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Pan-Macdeonians Petition President Obama on FYROM Name

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The Pan-Macedonian Association USA has generated a petition calling for the reversal of President George W. Bush’s 2004 Executive Order recognizing the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) as “Republic of Macedonia.”

Nykolah Chatzis, PA to the Association President, shared the petition with TNH, and provided his own thoughts.

THE PETITION

WE, the undersigned, citizens and residents of the United States of America and of countries around the world interested in advancing American interests in Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean and regional stability, petition the Obama administration to: REVERSE the Executive Order by the Bush Administration of 2004, recognizing the country of the “FYROM” as “Republic of Macedonia.”

U.S. Administration thought in 2004 that by recognizing FYROM as Macedonia would have brought stability. It was fooled. Sign the petition and ask Washington to restore truth and justice!

The recognition of FYROM as “Republic of Macedonia” by the Bush Administration was intended to assist the stability in the country in relation with the Albanians, and other minorities. Instead of stability, the recognition of the country by the United States as “The Republic of Macedonia” assisted the ethnocentric Slav led government to use it as a tool to enact despotic laws and autocratic practices such as restriction of the Press and imprisonment of political prisoners.

Furthermore, for various reasons, FYROM continually provokes its neighbors and especially Greece. It has perceived the U.S. recognition as approval and encouragement for its identity theft and identity fraud. Since its recognition by the United States, as “The Republic of Macedonia”, FYROM has increased its inimical and provocative actions against Greece, driven by their ill perceived “national goals” of expansionism at the expense of Greece.

FYROM’s continued provocative and irresponsible narrative fuels their domestic nationalism and regional instability, creates unpredictable conditions for the region and indeed the world.

Taking into consideration the above, WE, the undersigned American citizens interested in advancing American interests in Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean and regional stability, petition the Obama administration to reverse the Executive Order by the Bush Administration of 2004, recognizing the country of the “FYROM” as “Republic of Macedonia.”

[The petition may be signed by visiting the Association’s website at: https://www.gopetition.com/petitions/restoration-of-historical-truth-about-macedonia.html]

WHY IT MATTERS

Chatzis writes: “The conflict over the name Macedonia is more than what appears at its surface. To most it appears as merely childish bickering, old men and politicians droning on about the days of yore. The fight of naming rights seems extraordinarily frivolous in this new age of a globalized world. In this new identity of citizen of the world we are beginning to understand the true meaning of human, rather than dividing ourselves into groups, sects, blocks, races and fighting endlessly.

“I can tirelessly explain with facts and data, history books, and scrolls how Hellenism, as we know it today, was only spread through Alexander the Great. I can suggest the degree to which Hellenism was influenced; given that Mount Olympus is within the borders of the Ancient Kingdom of Macedon, and that the teachings of Aristotle, and the legacy of Socrates, flourished through Macedonia. And that Ancient Kingdom of Macedon only stretched a few miles out of what is Modern Greece.

But not every piece explaining why this conflict is no frivolous matter has to be scientific. For me and the men and women who come from Macedonia, as well as the rest of Greece, that name represents everything that was instilled in us from birth, and all the goals the rest of the world wishes to achieve in these times. That name, Macedonia, means everything.

“From that single name we have been given the strength to strive for new heights, learn all that we can, from our families, books, poetry, songs, our past, but especially from others around us. From a young age guided to think in new and innovative ways, and to leave no rock unturned. Ponder the greatest mysteries of the universe and to understand ourselves as much more than a species. To understand the concept of self and what lies within. We were lectured as children, not in any kind of religious morals, but simply morals. Be a good person, not because your sins it might bring angels to tears, but it may bring one single person to tears and there is no justification for harming one another. We were taught to put family above all else, to place money last, and put good food and drink somewhere in between. Maybe some dancing as well. That name gives us the audacity to achieve the greatest of victories, whether it’s conquering the known world or feeding someone in need, who has come from a long journey in search of a new place to call home.

“There is no hate where my ancestors come from. There is no prejudice. There is no greed and there is no disrespect to our earth. The food isn’t called organic, because there is no alternative. There is no homelessness, because we have each other. We may argue and critique one another, but that is our birthright as Greeks and there are usually no hard feelings between us.

The name Macedonia embodies every single one of these values, and that is what I am fighting for. These values are not just for ethnicities sake, but for the sake of bettering humanity. That is the essence of being Macedonian, now and in the days of old, to improve on what it means to be human. Taking what we know and passing it on to others and in turn learning from them.

“So, having to answer why it’s so important the preserve the name Macedonia is not so easy, because I took all of those values for granted. They were second nature to me and I never attributed it to where I come from, and where my heritage lies. To take that name away is to take away and belittle all we have achieved; thousands of years working to not only better ourselves, but to better our friends, our brothers and sisters that we share this planet with.

“Now I strive to preserve the name Macedonia not only for its antiquity, the rocks, statues and its coins, but for what it means to be Macedonian: for what it means to be Greek.”


Community Holy Week Turnout Up from 2015

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NEW YORK – Attendance at the Greek Orthodox Churches throughout the New York Metropolitan area saw a rise in attendance during this year’s Holy Week as compared to 2015. The primary reason appears to be that given the vast five-week span between Western (Mar. 27) and Eastern (May 1) Easter, families with members of Christians of more than one denomination had ample time in between the two to attend all services without overlap.

In addition, the Greek-American community remains devoted to the preservation of Orthodox traditions, and so its attendance numbers remain high.

The weather cooperated on Holy Saturday throughout the Northeast, allowing for travel conditions to be favourable to and from Church, and also for the celebration of Christ’s resurrection outdoors, following the receiving of the Light, as is customary.

EASTER RAIN

Easter Sunday was a different story, though, as the rain set in and dampened the plans of those set to roast lambs on spits. There was a mad rush to the local home improvement store – said many Greeks in Queens and Brooklyn – to purchase pop-up tents so that the guests, and the food, would stay dry.

Home Depot employees were surprised at the mad rush of customers at some locations – those that, unlike the ones in Flushing and East Elmhurst, had not sold out on Saturday by those who kept a careful watch on the weather.

Some employees of those two locations, in fact, stood at the front door and asked customers as they entered: “Are you Greek?” and if the answer was “yes,” instructed them to head to the Long Island City store.

Ultimately, the rain did not deter the celebrations to endure, as the aroma of roasting lamb permeated in backyards throughout the city.

IT’S RAINING LAMBS

Greek restaurants, taverns, and bakeries, were open, serving roast lamb and other delicacies, and International Meat Market owner John Stratigakis described the annual Easter celebration as “our Super Bowl,” the New York Post reported.

He said several hundred lambs come from two farms in Upstate New York, ranging from 15 to 60 pounds, selling between $6.99 and $11.99 per pound.

The 48-year-old butcher noted that has been in the business since he was 13 years old, and that it is a business which has been improving from each year to the next.

The Post reported that those who don’t have the yard space to roast had the opportunity to enjoy some lamb at Estiatorio Milos in Manhattan, which roasted 18 lambs after the Easter Resurrection service and an additional 16 on Easter Sunday.

Mother’s Day Gift Ideas- Books

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The origins of Mother’s Day trace back to Ancient Greek celebrations of the mother goddess Cybele, the only known goddess from Phrygia, a region of Asia Minor from the 6th century BC. Worship of the goddess spread from the east to the ethnically Greek areas of Anatolia, then to the Aegean islands and mainland Greece. In Rome, she was called Magma Mater, the Great Mother. Her worship was met with some resistance at first since the rituals of her cult were often wild, with music, dancing, and wine. Associated with animals, Cybele was depicted with a lion or on a lion-drawn chariot. The arrival of Christianity led to a more sedate celebration of Mother’s Day which in fact started out as a celebration of Mother Church.

The campaign to make Mother’s Day an official holiday in the United States began in 1905 spearheaded by Anna Jarvis the year her mother passed away. The celebration of Mother’s Day began with a memorial she held in honor of her mother at St. Andrews Methodist Church in Grafton, WV, in 1908. Woodrow Wilson signed the proclamation making the second Sunday in May the official celebration of Mother’s Day in the United States. In Greece, the Feast of the Presentation of Jesus Christ in the Temple, February 2, was traditionally celebrated in part as Mother’s Day, but in recent times, the second Sunday of May has been accepted as Mother’s Day there as well as in many countries around the world. Flowers are a classic gift, though they hardly last long enough to reflect the constancy of love for mom. Books are thoughtful way to share how much mom means to you. Here are some bookish gifts to share and make mom’s day extra special.

Charming photo books featuring the sights and history of Greece always make great gifts. The As the Seagull Flies series by author and photographer Penelope Matsouka is a wonderful series of aerial photo books from various places in Greece, including Mani, Paros, Naxos, Rhodes, and Lefkada. Published by Anavasi, the books are available in bilingual Greek and English editions. Anavasi also publishes maps and travel guides for those planning trips to Greece this year.

A History of Greece by Nicholas Doumanis is a fine single-volume edition. Beginning in the Bronze Age, this book tells the story of Greek-speaking people in the Eastern Mediterranean region from the earliest archeological traces. It also features maps and illustrations to highlight the remarkable history of Greece.

For moms who enjoy more literary diversions, there are several books in Greek now available online. The advent of various publishing platforms has now made it easy for book lovers to find books that in the past would have gone out of print. Moms with e-readers can upload all their favorites, from classics of ancient literature to romance novels. E-books are often relatively inexpensive when compared to hardcover books, but check with mom first, she may prefer “real” books to e-books. Some titles to enjoy, Tales from a Greek Island by Alexandros Papadiamantis, To Agriolouloudo (The Wildflower) by Pavlos Nirvanas, and Dio Nisia, Mia Agapi (Two Island, One Love) by Katerina Banou.

Katrantzou’s Designs at Met Museum

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NEW YORK– The Costume Institute’s spring exhibition, Manus x Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) opened on May 5 and runs through August 14. The exhibition opening was celebrated on Monday night at the museum’s Costume Institute Benefit, also known as the Met Gala. Co-chairing the event were British actor Idris Elba, designer Jonathan Ive, singer Taylor Swift, and Vogue Editor-in-Chief Anna Wintour. Fashion designers Nicolas Ghesquière, Karl Lagerfeld, and Miuccia Prada served as Honorary Chairs.

