Speaking at a hillside monument in Ligiades, Joachim Gauck expressed "shame" at the 1943 atrocity when Nazi troops executed dozens of villagers, including months-old babies, in reprisal for a partisan attack. He was accompanied by Greek President Karolos Papoulias, a resistance fighter as a teenager who comes from the nearby town of Ioannina.
"I wish to articulate what the perpetrators, and those who were politically responsible for so many years in the postwar period did not want, or were not able to utter," Gauck said. "That what happened here was a brutal injustice, and it is with feelings of shame and pain that I beg forgiveness from the families of those who were murdered."
That resentment has fuelled growing calls for Germany to pay Greece reparations for the brutal 1941-44 occupation and restitution for a forced wartime loan to Germany.
After the wreath-laying ceremony, about a dozen people at Ligiades unfurled a banner reading "reparations and justice," and chanted "justice, justice."
The two presidents then visited Ioannina's synagogue where Gauck spoke with Jewish community members, including nonagenarian survivors of Nazi death camps.
An official assessment of what sum Greece could demand is pending. But pro-reparations activists quote the sum of 162 billion euros (USD 223 billion), about half the financially distressed country's national debt. Papoulias said the issue "casts a pall" over the two countries' relations.
Separately, Greece's largest Jewish community, in the northern city of Thessaloniki, said last week it has taken Germany to Europe's top human rights court seeking the return of a massive ransom paid to Nazi Germany to free thousands of Jewish slave laborers. Despite the payment, those who had been press-ganged into construction projects across Greece were sent to Nazi death camps.
