By Maria
Petrakis Jun 26, 2014 2:01 AM GMT+0300
Bloomberg
The woman
who died in a burning Athens bank still smiles at Giorgos Mastorakos on his way
to the delicatessen he owns around the corner.
The wreaths
and tributes no longer cascade onto the road to mark the spot where she and her
two colleagues were killed in violence in May 2010 after the country’s
unsustainable debts and ensuing financial decline resulted in the first
depression since World War II. At the makeshift memorial that fewer people
visit on the anniversary of the deaths, the photo of the woman’s face is framed
by an anarchist sign and withering bouquets.
Mastorakos,
64, and his employees helped those who escaped the burning building. “And
that’s when the questions began: Did so-and-so get out? Have you seen that
person?” he said.