Christiane Vollaire, philosopher, and Philippe Bazin, photographer
Greece, a transit country for migration, has highly been affected by the 2008 economic crisis and is suffering the collapse of its healthcare system due to a lack of political will to ensure access to healthcare for all. In resistance, an ‘archipelago of solidarity’ emerges to help citizens that have fallen into poverty as well as asylum seekers.
A photographic research
Photographs do not serve as an illustration of the text or the other way around. They generate their own reflexive path. The ‘interview portraits’ are shot when the participant talks with the philosopher and if their consent is given. Therefore, they are not portraits, but snapshots of moments of immersion in one’s thoughts, suggesting an “off-camera”, a triangulation that questions the viewer. The ‘sceneries’ resonate with the portraits, as is proposed by the vis-a-vis pairing, letting the historical and contemporary context be imagined. In Elliniko, the social clinic is to be demolished, along with Saarinen airport, to make way for a leisure complex for the rich that will not improve the mental and physical health of the inhabitants. In Skouriès, the opening of the gold mine would poison the local population as well as the water supply for a town of 2 million people. In Ikaria, while the project to renovate the ancient thermal baths was refused because it emanated from the communist deportees during the civil war, the local hospital doctor had to fight to keep medical dialysis on the island. This confrontation between history and current issues is found in Patras as well as in the centre of the country, which is still suffering from the effects of the 1946 Napalm tests. Thus, interweaving the past and the present, the photographs show how they also constitute an alert for the future of mobilisation.
Philippe Bazin
The text and photographs of this contribution result from three years of fieldwork in Greece that associated field philosophy and critical documentary photography[1]Christiane Vollaire et Philippe Bazin, Un Archipel des solidarités : Grèce, 2017–2020, Loco, 2020. For over twenty years, the entirety of our joint work has been questioning the destructive effects of neoliberal policies and the processes of globalisation that support them, in terms of social rights (housing, work, health) and migration ; however, it focuses on the movements of resistance and revendication that challenge them. In the Balkans, Poland, Egypt, Chile, Turkey, Bulgaria and Greece. Finally, on the French territory, in refugee camps in Northern France[2]Refugees wanting to get to the United Kingdom., around the ‘Gilets Jaunes’ (Yellow Vests) movement, around the French-Italian border in Briançon and in working-class neighbourhoods of Seine-Saint-Denis[3]A North East suburb of Paris..
Our work in Greece briefly displayed here, stems from 145 interviews with allies, migrants or immigrant backgrounds met in Thessaloniki, Athens, Patras, the islands of Lesbos and Ikaria and the regions of Epirus, Thessaly and Western Macedonia. It challenges both the present of solidarity —against economic violence and against the violence of migration policies— and the historical twentieth-century of fights against fascism.
Going to Greece between 2017 and 2020 led us to perceive a specific dimension of the health issue. When health policies become –under the troïka of European and global banks’ diktat– policies of abandonment, they not only endanger the physical survival of people who are abruptly delivered to health precarity but also threaten the social structure in itself, as well as its very own political health.
Resisting in Athenes
V.I. is a biology teacher forced into early retirement by the economic hardship that has befallen the country since the 2010s. She became the volunteer manager of an important pharmacy run by the Elliniko social clinic in Athens. She said :
“I came here because I think it’s against the system : the system wants all these people to die. With the work I do here, I am fighting back. That’s why I live. I don’t want to use a gun or kill myself.”
One could not be perspicuous about what destructive economic policies do to everyone’s mental health. Nor could it be more explicit about the remedies required to avoid passively suffering from such social pathogenesis —which is even more toxic in the long run than the physical pathologies it causes. V.I. does not content herself with the significant administrative work she accomplishes in this social clinic. She also develops the meaningful activity of disseminating information. From the perspective of its therapeutic efficiency on the social body, she presents it as a rejection of denial about the real hecatomb generated by the troika’s intervention :
“I write all the papers against them, to all the journalists and the press. Every month we publish two Letters. The press releases say that diabetics cannot get what they need. We must tell the government that they have to change this from within. We talk on television, it represents a resistance.”
Considering herself to be at war in this dispensary, she stresses how important the international dimension of solidarity is since it is the ultimate response to the violence of globalisation :
“At the beginning, there were ten volunteers. At present, there are 300, along with those who work from home. Many volunteers work for the clinic throughout Europe by organising collections and buying medicines. From Germany to Italy, to Austria, to Switzerland, to France (Doctors in Paris and Brittany are giving medicine), to Belgium.”
She insists on the fact that this answer has nothing of humanitarian aid. And that international aid concerns exiled people who ought to benefit from it. For it stems from global financial policies and their tragic social consequences :
“We saw malnourished children. Even if it were only 20 babies, it is too much, because milk at this age is like medicine. Parents are without jobs, and if they do have a job, the salary is 300 € per month. To buy a brick of milk, they need to pay 20 €.”
