Ioannis Fourakis
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Ioannis Fourakis was born in 1937 in the Village of Drapania, in Chania, Crete. After finishing elementary school he took an exam to be accepted at the highschool of Kissamos, but he failed it. After this failure, being 13 years old, he left his village and went to Athens, where he worked as a waiter in a cafe in Plaka. There he joined the youth of the Party of the Liberals. The next year he found a job as an elevator driver in OTE. After four years he got fired because of his political action and he then returned to his village and occupied himself selling merchandise.
In 1955 he started writing articles for the morning newspaper "Athehnean". In 1961 he subscribed to the journalist school "Homer" using his articles as a reference instead of a highschool degree. When not working as a taxi-driver he attended the philosophical and legal lessons of the University of Athens.
In 1957 he got hired as a journalist for the newspaper "ΑΝΤΑΠΟΚΡΙΤΗΣ" and associate of "BHMA" of Athens. In 1963 he changed papers and got hired by the morning newspaper "Freedom". After four months he quit and started publishing the monthly political newspaper "ΚΑΜΠΑΝΑ".
During 1961-1967 he is present in all of the rallies and movements of the "Union of Center" and its youth movements (O.N.E.K and E.D.H.N.). During the dictatorship, while he did not participate in any resistance movements, the regime sentenced him many times to imprisonment "just in case". In 1968 he got arrested again for disobedience to the military command and was convicted to 6 months in the prisons of Averof and Aegina. After his release he started working again as a taxi driver. During 1972-1975 he worked for the insurance company "Phoenix".
After the fall of the Dictatorship he worked for many newspapers and magazines both in Athens and Crete. There he contributed with many political and military articles. Most of them were republished form bigger newspapers and magazines in Europe and America.
In 1977 he published his first book "Zionst Conspiracies", which was republished eleven times until 1998. After two years he published his book "Jews: The corrupters of Greek History" which until 1998 was republished six times. In the next two years he published the book "The first collision between Jews and Greeks" which until 1998 was republished five times. In 1989 he published "The prophecies of Delphi" which gets republished five times in the next ten years. In 1997 he published the books "Jews : The enemies of Greeks and Humans" and "Mixture of History and Mythology". In 2000 he publishes the book "Finding tracks in the Labyrinth".
[edit] April Children
As the Indigo movement began in the early '80s, a related phenomenon called April Children was being reported in Greece. Greek journalist Kostas Hardavelas announced that the University of Athens showed some unusual interest in children specifically born during April 1983. The university is said to have sought them in schools and performed interviews and surveys without further information or notification to the public. Hardavelas produced a documentary about the interviewees, promoting the view that these children had high IQ, mental abilities, peculiar dreams and spiritual experiences. In the absence of specific data about the key players and their aims within the University, the documentary posits the theory that connects the apparent anomaly to some cosmic event (planetary alignment or excessive solar activity).[citation needed]
Speculation about the children born during April 1983 is based on information from a book and articles written by Greek science-fiction and conspiracy theory author Ioannis Fourakis. Fourakis believes that the April Children have a mark on their skin, and that they will play some important role in the future in accordance with his theories of Ellinokentrismos.
See also : List of Epsilonists