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Our Everyday Greek Review: We Talk about our Easter Traditions in Greek

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The vocabulary below will help you build common phrases concerning the Greek Orthodox Easter traditions.

IMPORTANT VOCABULARY

Greek word    Pronunciation          Meaning

ΧριστόςΑνέστη         hriSTOSaNEsti         Christ is risen.

ΑληθώςΑνέστη         aliTHOSaNEsti         It’s true. He is risen.

ΤηΣαρακοστή            TEE sarakoSTEE     On Lent

ΤηΜεγάληΕβδομάδα            TEE meYAlievdoMAda       On Holy Week

ΤηνΚυριακή των Bαΐων       TEENkiriaKEE TON vaEEon         On Palm Sunday

ΤηΜεγάληΔευτέρα    TEE meYAlidefTEra            On Holy Monday

ΤηΜεγάληΤρίτη         TEE meYAliTREEti  On Holy Tuesday

ΤηΜεγάληΤετάρτη    TEE meYAliteTArti   On Holy Wednesday

Τη ΜεγάληΠέμπτη    TEE meYAliPEmpti On Holy Thursday

ΤηΜεγάληΠαρασκευή          TEE meYAliparaskeVEE    On Holy Friday

ΤοΜεγάλοΣάββατο   TO meYAloSAvato   On Holy Saturday

ΤηνΚυριακήτουΠάσχα         TEEnkiriaKEE TOO Paskha          On Easter Sunday

ΟΕπιτάφιος   O epiTAfios   Epitafios

Στηνεκκλησία            STEEN ekliSEEa     in, to the church

Νηστεύουμε  niSTEvoome we fast

Πηγαίνουμε   piYEnoome   we go

Φτιάχνουμε    ftiAhnoome   we make, prepare

Ψήνουμε        PSEEnoome we bake, roast

Βάφουμε        VAfoome       we paint, dye

Ανάβουμε      aNAvoome    we light up

Τρώμε            TROme          we eat

Δεντρώμε       DEN TROme we don’t eat

Τσουγκρίζουμε         tsooGREEzoome     we crack

Λέει     LEi      he says

Τηνύχτα          TEE NEEhta at night

Οπαπάς         O paPAS       priest

Τοκρέας         TO KREas     meat

Οχαλβάς        O haLVAS     halva

Οιελιές                        EE eliES        olives

Ηταραμοσαλάτα        EE taramosaLAta     fish-roe dip

Τακαλαμαράκια         TA kalamaRAkia                  fried squid rings

Οιφακές          EE faKES      lentils

Ταφασόλια     TA faSOlia     beansΤολάδι TO LAdi          olive oil

Τααυγά           TA avYA        eggs

Τακόκκινα      TA KOkina     red

Τακουλούρια TA kooLOOria           biscuits

Τατσουρέκια  TA tsooREkia            Easter sweet breads

Οιλαμπάδες   EE laMPAdes           candles

Ημαγειρίτσα  EE mayiREEtsa       Holy Saturday’s soup

Τοαρνί            TO arNEE      lamb

Στησούβλα    STEE SOOvla           on the spit

Η Λαμπροκουλούρα                        EE lamprokooLOOra           Easter bread

EXERCISES

Try to answer the questions below in Greek.Choose the right words from the lists.
Τι τρώμε τη Σαρακοστή;
Κόκκινα αυγά.
Αρνί στη σούβλα
Φασόλια.
Χαλβά.
Tαραμοσαλάτα.
Ελιές.
Τσουρέκια.
Τι δεν τρώμε τη Σαρακοστή;
Φακές.
Ελιές.
Κρέας.
Λάδι.
Μαγειρίτσα.
Κουλούρια.
Αυγά.
Τι τρώμε το Μεγάλο Σάββατο;
Καλαμαράκια.
Χταπόδι.
Ταραμοσαλάτα.
Μαγειρίτσα.
Κόκκινα αυγά.
Φασόλια.
Ελιές.
Τι τρώμε την Κυριακή του Πάσχα;
Αρνί στη σούβλα.
Κόκκινα αυγά.
Κουλούρια.
Λαμπροκουλούρα
Ταραμοσαλάτα.
Καλαμαράκια.
Χαλβά.
Πότε κρατάμε λαμπάδες στην εκκλησία;
Τη Μεγάλη Δευτέρα.
Τη Μεγάλή Τρίτη.
Τη Μεγάλη Τετάρτη.
Τη Μεγάλη Πέμπτη.
Τη Μεγάλη Παρασκευή.
Το Μεγάλο Σάββατο.
Την Κυριακή του Πάσχα.
Ποια μέρα είναι ο Επιτάφιος;
5.1.      Τη Μεγάλη Δευτέρα.

5.2.      Τη Μεγάλή Τρίτη.

5.3.      Τη Μεγάλη Τετάρτη.

5.4.      Τη Μεγάλη Πέμπτη.

5.5.      Τη Μεγάλη Παρασκευή.

5.6.      Το Μεγάλο Σάββατο.

5.7.      ΤηνΚυριακήτουΠάσχα.

What do we do at Easter? Match the verbs of the first list with the nouns of the second one.
Νηστεύουμε Κόκκινα αυγά.
Πηγαίνουμε Κουλούρια.
Φτιάχνουμε Τσουρέκια.
Ψήνουμε Αρνί.
Βάφουμε Λαμπάδες.
Ανάβουμε Χαλβά.
Τρώμε             Χριστός Ανέστη.
Δεντρώμε Το κρέας.
Τσουγκρίζουμε Στην εκκλησία.
Λέμε Ούτε λάδι.

Translate in Greek the phrases below.
Christ is risen.
Truly, he is risen.
On Palm Sunday we go to church.
On Holy Saturday night the priest says “Christ is risen”.
On Holy Week we fast.

PRONUNCIATION KEY

i (i-diom), ee (n-ee-dle), e (e-nergy), o (o-rganism), oo (b-oo-t), y (y-es), h (h-elium), th (th-eory), d (th-e). The capitalized syllables are accented.

The post Our Everyday Greek Review: We Talk about our Easter Traditions in Greek appeared first on The National Herald.


Par-King: The Recognized Taj Mahal of Miniature Golf Courses

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That Greek-Americans are the creators of what is now recognized as “Mini golf’s Taj Mahal” should come as no surprise. Since the arrival of Greeks to North America, virtually every form of public entertainment has had its Hellenic owners and innovators. Clearly there is a public amusement spectrum beginning with George Pangalos’ (d. 1921) creation and management of the 1893 Chicago World Exposition through all the subsequent Greek-owned sideshows, midways, carnivals, circuses, horse shows, resorts, lake park pavilions, rodeos and amusement parks/theme parks. I have heard various titles given to these collective forms of entertainment venues. The “amusement business” seems the best overarching title for this spectrum of popular entertainments.

The Par-King Skill Golf in Lincolnshire, IL is not just yet another of these Greek-owned public amusements but one that since its inception has been a national leader in miniature golf. For those who do not follow the rise and fall of American public entertainment forms, the New York Times has reported that by August, 1930 there were over 25,000 mini-golf courses in the country while there were only about 6,000 regular golf courses in the entire nation.

As one would suspect, the Par-King Skill Golf course did not just spring up overnight. Its origins, creative vision and sustained energy are all due to the ongoing efforts of one extended Greek-American family. But with each such Greek-American story there is always a founder from which all else follows.

On July 22, 1913, George Nicholas Boznos (1896-1991) arrived from Greece. By 1920, Boznos lived above a grocery store with his uncle Gustave at 3958 Grand Avenue in Chicago. At some point in the 1920s, Boznos married his wife Demetra and fathered four sons. In 1923, George Boznos moved his family to a 30 acre piece of property located at the southeast corner of Waukegan and Dempster in Morton Grove, Illinois. This Chicago suburban piece of property and the family businesses it inspired began first with the Dempster Vegetable Farm. Next Boznos opened the Dempster Cafe. So, enterprising were the extended members of the Boznos clan that I must turn from the various businesses these individuals managed to create and simultaneously maintain on this property and jump immediately to the establishment of what was, in time, to become the Par-King Skill Golf course.

