- Source: Yannis Tamtakos
Yannis Tamtakos (Greek: Γιάννης Ταμτάκος) (1908 – January 4, 2008) was a Greek political activist, initially of Trotskyism and in his later life, of Anarchism. Due to his political activity, he was chased by the Axis forces, Greek state and National Liberation Front (Greece). For quite a few years before his death, he was the oldest survivor among the active participants of the 1936 Thessaloniki strike.
Biography
Tamtakos took part in every workers' struggle in Thessaloniki, as a shoemaker, having been elected committee member (1926–1927) and secretary (1928–1929) of the Union of the Shoe-makers of Thessaloniki. Later he became active through the Union of the Unemployed. In 1931, while on the front line of a demonstration of the unemployed, in Syntrivani Square in Thessaloniki, he was attacked by a group of policemen, led by the nephew of the Head of the Police; he was shot in the cheek, and the bullet cut his tongue. He didn't lose his ability to speak, thanks to surgery.
Tamtakos and his comrades were persecuted by the German occupiers, the Security Battalions, but also from the anti-fascist forces. He managed to escape assassination efforts by National Liberation Front quite a few times while he used several identities and nicknames during the period of the occupation and of the liberation of Greece.
In Dekemvriana he accused the forces of the National Liberation Front of carrying out a Stalinist coup d etat. In 1948 his political Trotskyist party participated in the second World Congress of the Fourth International, when the party representative was Cornelius Castoriadis.
Published material
His book "Memories of a life in the revolutionary movement", which was published in March 2003, contains transcripts of recorded self-biographic tellings, including references to historical and political events of the last century. Part of his personal diary has been published in 1995, in the "Alfa" newspaper.
Yannis Tamtakos was one of the main characters in the movie "Coursal", directed by Nikos Theodossiou.
See also
Anarchism in Greece