Nazis to the Auschwitz concentration camps during the Occupation. Of these only six managed to survive. The school yard this time was not filled with voices of small children but with residents of the neighborhood of Agia Triada and old graduates of the school who came to honor the students of their school who prematurely left life in such a brutal way.