In 1951, the Boznos clan opened a driving range on their property called (at first) Gorgeous George’s Golfing Garden. Dates differ but sometime between 1955 and 1956 the range’s name was changed to 4G- Practise Fairways. It was during the 1950s, that Boznos and his sons altered their 30 acres of mixed produce production by adding a landscaping dimension to the business. Which morphed gradually into an “impressive array of unique trees and topiary, but also 10,000 flowers planted annually throughout the (future mini-golf range) grounds. Unintentionally, perhaps, but nonetheless each such business addition or alteration eventually dovetailed into elevating the driving range into something entirely new. By the 1960s, the driving range had morphed into a full-blown mini-golf course.

The original Par-King “was designed and its construction supervised by (then) 20 year old Sam Boznos…each of the 8 holes is identified by a replica, meticulously made by hand and painted in beautiful colors, of some famous landmark. You get an idea of what the holes look like, and what they represent, from their names. The holes on the front nine are called: ‘Liberty Bell,’ ‘Alligator,’ ‘Toll Road,’ ‘Statue,’ ‘Mount Rushmore,’ ‘Grandfather’s Clock,’ ‘Turtle,’ and ‘Prudential.’ On the last nine: ‘The Shoe (an 11-foot tall copy of the one the old gal lived in with all her kids),’ ‘Indian Tepee,’ ‘Humpty Dumpty,’ ‘Sweetheart,’ ‘Three Bears,’ ‘Roller Coaster,’ ‘Old Mill,’ ‘Clown’ and ‘Roulette.’

It took almost two years and about $80,000 to complete the course. The ‘Prudential’ building took the longest to make. It is 11 feet high, has 41 floors like the one on the lakefront, 2,500 tiny plastic windows, each one inch square and a quarter inch thick. Mount Rushmore is a reproduction of the monument in South Dakota with the faces of four Presidents: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt in clay (gradyent.blogspot.com).”

Then, on August 28, 1965, Amusement Business magazine crowned the Boznos clan’s course as “mini-golf’s Taj Mahal,” emphasizing that it was “noted to be the most elaborate (and highest-grossing course) 18-hole mini-golf in the nation.” Each putting-green was custom made, hand painted and featured a unique theme or construct. In 1977, ‘4G-Fairways…George’s Gorgeous Golfing Garden’ moved to 21711 North Milwaukee Road in Lincolnshire IL–some thirty miles north of Chicago. With this move the range became known as Par-King Skill Golf with the Boznos clan adding proudly the claim none deny The World’s Most Unusual Miniature Golf. This version of the course opened with ‘two 18-hole courses, 19 moving obstacles and 7 water holes (par.-king.com).” In its current location, the Course is owned and managed by George Boznos’ grandchildren.

Be advised that none of these putting-greens are the same. As reported in Men’s Journal, “Par-King in Lincolnshire, Illinois, calls itself ‘The World’s Most Unusual Miniature Golf,’ and it may be right. The highlight is a roller coaster hole in which patrons hit balls onto the Super Looper, a track with an upside-down element. Par-King’s two 18-hole courses have a wacky assortment of features, like a gorgeous hand-carved carousel with colorful horses at one hole and the Statue of Liberty at another. On the rocket hole, golfers hit balls up a ramp and onto a track that runs in and down the rocket. You’ll also find Mount Rushmore.”

This in no way is the limit of Par-King creations. A replica of the Sears (now Willis) Tower, elephants, dinosaurs, Mount Rushmore, scary clowns and even an elevator hole are all individual greens. Every winter these fiberglass creations must be dismantled, refurbished and placed in storage. Still, given the drive and creative nature of the Boznos clan at least one hole a year is replaced by a new one, hand-crafted designed in-house.

Here we must stress that while the Boznos clan is following creatively on the mini-golf course ‘form’ much much more is at work. Writing for Smithsonian Magazine, Matt Blitz reported that ‘until the mid-1920s, mini-golf courses were mostly miniaturized, putting-only versions of regular golf courses. That changed in the late 1920s, when Garnet Carter built and patented his Tom Thumb course in the resort town of Lookout Mountain near Chattanooga, Tennessee. Taking the “putting-only” course a step further, he added rock tunnels and hollowed-out logs as obstacles and soon found that his miniature golf course was far more profitable than his standard one.

Mini-golf has come far from the days of hollowed-out logs; today’s courses feature obstacles such as replicas of national landmarks, subway stations and laughing clowns. While there are only about 5,000 mini-golf courses still in America, there is a real art to the elaborate design of many of them…in the early 2000s, a steel “Super Looper” coaster (was introduced) that carries the ball upside-down. They are the only two like them in the world (smithsonian.com August 19, 2015). And here is where the Boznos clan demonstrates, once again, their innate creativity across generations.

Today, this multi-generational family-owned business is still thriving. But don’t take my word for it. Various videos on YouTube show different putting-greens at the Par King Miniature Golf course and their individually elaborate sites. Without a doubt, Par King Skill Golf remains a putt-putt paradise.

The post Par-King: The Recognized Taj Mahal of Miniature Golf Courses appeared first on The National Herald.

Jamaica U.S. Premiere Wows the Audience on HFS’s Greek Film Expo Opening Night

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NEW YORK – Opening night of the Greek Film Expo presented by the Hellenic Film Society USA (HFS) took place on April 27 with the U.S. premiere screening of Jamaica at the Directors Guild Theater in Midtown Manhattan. The charming and moving film, directed by Andreas Morfonios, is a bittersweet comedy about two estranged brothers at very different places in their lives.

Actors Nikoleta Kotsailidou and Spiros Papadopoulos- host of the popular TV musical revue, Stin Ygeia Mas Re Paidia, attended the screening, much to the delight of the audience, and are expected to attend all the screenings of the film during the showcase of films which runs through May 3.

Fanis Mouratidis received a Hellenic Film Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor in his role as Timos, a successful television personality whose brother, Akis, played by Papadopulos, is a cab driver struggling to pay his bills. The brothers come together at a crucial time in their lives as they deal with resentments and long-time disappointments while the clash of lifestyles and personalities offers comic relief. The comedy is highlighted by poignant moments, as the power of brotherly love helps them overcome their differences and teaches them valuable life lessons.

Director of the Hellenic Film Society USA Jimmy DeMetro, Consul General of Greece in New York Konstantinos Koutras, and actor Spiros Papadopoulos after the U.S. premiere of the film Jamaica. Photo by Eleni Sakellis

Papadopoulos demonstrates impressive range in his role, balancing the depth and powerful emotion with subtlety while he struggles to keep things together as his life seems to be unraveling. The financial aspect is only part of the problem, and his scenes with Kotsailidou, who plays his wife Popi, honestly reflect the emotions and the frustration so relatable in this day and age. The comic timing and chemistry of the entire cast, but especially between Mouratidis, Papadopoulos, and Anna-Maria Papaharalambous who plays Nina, is wonderful.

The comedy is delivered flawlessly by Mouratidis’ cheeky Timos and Papadopoulos’ serious Akis, recalling classic double acts of the past with the comic/straight man dynamic. Writer Giorgos Feidas has created a fine balance between the comedy and the touching moments in the film.

Onassis Foundation USA Executive Director and Cultural Director Amalia Cosmetatou with actors Spiros Papadopoulos and Nicoleta Kotsailidou. Photo by Eleni Sakellis

Flashbacks offer insight into the relationship between the brothers with the bonus of gorgeous Greek beach footage as well. Audience members were moved by the film and applauded as the credits rolled. They also gave a standing ovation to the actors when they stepped forward for a Q&A session which followed the film. Everyone expressed their enthusiasm for the film and congratulated the actors. When asked where is Timos, Papadopoulos replied that his co-star Mouratidis was performing in a play in Thessaloniki. Papadopoulos also noted the difficulties facing Greek films and the lack of resources, but Jamaica was very well-received in Greece, and is now “taking a stroll” outside the country to hopefully reach a wider audience. The film is based on a true story, he said, adding that it was made “between laughter and tears.”

Jimmy DeMetro, Hellenic Film Society USA Director, introduced the film and the actors Kotsailidou and Papadopoulos and thanked his “partners in crime,” the Associate Directors of the Hellenic Film Society, George Balafoutis, Eva Mallis, Maria Psomiades, and Vickie Rekoutis. He also thanked the benefactors of the HFS, Stavros Niarchos Foundation, and Nikos and Carol Mouyiaris, the patron Onassis Foundation USA, and all the sponsors, supporters, friends, and volunteers. The Mouyiaris’ donation, DeMetro noted, was made in memory of their son Alexis Mouyiaris, “a charismatic young actor, who died unexpectedly just as work on his first feature film was nearing completion. That his parents have chosen to honor his memory by supporting the work of a film society is both touching and inspiring.”

