SOURCE: GREEKCITYTIMES.COM
Manolis Bikakis – a Cretan-born hero of Cyprus.
His story is not well known, but one thing is for sure, everyone who reads about him will feel that he justly deserves a place next to the greatest Heroes of Hellenism.
It is on this day in 1974 that Turkey’s brutal invasion of Cyprus began, and Greece being controlled by a CIA-installed military dictatorship did next to nothing to support the Cypriots.
Born in 1954 in the village of Asi Gonia between Chania and Rethymnon, Bikakis in 1974 served in the 1st Parachute Squadron in Maleme.
The Squadron was one of the very few to be called upon to defend Cyprus.
As the planes full of commandos approached Nicosia airport after a low flight two to three meters above the sea, they came under fire from both the Turks and Cypriot Greeks who mistakenly though they were Turkish planes. One of the planes was shot down by friendly fire, killing all the commandos and the crew except Thanasis Zafiriou, who jumped out and was rescued with serious injuries.
Bikakis, a 20-year-old boy, in the chaos of the battles was separated from his comrades who believed he had died. In fact, he was alive and had a PAO (Non-Reversible Cannon) and 8 missiles. He was on a hill west of Nicosia in the area of Agios Dometios.
Despite being alone, Bikakis did not even think of leaving the hill to save himself, knowing that if the Turks captured the hill, then Nicosia airport would inevitably also fall to the invaders.
His first launched missile destroyed a Turkish tank causing the panicked crew to abandon it and run for safety. Because his position from the shot was known by the Turks, he quickly changed position with difficulty since he had to carry the PAO and 7 more missiles. From the new position, he marked the second Turkish tank and completely destroyed it, killing the entire crew.
There was confusion and the next two Turkish tanks changed direction. Bikakis targeted one tank, which he also destroyed with a well-aimed shot.
Then destroyed another tank.
A fourth.
A fifth.
A sixth tank he destroyed by himself.
Bikakis was left with only two missiles
When he saw the Turkish soldiers running to cover themselves in a building, he armed the PAO again. The last two missiles hit the building where the Turkish infantry battalion was covered. No one knows how many were killed.
He single handedly managed to prevent the Turkish attack aimed at occupying Agios Dometios, which would mean a siege of Nicosia and cut off access to Nicosia airport.
In the middle of the summer, Bikakis was left alone for four days looking for other commandos, having with him a machine gun he found on the hill. He succeeded in finding a building with a telephone, calling his superiors.
– Forward, Commander, Commander Bikakis.
– Where are you my child! Are you alive; What happened to you; Are you well?
– I am well, Commander, I am in the FORD delegation.
– Wait, I’m sending a vehicle to pick you up. Your eyes are fourteen, you are in a danger zone.
– Commander, I have not eaten in four, send food together, and I have no water at all.
He joined his unit and after the end of hostilities he returned to Greece.
Despite the fact that his commander submitted a petition for him to be awarded a medal, the Greek state never honoured him. Bikakis got married and started a family working as a builder in Crete.
He claimed neither laurels nor honours. In 1994 he tragically died in a car accident on the Corinth-Patras road.
It is little wonder why he is known as the “Greek Rambo.”
True hero! Awesome!!