What most pains him and many others here, though, is that central bankers and other international financial officials have, by letting their country’s 860,000 citizens suffer for the sins of a powerful few, shattered Cyprus’s solidarity with the European Union.

Cyprus is no poor cousin to the European Union, they say. Instead, it is a country with a small, but remarkably multilingual, solidly educated and until now comfortably middle-class population — people who consider themselves precisely the type of Europeans the rest of the union should be proud to have anchor its border with the Middle East.

Many Cypriots now feel great shock and anger at what they consider their economic excommunication.

“Not everyone here is Russian, or making money illegally, or laundering money,” Mr. Alexandrou said. “Most of us are normal people living normal lives.”

He sat, face grim, with his wife, Aliki, and their energetic 18-month-old son, Alexandros, in the living room of their modern white house on the outskirts of Nicosia. “Now we see that nothing good has come from European solidarity,” he said.

For Cypriots, joining the European Union and adopting the euro were significant achievements. After decades of internal strife and foreign occupation, Cyprus regarded acceptance into the European family as a promise of stability and the chance to forge a more modern economy.