The event is The Costume Institute’s main source of annual funding. Presented in the Museum’s Robert Lehman Wing and Anna Wintour Costume Center, the exhibition explores the impact of new technology on fashion and how designers use both the handmade and the machine-made in the creating haute couture and avant-garde ready-to-wear clothing.

“Fashion and technology are inextricably connected, more so now than ever before,” said MMA CEO and Director Thomas P. Campbell. “It is therefore timely to examine the roles that the handmade and the machine-made have played in the creative process. Often presented as oppositional, this exhibition proposes a new view in which the hand and the machine are mutual and equal protagonists.”

“Traditionally, the distinction between the haute couture and prêt-à-porter was based on the handmade and the machine-made, but recently this distinction has become increasingly blurred as both disciplines have embraced the practices and techniques of the other,” said Andrew Bolton, Curator of The Costume Institute. “Manus x Machina will challenge the conventions of the hand/machine dichotomy, and propose a new paradigm germane to our age of digital technology.”

The red carpet sparkled with celebrities in silver metallics, including Cindy Crawford, Lady Gaga, and Nicole Kidman. Emma Watson, Bee Shaffer, and Zoe Saldana were among the guests wearing gowns with trains trailing dramatically on the museum steps. Claire Danes lit up the red carpet in an organza and fiber optic gown by Zac Posen.

MARY KATRANTZOU

Alongside fashion icons of previous centuries like Charles James and Coco Chanel, young designers from around the world have works on display in the exhibition, including Greek fashion designer Mary Katrantzou. Born in Athens to an interior designer mother and father in textile design, Katrantzou seemed destined for a career in design. She studied architecture at the Rhode Island School of Design and then transferred to London’s Central Saint Martin’s College of Art and Design for her BA in textile design and her fashion MA. She then turned her focus on prints and womenswear. Having sold prints to designer Bill Blass while still studying fashion, Katrantzou managed to build her portfolio and by the time she graduated, she had created her signature style. Her designs are available in over 200 stores worldwide including US retailers Barneys and Neiman Marcus. Her collection available at Topshop sold out within days in 2011. In 2014, she began a collaboration with Adidas on clothing and footwear. With a focus on the way prints can alter the shape of a woman’s body, Katrantzou’s designs regularly appear on the red carpet. Among the famous women who have donned her designs, First Lady Michelle Obama, Taylor Swift, and Alicia Vikander picked up her Critics Choice Award for Best Supporting Actress in a dress from the Mary Katrantzou Spring Summer 2016 collection.

Greek Designer at Metropolitan Museum Costume Institute Gala

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NEW YORK– The Costume Institute’s spring exhibition, Manus x Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) opened on May 5 and runs through August 14. The exhibition opening was celebrated on Monday night at the museum’s Costume Institute Benefit, also known as the Met Gala. Co-chairing the event were British actor Idris Elba, designer Jonathan Ive, singer Taylor Swift, and Vogue Editor-in-Chief Anna Wintour. Fashion designers Nicolas Ghesquière, Karl Lagerfeld, and Miuccia Prada served as Honorary Chairs.

The event is The Costume Institute’s main source of annual funding. Presented in the Museum’s Robert Lehman Wing and Anna Wintour Costume Center, the exhibition explores the impact of new technology on fashion and how designers use both the handmade and the machine-made in the creating haute couture and avant-garde ready-to-wear clothing.

“Fashion and technology are inextricably connected, more so now than ever before,” said MMA CEO and Director Thomas P. Campbell. “It is therefore timely to examine the roles that the handmade and the machine-made have played in the creative process. Often presented as oppositional, this exhibition proposes a new view in which the hand and the machine are mutual and equal protagonists.”

“Traditionally, the distinction between the haute couture and prêt-à-porter was based on the handmade and the machine-made, but recently this distinction has become increasingly blurred as both disciplines have embraced the practices and techniques of the other,” said Andrew Bolton, Curator of The Costume Institute. “Manus x Machina will challenge the conventions of the hand/machine dichotomy, and propose a new paradigm germane to our age of digital technology.”

The red carpet sparkled with celebrities in silver metallics, including Cindy Crawford, Lady Gaga, and Nicole Kidman. Emma Watson, Bee Shaffer, and Zoe Saldana were among the guests wearing gowns with trains trailing dramatically on the museum steps. Claire Danes lit up the red carpet in an organza and fiber optic gown by Zac Posen.

MARY KATRANZOU

Alongside fashion icons of previous centuries like Charles James and Coco Chanel, young designers from around the world have works on display in the exhibition, including Greek fashion designer Mary Katrantzou. Born in Athens to an interior designer mother and father in textile design, Katrantzou seemed destined for a career in design. She studied architecture at the Rhode Island School of Design and then transferred to London’s Central Saint Martin’s College of Art and Design for her BA in textile design and her fashion MA. She then turned her focus on prints and womenswear. Having sold prints to designer Bill Blass while still studying fashion, Katrantzou managed to build her portfolio and by the time she graduated, she had created her signature style. Her designs are available in over 200 stores worldwide including US retailers Barneys and Neiman Marcus. Her collection available at Topshop sold out within days in 2011. In 2014, she began a collaboration with Adidas on clothing and footwear. With a focus on the way prints can alter the shape of a woman’s body, Katrantzou’s designs regularly appear on the red carpet. Among the famous women who have donned her designs, First Lady Michelle Obama, Taylor Swift, and Alicia Vikander picked up her Critics Choice Award for Best Supporting Actress in a dress from the Mary Katrantzou Spring Summer 2016 collection.

Greek-Amer. Mayors through the Years

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With the recent election of Chrysostomos (Chris) Alahouzos as mayor of Tarpon Springs, FL we are again reminded of the advances all Greeks have made in America. Alahouzos is far from the first Greek-born person to become mayor of an American city. As anyone following the national press on Alahouzos knows, he did not just spring out of the ground but has a long history of civic service including but not limited to being, in 2012, the Vice-Mayor of Tarpon Springs. And while Alahouzos may be the first Greek-born mayor of Tarpon Springs he is most certainly not the first mayor of Greek descent elected to that office in that specific city. Greeks have a complex and historically deep involvement with American politics.

In terms strictly of the office of mayor, at this moment in time, no one source or published account systematically lists every Greek-American who holds or has held this office in the United States. While the Greek press in North America has always carried coverage on any and all Hellenic candidates for any and all political office, again I know no listing of these figures across time. As far as I have been able to discover, it is only with the sustained survey work of the late Professor Charles C. Moskos that we have the first attempt at reviewing Greek political figures in the United States.

In my own efforts to advance what Dr. Moskos first offered, I have been surprised by how fundamentally hard it has been to even gather a systematic listing of just mayors. It is to not simply difficult to determine the ethnicity or racial background of individual mayors but many American communities just do not have a full listing of their own local politicians. I stress this point because Moskos has written that “over a score of second-generation Greek-Americans have been chosen mayors in the mill towns of New England, a delayed culmination of the aspirations of the early Greek immigrants who toiled there.” I have not found twenty or more Greek-American mayors in New England. In point of fact I have been able to locate and confirm just forty seven Greek-American mayors in nineteen states.

I have made very specific distinctions in this mayoral survey. First, I have only included those individuals who held office, not those who ran but were not elected. Second, not every city in the nation has a mayor; many have councils, and so the president of a council can be seen as the leader and so similar in terms of the office of a mayor. But, words do have distinct meanings and so this survey deals just with those political office holders designated as mayors. With this same general thought in mind, individuals who are married to a Greek or person of Greek descent but who are themselves not of Greek birth or extraction are not included.

For our purposes here I have divided the United States into nine regions: New England, Mid-Atlantic States, Midwest, Appalachian Highlands, Southeast, Heartland, Mountain, Southwest, Pacific Coast inclusive of the noncontiguous states of Alaska and Hawaii. To simplify our survey let me quickly note I found no one of Hellenic background who is or who has been a mayor in the Mountain States: Colorado, Idaho, Utah, Montana, Wyoming or Nevada.

In New England (e.g. Maine, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode Island) we find one Greek-American mayor in Maine, the honorable Nicholas Mavodones (Portland) for Connecticut, George A. Athanson (Hartford) and George P. Harlamon (Waterbury). Massachusetts can claim seven: Monte Basbas (Newton); Louis J. Diamond (North Adams); George C. Eliades (Lowell); George Katsaros (Haverhill); Byron J. Mathews (Newburyport); Nick Mavroules (Peabody); and Tarsy T. Poulios (Lowell).

Next in New Hampshire, two Michael E. J. Blastos (Keene) and Ted Gatsas (Manchester) while, as far as I have been able to determine, Vermont has never had a mayor of Greek descent and finally Rhode Island with Dean Lewis in Newport.

In the Mid-Atlantic States (Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and New York) we have Lee Alexander (Syracuse); John Cleo Apostol (Annapolis); Andrew J. Jakomas (McKeesport); Alex Jeffers (Williamsburg PA); Emmanuel K. Kallas (East Pittsburgh PA) Michael John Pantelidis (Annapolis MD) and then Andronic Pappas (Altoona PA).

For the Heartland states (Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, and Missouri) Helen Boosalis (Lincoln, NE); Tom Jolas (Mason City, IA); George Soumas (Perry, IA) and then George J. Vavoulis (St. Paul, MN).

The Midwest (Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio) Nicholas Blasé (Niles, IL); George Chacharis (Gary, IN); P. Peter Chacos (Terre Haute, IN); H. Jonathon Costas (Valparaiso, IN); Adeline Jay Geo-Karis (Zion, IL); John B. Nicosia (East Chicago, IN); Samuel T. Pappas (Garden City, MI); James Pappas (Fox Lake, IL); Jim Plakas (Garden City, MI); Peter Anthony Sarantos (Elkhart, IN) and James Tassis  (Ecorse, MI).

In all of the Appalachian Highland states (Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia) we have only Bill Saffo (Wilmington, NC).

For the Southeast (South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Louisiana) we have the aforementioned Alahouzos, and also Constantine Apostolou (Pensacola, FL); George Cretekos (Clearwater, FL); James Nichols (Apalachicola, FL); Anita Protos (Tarpon Springs, FL); John Rousakis (Savanna, GA) and George Tsourakis (Tarpon Springs, FL).

