Some years ago, travelling on the presidential plane of Venezulea's left-wing President Hugo Chavez of with a French friend from Le Monde Diplomatique, we were asked what we thought was happening in Europe. Was there any chance of a move to the left?
We replied in the depressed and pessimistic tones typical of the early years of the 21st century. Neither in Britain nor France, nor anywhere in the eurozone, did we see much chance of a political breakthrough.
Then maybe, said Chavez with a twinkle, they could come to our assistance.
He recalled the time in 1830 when revolutionary crowds in the streets of Paris had come out waving the cap of Simon Bolivar, the South American liberator from Venezuela who was to die at the end of that year.
Fighting for liberty, Latin American style, was held up as the path for Europe to follow.
At the time, I was encouraged but not persuaded by Chavez's optimism. Yet now I think that he was right.
It was good to be reminded that Alexis Tsipras, the leader of Greece's radical left party, Syriza, had visited Caracas in 2007 and inquired about the future possibility of receiving cheap Venezuelan oil, much as Cuba and other Caribbean and Central American countries do.
There was a brief moment when then London mayor Ken Livingstone and Chavez conjured up an oil deal between London and Caracas. It looked promising until it was rejected by Livingstone's successor, Boris Johnson.
More important than the prospect of cheap oil is the power of example. Chavez has been engaged since the turn of the century, even before, on a project that rejects the neoliberal economics that afflicts Europe and much of the Western world.
He has been opposed to the recipes of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, and has fought hard against the policies of privatisation that harmed the social and economic fabric of Latin America and with which the European Union is now threatening to destroy the economy of Greece.
Chavez has renationalised many industries, including oil and gas, that were privatised in the 1990s.
The words and inspiration of Chavez have had an effect beyond Venezuela. They have encouraged Argentina to default on its debt and renationalise its oil industry.
Chavez has helped Bolivia's Evo Morales to run its oil and gas industry for the benefit of the country rather than its foreign shareholders ― and more recently to halt the robbery by Spain of the profits of its electricity company.
Above all, Chavez has shown Latin America that there is an alternative to the single neoliberal message that has been endlessly broadcast for decades, by governments and the media in hock to an outdated ideology.
Now is the time for that alternative message to be heard further afield, to be listened to by voters in Europe. In Latin America, governments following an alternative strategy have been re-elected time and time again, suggesting that it is effective and popular.
In Europe, governments of whatever hue that follow the standard neoliberal template seem to fall at the first fence, suggesting that the will of the people is not engaged.
Chavez and others helping make the new "Bolivarian revolution" have called for "21st-century socialism".
This is viewed not as a return to Soviet-style economics or the continuation of the mundane social democratic adaptation of capitalism. Rather, as Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa put it, for the re-establishment of national planning by the state "for the development of the majority of the people".
Greeks have a wonderful chance to change the history of Europe and to throw their caps of Bolivar into the air, as once the Italian carbonari did in Paris all those years ago.
Lord Byron, who planned to settle in Bolivar's Venezuela before sailing off to help liberate Greece, named his yacht Bolivar. He would certainly have been pleased with contemporary developments.
[This article first appeared in The Guardian.]