Τρίτη 1 Οκτωβρίου 2019

Yiangos Pesmazoglou




 Yiangos Pesmazoglou                    ΓΙΑΓΚΟΣ ΠΕΣΜΑΖΟΓΛΟΥ
Born 1918, Chios                               Died 2003, Athens


 Section 7, Number 685

Walk on any street in the center of Athens today and you will come across remnants of its past. The Stoa Pesmazoglou which runs between Panepistimiou and Stadiou streets recalls the thriving 19th century merchant clan which originated in the Cappadocia region of Asia Minor (1), spread from there to Alexandria and Constantinople, and then brought their money and expertise to help build Athens in the latter part of the 19th century.


  

 If you know where to look, you can see a remnant of a once grand Ernst Ziller designed Pesmazoglou building standing incongruously cheek by jowl with a building created for Athens more recent elite:

On Bas. Sophias Avenue opposite the Benaki Museum 


Only the eastern section of the 1893 building remains.

 And then there is the tomb of wealthy banker Ioannis Pesmazoglou (1857-1906), which is the largest monument (2) in the plaza of the First Cemetery:


The work of Italian sculptor Franceso Jerace (1853-1937)

But not all monuments are bricks, mortar, or marble as the subject of this entry proves. Yiangos Pesmazoglou’s grave may be much more modest, but his legacy is not: this cosmopolitan, cultured, and far-sighted economist and thinker dedicated his life to the betterment of Greece.



Yiangos Pesmazoglou
The Early Years

Yiangos (Ioannis) was born on Chios in 1918 where his father Stephanos was the manager of the Bank of Athens.(3)


With his parents

The family soon moved to Athens where he studied at the Makris school and then at the Varvakeio School (4) before entering the Athens University in 1935 to study Law and economics. He was apparently enthusiastic and hard working throughout his student years.  His primary interest was economics. At the university he was influenced by the economic theories of  Kyriakos Varvaresos (Κυριάκος Βαρβαρέσος), a future  deputy director of the Bank of Greece who was teaching Political Economy at the time.  Other important influences during this period were professors Constantinos Tsatsos and Panayiotis Kanellopoulos.  Yiangos was very fortunate to have been exposed to the influence of two such intellectual heavyweights.  
   
The times were not easy. Yiangos attended University under the Metaxas dictatorship, a regime that caused democratically minded persons to pause, and, as a professed Social Democrat, it would have been a difficult period for him. He fought as a soldier against the Italians who invaded in 1940 and then - at 24 years old, he suddenly found himself living in German occupied Greece.



As a young man
During the German occupation he came to know EAM member Nikos Karvounis (Νίκος Καρβούνης ), who was writing  for Proia (Πρωΐα) a newspaper whose editor was Yiangos’ cousin Stephanos Pesmazoglou(5).  But in spite of being exposed to EAM’s political theories and its plans for the future, in the end Yiangos did not believe that their philosophy or political agenda was the way forward in a post war world. He wanted to discover a better way.
In February of 1945, he married Miranda, the love of his life.


His marriage to Miranda Economou

Cambridge

Just months later he applied for and was given a grant to study at the University of Cambridge where he would go with Miranda and obtain his second degree in economics. At Cambridge, Yiangos came under the influence of the economic theories of John Maynard Keynes.  One of the most influential economists of the 20th century,  Keynes proposed a theory that was the opposite of government laissez faire; he advocated that governments should employ interventionist fiscal and monetary policies in order to mitigate the adverse effects of economic recessions and depressions  such as the ones that had occurred in the 1930s and thereafter. Yiangos would return to Greece with these kind of policies very much in mind. And not only that. He would later say that his sojourn in Cambridge had taught him the value of words such as ‘maybe’ or ‘perhaps’, as the means to moderate extreme positions and deal with conflicting opinions.

The Return

Upon returning to Greece, his star rose quickly. In 1950 he was elected Assistant Professor of Political Economics at the Athens Law School and, under the premiership of Nicholaos Plastiras, was appointed the General Director of Political Economy and Programming in the Ministry of Co-ordination then headed by Georgios Papandreau. In 1955 he was appointed Economic Advisor to the Bank of Greece, a position he retained until 1960.

If that were not enough, in 1958, the conservative Prime Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis  appointed him to lead the team negotiating the 1961 agreement with the European Economic Community –the agreement that would pave the way for Greece’s entry into the E.U. in 1981.

In 1960 he became the Deputy Governor of the Bank of Greece  under the governorship of  Xenophondas Zolotas. 


Mr Zolotas on the left and Mr Pesmazoglou on the right

In 1962 he was appointed President of the Committee for European Co-operation. At a time when countries like England and Sweden were pushing for a loose union, others in Europe, including Pesmazoglou, were pushing for a much closer federalized union. During this period, the name Yiangos Pesmazoglou  became synonymous with the Greek effort to join the Common Market.

1967: The Dictatorship Years

1967 started well. Yiangos was elected professor at the Athens School of Economics.  When the Junta took over the country in April of that year, he was persuaded to remain in his post at the Bank of Greece by promises of a quick return to normalcy. But by August of that same year both Zolotas and Pesmazoglou realized that the promise had been an empty one and they resigned on August 3.  The Junta quickly stripped him of his chair at the university. 