For all of the Southwest (Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas) we find only Anton Proto (Nogales, AZ).

Pacific Coast States (inclusive of the noncontiguous states) (Washington, Oregon, California, Alaska, Hawaii)  Arthur Christ Agnos (San Francisco, CA); George Christopher (San Francisco, CA) and Tom Means (Mountain View, CA).                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   While many readers would have preferred a detailed article on each of these individuals we must begin by knowing which Greek-Americans now hold or have held the office of mayor in Ameriki. Recently, it has been advanced that Martin Arguelles Sr. was not only the first mayor of San Agustin (St. Augustine) in the Florida territory of New Spain but that he was of Greek descent. Is this true? I don’t know. But that is how we move forward in Greek-American Studies. One suggestion at a time, vetted by the community at large and then the data is accepted or rejected as the evidence is reviewed by the world at large.

What else can we do? Facts are facts, no matter who uncovers them. At a time when more persons of Greek birth and or Greek descent are now to be found in the American educational system—from literally pre-school to the most prestigious universities in this nation—than at any other time in the history of this country, we have no scholars who are systematically reviewing, studying, assessing and then writing about our collective history in this hemisphere.

The politicians cited above are worthy of more extensive study. As a group they represent the very best and unfortunately, at times, the very worst of our community. Consequently as with all things Greek in North America, Greek-American mayors have achieved the highest honors inclusive of public monuments that their local community could provide  as well as being found guilty of high crimes and sentenced to jail. It is an extremely odd mix to say the least.  Ultimately we need to know more about our common history in the United States if we are ever to understand our place not only in this nation’s history but that of Hellenism itself.

 

An Easter Odyssey On Crete

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On our Olympic Airways flight from Athens to Rethymnon, Crete, I sat on the aisle in a three-seat row, my wife, Diana, in the middle seat beside me. The window seat was occupied by a white-haired, wiry old man with several well-filled K-Mart shopping bags at his knees. He told us he was a widower returning from one of his periodic visits to America with gifts for his grandchildren. We told him we were visiting Crete for the first time to spend Easter with relatives we had never seen before. The old man wiped a tear from his eye and wished us well.

A short while later we began our descent toward the port city of Rethymnon. As the swirling clouds cleared and we glimpsed the ground, a murmur of awe and delight rose from the passengers at the windows. The old man motioned us to his window. I looked down at my first sight of Crete, the birthplace of my father and mother. Clearly visible in the midst of Homer’s wine-dark sea, the island was a dazzling and radiant panorama of flowers.

GARDEN EMIGRATION

“The garden of Crete…” the old man whispered and fervently made the sign of the cross.

The garden of Crete…Once, in a memory from my childhood, I heard the island referred to in that way. When spring arrived in Crete, my mother told me, it was as if the island were a spacious garden bursting with flowers.

My mother, Stella Christoulakis, was born in the village of Nipos, in the western part of the island near Chania. My father, the Reverend Mark Petrakis, came from the village of Argyroupolis in the mountains above Rethymnon. In 1916, my parents emigrated from Crete to America, where my father had been assigned as a priest to a parish of young Cretan coal miners in Price, UT. They brought with them four of my brothers and sisters.

I have in my possession a faded, treasured photograph taken of my family in Crete about the time they began their journey to America. My father wears a tall, black stovepipe hat common to Greek Orthodox priests of the period, a long, black cassock mantling him from throat to ankles. My mother, a small comely woman with thick, long hair braided and then tied up into a bun, stands beside him. My two brothers and two sisters, ranging in age from six to twelve, cluster around them.

The family remained in Utah until my father was reassigned to a parish in Savannah, GA. A few years later they moved to St. Louis, MO, where I was born. That same year they made a final move to Chicago, where the last child in our family, another sister, was born.

HOMEWARD BOUND

Now, as our flight descended toward Cretan soil, I recalled how the constellations of my childhood glittered with stories of that tragic and lovely island. The songs, tales, and proverbs of Crete passed from my parents to me. Although I had been born in America, I had always felt a part of me belonged to that faraway land.

Gorgios, the young taxi driver we hired at the airport, drove us through a tangle of cars, bicycles, and motorbikes that clogged the streets of Rethymnon. On the sidewalks, crowds milled about the stalls of peddlers selling vegetables and fruit. In outdoor cafes people sat and sipped coffee and drank small glasses of ouzo and raki.

Along with black headbands, Cretan men wore the vraka or black baggy pants that swirled around their black boots as they walked. In the sash of their waistbands, some carried ivory-handled daggers inlaid with silver.

They stared at us as the taxi passed, realizing we were strangers. Their expressions were wary, sometimes even hostile. The centuries of slavery and war the Cretans have endured and the devastating occupation of the island by German troops after the Battle of Crete in the Second World War have left the islanders resentful and rebellious. Cretans, my father told me, make staunch friends and unrelenting enemies.

We left the city, the road winding up into the majestic mountain ranges that run the length of the island. To the west were the Levka Ori (White Mountains). In the center of the island was Mount Ida. To the east was the Dhikti range where Zeus, ruler of the heavens and father of other gods, was born.

Aside from their stark imposing beauty, the mountains affected the island’s history by isolating regions and villages and by setting up a natural barrier against invaders.

Above the peaks of the highest mountains was the glowing sun, radiating a light that Greek writers from the ancient dramatists to the modern poets sought to describe.

When words could not capture its resplendence, they assigned the sun the attributes of a god and worshiped it. The warrior Ajax, about to perish in battle, cried out to die in the light. When the painter El Greco left Crete for Spain, the skies he painted retained the luminous light above the island he had left behind.

Then there were the flowers. Viewing them from the height of the plane was an enchanting spectacle. But to see them close was to have our senses overwhelmed.

Flowers curled across stone walls, adorned the small whitewashed churches on the slopes of the mountains, trailed along the trellises of houses, bloomed from window boxes, softened the spiked plants and thorny bushes. Their aroma filled the air with a dizzying fragrance of carnations and bougainvillea.

Meanwhile, whatever mountain road we traveled, we were never out of sight of the sea for long. The water would be hidden for a few moments and then as the taxi veered around a precipitous cliff of rock, the sea came stunningly into view, an expanse of turquoise-blue water stretching toward the horizon.

But the tranquil surface of the sea was deceptive. From the time of the ancient Greeks, beneath the placid waters lay the wrecks of sunken ships and the ruins of lost cities.

Twilight had fallen as we drove slowly into Argyroupolis, on the surface resembling so many other villages we already had passed. Chickens clucked and scurried to escape the wheels of the auto. A few dogs barked. People hurried from their houses to herald our arrival. All the villagers had been waiting and they greeted us with buoyant cries of “Kalos Orisate” Welcome! Welcome!”

A small group of children ran to my uncle’s house to let the family know we had arrived. As we emerged from the taxi, our first cousins Antonia and Yannis Couides and their daughters, Eleni and Melpa, came from the house to greet us.

How fulfilling it was to embrace relatives we had never seen before but that we felt instantly we knew. Perhaps it was the cards, letters, and snapshots sent back and forth across the ocean for years. Perhaps it was the resemblances to family members in America. As we hugged, laughing and talking at the same time, the villagers clustered around us, sharing the jubilation of the reunion as though they were related to us as well.

I asked about my uncle. Father Joseph, Antonia’s father. She told us he had been anxiously awaiting our arrival all day and she had finally prevailed upon him to rest. He was asleep in his bed in the kitchen.

As we entered the house, the old priest woke with a start. He scrambled from the bed, his countenance anxious and apprehensive, as if he feared our arrival was a dream that would escape him once he woke. Then he raised his arms to embrace me fervently.

Father Joseph was in his middle eighties with a strong, stocky body. He had snow-white hair and a white beard. In America he would have made an authentic St. Nick.

FATHER JOSEPH

Although he had been retired from his parish church for almost ten years—another priest serving in his place – in honor of our visit he planned to participate in the liturgy that evening.

Now he tugged at my arm, asking me to accompany him to church so he could prepare for the service. Diana, with Antonia, Yannis, and their daughters, would follow later.

The church was located in the lower village and to get there we had to descend about a hundred stone steps. Although the curve of the sky gleamed with stars, the night was pitch black. Father Joseph told me he had been descending and ascending those steps all his life but I still marveled at how confidently he skipped down, as agile and surefooted as a mountain goat. Uncertain of my own footing, I kept falling behind until Father Joseph returned for me and took my arm and led me carefully and safely down the stairs.

When we entered the small village church, only a few somber old men and old women waited silently before the icons. After Father Joseph introduced me to Father Stavros, a dark-haired, dark-bearded young priest, he led me to an alcove occupied by Barba Leontis, a lean old psalti (cantor), wearing a faded, black cassock that hung loosely on his gaunt frame. Father Joseph introduced me as his nephew from America and asked Barba Leontis to allow me to sit beside him.

The first parishioners began to arrive, strong, sun-darkened men and women, dressed in their best clothing. The lovely girls and handsome boys had well-scrubbed faces and necks. A row of old patriarchs, stiff-necked as roosters, took their places against the wall. A coven of black-garbed old women loomed like tragic figures in an ancient chorus. A black-haired beauty, exquisite as Helen of Troy, entered church with the regal walk of a princess.

Many of their faces reminded me of parishioners from my father’s parish in Chicago. I stared at them, shaken at the resemblances, so precise that I was able to affix names from my past to many of them.

“ALITHOS ANESTI”

The services began. Father Joseph emerged from the sanctuary to make the sign of the cross over the congregation.

He wore scarlet and gold vestments I remembered had once belonged to my father. As the vestments grew worn, my mother sent them to Father Joseph and he wore them for years. He looked toward me and when he saw that I recognized the vestments, his face flashed an endearing smile.

Beside me, Barba Leontis began to chant one of the old Byzantine hymns, and on the opposite side of the church, two young cantors who had taken up positions across from us intoned a response. The old cantors voice was husky and grating, while the voices of the young cantors were strong and clear.

At an early point in the liturgy, Barba Leontis grasped my arm and pointed to the hymnal. ”Sing,” he said to me in a low, urgent voice.