Director of the Hellenic Film Society USA Jimmy DeMetro on opening night of the Greek Film Expo at the Directors Guild Theater in New York. Photo by Eleni Sakellis

Many members of the audience shared their appreciation for the film, noting its hopeful and optimistic aspects, the wit and heartfelt emotions.

Among those present at the screening were Consul General of Greece in New York Konstantinos Koutras and his wife Popita Pavli, Executive Director and Cultural Director of the Onassis Foundation USA Amalia Cosmetatou, Dr. George Liakeas- President of the Hellenic Medical Society of New York and his wife, Nicole, and vocalist Aphrodite Daniel, among many film fans and members of the community.

A reception was held after the film screening at Ousia on Manhattan’s West Side, where the film’s newly-minted fans had the opportunity to speak with the actors and share how much they enjoyed the film.

Tickets and more information are available online at: hellenicfilmusa.org.

The audience at the U.S. premiere of Jamaica on opening night of the Greek Film Expo presented by the Hellenic Film Society USA. Photo by Eleni Sakellis

The post Jamaica U.S. Premiere Wows the Audience on HFS’s Greek Film Expo Opening Night appeared first on The National Herald.

Going on in Our Community

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THRU OCTOBER 6

TARPON SPRINGS, FL – The City of Tarpon Springs will present Night in the Islands–a free event on the world famous Sponge Docks (Dodecanese Blvd. between Athens and Roosevelt Streets) on May 19, July 7, August 4, and October 6 this year. Enjoy a Greek panagiri with music, dancing, and dining! And we will offer an hour of free Greek dance lessons by the Levendia Dance Troupe from 6-7 PM. Night in the Islands will feature the engaging music of Odyssey in April and May, and in July, August, and September we will feature Ellada in front of the Sponge Exchange. In April and May, we will also feature Neos Ihos playing Greek music on the block between Hope and Roosevelt Streets. To reserve a table for dinner, please contact participating restaurants Costa’s, Hellas, Mama’s, or Mykonos. This popular event is free, thanks to funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Tarpon Springs Merchants Association. For more information, contact Tina Bucuvalas at 727-916-0235 or tbucuvalas@ctsfl.us.

THRU JULY 8

NEW YORK – The Onassis Cultural Center New York presents Birds: A Festival Inspired by Aristophanes, comprising a rich array of events that consider the enduring—and, currently, pressing—central themes of Aristophanes’ ancient satire, The Birds, April 22- July 8. The festival is produced by Onassis Cultural Center New York for the American premiere of Nikos Karathanos’ uproarious and poetic adaptation of the original Aristophanes play, presented by St. Ann’s Warehouse and Onassis Cultural Centre-Athens. More information is available online at: onassisusa.org.

MAY 2-13

BROOKLYN – Following its sold-out World Premiere at the open air Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus and a subsequent popular engagement at the Onassis Cultural Center in Athens, Greece, the play- Aristophanes’ Birds, directed by Nikos Karathanos, will run for 12 performances at St. Ann’s Warehouse, 45 Water Street in Brooklyn, Wednesday, May 2- Sunday, March 13. More information is available online at: http://stannswarehouse.org/show/the-birds/.

MAY 3- JUNE 1

WASHINGTON, DC – The Embassy of Greece and the Hellenic Ephorate of Antiquities of Kavala-Thasos invite you to the Opening of the photography exhibition Archaeological Site of Philippi: A Landmark of European Heritage on Thursday, May 3, 6:30-8:30 PM at the Embassy of Greece, 2217 Massachusetts Ave NW in Washington, DC. The Archaeological Site of Philippi is included in UNESCO’s list of World Heritage Monuments since 2016. The photo exhibition is free and will be on display at the Embassy of Greece until June 1. Visiting Hours: Monday-Friday, 10 AM-3 PM. The exhibition is generously sponsored by Raycap and is part of the European Union Month of Culture in DC. RSVP for the opening on Eventbrite.

MAY 4-5

MANHATTAN – A special Greek Jewish Shabbat at Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue and Museum, 280 Broome Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, celebrating the Romaniote and Sephardic traditions of the Jews of Greece takes place on May 4-5. Community leaders from Greece, Seattle, Indianapolis, Portland, Miami, Atlanta, and Philadelphia will be present, including the following distinguished Hahamim: Rabbi Gabriel Negrin, Jewish Community of Athens, Greece; Rabbi Ben Hassan, Sephardic Bikur Holim Congregation, Seattle; Rabbi David Gingold-Altchek, Etz Chaim Sephardic Cong, Indianapolis; and Rabbi Nissim Elnecavé, The Sephardic Jewish Brotherhood of America. Beginning on Friday, May 4, 6:45 PM, and continuing on Saturday, May 5, 9 AM, the complete schedule is available online at: www.kkjsm.org. Please RSVP to amarcus@kkjsm.org. More information is available by phone: 212-431-1619 and online at: www.kkjsm.org.

MAY 4-6

PHILADELPHIA, PA – The Greek America Foundation presents its National Innovation Conference and Forty Under 40 Awards Weekend in Philadelphia, PA with a complete weekend of receptions, speakers, workshops, and events. This event is presented in association with the National Hellenic Student Association (NHSA). Tickets for students and young professionals should be purchased through NHSA (with or without hotel accommodations at the Marriott Philadelphia Downtown) For more information visit: www.nhsaofamerica.org and www.greekamericafoundation.org.

BETHESDA, MD – St. George Greek Orthodox Church, 7701 Bradley Blvd. in Bethesda, holds its annual Greek Festival May 4-6. Featuring traditional Greek cuisine, guided church tours, Greek dance performances, live Greek music, Greek “Agora” marketplace, and Kids Corner. Hours: Friday, May 4,12-10 PM; Saturday, May 5, 12-11 PM; and Sunday, May 6, 12-8 PM. More information is available by phone: 301-469-7990 and online at: https://stgeorge.org/festival/.

MAY 5-6

DURHAM, NC – The Greek Festival of St. Barbara Greek Orthodox Church, 8306 NC Highway 751 in Durham takes place Saturday, May 5-Sunday, May 6, 11 AM- 8PM. Enjoy delicious Greek food and pastries, a Greek Taverna and Café, traditional music, folk dance performances, shopping, video travelogues of Greece, church tours, and kids’ activities. More information is available online at: http://www.durhamgreekfestival.org/.

MAY 6

MANHATTAN – Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue and Museum hosts the fourth annual Greek Jewish Festival on Sunday, May 6 from 12-6 PM. The festival, a unique cross-cultural celebration, will take place in front of KKJ’s landmark historic synagogue on Broome Street between Allen Street and Eldridge Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. More information on the Greek Jewish Festival is available online at: www.GreekJewishFestival.com.

MAY 8-11

WILKES-BARRE, PA – Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, 32 East Ross Street in Wilkes-Barre, holds its Spring Greek Food Festival on Tuesday, May 8- Friday, May 11, 11 AM- 8PM. Features: Eat-ins and take-outs of delicious Greek food and pastries, Free local delivery (within 2 miles) offered to orders over $30, Church is handicap accessible on the inside (after passing 5 steps leading to entrance of church), All major credit cards accepted. Pre-orders are welcome in advance by phone: 570-823-4805 and email: greekfoodfestival@yahoo.com.

MAY 10-13

WATERBURY, CT – Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, 937 Chase Parkway in Waterbury, holds its annual Greek Festival May 10-13. Enjoy authentic Greek food, music and dancing. Raffle tickets and more information are available by phone: 203-754-5189 or email: office@holytrinitywaterbury.org. Festival Hours: Thursday, May 10, Thursday 10 AM-9 PM; Friday, May 11, 10 AM- 11 PM; Saturday, May 12, 10 AM- 12 Midnight; Sunday, May 13, 11 AM- 3 PM.

MAY 11-13

WEBSTER, TX – St. John the Theologian Orthodox Church of Webster holds the 25th Annual Clear Lake Greek Festival at the Landolt Pavillion, Clear Lake Park, 5001 Nasa Parkway, in Seabrook, on Friday, May 11 and Saturday, May 12, 11 AM-10 PM, and Sunday, May 13, 11 AM-6 PM. Enjoy Greek food, dancing, gift shops, and children’s activities. More information is available online at: clearlakegreekfestival.com.

The post Going on in Our Community appeared first on The National Herald.

Greek National Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg Appointed as World Bank’s Chief Economist

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WASHINGTON – World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim announced on Thursday, April 26,  the appointment of Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg, Elihu Professor of Economics at Yale University, as World Bank Group Chief Economist.

