
The  struggle of those who fight against all forms of power, who are anxious  that each moment should not be wasted and who stubbornly maintain the  belief that we are capable of creating a free and non-authoritarian  world, is as distant from any kind of mythology or fiction as the earth  is from the moon.
This  struggle has had, has and will have countless casualties; dead,  captured, and people who desist because they lose hope or compromise  themselves because the powers that be have found the low or high price  to buy them off.Those seeking saints, martyrs or  messiahs, or heroes and mythical beasts, are ultimately no different  from those who do not miss the opportunity to point the finger at the  scoundrels, the black sheep, the criminally suspect and those who  politically have already lost. Both the superior beings depicted by one  side and the extremist creatures from the other are equally expendable.  In either case the purpose is to keep everyone sedated and docile,  despite what the proponents of either side might claim.
Some  ecstatically speak of those 'sacrificed', while the others piously try  to measure the political loss. It is of little importance whether this  convergence is achieved due to fanaticism or delusion, ignorance or  expediency, for reasons of political visibility and survival or  practising dogmatism. Those who are supposed to object shout to convince  everyone that they have unfinished business with them, but this fraud  is difficult to conceal. But so be it. This scenario is true and played  to death, but the beaten path is always the most secure. Always? Or  maybe it is not?
The following words, and those preceding them,  are not the product of an obligation or sense of duty. Nor are they part  of any revolutionary obituary. They are far away from and hostile to  any attempt to mythologizing, ownership, engaging or disengaging,  against the mud slung and the depreciation, which authority is already  trying to spread after the disclosure of the identity and photograph of a  dead "terrorist" following a gunfight with cops in Daphne. Lambros  Fountas, who fell dead in a shootout with the crew of the police squad  car in the area of Daphne is known for his anarchist activities.
From his years as a high school student he was socially active and would later join the anarchist group 
MAVRO AGATHI (Black Thorn), who issued the 
DROMI TIS ORGIS (Streets of Rage)  'zine/pamphlet/serial. He was active and participated in marches,  rallies, social conflicts, demonstrations, flyposting, discussions and  social events.
 (Streets of Rage)
(Streets of Rage) 'THE MAGAZINE
He  was one of the thousands of young people not enrolled at the time with  any political youth party involved in the student occupations,  demonstrations and clashes prior to and after the murder of Professor N.  Temponera in Patras. Those young people were inspired by the  insurrectional events of January 1991 as well as anarchist ideas and  practices that they appropriated with a vitality which words are  incapable of describing. 
The  anarchist group Black Thorn, until its dissolution, participated in the  Co-operation of Anarchist Groups and Individuals for Social Solidarity  and Diverse Action.During the occupation of the  Polytechnical University of Athens in 1995 for the anniversary of the  1973 Uprising, Lambros Fountas was among the 504 who were arrested by  the repressive state forces that invaded the university grounds on the  morning of November 18th. He was, therefore, among so many young people  of a generation that the politically correct were quick to describe as  lost. Among all those who chose their partners' hand and travelled the  1990s from protest to protest, from roadblock to roadblock, standing in  solidarity with passion in every social aspect, who chose to confront  power with their rights and their wrongs, their differences amongst  themselves and their stubbornness, confounding the authority that wanted  them to simply be passers by in the social struggles. Not that there  weren't any such people. Quite the contrary. Since then I have met up  with Lambros and been side by side many times in marches, roadblocks and  clashes.
We solemnly believe that what the people who fight  leave behind them, is what they really contribute and is not superficial  to the liberation process from the shackles of oppression and  exploitation. This is a legacy that transcends any needs, decisions and  choices.
Because the means are not an end in themselves and don't  differentiate those fighting, but rather reveal possibilities, they  don't sanctify those who choose one or another form, nor do they put  anyone on a pedestal. There are no unknown comrades who have been  unfairly lost. Nor is the point principally, in these situations, the  search for operational errors.
Equally, however, we do not agree  with the logic that explanations are the privilege of priests, initiates  or those well-educated in internal affairs or with those who deal with  cases and craft scenarios all the time, that the answer may begin and  end with motto: loss is a necessary evil. Our position must be  straightforward and outspoken.
We close, saying goodbye to Lambros with an Indian wish (and certainty):"The next time (we meet) will be better!" 
"Anarchist Archive of Athens
 11/3/10 complitle translate actforfreedomnow in memory and honor to my friend and comrade lambro.
 
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