I stared at him in shock. He must have mistakenly thought that Father Joseph had brought me to sit beside him because I was also a cantor from America. I struggled to explain that I had never been a cantor, only an altar boy.

The old man attributed my stammering explanation to some modesty with which he had scant patience. He once more sternly admonished me to “Sing!” His voice had risen and from below us in the church, a number of parishioners stared up at us.

Throwing prudence to the winds, drawing on memories of my father’s church and its hymns, in a low, nervous voice, I started to chant the music. The young cantors grimaced and sneered. Barba Leontis glared at them and urged me on.

Father Stavros and Father Joseph joined voices in chanting the liturgy, the cantors responding. I moved closer to the hymn book, struggling to decipher words and music, trying to imitate Barba Leontis. No one in the church seemed to understand that I hardly knew what I was doing, so my confidence grew and my voice became stronger. I felt possessed suddenly of an awesome Cretan force and power.

At a moment when my voice resonated robustly across the church, my wife, Diana, Antonia, Yannis, and their daughters entered the church. Diana heard my voice before she saw me and across the distance that separated us, I witnessed her shock. She had never heard me sing in church before and she must have thought it an Easter miracle. She bent her head, and quickly made the sign of the cross. Beside her Yannis beamed at me proudly.

I had experienced many Easters as a child, then as a youth and an adult. But none of them equaled the beauty and emotion of that Easter night in the village in Crete. I felt bound in some irrevocable way to the villagers. The church, candles, incense, the beloved face of my uncle and the stern countenance of the young priest, all fused with my past. I felt, as well, the mystical presence of the night that loomed around us, sky, earth, and water linking the present to the mythic past.

At midnight when the lights were extinguished and the church was hurled into darkness, I waited, trembling with an excitement and anticipation I had not felt since childhood. Father Joseph emerged from the sanctuary holding the first candle, its frail light glinting across his white beard. From that solitary candle other candles were lighted and flared into flame until several hundred candles gleamed like stars on the waves of night.

When it came time to express the salutation, ”Christos Anesti! (Christ is Risen!)” I felt the words bursting from my soul, “Christos Anesti!” I cried to Barba Leontis. “Alithos Anesti! (Truly, He is Risen!)” his hoarse voice cried in response.

When we emerged from the church at the end of the liturgy, the night glittered with numerous fires as villagers in surrounding mountain Villages burned great bonfires engulfing effigies of Judas. The night also cracked and echoed with the thunder of hundreds of guns being fired in celebration.

We ascended the steps toward the upper village, Antonia and the girls holding their flickering candles. In the house we sat down to the festive Easter dinner that concluded the forty days of fasting. I was given the baked lamb’s head as a special delicacy, which I was unable to eat. After several futile attempts to convince me what a treat it was, Father Joseph gave up and attacked it with gusto, grinning at me, savoring every bite while little specks of lamb’s eyes glittered in his beard.

WARM BON VOYAGE

Sated with food, Diana and I were given the principal bed, belonging to Yannis and Antonia. It had been built by my great-grandfather in the previous century. For more than a hundred years it had provided a haven for family births and deaths. My father had been born in the bed and my grandparents died in the bed that symbolized the continuity of the family.

I slept restlessly for a while and woke to a light rain striking the roof. I imagined my father as a boy listening to the rain. I rose then and made my way outside to stand on the porch. The earth around me was silent and shadowed, the first frail light breaking over the monoliths of mountains. In that moment I witnessed the dawn in a way I had never experienced it before, the night not yet relinquishing its power, the day not yet gaining ascendancy. Darkness and light played out an ancient drama of confrontation before my eyes. Finally, wearily, I returned to bed and slept.

In the morning I woke to the pealing of countless bells. They rang in Argyroupolis and resounded from numerous other villages. We ate bread and cheese and drank warm milk to their peelings and echoes.

When the young taxi driver, Gorgios, returned to take us back to the airport in Rethymnon, our family and most of the villagers gathered to bid us farewell. I embraced my cousins and the children, wondering with melancholy, when I would ever see them again. Yet I was grateful at how much intimacy and love had been fostered in the space of a single night.

The last person to whom I said good-bye was Father Joseph. The old man held me at arm’s length for a long time, staring into my face as if to memorize every bone and strip of flesh, because he understood we probably never would see each other again. Then he drew me slowly, breathlessly, into his arms. As he hugged me tight, I smelled the scents of incense and candle wax on his cassock and felt the trembling of his flesh. Finally, he whispered a blessing for our safe journey home and hugged me one last time.

We climbed into the taxi, carrying the parcels of bread, cheese, and the container of olive oil they pressed upon us. When we started to drive slowly away, the villagers began to wave. Father Joseph raised his hand one last time, as if beseeching us to remain. As the taxi started down the road, a small band of children ran alongside. They escorted us through the village, scattering the chickens, agitating the dogs. When the children could no longer keep up, they stopped and waved their hands vigorously and cried their final farewells.

As we drove deeper into the mountains, their shrill young voices carried in melodious cries across the morning. We could still hear their voices and the distant, peeling bells of Crete long after the village was lost to our sight.

St. Thomas Church in Cherry Hill Celebrates Patron Saint

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St. Thomas Church in Cherry Hill, NJ celebrated their patron saint on the feast day of the Apostle. His Eminence Metropolitan Evangelos presided over the vesper services on Saturday evening, and the Divine Liturgy on Sunday morning which included the ordination of Father George Parsenios, a graduate of Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology in Boston,and a current Associate Professor of the New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary. Members of the parish council of St. Thomas Church revealed the new facade of the church on a banner with plans for more renovations. The celebration continued with the blessing and grand opening of the new St. Thomas Senior Apartments also in Cherry Hill. Founded through a bequest by the Chigounis family to St. Thomas Church, the one and two bedroom rental units are open to applications from those meeting age and income requirements. On hand for the blessing along with His Eminence Metropolitan Evangelos, were parishioners, Parish Council members including Anastasios Efstratiades and St. Thomas Senior Housing Board of Directors Anthony Chigounis, Chris Diamantoukos, Martina Harris, George Burlotos, Antony Velahos, Thomas Pousatis, Nick Criaris, John Souras, and Tom Gotzis. More information on the St. Thomas Senior Apartments is available by phone, 856-448-4121.


Follow Your Spirit & Upon This Charge Cry God… for Hellas & St. George

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In the midst of the joyous Paschal period, we celebrate the feast of St. George the Great Martyr, one of Romanity’s greatest heroes. As the saintly Greek author Alexandros Papadiamantis notes “the Greek people most appropriately honor St. George, one of their most Hellenic saints, with an amazing display of devotion. The trophy-bearing Great Martyr, together with the myrrh-gushing St. Demetrios of Thessaloniki, his kindred spirit and equal, stand on guard – one at the entrance to the summer and the other to the winter…” Perhaps no other saint has more chapels dedicated to him throughout Greece. After all, what other saint can boast of being the general patron of Greek cities and protector of the Greek countryside? According to Papadiamantis, the saint’s biography makes no mention of his place of martyrdom, as if to leave his memory as a common Panhellenic possession.

There are countless miracles attributed to St. George. In his article  “Ai Mou Yioryi” (My Dear St. George), written in 1892 – just one year before Greece declared bankruptcy – Papadiamantis cites several. For those who don’t believe in miracles, he suggests a trip to Mt. Athos, and specifically to the Zographou Monastery. There, they can see an icon of St. George that was not made by human hands, but formed out of the blood from his martyrdom. According to tradition, a doubting bishop who questioned the miraculous image once placed his finger on the icon to examine it and was punished for his audacity by getting his finger stuck to the icon. Unable to remove it, he was forced to cut it off. The remnants of the finger remain visible on the icon centuries later, up until the present day!

But the trophy-bearing St. George is also known for his condescending goodness, which is captured in Papadiamantis’ tale of a young boy playing quoits at a seaside town in the East, nearby the saint’s church. The boy was losing and his philotimo was suffering (that’s how you could tell he was Greek(!) says Papadiamantis). In order to recover his lost honor, in lieu of the usual gifts of candles, incense, and a liturgy, he decided to offer the saint… an omelet. And as soon as he made the wish, he went on a winning steak utterly triumphing over the others, at which point he ran home and made sure a large omelet was prepared, which he brought on a plate and laid in front of the saint’s icon in the church. As the boy left, a sailor happened to be entering the church and saw the sizzling omelet. Reasoning to himself that St. George had no need of omelets, he figured he’d eat it and replace it with a large candle. However, upon devouring the omelet, as he went to leave, he realized that his legs were sticking to the church floor repeatedly. Finally realizing the miracle that was taking place, he was compelled to up his offering in order to leave, at which point he could not help but remark “St. George, you sell your omelets for a high price!”

Papadiamantis doesn’t choose his stories at random. After asking the saint forgiveness for the childlike simplicity of his article, he notes “my dear St. George, forgive me for mixing the sacred with the profane – for making this compromise, this novelty – because if I dare to transcribe here the superhuman struggles and lengthy torture that you endured, shedding you priceless blood drop by drop on behalf of Christ the Savior, today’s Greeks – the descendants of those whom you benefacted so many times – might likely cry out: ‘get a load of these fairy tales!’ Their wise men won’t hesitate to say that you are Perseus or Hercules in disguise! …”

Seven years into the hated memorandum, Greece’s politicians would do well to remember St. George. And Hellas’ prime minister would most certainly be better off offering an omelet to the saint to help the negotiations than reasoning with the malevolent creditors. After all, St. George is famously associated with slaying the dragon that nested near a spring and would periodically demand blood from the citizens as a tax. The poor people would cast lots (true democracy!) to determine which unfortunate maiden’s turn it would be to satisfy the terrible beast’s voracious appetite. Unlike modern-day Greece, however, even the “royalty” were subject to consequences, and back then, the unlucky lot was drawn by Princess Alexandra! However, St. George hearkened to the prayers of her parents, heroically and invincibly coming to her aid, killing the terrible dragon, and returning the princess to her parents unscathed.

The multi-headed hydra known as the troika (now the quartet) of Greece’s lenders is not unlike that terrible dragon. Their voracious appetite for taxes is sucking the lifeblood out of Greece and posing an unbearable threat – most of all to its unlucky youth. Only now, the lot almost always undemocratically falls on the poor and middle class – never the party cadres, never the barons, never the self-styled leftists and pseudosocialists with capitalistic appetites.