 Seferis’ Declaration

As months passed, Pesmazoglou was concerned by what he felt was too easy an acceptance on the part of the outside world to the anomalies and depredations of the Junta, a problem he discussed with the poet George Seferis. Together they considered ways to make their opposition to the Junta public and, at the same time give courage to the Greek people suffering under the regime. The result was Seferis’ famous anti-Junta speech of March 28, 1969 which was broadcast on the Greek Service of the BBC, in Paris and on Deutsche Welle as well as being widely disseminated in journals.



Seferis speaks out on the BBC

Then in 1971, Pesmazoglou founded The Society For the Study of Greek Problems in order to probe the limits of free discussion under martial law. The society attracted many members who would meet at the Alpha theatre of actor Stephanos Linaios  (Στέφανος Ληναίος) until the Junta closed the society down in 1972. It was during this period that Pesmazoglou came into contact with many people whose ideas would eventually form the core of new parties of the Greek left, parties such as the Eurosocialists and Eurocommunists. 


Pesmazoglou with author and activist Gunter Grass

His anti-Junta activities did not go unnoticed and in 1972 he was exiled to the mountain village of Deskati in Grevena, and after that to Thermo, high up on the eastern edge of lake Trixonidas in Aitoloakarnanias, both out of the way places even today.
Exile by a hostile government has been a popular solution all through Greek history and could almost be seen as a badge of honour by any dissident worth his or her salt. His wife Miranda brought his art supplies into exile with him and he was able to take up a pastime that he had had little time for in the previous years:



One of the paintings

The Post Junta Years

In 1974, he entered the political arena and was elected to parliament on the Center-Union ticket. He became Minister of Economics in the ecumenical government formed by Konstantinos Karamanlis. From 1975 to 1978 he was President of the Joint Parliamentary Committee for Greece and the Common Market.

In the 1977 election, the Center-Union party was badly defeated and Pesmazoglou led a breakaway movement to form The Party of Democratic Socialism (ΚΟΔΗΣΟ) a party that, in spite of the luminaries who joined it, was basically considered the party of Pesmazoglou. (6)


Although pro-European and imbued with the ideals of Social Democracy, ΚΟΔΗΣΟ was no match for the rising star of populist  Andreas Papandreau and the party disappeared quickly from the political scene.
During the 80s, Pesmazoglou would align himself with the conservative party, New Democracy, although he never became a member.

Kudos

In 1992, at the age of 74 and after a long career, Yiangos was elected to the prestigious Athens Academy and in 1996, he became its president.

It is always hard to grasp the inner person. Yiangos Pesmazoglou comes across to me as intelligent, moderate and intellectual, a man constantly searching for the ‘better way’ during a period in Greece’s modern history when extremist and populist views were winning the day. The word ‘balanced’ comes to mind. In a society where being left or right was a label bestowed on almost all public figures, he seems to have preferred a ‘middle’ way where words like maybe and perhaps could conceivably become part of the social and political dialogue.

Yiangos Pesmazoglou died in 2003 and is buried in the First Cemetery.

Map


 Section 7, Number 685

Footnotes:

(1)  The family name was originally   “Pesma”. It expanded with the addition of  zoglou  (the Turkish equivalent of ‘son of’). Their family businesses, banking in particular, spread throughout the Ottoman sphere. Banker Ioannis Pesmazolglou’s ( 1857-1906) bank merged with the Bank of Athens in 1897 and he became its chairman until he died.  
(2)   I have discovered frustratingly little about the making of this incredible chunk of marble with its impressive hanging angels and a bas relief of the entrance to Hades.  Franceso Jerace was a big name in Italy and his work can be found all over Europe, but this is his only work in Greece as far as I know. There is no reference to him ever coming to Greece. Is it possible he designed it and then a Greek sculptor realized the concept? I would love to know.
(3)  There is very little in English about this family and research is partly confounded by the repetition of the same first names (Georgios, Ioannis, and Stephanos) over and over again. Unless specific dates or other specifiers are given, it is often difficult to know which Ioannis or Stephanos or George is being referred to. The name Yiangos is a diminuative of Ioannis. This passing on of the same names for generations must have been confusing inside a clan as large as this one!
(4)  The Varvakeio School, funded by Greek benefactor Ioannis Varvakis is still going strong in Athens.
(5)  One source lists this Stephanos as the son of banker Ioannis Pesmazoglu (1857-1906).
(6)  Other members included--------------------------------------

Sources
 There are very few English sources on the internet aside from this obituary by historian Richard Clogg: John Pesmazoglou: Bold champion of democracy and Greece's place in Europe at https://www.theguardian.com/news/2004/feb/02/guardianobituaries
Greek Sources:
-«Γιάγκος Πεσμαζόγλου» της Νίτσας Λουλέ- Θεοχαράκη, από εκδόσεις Ελληνικά Γράμματα.
-Η προσωπικότητα του Γιάγκου Πεσμαζόγλου. Η σφραγίδα του στην ιστορία της μεταπολεμικής Ελλάδας https://www.blod.gr/lectures/i-prosopikotita-tou-giagkou-pesmazoglou-i-sfragida-tou-stin-istoria-tis-metapolemikis-elladas/
Nuvola apps kaboodle.png Γιάγκος Πεσμαζόγλου(Αρχείο ντοκιμαντέρ της ΕΡΤ


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