This dispensary, which proved to be vital and has expanded so much, will not only receive any state support but will be threatened with eviction in favour of a gigantic amusement park for the jet-set, to which the land has already been sold and against which the clinic’s activists have been fighting for almost ten years.
Exiled people behind the civic engagements in Thessaloniki
Five hundred kilometres north of Athens, in the metropolis of Thessaloniki, another social health clinic has opened. C.K, a hospital doctor and head of the intensive care unit, is one of the founders. As she recounts, medical solidarity and collective victories result from a migrant workers” hunger strike :
“In January – February 2011, in Crete, a group of migrants decided to organise a wide-scale hunger strike. They were essentially from North Africa : Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia. They were agricultural workers in Crete. We said OK to help them. They travelled to Thessaloniki (…) We had a big protest here at the University. (…) They won : they got papers, permission to work and working documents.”
However, the success of the community movement with exiled people coincided, at the end of that year, with the heavy blow of the government’s decision to scuttle the public health system. Taken for purely ‘managerial’ reasons, this decision abruptly deprived three million Greek citizens of access to health care.
C.K. describes this temporal coincidence as an opportunity : as a common victory just took place with the exiled workers, alternative movements feel endowed with the strength to fight back against the government’s decision concerning citizens. Thus, awareness is growing from having to consider their leaders as enemies and those who are supposed to be outsiders as allies, and it gives them the energy for a common struggle.
The autonomous social clinic in Thessaloniki opened in November 2011, and it was instrumental in pressuring the left-wing government that came to power in 2015 to provide free healthcare. It will be done in 2016 however under the conditions of hospital overcrowding without increasing the medical staff and without adequate reimbursement of medicines, dispensaries will have to take over, once again.
An archipelago of health struggles
Thus, it has established a significant archipelago[4]The concept of the archipelago, in its geographical and symbolic dimensions, is explored in our book. of health struggles, revealing the reality of political health through collective social initiatives. In East Thessaloniki, in Skouriès, Halkidiki, the opening of a gold mine by a multinational company has been confronted since the 2010s by an environmental advocacy group that is in part informed by medical researchers from the University of Thessaloniki. The latter were amongst the whistleblowers and they came to inform the villagers by holding on-the-spot meetings and by carrying out extensive educational work.
D.B., a retired miner, gained geophysical and healthcare knowledge from these interventions, leading him to participate in solidarity movements. Previously engaged in the miners” trade union struggles of the seventies, he broadened the meaning of this present struggle not only to workers but for the health of the population at risk of permanent danger. Whether it be for water supply (groundwater contaminated by mercury or arsenic, necessary components in gold exploration) or for air breathability :
“What is happening now is more dangerous than it was at the time of the ’77 strike. Thirteen villages in the region have been leased for a hundred years. Moreover, there are twenty thousand tons of dust every day. There is a pit where toxic waste is being dumped and further waste is meant to be dumped. The biggest problem is its proximity to villages.”
Meanwhile, in a self-managed VIOME factory near Thessaloniki —that is abandoned by its managers and has been reclaimed by its workers through organic soaps and cleaners’ production— a clinic focusing on the issue of work-related risks has opened :
“We opened a clinic for all workers in the area. They are informed by the Cooperative Union. We knew people who were doctors. Some were very interested, and they were organised. As for the migrants, they are from the working class. And the consultations are taking place in the industrial buildings.”
In the harsh context of contemporary economic, social and post-colonial discrimination, recovering not on individual physical and psychological health, but also common political health is one of the major challenges of these solidarity-based care spaces. Additionally, there is significant awareness that at present the migration debate is a common factor for revendicating solidarity health. Therefore, Greece is becoming not only a laboratory of economic and migratory violence but a reference point and an instrument for potential resistance in Europe and elsewhere. This is the meaning that our work, within its international perspectives, aspires to attribute to it.
About the authors
Christiane Vollaire is a researcher affiliated with the Centre de recherche sur le travail et le développement (CRTD) at the Centre national des arts et métiers (Cnam) and a member of the research programme Non-lieux de l’exil (EHESS-Inalco). She is a CI Migration fellow.
Philippe Bazin is a photographer and a former student of the École nationale supérieure de Photographie in Arles. He was professor of photography at the École nationale supérieure de Dijon from 2014 to 2020 where he coordinated the research programme Travail, migrations et ruralité.
Notes[+]
↑1 | Christiane Vollaire et Philippe Bazin, Un Archipel des solidarités : Grèce, 2017–2020, Loco, 2020 |
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↑2 | Refugees wanting to get to the United Kingdom. |
↑3 | A North East suburb of Paris. |
↑4 | The concept of the archipelago, in its geographical and symbolic dimensions, is explored in our book. |
Cite this article
Vollaire and Philippe Bazin, “Political Health and solidarity in Greece”, [trad. Victoire Hernandez], in Betty Rouland (Ed.), Issue “State Medical Assistance and the making of a fake problem”, De facto [Online], 31 | February 2022, [English] published online in February 2023. URL : https://www.icmigrations.cnrs.fr/en/2022/07/25/defacto-031–05/
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