Lacking the philotimo of the young boy, their sole concern is merely to remain glued to their posts. Instead of freeing Greece from the fangs of the hydra, they gladly sacrifice the people and merely seek to triumph at the polls. “Ah, Elections! These have been our sole concern for seventy years, since we were liberated. In other words, since we changed tyrants; whom we fancy that we change more regularly through elections.” Nearly 125 years later, Papadiamantis’ words could not ring truer. Hopefully his conclusion will as well: “But, my dear St. George, may the dawn of that blessed day of the Resurrection of our People rise all the sooner, because a nation that has such a great cloud of martyrs, and so many supplicants before God alongside you, who are your flesh and blood, will never be abandoned by the God of their fathers. May that day dawn soon, my dear St. George!”

Follow me on Twitter @CTripoulas

 

Pan-Macedonians Push Obama

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The Pan-Macedonian Association USA has generated a petition calling for the reversal of President George W. Bush’s 2004 Executive Order recognizing the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) as “Republican of Macedonia.”

Nykolah Chatzis, PA to the Association President, shared the petition with TNH, and provided his own thoughts.

THE PETITION

WE, the undersigned, citizens and residents of the United States of America and of countries around the world interested in advancing American interests in Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean and regional stability, petition the Obama administration to: REVERSE the Executive Order by the Bush Administration of 2004, recognizing the country of the “FYROM” as “Republic of Macedonia.”

U.S. Administration thought in 2004 that by recognizing FYROM as Macedonia would have brought stability. It was fooled. Sign the petition and ask Washington to restore truth and justice!

The recognition of FYROM as “Republic of Macedonia” by the Bush Administration was intended to assist the stability in the country in relation with the Albanians, and other minorities. Instead of stability, the recognition of the country by the United States as “The Republic of Macedonia” assisted the ethnocentric Slav led government to use it as a tool to enact despotic laws and autocratic practices such as restriction of the Press and imprisonment of political prisoners.

Furthermore, for various reasons, FYROM continually provokes its neighbors and especially Greece. It has perceived the U.S. recognition as approval and encouragement for its identity theft and identity fraud. Since its recognition by the United States, as “The Republic of Macedonia”, FYROM has increased its inimical and provocative actions against Greece, driven by their ill perceived “national goals” of expansionism at the expense of Greece.

FYROM’s continued provocative and irresponsible narrative fuels their domestic nationalism and regional instability, creates unpredictable conditions for the region and indeed the world.

Taking into consideration the above, WE, the undersigned American citizens interested in advancing American interests in Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean and regional stability, petition the Obama administration to reverse the Executive Order by the Bush Administration of 2004, recognizing the country of the “FYROM” as “Republic of Macedonia.”

[The petition may be signed by visiting the Association’s website at: https://www.gopetition.com/petitions/restoration-of-historical-truth-about-macedonia.html]

WHY IT MATTERS

Chatzis writes: “The conflict over the name Macedonia is more than what appears at its surface. To most it appears as merely childish bickering, old men and politicians droning on about the days of yore. The fight of naming rights seems extraordinarily frivolous in this new age of a globalized world. In this new identity of citizen of the world we are beginning to understand the true meaning of human, rather than dividing ourselves into groups, sects, blocks, races and fighting endlessly.

“I can tirelessly explain with facts and data, history books, and scrolls how Hellenism, as we know it today, was only spread through Alexander the Great. I can suggest the degree to which Hellenism was influenced; given that Mount Olympus is within the borders of the Ancient Kingdom of Macedon, and that the teachings of Aristotle, and the legacy of Socrates, flourished through Macedonia. And that Ancient Kingdom of Macedon only stretched a few miles out of what is Modern Greece.

But not every piece explaining why this conflict is no frivolous matter has to be scientific. For me and the men and women who come from Macedonia, as well as the rest of Greece, that name represents everything that was instilled in us from birth, and all the goals the rest of the world wishes to achieve in these times. That name, Macedonia, means everything.

“From that single name we have been given the strength to strive for new heights, learn all that we can, from our families, books, poetry, songs, our past, but especially from others around us. From a young age guided to think in new and innovative ways, and to leave no rock unturned.

Ponder the greatest mysteries of the universe and to understand ourselves as much more than a species. To understand the concept of self and what lies within. We were lectured as children, not in any kind of religious morals, but simply morals.

Be a good person, not because your sins it might bring angels to tears, but it may bring one single person to tears and there is no justification for harming one another. We were taught to put family above all else, to place money last, and put good food and drink somewhere in between. Maybe some dancing as well.

That name gives us the audacity to achieve the greatest of victories, whether it’s conquering the known world or feeding someone in need, who has come from a long journey in search of a new place to call home.

“There is no hate where my ancestors come from. There is no prejudice. There is no greed and there is no disrespect to our earth. The food isn’t called organic, because there is no alternative. There is no homelessness, because we have each other. We may argue and critique one another, but that is our birthright as Greeks and there are usually no hard feelings between us.

The name Macedonia embodies every single one of these values, and that is what I am fighting for. These values are not just for ethnicities sake, but for the sake of bettering humanity. That is the essence of being Macedonian, now and in the days of old, to improve on what it means to be human. Taking what we know and passing it on to others and in turn learning from them.

“So, having to answer why it’s so important the preserve the name Macedonia is not so easy, because I took all of those values for granted. They were second nature to me and I never attributed it to where I come from, and where my heritage lies. To take that name away is to take away and belittle all we have achieved; thousands of years working to not only better ourselves, but to better our friends, our brothers and sisters that we share this planet with.

“Now I strive to preserve the name Macedonia not only for its antiquity, the rocks, statues and its coins, but for what it means to be Macedonian: for what it means to be Greek.”

Jimmy T. Patronis Receives Alumni Award in FL

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PANAMA CITY, FL – Gulf Coast State College honored Jimmy T. Patronis of Panama City, FL at the 7th Annual Distinguished and Rising Alumni Awards event in March. The son of Jimmy and Helen Patronis, he has dedicated his life to developing the community. Patronis represented the 6th District in the Florida House of Representatives and was recently appointed to serve on the Florida Public Service Commission. He is a member of the National Association OF Regulatory Utility Commissioners and serves on its Committee on Consumer Affairs, and the Committee on Energy Resources and the Environment. His work and commitment to public service is appreciated throughout the Northwest region of Florida. Concerning her son’s recent award, his mother Helen said “We are very proud of all his accomplishments.”

A restauranteur by trade, Patronis began his political career as an intern for the Florida Senate in 1995. A year later, he worked as a research assistant for the House OF Commons in London. In 2006, he was elected as the Republican representative for the 6th District of Florida. In his bid for reelection in 2008, he won unopposed. In 2010, he defeated the Democratic challenger John McDonald with 78% of the vote.

Patronis is a dedicated Orthodox Christian, and a lifelong member of ST. JOHN’S GREEK ORTHODOX CHURCH. Family is also a top priority. He intended to run for Florida state representative of the 4th District, but decided to spend more time with his family, wife Katie and their two sons.

The Patronis family business, CAPTAIN ANDERSON’S RESTAURANT, first opened in 1967 and continues to be a success. Brothers Jimmy and Johnny founded the restaurant, alternating day and night shifts in the early days, and continue to pull shifts though the younger generation of the family began taking a larger role in the day to day running of the business in the last 20 years. Besides serving as Commissioner for the Florida Public Works Commission, Patronis is also a partner in the family restaurant where he and his father, uncle, and brothers all continue to work.

Rebirth of Greek Cuisine in Boston

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BOSTON, MA – Greek restaurants are popping up all over Boston, not least of which DORETTA TAVERNA & RAW BAR, the Boston Globe reported. Other new restaurants in the past year, the Globe wrote, include COMMITTEE, PELEKASIS, SALONIKI, and coming soon is KAVA NEO-TAVERNA.

This phenomenon is not limited to Boston, the Globe reported, said GREEK FOOD AND WINE INSTITUTE President ERIC MOSCAHLAIDIS, who said he noticed several new restaurants opening in New York City and San Francisco over the past few years. “The food is the basis of the Mediterranean diet, which has been recognized as probably the most healthful on the planet. And it tastes great.”

Another important factor, notes the Globe, is that “young entrepreneurs from Greece, or of Greek ancestry, who are launching businesses that reflect their roots. As an example, Moscahlaidis cites ERIC PAPACHRISTOS, who teamed with chef JODY ADAMS and JONATHAN MENDEZ on Saloniki. The restaurant is named after Thessaloniki, where Papachristos lived as a young child. Along with modernized gyros, the menu includes Yiayia’s soup, made with white beans, preserved lemon, and herbs. ‘It’s a big personal project for him,’ said Moscahlaidis.”

Committee General Manager and partner DEMETRI TSOLAKIS called it a “rebirth” of Greek cuisine in the city of Boston. “I think people saw a lack of cuisine in the city,” he told the Globe. “Greece is all over the news now. The food is fresh, and can be enjoyed by pretty much anyone.”

Committee, which opened in June, offers a menu designed around meze, small, shareable dishes such as spanakopitakia, grilled octopus, olive salad, and dolmades (grape leaves stuffed with rice and pine nuts. This puts the focus on social enjoyment, “bringing people together over food and drink,” says Tsolakis. “Being a son of Greece, that’s our culture. We’re trying to bring Greece to you.”

Arvanitaki Gets Perimeter Institute Chair

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WATERLOO, CANADA – On April 28, the Perimeter Institute announced the inaugural Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF) Aristarchus Chair of Theoretical Physics, Asimina Arvanitaki.

The collaboration between Perimeter and the SNF is an $8 million initiative that will have far-reaching effects in the world of theoretical physics as well as the world at large.

As Perimeter’s Founder Mike Lazaridis said at the event, “today’s theoretical physics becomes tomorrow’s technology.” He also remarked, “Perimeter Institute is creating a series of prestigious chairs in theoretical physics, named after some of the most important and innovative physicists in history. Like those physicists who made discoveries that have changed our world, we believe these Perimeter chair holders will help accelerate transformational research breakthroughs.

