Refugee Hotel in Athens, Greece
On 21 April, 2016, Greek activists occupied Hotel City Plaza in Athens, which had been empty since 2010. The former three-star hotel with 92 rooms was then turned into a shelter for about 400 refugees. It is estimated that more than 57,000 refugees are stranded in Greece after Greece and Turkey struck a deal to close the borders in March 2016, and most of them live in sub-human conditions at camps or even on streets.
The hotel is run by volunteers and on individual donations, and the activists want to make a point about the living conditions of stranded refugees. A squat by definition is illegal and temporary. The better living conditions, safety and privacy, however, made the resident refugees feel human again, however temporarily.
I was intrigued by the hotel’s humanizing effect and its parallel dynamic to the temporary, uncertain status of the refugees. The setting of the hotel also raises important questions regarding the refugee crisis: What makes someone a tourist or a refugee, and how do different sets of privilege apply to each?