Goldberg, a Greek and US national, brings an impressive track record as a leading applied microeconomist, widely cited for her research on developing countries—including the effects of trade on inequality and firm productivity, profits and innovation, and enforcement of intellectual property rights, The World Bank announced.

Goldberg is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a recipient of fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. She has won the 2003 Bodossaki Prize in Social Sciences, which is awarded to distinguished scholars of Greek nationality or decent, who is younger than 45, Yale University says.

“I’m thrilled that Penny Goldberg will bring her vast academic experience, intellectual rigor, and boundless curiosity to the World Bank Group,” World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said. “Penny has spent her career examining many of the most complex issues that affect developing countries, and she will help answer the most important – and difficult – questions of our time: how to help developing countries prepare for the economy of the future, and how to ensure equality of opportunity everywhere in the world.”

 

The post Greek National Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg Appointed as World Bank’s Chief Economist appeared first on The National Herald.

Maria Farantouri Talks to TNH about Upcoming Carnegie Hall Concert

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ATHENS – The renowned singing star Maria Farantouri has built an extraordinary career performing some of the most iconic songs by the famous Greek composers including Mikis Theodorakis and Manos Hadjidakis.

She took time out from her busy schedule and spoke with The National Herald about her upcoming concert at Carnegie Hall on May 12. The concert entitled, Maria Farantouri: A Tribute to Mikis Theodorakis, will present not only the most famous works by the composer and that Farantouri herself popularized but also works made famous by Giorgos Dalaras and Bithikotsis, she told TNH.

Associated with legendary Greek composer Mikis Theodorakis and his music for more than 40 years, Farantouri, accompanied by a chamber ensemble, will sing some of his best-loved songs from throughout the composer’s unforgettable oeuvre.

Farantouri told TNH about her previous concerts in the United States and how this latest Carnegie Hall concert came together, “I had performed with Mikis and the ERT orchestra in 1994 at Carnegie Hall and then I performed at universities [in the U.S.] in 2002, then in 2014 I was invited to Princeton with the very well-known American saxophonist Charles Lloyd. He loves Greek music and traditional Greek music, and he also liked my voice. We did a concert in Athens in 2010 and other performances in New York, Washington, and in California- Santa Barbara, L.A., we did many concerts, that was in 2013, and in 2015 NYU invited me to perform there.

“An American, Robert Browning, a promoter/impresario heard about me and had heard Mikis Theodorakis and that the concert was very good at NYU and came to visit me in Athens. He spends his summers in Chania and he met his American wife, Helena in Chania and since then they visit Chania every year. On his way to Chania, he stopped by and told me he heard wonderful things about the concert at NYU and he thought it would be a good idea to introduce me to Carnegie to do a concert as we wanted, a tribute to Theodorakis, and these 2 years he made the proposal and Carnegie accepted and as you know they never put on the same production, only for big stars in America and sometimes they put on shows that are paid by others, but this show is presented by Carnegie Hall itself and I thought it a great honor for me and for our music and for Greece and for our poets and for our Miki, and I thought we would do this tribute to him. And 2 years ago, I didn’t know if Miki would still be with us, but he is and he’s very pleased about the tribute, because as you know I also sing Hadjidakis, rembetika, and in Europe, just last week I was in Amsterdam and in Belgium, there I have an open program, but here I really wanted to do the tribute. It was a wonderful concert we did in 1994, 24 years ago with Miki. This time, we are doing a great selection of songs from all of Miki’s works, the laika, beloved songs, melodic ones and lyrical ones.

“We also have the Archdiocesan Choir with director Evey Simon and 16 great singers who will join in at the end for 5 or 6 songs and we’ll sing together. Theodorakis has written many song cycles, of all the great poets I tried to find the best pieces, the most emblematic, so the audience will hear and sing along and feel the whole history with the songs and our beloved Miki. And at the same time, [to feel] the weight of the poetic word because even the most laika songs, the poets have written them, Livaditis, Christodoulou, Seferis, Elytis, Ritsos, Anagnostakis, all of them. This is our heritage and our spiritual inheritance and I thought this is a good opportunity in New York in a venue that honors me with the invitation to present the best of what I sang as a young girl with Mikis Theodorakis up until now… if you think about it, the value of the project is what brought me to perform in Europe, they invite me to perform because there is a great value to these songs. It is our spiritual Greece.”

Farantouri told TNH, “When I return next time, I will open up the program because both Theodorakis and Hadjidakis are my ‘parents’ and I love Hadjidakis’ work and I have sung his songs and he wrote for me, the famous Persephone, and many other songs that he wrote for my voice, which I sing everywhere. Next time we’ll perform Manos’ beloved songs and Xarchakos’ because I sing rembetika, too.”

Of the Carnegie Hall concert, she said, “We have a wonderful group of musicians performing. Achilleas Wastor, the pianist will play some classical pieces by Mikis, you will hear the Syrto ton Chaniotikon from his classical suite and he connects it with the Zorba theme on solo piano. Then you will hear the solo bouzouki from a lovely piece by Mikis and then a cello solo.”

She noted the concert’s appeal to “our American friends who love Greece, the spiritual Greece and contemporary Greece, as well as the Greek community, our brothers who live so far, I want them to feel proud of Greece.”

“It’s not just my own idea,” Farantouri said, “Others have noted it, too, that we are the only nation that has popular songs based on the great poets. There are some in America like Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan, of course, he was honored, but our great poets made the song popular. They are not songs at the margins, they are songs that the whole world sang, all the people sang, particularly from the past, but they endure, they endure, just like the rembetika, and Manos’ songs, Mikis’ songs, and in Greece, it unites Greeks, and this is my deep desire for all Greeks to be united and to sing about Romiosini, about our Greece, about all the beauty of Greece and Greek things.”

“The songs are simple and beautiful,” she added, “they’re supported by the poets, to Feggari Magia Mou Kanes Kai Perpato Sta Xena to Tragoudi ths xenitias [the song of exile], a poet wrote this.”

“The choir who will be performing with us is made up of professionals, poets, singers who perform from Byzantine music to contemporary music, and it’s an honor for me to perform with them all and choir director Evey Simon. We have 7 wonderful musicians, soloists performing. Achilleas Wastor, whom I mentioned, and David Lynch is an American saxophonist who for the last 30 years or so has lived in Greece. He knows Greek music very well. Petros Klampanis the fantastic bassist who lives in New York. Christos Rafalides plays the vibraphone, also lives in New York. The amazing Heracles Zakkas, on bouzouki and mandolin, plays all types of Greek music. I have taken care to have the best musicians and it is really a celebration and that is how I want the Greek community to see it and to sing all together for our beautiful homeland which may be suffering through difficulties but in the past went through even worse and overcame the difficulties and will overcome, and slowly we will overcome our problems because that is how we Greeks are. We may lose our way a bit but we will always find it again.”

Farantouri also noted that songs from Mathausen and Axion Esti, will also be preformed, as well as songs made famous by Kazantizidis and Bithikotsis, among other beloved singers of the past. She added that “even Malamas and the younger generation are singing Theodorakis. Our Mikis is classic and everyone sings his songs.”

Carnegie Hall presents Maria Farantouri: A Tribute to Mikis Theodorakis on May 12 at 8 PM in the Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage. More information is available online at www.carnegiehall.org.

Maria Farantouri, Vocalist

Achilleas Wastor, Music Director and Piano

David Lynch, Saxophone and Flute

Heracles Zakkas, Bouzouki and Mandolin

Alexandros Botinis, Cello

Petros Klampanis, Bass

Christos Rafalides, Vibraphone

Engin Kaan Gunaydin, Percussion

with the Archdiocesan Cathedral of the Holy Trinity Choir, Evey Simon, Director.

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President Pavlopoulos Visits New Alexandria Library, Greek Community

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ALEXANDRIA, Egypt – Greek President Prokopios Pavlopoulos paid a visit to Alexandria on Monday following an invitation by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi to attend a collaborative event of the Greek, Egyptian and Cypriot diaspora.

Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades is also attending the event, called “Nostos, The Return.”

Visiting the site of the new library of Alexandria, which commemorates the famed Alexandria Library of the Hellenistic age, Pavlopoulos said the new library “is traversing its own brilliant and creative path, one shared by modern Egypt.” Greece, he added, “always was and always will be present in this uninterrupted trajectory through time.”