“One of our greatest strengths is our recruitment of brilliant young scientists, often just entering their peak years of research productivity, and whose work promises important breakthroughs. Asimina is an exceptional scientist who has already made significant contributions to her field of particle physics – she devises and employs novel methods, bridging theory and experiment to examine and decode the building blocks of nature. We are very pleased to have her on our faculty at Perimeter and extremely appreciative of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation’s generous support of her chair.”

Among the honored guests and those attending the event were SNF co-President and Director Andreas Dracopoulos, Perimeter Managing Director and COO Michael Duschenes, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario Elizabeth Dowdeswell, and Canada’s Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan.

In his speech introducing Arvanitaki as SNF’s inaugural Aristarchus Chair in Theoretical Physics at Perimeter, Dracopoulos commented on the extraordinary collaboration between the two, seemingly unrelated organizations, noting that Perimeter and SNF had more in common than meets the eye, “both, the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics and the Stavros Niarchos Foundation are not-for-profit organizations which share a mission, that of trying to improve society at large; they were both formed quite recently, in the late 90s, and both believe in the multiplying effect of positive collaborations.”

Dracopoulos mentioned the assessment of the Perimeter grant proposal by SNF Education Program Coordinator Eva Polyzogopoulou, who found Perimeter’s “uniqueness as a research institute lies in its core philosophy, which is based in the belief that science can only progress when young qualified minds are given the freedom and space to devote themselves to their research and tackle the deepest questions. Focus is given to inspiring and training the next generation in order to drive innovation and lead to breakthroughs.”

The Greek-born Arvanitaki studied at the University of Athens, and then went on to graduate school at Stanford University in California where she earned a PhD and was a research associate at the Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics. One of the brightest minds in the field, Arvanitaki joined Perimeter in 2014. She summarized her work as “particle physics without the colliders.” She went on to say, “I was raised to do particle physics beyond the Standard Model – supersymmetry, extra dimensions, theories of dark matter, and the like. For the last few years, I’ve been fascinated by new ways to test such theories.”

Her research on dark matter, along with that of her collaborators at Perimeter was recently published in Physical Review Letters and marks a fascinating development in the quest to detect the elusive dark matter.

For those with only a smattering of physics knowledge, dark matter comprises most of the universe, but remains elusive for those attempting to study it. Research into dark matter, which emits no light nor absorbs light, is now focusing not on seeing it, but on hearing it. The thought behind new ways of detecting dark matter revolves around the idea that it might behave more like a wave than a particle, or even like both. Particles, bosons specifically, when grouped together act like a wave. The sound of dark matter could then be detected with existing experimental devices, depending on the frequency of this theoretical dark matter wave.

Arvanitaki said, “call it the sound of dark matter. It would be a very boring, monotonous tone.” Since matter often interacts with its environment in more than one way, physicists suspect dark matter also interacts more than just gravitationally on its surroundings. So far, the gravitational effect on its surroundings is the only hint that dark matter exists. Experiments conducted in other parts of the world could be picking up traces of dark matter, even if the experiments were not intentionally looking for it. Arvanitaki noted, “That’s the cool thing about this. We don’t need to prove any new technology. Most of the technologies are there already, and it’s taking advantage of the tools developed for another purpose.” SNF’s support in establishing the Aristarchus Chair will allow Arvanitaki and her collaborators to continue the experiments in search of dark matter. As Arvanitaki observed, “this is the story of experiment. You just have to look. Even if you don’t find anything, that doesn’t mean you stop. If you don’t look, you don’t know.”

Arvanitaki told TNH how special a day it was for her and that it felt like an out-of-body experience. She went on to say what an honor it is for her to be chosen by SNF and Perimeter. Arvanitaki hopes their support and promoting outreach and education, especially science education in Greece, will benefit the many gifted, young students and scientists there. She observed that many Greeks are doing great work in all fields of science and it is important to continue to support education and expand opportunities especially in times of crisis.

Dracopoulos remarked on the far-reaching effects of Arvanitaki’s work: “her work will also create a pipeline with Greece that will allow fellow Greek students and scientists to become more exposed to the Perimeter’s research endeavors and to benefit from them, thus being very impactful especially during those very difficult times in Greece given the deep socioeconomic crisis that has engulfed the country for the last 7 years.”

Arvanitaki, the first woman to hold a research chair at Perimeter, spoke eloquently at the event. “All I can say, as someone who comes from a small village in Greece, this is something I never dreamed of. The only thing I can honestly say is thank you. Thank you for the privilege of making me part of the team that tries to help Greece in such a time of need.”

Perimeter Institute continues to draw gifted physicists from around the world, including Arvanitaki. It was founded in 1999 by Lazaridis, the Greek-Canadian who also founded Blackberry, and who continues to fund the cutting edge research at Perimeter along with a public-private sector partnership, and serves as Board Chair and Leadership Council Founding co-Chair. His initial personal contribution of $100 million in 2000 helped establish a world-class research facility to foster breakthroughs in physics and share the power of theoretical physics with the world.

According to the Perimeter website, “Foundational theoretical physics is a cornerstone of modern quantitative science, on which so much else rests. The field advances our fundamental understanding of the universe, and its powerful ideas seed the technologies of tomorrow. Solar cells, computers, GPS, wireless technologies, and diagnostic imagery – they are all rooted in breakthroughs made by theoretical physicists.”

With promising minds like Arvanitaki at work and a commitment to sharing research with the world, the Perimeter Institute in collaboration with the Stavros Niarchos Foundation will build a brighter future for all. In his concluding remarks at the event, Andreas Dracopoulos addressed all those at the Perimeter Institute, “…Keep imagining, keep looking, for the good of all humankind, thank you!”

 

 

Other Mothers: Not Just About the One You Were Born To

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HOUSTON, TX – I used to joke that my mother bankrupted me in May with all the gifts.  Her nameday was May 5th (St. Irene), her birthday was May 19th, and Mother’s Day is in between.  What do you get a woman who has everything, including enough aprons and black housecoats to last several  lifetimes?   My children have it easier.  My birthday is in July and they simply ignore my nameday (May 21st).

Anna Jarvis conceived of Mother’s Day in 1908 as a way of honoring the sacrifices mothers made for their children.  It became an official U.S. holiday in 1914, when President Woodrow Wilson designated the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day.  Though Jarvis had originally imagined it as a personal celebration between mothers and families, once Mother’s Day became a national holiday, it was not long before florists, card companies, and other merchants capitalized on its popularity.  Dismayed by this commercialization, Jarvis disowned the holiday altogether and, by the time of her death in 1948, even actively lobbied the government to have it removed from the calendar.

Except it hasn’t been removed.  And the cards and candies and flowers keep on coming.  Has Hallmark hijacked yet another celebration?  Probably.  Have we lost sight of the holiday’s meaning?  Not really.  For some of us, Hallmark takes the ball out of our court.  For most of us, it is that gentle reminder to pause and be grateful.  Should we be grateful every day?  Of course.  But let’s be honest.  Unless we keep an Oprah-style gratitude journal, we need that nudge.

Sometimes that nudge reminds us to be grateful to those who have been “like” a mother to us.  Yes, there is a card for that, but more important, the understanding that biology is not the only criterion for motherhood.   Sometimes we’re lucky enough to have other women in our lives – role models, mentors – who provide an alternate perspective, additional support, minus the guilt and the groundings.  I have been fortunate to have two such women in my life.

The first was the chairman of the English department at my former university.  While I was in graduate school, I sent her a letter of introduction and my vita just in case there was a position available for someone who was ABD (All But Dissertation).  Predictably, I received a “thanks, but no thanks” response.  And then, two weeks later, I got an unexpected phone call.  Apologizing for any inconvenience, she asked if I was still interested.  I jumped at the chance.  Unbeknownst to me, she had me in mind to fill the recently vacant Renaissance position, but I first had to transform that ABD into a PhD.   I had completed three chapters of my dissertation in a record six weeks, and now I took the summer off and completed the final three chapters in another record six weeks.

Not only did I teach all things Shakespeare and his friends, she trusted me to develop courses that would attract students other than English majors to our classes.  To that end, I created six new literature courses as well as several writing courses that morphed into the only writing major at a Houston university.

She retired soon after I arrived – too soon – but we continue to be friends.  We meet for lunch every few months, and conversations resume as if we’ve never been apart.  When I left our university, she and her husband provided invaluable support and advice.  She still supports my work and attends my research presentations.  I often say I want to be her when I grow up.  She is effortlessly beautiful, with a deep voice reminiscent of Lauren Bacall.  She used to live on Shakespeare Road.  I was always envious of that address.   Better yet, she shares a birthday with him – April 23rd.  But best of all?  Her maiden name was Hamlet.  I used to tease that she was lucky her parents hadn’t named her Ophelia!

I learned much from her – enough to become chairman of the department years later.

The second woman who influenced me was a spry senior citizen who lived in a nearby retirement community.  She had been principal of the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts for many years and had chosen that particular facility because of its proximity to a university and its young people.  She attended every performance and every lecture, and endowed a scholarship for deserving music students, earning the title Distinguished Mentor Emeritus.  She even enrolled in classes, earning a Master of Liberal Arts and an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters.   

She and her husband were music ministers at their church, where she played the organ for 35 years.  On the occasion of her church’s 60th anniversary, she was invited to play the “Toccata,” from the 5th Symphony by Charles Widor.  She was in her 80s.  She was more tenacious than many half her age.  Her former student was the pastor of a church on the tiny island of Unalaska, 800 miles southwest of Anchorage with, as she described it, “the shortest runway in North America.”  She had researched and selected an Ibach piano for the Unalaska United Methodist Church, and he invited her to witness the laying of the cornerstone and play the new piano for the church’s dedication.  What he neglected to tell her was that she would be playing “Godspell” for the community musical.  Imagine the mistress of the “Toccata” playing a rock opera.

We met when she brought another senior adult to my English course.  I arrived with some students, and we stood at the door to listen as this white-haired lady mesmerized the class with a charming introduction of who she was and how she was connected to the university.  When she noticed me and the other students, she waved us in and said to me, “Come on in, sweetie, and have a seat.”  The class roared with laughter.  They’d never really thought of me as “sweetie.”

That was the beginning of a long and beautiful friendship.  I’m not certain that she knew at that moment how special she would be to me and my family, but I don’t really doubt it either.  She had that uncanny ability.

