The dividing line between Greeks and foreigners reappears with greater intensity under the sense of injustice felt by locals for the privileges of foreigners in a reversal of who is really in need and who is entitled.
F.=Facilitator, P.=Participant
P. 4: Let me talk to you a little bit about the reality in Eleusis. Up to ten years ago in the “Russian”, as we say, people lived in wooden structures. How do we see in the cartoons the little houses? Like so and they had for doors...
P. 5: It was after the war, a long time ago.
P. 4: No, no, no. There are still houses like that within the settlement.
P. 6: Okay, I lived in Korytsa for fifteen years and worked there...
P. 4: Forget about Korytsa. I'm talking about those who came here in '68 - I was born in '67 and came here in '69, and these people here did everything to send me back to Russia. That's why I'm telling you, I know them. In their houses, instead of doors, they had rugs. So, until recently, it was flooding, like what happened in Mandra. Now, the fact that the Air Force camp is there and has somehow upgraded the area is another matter. Four years ago, they came to pave the roads. So, seeing that the state is giving money to foreigners, money from the European Union, someone from the “Russian” can tell you that we've been here for so many years...
P. 5: In tents...
P. 4: I'm telling you how they see it. The fact that they live in tents, and at the same time, foreigners receive the thousand euros that the state gives them, is something visible to them.
F. 2: Better not get into this.