Meeting with the Greek diaspora in the city, the president referred to the visit as “a pilgrimage on behalf of the Greek people” to a vibrant community of the diaspora that has provided Greece with many of its benefactors and world literature figures like poet Constantine Cavafy and Stratis Tsirkas.

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Cavafy Poetry and Music in Honor of His Birthday

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As National Poetry Month comes to a close, it is fitting to celebrate poet Constantine Cavafy who was born on April 29, 1863 in Alexandria.

His parents both hailed from Constantinople and Cavafy was proud of his heritage and his illustrious ancestors. According to his biography, his Phanariote great-grandfather Peter Cavafy (1740-1804) was Secretary of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, while his Phanariote great-great-grandfather John Cavafy (1701-1762) was Governor of Jassium, as was his great-grandfather Michael Scarlato Pantzo (brother of Meletius, Patriarch of Alexandria), while his great-great-great-grandfather Theodosius Photiades (brother of Cyril, Bishop of Caesarea Philippi) was an Official of the Ottoman Government. Cavafy’s cosmopolitan family roots extended from Constantinople to London (via Alexandria, Trebizond, Chios, Trieste, Venice, and Vienna), and he was the youngest of seven brothers (two elder siblings, a boy and the sole girl, died in infancy).

In honor of the poet’s 155th birthday and the 85th anniversary of his death, he died on April 29, 1933, add some of his poems to your reading list. Cavafy brought the history and culture of Greek antiquity to life as no other modern Greek poet of his time. Ithaca is one of his most famous poems, and beautifully captures the essence of the journey and the return home that is so essentially Greek. The Complete Poems of Constantine Cavafy, translated by Daniel Mendelsohn, is a good choice for those interested in reading an excellent English translation of the poet’s works. Many of the poems, translated by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard, are available online on the official Cavafy website www.cavafy.com and on www.kavafis.gr for the Greek originals.

A recent event at the University of Vienna honored Cavafy with lectures on his life and work and a concert of his poems set to music by well-known composer Athanasios Simoglou. The poet’s ability to inspire other artists, 155 years after he was born and 85 years after his death, is a testament to the timeless quality of his work.

Among those in attendance at the tribute, as the Athens-Macedonian News Agency (ANA-MPA) reported, were Austrian public officials, diplomats, and literature and music enthusiasts, as well as members of the Greek community. The event was organized by the Press and Communication Office of the Greek Embassy in Austria and the Austrian magazine Society. First Counsellor for Communication – Head of the Press and Communication Office Konstantinos Prokakis and Gertrud Tauchhammer, publisher of Society Magazine, delivered the welcoming remarks at the event.

In his speech, Giorgos Florentis, General Secretary of the Greek Ministry of Digital Policy, Telecommunications and Information, noted his joy and emotion at being in Vienna, “where Greek voices never ceased to converse with history” and at a tribute to Cavafy, his fellow Alexandrian. From early in his life, he felt an connection to the poet and studied his works.

Florentis told ANA-MPA how unique and extraordinary the tribute was in such a historical site as the University of Vienna, noting that it was “a very good, bold initiative that had great success with a distinguished audience” promoting Greek culture, “one of the greatest and best ‘products’ of Greece, to the ends of the earth.”

In his speech, Konstantinos Prokakis noted that the aim of the tribute was to show the Austrian public that there is not only Greece of the economic and refugee crisis, with all the negative stereotypes that have dominated the international press over the last decade, but there is also the Greece of culture and high intellectual creativity.

In her lecture, Dr. Lilia Diamantopoulou, university assistant at the University of Vienna, spoke about the life and work of the great Alexandrian poet, with extensive references to the “musical adaptability” of his poetry.

In his lecture on “The musical sigh of the poet,” composer Athanasios Simoglou, noted that he feels pride but also awe and a great sense of responsibility to Cavafy. He referred to the poet’s personality and work and how he was in high school when he first became “acquainted” with the poet.

Simoglou’s first composition based on Cavafy’s poems was in 1983, with the music for Ithaca followed by Polis, Thermopylae, To come, and As much as you can. Since then, he has composed music for a total of 36 poems by the Alexandrian poet.

His main aim is to make the poet more known to the general public through music, something that is achieved with accessible melodies that can be sung by the people, said Simoglou.

The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra of Vienna – composed mainly of young talented Greek musicians – performed under the direction of the orchestra’s founder, Konstantinos Diminakis, who also performed on the piano. They presented a series of works by Simoglou – the poems of Cavafy set to music- with baritone soloist Alexandros Tzovanis and violinist Angelina Georgiades.

Simoglou’s compositions based on Cavafy’s poems are available online.

Material from the ANA-MPA was used in this report.

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Loot’s Annual Contemporary Jewelry Exhibition and Sale, Opening Night Benefit 

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NEW YORK – The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD), 2 Columbus Circle in Manhattan, once again assembled a remarkable group of artists for their annual five-day exhibition and sale of contemporary art jewelry, April16-21, with all proceeds benefiting the Museum’s programs and exhibitions. Three talented Greek artists, Katerina Anastasiou, Tassa Ganidou, and Tina Karageorgi were also among the 35 artists from 15 countries this year. On April 16, MAD held their annual Loot Opening Benefit, which began with a three-hour cocktail portion in the second floor gallery where guests enjoyed the wonderful opportunity for jewelry shopping.

The annual Awards Presentation at MAD’s Robert restaurant followed. The Museum honored four avid studio jewelry and arts philanthropists: Loreen Arbus was presented with her award by Loot’s Chair Marsy Mittlemann; Carolee Lee was presented by MAD’s Board Member Ann Kaplan, Michael and Karen Rotenberg was presented by Loot’s Curator Bryna Pomp. All four honorees expressed their love for the Museum and the field of jewelry in their acceptance speeches. During Loreen Arbus’ speech, she announced that MAD was her favorite museum in the world. The Museum’s Chair and Board of Trustees Michele Cohen made the opening remarks at the benefit dinner. Chairman Emerita Barbara Tober and husband Donald Tober were also among those present.

Guests included: Susan Ach, Muna Rihani Al-Nasser, Paola Bacchini, Dennis Basso, Dr. Joyce F. Brown, Liliana Cavendish, Paolo Costagli, Consuelo Vanderbilt Costin, Caroline Blackman Coakley and Patrick Coakley, Brian Damaris, Patti and Michael Dweck, Patricia Falkenberg, Joanna Fisher, Boo Grace, Lucia Hwong Gordon, Joan Hornig, Michele Gerber Klein, Suzan Kremer, Lewis Kruger, Nanette L. Laitman, Francine LeFrak, Shari Loeffler, Linda Plattus, Liz Peek, Barbara Regna, Peter Regna, Heidi Rigney, Toni Ross, Jean Shafiroff, Barbara and Donald Tober, Barbara Winston, and Debbie Wheeler.

Peter Regna and Barbara Regna at the Opening Night Benefit at The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) Presents Loot: MAD About Jewelry. Photo: ©Patrick McMullan, Aurora Rose/PMC

“The 2018 artists we invited stood out for their inspiring craftsmanship and inventiveness,” said Loot Curator Bryna Pomp. “The jewelry featured incorporates a wide range of remarkable non- traditional materials, from crocheted textiles, ecologically tie-dyed silk, felt, leather, and resin to 3D-printed nylon, titanium, safety pins, bicycle tires, X-ray film, papier-mâché, and wood.”

A highlight of the event was when Shannon R. Stratton, Chief Curator of MAD, announced that artists Isabelle Molénat and Sarran Youkongdee have been awarded the third annual Loot Acquisition Prize, on the occasion of the eighteenth edition of Loot: MAD About Jewelry. Loot presents a cross section of the most exciting cutting-edge art jewelry designs, while offering the public a rare opportunity to purchase pieces from and to meet some of the most skilled creators in the field. This year’s prize resulted in the acquisition of two jewelry works, Isabelle Molénat’s Collection Knots Necklace (2018) made of silk and polypropylene and Sarran Youkongdee’s Siam Rattikarn (2017) made of felt, brass, and pearl, for the Museum’s collection. Awarded by a jury, the Loot Acquisition Prize seeks to recognize a Loot jewelry artist whose work reflects a maturity in artistry and concept; exhibits both a superior and experimental understanding of materials and form; and demonstrates expertise in technique and execution.

