Santa Barbara AHEPA Chapter 243

Chapter website for Santa Barbara AHEPA Chapter 243.

[Home]  [Blue Dot] Back to Chapters

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

OHI DAT October 28, 1940 

Ohi Day
Celebrated throughout Greece, Cyprus and the Greek communities around the world on October 28 each year, Ohi Day (also spelled Ochi Day, Greek: Επέτειος του «'Οχι», Anniversary of the "No") commemorates Greek Prime Minister Ioannis Metaxas's (in power from August 4, 1936 until January 29, 1941) rejection of the ultimatum made by Italian dictator Mussolini on October 28, 1940.
The Italian ultimatum
This ultimatum, which was presented to Metaxas by the Italian ambassador in Greece, Emanuele Grazzi, on October 28, 1940, at dawn (04:00 AM), after a party in the German embassy in Athens, demanded that Greece allow Axis forces to enter Greek territory and occupy certain unspecified "strategic locations" or otherwise face war. It was allegedly answered with a single laconic word: όχι or no. Most scholars dismiss the use of the word 'Ohi' as an urban legend, claiming that the actual reply was the French phrase "Alors, c'est la guerre" ("Then it is war"). In response to Metaxas's refusal, Italian troops stationed in Albania, then an Italian protectorate, attacked the Greek border at 05:30 AM. Metaxas's reply marked the beginning of Greece's participation in World War II (see Greco-Italian War and Battle of Greece).

On the morning of October 28 the Greek population took to the streets, irrespective of political affiliation, shouting 'ohi'. From 1942, it was celebrated as Ohi Day.


The Greek island of Poros decorated in recognition of Ohi Day
[edit] Anniversary
During the war, October 28 was commemorated yearly by Greek communities around the world and in Greece, and after WWII it became a public holiday in Greece. The events of 1940 are commemorated every year with military and student parades. On every anniversary, most public buildings and residences are decorated with Greek flags.

posted by Santa Barbara Chapter 243  # 7:43 PM

Archives

July 2005

  

August 2005

  

September 2005

  

October 2005

  

November 2005

  

December 2005

  

January 2006

  

February 2006

  

March 2006

  

April 2006

  

May 2006

  

July 2006

  

August 2006

  

September 2006

  

November 2006

  

January 2007

  

April 2007

  

June 2007

  

April 2008

  

May 2008

  

June 2008

  

July 2008

  

August 2008

  

September 2008

  

October 2008

  

November 2008

  

December 2008

  

January 2009

  

February 2009

  

March 2009

  

April 2009

  

May 2009

  

June 2009

  

July 2009

  
Top of Page

[Blogger]