Kaisariani photos: Why Greece’s past is present
When a set of long‑lost photographs of the 1944 May Day executions of 200 Greeks by Nazi occupation forces suddenly surfaced on eBay in February, Greece was shaken.
The images — the first ever to show the two hundred political prisoners, Communists, walking to their deaths at the Kaisariani shooting range in Athens — reopened a chapter of history that has never stopped shaping the country’s politics.
With the help of our guest Professor Elias Dinas from the European University Institute in Florence, in this episode we explore why these photographs matter now: how they collide with decades of suppressed memory, why Kaisariani remains a defining symbol for the Greek Left, and what their reappearance reveals about the ongoing struggle over who gets to tell the story of the past.
Useful reading
Never-before-seen photos of Nazi executions in Greece surface on eBay – France24
‘We can see that courage’: Greece recovers long-lost photos of Nazis’ May Day executions – The Guardian
Man moved as photo of grandfather’s execution by Nazis surfaces - Kathimerini
Message from the past, mirror for today - Kathimerini
Kaisariani Execution: Three More Historic Photographs Surface – To Vima
Photographs of 1944 Nazi Executions in Greece Declared Protected Monument – Dnews
Cretan Man Recognizes His Grandfather in Kaisariani Execution Pics – To Vima
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