The Loot 2018 Chair is Marsy Mittlemann. Fashion designer Dennis Basso joined the Opening Benefit Host Committee, which also included Iris Apfel, Davina Benshetrit, Andi Potamkin Blackmore, Noreen Buckfire, Marian C. Burke, Kathy Chazen, Caroline Blackman Coakley, Michele Cohen, Paolo Costagli, Jessica Kagan Cushman, Gino Di Geso, Patti Dweck, Joan Hornig, Ann Kaplan, Judith Leiber, Shari Siadat Loeffler, Ella McHugh, Robert Lee Morris, Rebecca Moses, Linda Plattus, Polina Proshkina, Angela Sun, Barbara Tober, Isabel and Ruben Toledo, Kay Unger, and Barbara Waldman.

Everyone noted that they looked forward to the annual event where they can “discover” such talented artists from around the world and purchase their unique creations.

Saran Youkongdee and Isabelle Molenat were honored with the Loot Acquisition Prize at The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) Presents Loot: MAD About Jewelry. Photo: ©Patrick McMullan, Jared Siskin/PMC

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Ta Filarakia, the Must See Comedy in Astoria (Vid & Pics)

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ASTORIA – Ta Filarakia- Bromance opened on April 27 at the Archdiocesan Hellenic Cultural Center in Astoria and runs on Fridays-Sundays through May 27. The hilarious and thoughtful comedy is blessed with an embarrassment of riches when it comes to theatrical talent. Directed by Loukas Skipitaris, with text adaptation by Giorgos Vouros, and starring Stratos Tzortzoglou, Manos Pantelidis, and Tasos Karydis, the play is an uproarious comedy that explores male friendship or “bromance” as it is known today, loyalty, and the general value of friendship and truth.

The opportunity to see three extraordinary actors perform with perfect comic timing, as well as honest, raw emotion in this entertaining play, should not be missed.

“There is no truth without passion, without error… the truth can only be achieved with passion” is just one of the themes explored in this dynamic, dramatic comedy or a drama written funny.

“What is beautiful and great in this world has never been born of logical discussion,” one of the characters says thoughtfully in the play.

Anastasios (Tasos Karydis), divorced and separated from his child, has an outlet in “modern art” trying to escape from everyone and everything.

Stratos (Stratos Tzortzoglou) is married but has psychological problems and controlling tendencies. He butts head with Anastasios to preserve the notion of “male friendship” as he sees it.

Manos (Manos Pantelidis) tries to calm the situation, but is tortured by his mother, his stepmother, his future wife, her stepmother, and his friends.

“What is beautiful and great in this world has never been born of logical discussion,” the character says in a reflective moment.

A disagreement gradually escalates into a wild fight in a living room among the three old friends. Is the “male friendship” innocent and pure, or is it governed by selfishness, eroticism, and power?

The talented actors work so well together, their 15-year friendship is entirely believable, as they skillfully navigate through the hysterical moments, scathing lines, thoughtful asides, and physical comedy in the play.

Stratos Tzortzoglou and Tasos Karydis in a scene from Ta Filarakia at the Hellenic Cultural Center in Astoria. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)

Tzortzoglou is charismatic as always, delivering his lines with caustic wit. Karydis is charming and fully committed to the absurdity of his character as the art enthusiast. Pantelidis is a jittery revelation as the henpecked Manos, caught in the middle of the fight and struggling to keep it all together as his wedding day approaches.

As the tensions in the play rise, the trio strikes comedy gold with the characters realizing how much is at stake, adding a poignancy to their interaction. Ta Filarakia is definitely a must see production.

Skipitares’ skilled direction highlights the heart and thoughtfulness of the play while giving the actors their moments to shine in each scene amid the flurry of verbal sparring. Skipitares made his Broadway acting debut in Illya Darling with Melina Mercouri, and also appeared in the original Broadway production of Zorba, directed by Hal Prince. He has acted Off-Broadway, in National tours, and in addition to his featured role in the prime time TV series The Andros Targets, has had running roles in As the World Turns, The Guiding Light, and One Life to Live. In 1971, Skipitares began directing. His credits in the United States and in Greece include productions of Greek classics and plays by Anton Chekhov, Tennessee Williams, George Bernard Shaw, Neil Simon, Ira Levin, and many others.

Performances from April 27-May 27, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 PM and Sundays at 4 PM, at the Archdiocesan Hellenic Cultural Center, 27-09 Crescent St. in Astoria.

For tickets by phone: 718-626-5111 and +1 917-579-3707 or email: info@hellenicculturalcenter.org

Stratos Tzortzoglou and Tasos Karydis in a scene from Ta Filarakia at the Hellenic Cultural Center in Astoria. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)
Stratos Tzortzoglou and Manos Pantelidis in a scene from Ta Filarakia at the Hellenic Cultural Center in Astoria. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)
Manos Pantelidis and Tasos Karydis in a scene from Ta Filarakia at the Hellenic Cultural Center in Astoria. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)
Manos Pantelidis and Tasos Karydis in Ta Filarakia at the Hellenic Cultural Center in Astoria. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)
Ta Filarakia at the Hellenic Cultural Center in Astoria. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)

 

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Greek Independence Day, Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago (Vid & Pics)

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CHICAGO, IL – The Hellenic American Academy organized the Annual Greek Independence Day and Hellenic Heritage Parade, which took place on Sunday, on Halsted Street, between Randolph and Van Buren Streets.

“Our meeting point will be on Randolph Street, west of Halsted Street, by the Hellenic American Academy float, our number in the order of floats and marchers is #1! Weather is forecasted to be a beautiful spring day! It is our obligation as Greek-Americans to participate in the parade and teach our youth the significance of paying tribute to the heroes of 1821 and maintaining our Greek heritage! We are looking forward to seeing everyone at the parade,” Academy’s press release said before the parade.

Honored to see the Evzones of Greek Presidential Guard marching at the Greek parade on a sunny afternoon in Chicago. 🇬🇷 Ζήτω η Ελλάδα!

Posted by Dimitri Nassis on Sunday, April 29, 2018

The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)
The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)
The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)
The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)
The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)
The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)
The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)

The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)

The Greek Independence Day celebrated with the Annual Hellenic Heritage Parade in Chicago, on Sunday, April 29, 2018. (Photo by Aristotle Saturday Greek School)

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McGrath Architectural Company Warns to Dispose St. Nicholas Materials

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BOSTON.-The McGrath Architectural Surfaces Company in a letter dated April 26, 2018 threatens the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese to dispose material of St. Nicholas church in Ground Zero “should McGrath not receive the $2.4 million currently owed on or before by April 30, 2018.”

The letter was addressed to Bishop Andonios of Phasiane, Chancellor of the Archdiocese, by the company’s General Manager Paul Kitching.

It is stated in the letter that “the payment timelines communicated to McGrath over the past year have been an ever-sliding date that comes and goes with no funds being made available. It’s been a year of broken promises by the Church.”

The National Herald reveals the letter in its entirety:

“Dear Bishop Andonios,

We are writing today in one final attempt to make the Church fully aware that McGrath has repeatedly made requests for payment of our outstanding invoices on the project amounting to approximately $2.4 million. We have attempted to collect on these unpaid monthly amounts which date back a full year. To date, the Church has refused, and continues to take no definitive action nor has it accepted responsibility for the project’s current financial status. There have been numerous individuals, including representatives of McGrath, who have spoken directly to you and others within your organization to express the financial impact resulting from the lack of payment.

Unfortunately, the Church is now out of time as we can no longer leave ourselves in a position to receive monthly additional cost claims and deficient payment notices from our vendors. McGrath and our vendors have been experiencing continued accumulating costs for storage of materials and interest on unpaid balances. Please note, all the materials produced were done so in good faith that timely monthly payments would be made by the Church. The payment timelines communicated to McGrath over the past year have been an ever-sliding date that comes and goes with no funds being made available. It’s been a year of broken promises by the Church.

Should McGrath not receive the $2.4 million currently owed on or before by April 30, 2018 we will have no choice but to dispose of all project related materials overseas and within North America. By continuing to hold these materials we fear we will only be seeking a larger unpaid amount from the Church with no assurances the project will proceed.

Our hope is the Church can make payment on the $2.4 million owed and can free up the additional $4 million to continue fabrication of the remaining overseas materials. If this payment does not occur by April 30, 2018 we firmly believe the entire exterior rainscreen we spent 3 years developing from the architect’s concepts will be lost and not repeatable.

Respectfully,

Paul Kitching
General Manager.”

