The Massacre of Kalavryta - 1943
 " ... Due to partisan activity around the town of  Kalavryta in southern Greece, a unit of the German army 'Kampfgruppe  Ebersberger' the 117th Jager Division, under the command of General Karl de  Suire, surrounded the town on the morning of Monday, December 13. All the  inhabitants were herded into the local school. Females and young boys were  separated from the men and youths, the latter being marched to a hollow in a  nearby hillside. There the soldiers took up positions behind machine-guns.  Below, they witnessed the town being set on fire. Just after 2pm a red flare was  fired from the town. This was the signal for the soldiers to start firing on the  men and youths who were huddled in the hollow. At 2.34pm the firing stopped and  the soldiers marched away. Behind them lay the bodies of 696 persons, the entire  male population of Kalavryta. There were 13 survivors of the massacre, the town  itself totally destroyed. Only eight houses out of nearly five hundred, were  left standing. It was not until late afternoon that the women and young boys  were released to face the enormity of the tragedy. Today a memorial stands on  the site of the massacre on which are carved the names of 1,300 men and boys  from Kalavryta and 24 nearby villages who were murdered that day. (Around 460  villages were completely destroyed and approximately 60,000 men, women and  children were massacred during the occupation of Greece) ... "
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