She was lovely and loving but mostly loveable, and – I might add – mischievous.  When my grandsons visited, clearly fascinated by her walker, she would encourage some rolls across the lobby – to the delight and, sometimes, the chagrin of the residents.  And she always had some treats stashed in the seat – not always sugarless, by the way.  When we shopped for birthday and Christmas gifts for the boys, I couldn’t pull toys off the shelves fast enough.  She didn’t much care if the toys had a gajillion pieces or would create a mess.  After all, as their “new yiayia,” her job was to spoil them.  My daughter could clean up after them.

She never had children, so she adopted us, and every young person who was lucky enough to be in her presence.

As close as we were, what neither of us knew, and what I only learned as I composed her obituary, is that her middle name was Irene.  That was my mother’s name.

I loved my mother very much, and I miss her every day.  No one can replace her in my heart.  But I was lucky enough to meet these two women who, in different ways, nurtured me as only a mother can.  My mother would have really liked them.

Ex-NY Senate Leader Skelos, Son Face Corruption Sentence

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NEW YORK — For the second time in less than two weeks, a once-powerful New York politician is facing sentencing in a spate of corruption cases that have roiled Albany.

Former Senate majority leader Dean Skelos, 68, and his son, Adam, 33, are scheduled to appear in federal court in Manhattan on May 12 following convictions last year for extortion, fraud and bribery.

On May 3, another Manhattan Federal judge sentenced former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a Democrat, to 12 years in prison in his bribery case.

At trial, the government had accused the elder Skelos, a Long Island Republican, of strong-arming three companies with a stake in state legislation — a major real estate developer, an environmental technology company and a medical malpractice insurer — into giving his son about $300,000 through consulting work, a no-show job and a payment of $20,000. The scheme unraveled when investigators began recording phone calls between the father and son.

On one tape, jurors heard Adam Skelos, snapping at a supervisor on the no-show job, “Guys like you aren’t fit to shine my shoes.”

In another, the Senator coached his son about the need for discretion amid the state Capital’s ongoing corruption scandal, saying, “Right now we’re in dangerous times, Adam.”

Defense attorneys argued at trial that the tapes and other evidence showed only that Dean Skelos was a devoted father looking out for his son, and that overzealous prosecutors were overreaching.

The defense has taken a similar position in court papers seeking probation instead of prison time for both defendants.

Dean Skelos’ conviction “represents a complete aberration in an otherwise extraordinary and honorable record of service,” the papers say.

“Tragically, the conduct which led to his conviction was fundamentally driven by Dean’s love and concern for his only son … a love that is the hallmark of his family life.”

A government filing demands a stiff sentence near or within advisory guidelines of roughly 12 to 15 years for Dean Skelos and 10 to 12 years for Adam.

The father and son “have fed the public’s worst fears and suspicions about their government: that our elected officials are not looking out for the public good, but instead looking out only for ways to turn the immense power entrusted in them into personal profit,” prosecutors wrote.

“At a time when the public’s trust in their government is at an all-time low, Dean and Adam Skelos, through their conduct and their words, have managed to lower the bar even further.”

Skelos and Silver were among a group dubbed the “Three Men in a Room” in Albany, a nod to the longstanding practice of legislative leaders and the Governor negotiating key bills behind closed doors.

They were the highest-ranking of the more than 30 lawmakers have left office facing criminal charges or allegations of ethical misconduct since 2000.

(TOM HAYS)


MMA Costume Showcase For Katrantzou

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NEW YORK– The Costume Institute’s spring exhibition, Manus x Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) opened on May 5 and runs through August 14.

The exhibition opening was celebrated  at the museum’s Costume Institute Benefit, also known as the Met Gala. Co-chairing the event were British actor Idris Elba, designer Jonathan Ive, singer Taylor Swift, and Vogue Editor-in-Chief Anna Wintour. Fashion designers Nicolas Ghesquière, Karl Lagerfeld, and Miuccia Prada served as Honorary Chairs.

The event is The Costume Institute’s main source of annual funding. Presented in the Museum’s Robert Lehman Wing and Anna Wintour Costume Center, the exhibition explores the impact of new technology on fashion and how designers use both the handmade and the machine-made in the creating haute couture and avant-garde ready-to-wear clothing.

“Fashion and technology are inextricably connected, more so now than ever before,” said MMA CEO and Director Thomas P. Campbell.

“It is therefore timely to examine the roles that the handmade and the machine-made have played in the creative process. Often presented as oppositional, this exhibition proposes a new view in which the hand and the machine are mutual and equal protagonists.”

“Traditionally, the distinction between the haute couture and prêt-à-porter was based on the handmade and the machine-made, but recently this distinction has become increasingly blurred as both disciplines have embraced the practices and techniques of the other,” said Andrew Bolton, Curator of The Costume Institute.

“Manus x Machina will challenge the conventions of the hand/machine dichotomy, and propose a new paradigm germane to our age of digital technology.”

The red carpet sparkled with celebrities in silver metallics, including Cindy Crawford, Lady Gaga, and Nicole Kidman. Emma Watson, Bee Shaffer, and Zoe Saldana were among the guests wearing gowns with trains trailing dramatically on the museum steps. Claire Danes lit up the red carpet in an organza and fiber optic gown by Zac Posen.

MARY KATRANZOU

Alongside fashion icons of previous centuries like Charles James and Coco Chanel, young designers from around the world have works on display in the exhibition, including Greek fashion designer Mary Katrantzou.

Born in Athens to an interior designer mother and father in textile design, Katrantzou seemed destined for a career in design. She studied architecture at the Rhode Island School of Design and then transferred to London’s Central Saint Martin’s College of Art and Design for her BA in textile design and her fashion MA.

She then turned her focus on prints and womenswear. Having sold prints to designer Bill Blass while still studying fashion, Katrantzou managed to build her portfolio and by the time she graduated, she had created her signature style.

Her designs are available in over 200 stores worldwide including US retailers Barneys and Neiman Marcus. Her collection available at Topshop sold out within days in 2011. In 2014, she began a collaboration with Adidas on clothing and footwear.

With a focus on the way prints can alter the shape of a woman’s body, Katrantzou’s designs regularly appear on the red carpet.

Among the famous women who have donned her designs, First Lady Michelle Obama, Taylor Swift, and Alicia Vikander picked up her Critics Choice Award for Best Supporting Actress in a dress from the Mary Katrantzou Spring Summer 2016 collection.

Dean Skelos, Ex-NY Senate leader gets 5 years in prison for corruption

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TOM HAYS, Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — A once-powerful New York politician convicted of using his position as Senate majority leader to pressure companies to provide hundreds of thousands of dollars for his son was sentenced Thursday to five years in prison, the latest in a spate of corruption cases that have roiled Albany.

The sentence for Dean Skelos was significantly lower than prosecutors had asked for, and the judge noted that the dollar value in the case “pales in comparison” to that of New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, who was sentenced to 12 years in prison in his bribery case this month.

But, U.S. District Judge Kimba Wood told Skelos: “The effect of your crime has much in common with him.” She calculated the total dollar amount loss of his crime at $680,120, and she fined him $500,000.

Skelos‘ son, Adam, was due to be sentenced later Thursday. Both were convicted last year of extortion, fraud and bribery.

The dynamics of their father-son relationship took center stage at the sentencing hearing.

Wood interrupted attorney G. Robert Gage as he spoke on behalf of the Long Island Republican to ask why the father did not reach out to his many friends to help find his son a job rather than use his position to extort companies.

“I wish I could answer that question,” Gage said. “I certainly wish it had not happened.”

Dean Skelos, 68, told the judge that the convictions had destroyed his reputation and asked for leniency for his son.

“It is heartbreaking to stand before you,” he told the judge. “Somewhere along the way my judgment became clouded.”

The son said he was deeply embarrassed by his actions and regretted what he had done. He choked up as he spoke about his relationship with his father.

“I love him more than anyone in the world,” Adam Skelos, 33, said as his father wiped his own eyes.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Masimore said it didn’t matter that the father and the son were blinded by their love for each other when they committed their crimes. He said that would be like robbing a bank and then saying it was done for the benefit of the family.

“It is a sad day for the state of New York and the people of New York as well,” Masimore said. “Dean Skelos knew better. He knew better than to do this.”

Prosecutors said in court papers that the father and son sought more than $760,000 in extortion payments, bribes and gratuities and ultimately succeeded in obtaining more than $334,000 to line their family’s pockets.

At trial, the government had accused the elder Skelos of strong-arming three companies with a stake in state legislation — a major real estate developer, an environmental technology company and a medical malpractice insurer — into giving his son about $300,000 through consulting work, a no-show job and a payment of $20,000. The scheme unraveled when investigators began recording phone calls between the father and son.

On one tape, jurors heard Adam Skelos snapping at a supervisor on the no-show job and saying, “Guys like you aren’t fit to shine my shoes.” In another, the senator coached his son about the need for discretion amid the state capital’s ongoing corruption scandal, saying, “Right now we’re in dangerous times, Adam.”

Defense attorneys argued at trial that the tapes and other evidence showed only that Dean Skelos was a devoted father looking out for his son and that overzealous prosecutors were overreaching. The defense took a similar position in court papers seeking probation instead of prison time for both defendants.

A government filing had demanded a stiff sentence near or within advisory guidelines of roughly 12 to 15 years for Dean Skelos and 10 to 12 years for Adam.

The father and son “have fed the public’s worst fears and suspicions about their government: that our elected officials are not looking out for the public good, but instead looking out only for ways to turn the immense power entrusted in them into personal profit,” prosecutors wrote. “At a time when the public’s trust in their government is at an all-time low, Dean and Adam Skelos, through their conduct and their words, have managed to lower the bar even further.”

Skelos and Silver were among a group dubbed the “three men in a room” in Albany, a nod to the long-standing practice of legislative leaders and the governor negotiating key bills behind closed doors. They were the highest ranking of the more than 30 lawmakers who have left office facing criminal charges or allegations of ethical misconduct since 2000.