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IOCC Supporters Surpass $1 Million Challenge Gift to Aid Families in Greece

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BALTIMORE, Md – From October 2017 through February 2018, IOCC supporters gave more than $1.2 million under the Jaharis Family Foundation Inc.’s $1 million matching challenge to help people in need in Greece, IOCC announced on May 1.

In October 2017, IOCC announced the foundation’s challenge, issued to help support emergency and development projects in Greece. The Jaharis Family Foundation Inc. offered to match donations to IOCC’s Give for Greece program, dollar for dollar, up to $1 million.

IOCC issued a call for donations, and supporters across the country and the world responded.

Projects in Greece, implemented in partnership with Apostoli, the humanitarian organization of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Athens, offer sustainable access to safe and nutritious food for children, families, and the elderly, and provide relief to refugees. The funds from this match will further the work IOCC has been doing over the past six years to address critical health and nutritional needs emerging in Greece, to support the development of agricultural cooperatives and small businesses that provide jobs and food, and to offer educational programs for students from low-income and refugee families.

Donor support for IOCC’s efforts in Greece will help provide fresh food, supplemental food assistance, medical aid, support for agricultural associations and small businesses, refugee assistance, and other relief over the next two years, benefitting an estimated 50,000 families throughout the country—among them farmers, small businesses, refugees, schoolchildren, and others.

“We are deeply grateful to the Jaharis family for the opportunity to continue offering vital assistance in Greece,” said Constantine M. Triantafilou, IOCC Executive Director and CEO. “Many families there still face difficulty, so IOCC aims to offer immediate assistance while also creating longer-term opportunities like jobs and skills training. This gift from the Jaharis family and from all who responded to the challenge will keep this work going strong.”

Although the match has ended, donations are still welcome. Visit iocc.org/giveforgreece to become part of these efforts.

IOCC, the humanitarian and development agency of the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of the United States of America, was created in 1992 in response to the collapse of the Soviet Union and to support innocent people affected by conflict in the former Yugoslavia. Today, the organization applies its expertise in humanitarian response to manmade and natural crises in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and the United States. The organization has, since its founding, distributed aid worth over $625 million in more than 60 countries around the world, and offers assistance based solely on need.

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Greek-American Judge OKs Appeal of Case Around Trump’s Campaign Statements

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NEW YORK (AP) — A New York judge says an appeals court can decide if presidential campaign statements can be used to prove racial animus led to a decision to end a program sparing many young immigrants from deportation.U.S.

District Judge Nicholas Garaufis said Monday the Manhattan federal appeals court can rule whether immigration rights groups and others can try to prove President Donald Trump’s campaign trail statements fueled the program’s end.

The judge ruled in February the Republican president has the power to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program but relied on flawed legal positions in doing so. That ruling came in lawsuits brought by immigration rights groups and 15 states and the District of Columbia.

The Department of Justice calls the program an “unlawful circumvention of Congress.”

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Patriarch Theodoros Awards Grand Cross of St. Mark Medal to Greek President

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President of the Hellenic Republic Prokopios Pavlopoulos, currently on a visit to Egypt, on Tuesday met with Patriarch of Alexandria and All Africa Theodoros II, who presented him with a Grand Cross of the Order of St. Mark medal.

The Greek president also visited the former home, now turned into a museum, of the Greek poet Constantine Cavafy, noting that his poetry can act as a guide toward national self-awareness for Greeks and especially those burdened with the responsibility of governing the country, especially during these difficult times.

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Night in the Islands, a Greek Event in Tarpon Springs (Vid)

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TARPON SPRINGS, FLA – On Saturday, May 19, from 6:00-11:00pm, the City of Tarpon Springs will present Night in the Islands–a free event on the world famous Sponge Docks. Enjoy Greek music, dancing, and dining! And we will offer an hour of free Greek dance lessons by Levendia Dance Troupe from 6-7pm.

“Thanks to funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Tarpon Springs Merchants Association, Night in the Islands is featuring the music of Odyssey in May, and in July, August, and September we will feature Ellada in front of the Sponge Exchange. In May we are also featuring the music of Demetri Kousathanas in the block between Hope & Roosevelt Streets,” Tarpon Springs Arts (www.tarponarts.org) says via its press release.

Future Nights in the Islands will take place on July 7, August 4, and October 6, 2018.

 

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John Horozoglou and Athanasia Angelopoulou Wed in Southampton

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NEW YORK –  John Horozoglou and Athanasia Angelopoulou united their lives in the sacred bonds of holy matrimony on Saturday, April 28, at the Greek Orthodox Church of the Assumption, Kimisis tis Theotokou, in Southampton, Long Island, NY. Fr. Alexander Karloutsos presided over the ceremony.

The reception followed in the community’s hall.

We wish the couple congratulations and all the best for a happy and healthy life together!

Horozoglou, the son of Nikolaos and Aphrodite (Pavlidou), was born in Stuttgart, Germany and is now a resident of Heraklion in Attica. Athanasia, daughter of Spyridon and Panagiota Angelopoulou, was born in Lykoudesi, Messinia and now resides in Glyfada.

John Horozoglou and Athanasia Angelopoulou were wed in a beautiful ceremony at Kimisis tis Theotokou Church in the Hamptons with Fr. Alexander Karloutsos presiding. Photo: Courtesy of John Horozoglou
John Horozoglou and Athanasia Angelopoulou were wed in a beautiful ceremony at Kimisis tis Theotokou Church in the Hamptons with Fr. Alexander Karloutsos presiding. Photo: Courtesy of John Horozoglou
John Horozoglou and Athanasia Angelopoulou were wed in a beautiful ceremony at Kimisis tis Theotokou Church in the Hamptons with Fr. Alexander Karloutsos presiding. Photo: Courtesy of John Horozoglou
John Horozoglou and Athanasia Angelopoulou were wed in a beautiful ceremony at Kimisis tis Theotokou Church in the Hamptons with Fr. Alexander Karloutsos presiding. Photo: Courtesy of John Horozoglou

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Consul General Hosts Reception for Hellenic Film Society, Greek Filmmakers, Actors  (Vid & Pics)

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NEW YORK – On April 30, Consul General of Greece in New York Konstantinos Koutras welcomed the Hellenic Film Society USA (HFS) and the Greek filmmakers and actors who are participating in the Greek Film Expo which runs through May 3 for a reception at the Consulate.

HFS Chairman Jimmy Demetro thanked the Consul General and introduced the talented filmmakers and actors whose remarkable works are being shown in New York-area theaters- directors Dora Masklavanou, Alex Sipsidis, and Vasilis Christofilakis, also an actor, as well as Spiros Papadopoulos- host of the popular TV musical revue, Stin Ygeia Mas Re Paidia, and Nicoleta Kotsailidou. All the filmmakers and actors were grateful for the positive response to their work and thanked the HSF and Demetro for their efforts supporting Greek films.

Demetro noted the enthusiastic response of the Greek community to the films and how the questions the audience members have asked in the post-screening Q&A sessions show how much they appreciate not only seeing these wonderful films from Greece and meeting the filmmakers and actors, but are also engrossed in the themes explored in the films and the technical aspects as well.

He acknowledged the support of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation, Nikos and Carol Mouyiaris, the Onassis Foundation, and the Kallinikeion Foundation among the many others who have donated and volunteered to help make the HFS and the Greek Film Expo possible. He gave credit to his indispensable team, George Balafoutis and Eva Mallis who were present at the event, and Maria Psomiades and Vickie Rekoutis who could not attend. Demetro spoke with The National Herald at the event, noting that he may be the most visible, attending all the screenings, and introducing the films, but it is the team that has made everything possible.

In his welcoming remarks, Consul General Koutras noted how wonderful it is to see the Greek community in New York embrace these films from Greece, noting how they appreciate the quality of the work and the connection with the homeland. He mentioned the Greek spirit shared by all Greeks whether in Greece or the diaspora communities and the Greek language. Many events begin with a prayer, Koutras observed, adding that at a recent event the priest said they would sing the Christos Anesti in Greek and in English, everyone participated in the Greek version, but only the priest chanted the English version. The films, culture, and the language unite the community in a powerful way with Greece.

Papadopoulos also noted how many Greek-Americans apologize for their Greek and then speak just fine, like Demetro who said his Greek is bad, but then spoke very well throughout the reception.

