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Christos Konstantinidis (anarchist)

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Christos Konstantinidis (in Greek: Χρήστος Κωνσταντινίδης) is a Greek publisher, translator, and anarchist activist. He actively participated in radicalizing Athenian universities during the Greek junta (1967-1974) and was particularly involved in the Athens Polytechnic uprising (1973), an event that marked the beginning of the fall of the junta.

He is generally regarded as one of the first links between the Greek student movement and anarchism, and he holds an important place in the revival of anarchism in Greece.

Biography

Christos Konstantinidis became politically active during the dictatorship of the colonels (1967-1974) after being trained in activism in Paris. In 1971, he founded the International Library (Διεθνής Βιβλιοθήκη), which quickly became the gathering place for the Athenian anarchist and anti-authoritarian movement. Through his bookstore, he managed to circulate texts by Goldman, Bakunin, Kropotkin, as well as more recent works, including situationist texts. Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle (1967) is one of the books he helped to transmit clandestinely, according to several testimonies collected by Nicholas Apoifis, who often refers to this example.

With Nikos Balis, he participated in radicalizing students. Quickly, within this emerging circle of anarchists, he founded the first anarchist group within Greek universities. In February 1973, he initiated the occupation of the Faculty of Law in Athens.

References