Chris Hitchens signature

Chris Hitchens' signature and dedication to 'Yannis' as he called me

I am not one of the giants of the literary establishment who regularly consorted with Christopher Hitchens, the great polemicist who died on December 15 after a two-year battle with cancer. I am just one of the lucky ones who met him fleetingly and were dazzled by his personality. Unlike many, I didn’t argue with him. We were on the same side, because one of the several causes he espoused was that the Elgin Marbles should be returned to Greece.

I met Christopher Hitchens at the press launch of The Parthenon marbles: The Case for Reunification, republished in 2008 after the opening of the new Akropolis museum in Athens, with a new introduction by ‘Hitch’ and a preface by none other than the great Nadine Gordimer (1991 Nobel Prize for Literature). The repatriation of the Parthenon Marbles as he and Nadine Gordimer call them (“They were never Elgin’s!” she angrily insisted) was one of the wars he fought against the establishment. Hitch had a long interaction with Greece; he married his first wife, Eleni, a Greek Cypriot, in a Greek Orthodox ceremony and his twenty-something son, Alexandros, whom I met (and who, I am pleased to impart, has his father’s air and presence) speaks Greek.

In the book and in discussions afterwards he had an answer to every argument against restitution.

That Lord Elgin removed the statues “legally“: Hitch examines Elgin’s correspondence to point out that the Sultan’s much-quoted final firman allowing the removal of the sculptures was obtained retroactively after Elgin had done his nasty work. The first firman, written in Italian, points out that Elgin was only authorised to remove “qualche pezzi di pietra” (a few pieces of stone).

That Lord Elgin ‘saved’ the marbles: Hitch reminds everyone that his ship, the Mentor, sank outside Kythera and, had it not been for the Herculean efforts of local fishermen, he would be vilified as the man who lost not ‘saved’ the marbles.

That Lord Elgin donated the marbles to the British Museum: Hitch points out that he took whatever he could from the government as a security for one of his bad debts.

That the Greeks did not care about the marbles: Hitch records in detail the furore and bickering that has enveloped the removal of the marbles for two centuries now. In fact, those marbles that survived Elgin survived the 10-year bloody war of Greek Independence 18 years later. As one of the Greek heroes of that War , General Makriyiannis put it: “It’s because of our ancient statues that we are fighting for our freedom“.

 That the marbles are safer in London than in Athens. Hitch quotes in full the British Museum Standing Committee minutes of October 8, 1938: “The Director reported that through unauthorised and improper efforts to improve the colour of the Parthenon sculptures[..] some important pieces had been greatly damaged.” In fact, as we now know, they were regularly rubbed with a copper tool and cleaned with a solution of ammonia!

The Athens pollution would destroy the marbles. Hitch outlines the number of careful stone restoration that the Akropolis has undergone since 1979 and that the arguments are not valid any more. The pollution was mostly cleared in time for the 2004 Olympics and the new Akropolis museum is ready and waiting.

But Hitch’ best argument was the one he employed face-to-face. “How would you feel if the Mona Lisa was kept half in Paris and half in Copenhagen?” he would ask and startle you.

Which is correct. The marbles were not cut cleanly or in order. An Appendix in his book shows that, say, out of the 32 metopes on the southern side representing the struggle of the Lapiths and Centaurs: I is in Athens; II, III are in the British museum; IV is in the British Museum, the heads in Copenhagen; V is in the British Museum, part of a head in Würzburg; VII in the British Museum, one head in Athens, one head in the Louvre; VIII in  the British Museum; IX in the British Museum, head in Athens; X is in the Louvre; XI is destroyed; XII in Athens, XIII to XV are missing, presumed sunk with Elgin’s ship..

I’d better stop.  It’s even worse with the frieze, where parts of the same sculpture – hacked in half – are in Athens and others in the British museum.

For Hitch restitution of the Parthenon marbles should be “freely offered as a homage to the indivisibility of art and – why not say it without embarrassment? – of justice, too“.

Hitch was one of the last great Philhellenes and Greece has lost one of her closest friends in her hour of need. Hopefully his legacy of solid arguments despite what he calls “the certainty of its own rectitude on the part of a section of the British Establishment” will do the convincing.

Christopher Hitchens, R.I.P.