When asked about the enthusiasm for bringing Greek films to the United States through the HFS and the Greek Film Expo, Demetro told TNH that the material is there, the people want to do it, but the financial support is the key. He expressed his gratitude for all the supporters, noting that he couldn’t do it alone. When asked about the next step for the HFS, Demetro said there are some wonderful films they would like to bring to the U.S. and to bring Greek films on a regular basis to the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, to screen, for example, on the first Sunday of every month.

Consul General of Greece in New York Konstantinos Koutras hosts reception for Hellenic Film Society, Greek filmmakers, actors. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)

The Museum, he told TNH, once had such a regular series of Greek films, a few years ago, but the films now are very different and more accessible to a wider audience. Demetro also shared his hope that the films will receive wider distribution, and perhaps through some of the new methods available, including video on demand and online streaming services. Netflix, he pointed out, has some Greek films available, for example, but there could always be more. He also mentioned that HSF is in the early planning stages for a collaboration in Maryland at the recently restored Stavros Niarchos Foundation Parkway Theatre in Baltimore. Film fans can look forward to more exciting developments and more wonderful screenings soon.

Also in attendance at the event were the Consul General’s wife Popita Pavli, Andreas Zoupanos, and members of the media.

About the Films

Jamaica, directed by Andreas Morfonios, is a bittersweet comedy about two estranged brothers at very different places in their lives. Actors Nikoleta Kotsailidou and Spiros Papadopoulos are expected to attend all screenings.

Consul General of Greece in New York Konstantinos Koutras hosts reception for Hellenic Film Society, Greek filmmakers, actors. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)

The award-winning drama Polyxeni, directed by Dora Masklavanou, was nominated for 11 Hellenic Film Academy Awards including Best Picture. It tells the story of a young woman attempting to gain independence in a traditional society. The director is expected to attend the Manhattan and Astoria screenings of her film.

Blue Queen, directed by Alex Sipsidis, is a mystery that unfolds from four different points of view with intriguing plot twists that keep the audience guessing till the end. Sipsidis attended the screenings on April 27 and 29.

The comedy Too Much Info Clouding Over My Head, directed by Vasilis Christofilakis, focuses on a hapless film director whose career is sidetracked when he is forced to raise money to film a screenplay he detests.

More information is available online at hellenicfilmusa.org.

Consul General of Greece in New York Konstantinos Koutras hosts reception for Hellenic Film Society, Greek filmmakers, actors. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)
Consul General of Greece in New York Konstantinos Koutras hosts reception for Hellenic Film Society, Greek filmmakers, actors. (Photo by TNH/Costas Bej)

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George Leventis Honored on Top 25 Newsmakers List

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NEW YORK – Langan International Managing Director George Leventis is one of the Top 25 Newsmakers of 2017 according to the Engineering News-Record (ENR) for his work on Greece’s €10-billion, 1000-KM roadway program. ENR’s editors selected a diverse group of individuals to be recognized this year “for their service to the construction industry and the public,” ENR reported, noting that Leventis “negotiated in an intense political environment to help broker deals that saved Greece’s multibillion-dollar roadway program.”

Leventis is Managing Principal in Langan’s New York City office and Managing Director of Langan International. He has over 30 years of experience providing engineering services for residential, commercial, industrial and supertall buildings; waterfront and offshore structures; and infrastructure projects. Leventis’ expertise also includes lender’s technical advisory services for international concession projects, and forensic technical support and services.

George Leventis is a Top 25 Newsmaker for his work on Greece’s €10-billion, 1000-KM roadway program.

Between 1998 and 2001, Leventis served as Director General of the Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games, Athens 2004, S.A., overseeing all activities related to Olympic works and the environment. Currently, he is an adjunct professor at Columbia University, where he teaches a graduate course focused on deep foundations for supertall buildings. Leventis is also Regional Director of ACEC, an ASCE Fellow, member of The Moles, member of the Board of New York Building Congress, and member of the Advisors Board of the Stevens School of Business.

Leventis has a long history of overcoming the challenges that accompany complex projects in Greece, including his involvement in the Athens Olympics of 2004 and the Rion-Antirion Bridge. These experiences prepared him to navigate the intense political environment and ongoing financial crisis that surrounded the Olympia Odos motorway project, for which he served as the lender’s technical advisor since 2006 and was completed in 2017. This landmark project provides critical links to key destinations in Greece and is a vital part of the Trans-European Network.

“What should have been about $30 million per month in construction work slowed down to about $3 million during the crisis. But, working together with all the stakeholders, we kept it going,” Leventis said, ENR reported.

He told ENR that the experience of the Athens Olympic Games helped him sharpen his ability to “deal with different people with different agendas and needs. At the end of the day, I had to pull things together.”

The completed roadway.

When he suggested “privatizing Olympic venues,” ENR reported, he “encountered regulatory obstacles” and said the experience was “gut-wrenching, but it allowed me to become more confident in dealing with issues openly in a public forum.”

Kakia Skala roadway.

When Leventis was hired as technical adviser to Olympia Odos, one of the five concessionaires working to build or improve roads in Greece to help the tourism industry and demonstrate P3 viability, his diplomatic skills came in handy.

“George’s role was very instrumental in keeping the construction going in such a harsh economic environment,” Panayiotis Papanikolas, CEO of Olympia Odos, told ENR, adding that while construction ceased for three years and Leventis was involved in negotiations and “went beyond ‘his contractual responsibilities as technical adviser and participated in many discussions and negotiations with the state and the contractor. He managed to gain the respect and trust of all parties.’”

For two years the negotiations continued and changes were made to the details of the projects and deadlines including, “reduced bank loans and claims, a government agreement to cede expected toll revenue and cover inflation for extended deadlines, and increased European Union contributions,” ENR reported. The tough times continued as well “with austerity measures, national riots, changing governments and anti-toll sentiment,” ENR reported, adding Leventis’ recollection that the consortia “collaborated to keep enough money trickling in” and construction continued and was completed in 2017.

Construction on the roadway in Greece.

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World Bank’s New Chief Economist Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg Talks Exclusively to TNH

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WASHINGTON – The road to Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg getting from a student in Greece to the second woman – and first Greek – to become the World Bank’s Chief Economist depended on a typewritten letter.

While an undergraduate in Germany, Koujianou Goldberg, 55, now the Elihu Professor of Economics at Yale, applied for an internship at the bank, in the days when there was no email and got some career-changing advice.

“Some very nice person actually replied to my letter … and wrote that they would not even consider my application for an internship if I were not enrolled in a doctoral program. So at that point I decided that I needed to get a doctoral degree,” she told The National Herald.

“The U.S. was famous for its postgraduate education in Economics, so I applied to several U.S. institutions, and decided to go to Stanford in the end,” she said.

That led to her writing and co-writing papers on an array of economic topics, including intellectual property rights, the global market, multi-product firms in India, and local-currency price stability, the kind of arcane topics that make eyes roll outside of her field, but open them in hers and get notice.

World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim, in announcing the appointment, said, “I’m thrilled that Penny Goldberg will bring her vast academic experience, intellectual rigor, and boundless curiosity to the World Bank Group,” at the institution which provides loans to countries of the world for capital projects, especially those still developing economies.

“Penny has spent her career examining many of the most complex issues that affect developing countries, and she will help answer the most important – and difficult – questions of our time: how to help developing countries prepare for the economy of the future, and how to ensure equality of opportunity everywhere in the world,” he said.

Goldberg, a Greek and US national, brings an impressive track record as a leading applied microeconomist, widely cited for her research on developing countries—including the effects of trade on inequality and firm productivity, and profits and innovation.

She is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a recipient of fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

She won the 2003 Bodossaki Prize in Social Sciences, which is awarded to distinguished scholars of Greek nationality or descent younger than 45 at the time, Yale said.

She was born in Athens in 1963, studied in Germany and used a scholarship from the Onassis Foundation to get to that treasured doctoral path at Stanford.

She went to the German High School of Athens and after getting a scholarship from the German Academic Exchange Service passed up the University of Athens to study in Germany, which opened the door to the US.

Her experience in studying economies around the world led her to give some advice to her homeland, suffering through a now eight-year long austerity crisis that forced successive governments to seek what turned into 326 billion euros ($391.11) to prop up an economy nearly brought down by generations of wild overspending and runaway patronage.

“Tourism and investment are two obvious ways. But Greeks abroad can also provide accurate information about Greece and help rectify misconceptions about the situation in Greece,” she told TNH.

She said American students are interested in the Greek crisis. “American students (and Americans in general) have much more empathy for the Greeks than many Europeans, partly because the U.S. itself has gone through a severe crisis starting in 2008,” she said.

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