 

Astoria Street Conamed for the Late Demetris Kastanas

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ASTORIA – The conaming of 31st Avenue between Steinway Street and 41st Street for the late Demetris Kastanas took place on May 7 under overcast skies. The event honored the Greek-born Kastanas who founded the National Greek Television program in 1975, then expanded it into its own channel in 1987. Eseis Magazine was also founded by Kastanas to cover issues affecting the Greek community.

Kastanas’ program was a staple in Greek-American homes for decades when weekend visits to Yiayia’s house always included watching Kastanas. For many, Kastanas’ program and later cable channel were a bridge to the homeland offering news and entertainment in the years before the internet and YouTube have made our world so much smaller. He was helped the fundraising efforts of a number of charities, including the Greek Children’s Cancer Fund.

The street conaming event was attended by Kastanas’ family members, including his widow, Nomiki, son George, daughter Matina, granddaughter Maria, son-in-law Michael Siderakis, as well as several dignitaries. New York City Council Member Costa Constantinides, Assemblymember Aravella Simotas, His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios, Consul of Greece Costas Koutras, Consul of Cyprus Vasilis Phillipou, President of the Federation of Hellenic Societies Petros Galatoulas were all present and expressed their appreciation and thoughts on Kastanas’ life and legacy.

Archbishop Demetrios offered a blessing and noted that Kastanas’ legacy as a staunch supporter of the Greek Orthodox faith and Hellenism continues through his family and that his presence during these times is missed.

Constantinides said, “Demetris Kastanas helped promote Hellenism and Democratic values throughout his life. We honor him because he served as a great example of civic engagement. As the founder of the first Greek-language channel, he made news and entertainment accessible to Greek-Americans throughout our city and our country. We are proud to commemorate Kastanas’ contribution to our city with this street co-naming.”

State Senator Michael Gianaris, who was unable to attend, released this statement, “There is not a single Greek-American in New York whose life has not been touched by Demetris Kastanas. I have fond memories of watching his Saturday afternoon television show with my grandmother when I was a child, as it was the center of the Greek community at that time. It is an honor to continue his legacy through the addition of Demetris Kastanas Way right here in Astoria.”

Simotas spoke about her own personal memories, “I have such fond memories of my time visiting his station to express my best wishes to his listeners for the holidays and special occasions, both as a young student and in my current role representing our Astoria community. I am honored to be a part of this ceremony, renaming a street for this special person, right here in Astoria, which so many Greeks have called home.” She went onto say that she would be forever grateful for Kastanas’ support in the early days of her political career.

Nomiki Kastanas was moved by the event, and spoke with emotion, “I am so pleased, proud, and deeply humbled by this street co-naming honoring my husband, and although we miss him deeply, it gives us inner peace knowing that all his years of hard work and sacrifice have been vindicated, recognized, and appreciated.”

The event concluded with the unveiling of the street sign Demetris Kastanas Way and a presentation of a replica to the family members. Following the event, a reception for family and friends was held at Cavo.

Seeing Pergamon, Hellenistic Kingdoms 

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Pergamon and the Hellenistic Kingdoms of the Ancient World opened at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) on April 18 and runs through July 17.

The exhibition covers the art and artistry of the Hellenistic era, the time period after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC until the suicide of the Egyptian queen Kleopatra VII (the famous “Cleopatra”), in 30 BC. Hellenistic art, once dismissed as decadent, has recently received more attention from scholars and archaeologists excavating Hellenistic sites.

The reevaluation of artwork that remained relevant and influential across the Roam Empire for more than 300 years is long overdue.

The artifacts on view provide exquisite examples of the scope of Hellenistic art, from intricate jewelry and mosaics to lifelike portrait busts and large-scale statues, the attention to detail is remarkable. The wealthy elites of the time commissioned works of beauty to decorate their homes.

Skilled artisans crafted glasses, ceramics, and other everyday objects influenced by the Classical Greek design and Eastern cultures that Alexander’s conquests brought together.

Clean lines and elaborate decoration both found expression in Hellenistic art, demonstrating the skill of artisans in workshops across the Hellenistic world.

The exhibition brings a forgotten, or rather neglected, era to life. The striking bronze portrait bust of Ptolemy II Philadelphus whose extensive royal patronage helped establish Alexandria with its lighthouse, museum, and library as one of the greatest cities in the Hellenistic world, seems about to speak to you, as one museum-goer suggested.

Busts of Epikouros, Antisthenes, and Karneades, three leading Athenian philosophers whose writings were studied by Pergamene intellectuals offers a glimpse into past and into the philosophical ideas that captivated the minds of the people.

The survival of many of the artifacts in the exhibition is due to the Romans collecting Hellenistic art around the 1st century BC. The demand at that time for Greek art, mostly from the workshops in Athens, was so high, Rome soon became a new center for Hellenistic art with Greek craftsmen migrating there and establishing a thriving art market.

Artisans in workshops in Rhodes, Kos, and Asia Minor also produced fine works of art for export throughout the Roman Empire. Some of the artifacts on display were preserved under the ash that covered Pompeii and Herculaneum in the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD and then excavated in 18th Century.

Others were pulled from the sea floor in underwater excavations of ancient shipwrecks including the famous Antikythera shipwreck. Video of recent underwater excavations at the Antikythera site is also on display in the exhibition.

With works from the MMA’s own collection and from museums in Athens, Thessaloniki, Kalymnos, Naples, the Vatican, Berlin, Paris, Morocco, and Tunisia, the exhibition provides a unique opportunity to view the art of Pergamon and the Hellenistic kingdoms in one location that would otherwise require a lifetime of travel to accomplish. One enthusiastic art-lover observed, this exhibition is “not to be missed.”

Those interested in attending the exhibition are advised to visit during the week to avoid the weekend crowds. Visitors from around the world are flocking to see the Hellenistic art on display.

One couple from China remarked on the wonderful artifacts, the impressive sculptures in the round inviting the viewer to see the work from all angles, and how they had not learned about Greek and Roman mythology or much at all about Western culture in school, but now travel extensively just to view the art inspired by Greece and its culture.

They were particularly fascinated by the fact that there are, “so many different versions of the myths.” Tourists from France, Spain, and across the United States all expressed their admiration for Hellenistic art. One Greek-American couple noted that they had seen a few of the works in Athens, but would have had to travel to Berlin to see much of the art from Pergamon. One-third of all the artwork in the exhibition is from the Pergamon Museum in Berlin.

Essential to our understanding of the legacy of Hellenistic art is the realization that there were no classical models for whole areas of Greek imagery during the Augustan period of Rome, only the Hellenistic ones were available, especially for representations of Dionysos and his followers, the Bacchantes, and the nude Aphrodite.

For representations of battles, sculptors relied on the royal Attalid monuments with the Hellenistic models influencing Imperial Roman art for centuries. The rediscovery of Hellenistic art also inspired later artistic movements during the Renaissance and Baroque era.

Part of the exhibition’s related programming, a two-day symposium, Art of the Hellenistic Kingdoms: From Pergamon to Rome, held on May 4 and 5, offered a more in-depth look at the legacy of Hellenistic art. Renowned scholars from across the globe presented new scholarship on the art history and archeology of the Hellenistic era.

On the first day of the symposium, The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Director and CEO Thomas P. Campbell offered his welcoming remarks followed by the introduction to the event by Dorothee Dzwonnek, Secretary General, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) and Carlos A. Picón, Curator in Charge, Department of Greek and Roman Art at The Met.

Among the scholars, Andreas Scholl, Director, Collection of Classical Antiquities, The National Museums in Berlin, Germany presented Monumental — Impressive — Unique: Hellenistic Art and Architecture in the Restored Pergamon Museum.

Kiki Karoglou, Assistant Curator, Department of Greek and Roman Art, at The Met offered her work on An Early Hellenistic Votive Statuette in The Met: Alexander-Dionysos Melanaigis, Olga Palagia, Professor of Classical Archaeology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece presented Pergamene Reflections in the Sanctuary of Diana at Nemi.

The second day of the symposium focused on the decorative arts of the Hellenistic kingdoms. Christine Kondoleon, George and Margo Behrakis Senior Curator of Greek and Roman Art, Department of Art of the Ancient World, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, presented Poets, Performers, and Riddles in Hellenistic Mosaics.

Accompanying the exhibition, the gift shop offers souvenirs including books, scarves, statues, and hand-hammered gold jewelry designed by Fotini Liami from Thessaloniki.

The catalog of the exhibition, Pergamon and the Hellenistic Kingdoms of the Ancient World by Carlos A. Picón, Curator in Charge, and Seán Hemingway, Curator in the MMA’s Department of Greek and Roman Art, is also available.

Feeding the 5,000 in Union Square

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With so many people starving in the world, wasting food is a growing problem in developed countries around the world.

In the United States, charities like City Harvest attempt to remedy the problem through food drives and programs in partnership with various groups, collecting food and distributing it to those in need. News reports of food waste by local supermarkets and chain restaurants only reveal a small portion of the problem.

Recent research has revealed that the United States spends $218 billion a year growing, processing, and transporting food that is never eaten. Up to 63 million tons of perfectly edible food ends up in American landfills each year – a troubling number from a resource and greenhouse emissions perspective, but all the more galling in light of the roughly 49 million Americans who live in food insecure households, not knowing where their next meal is coming from.

In efforts to shed light on this critical issue and its solutions, Feedback, an environmental non-profit organization, based in London, dedicated to ending food waste at every level of the food system, held the opening Feeding the 5,000 event of its US campaign, with support from The Rockefeller Foundation and in partnership with a coalition of more than 40 like-minded organizations and chefs, to “Take food waste off the menu.”

Greek-born Niki Charalampopoulou, Managing Director of Feedback, brought the organization and the event to our attention at The National Herald. In an interview with TNH, she noted the successful events held in Athens and Thessaloniki and the need to bring attention to this global problem. Charalampopoulou earned her Masters at the London School of Economics in the Department of Geography and Environment, and joined Feedback in 2011 managing the design, organization, and delivery of Feedback’s campaigns, including Feeding the 5000. She noted that many restaurant owners would like to reduce waste and donate food rather than throw it away, but often don’t know where to begin. Creating partnerships is an important aspect of Feedback’s mission to end food waste.

In a festive atmosphere with music and a few people dressed as green beans, the Feeding the 5000 event in Union Square provided 5,000 members of the public with a free feast, made entirely from fresh, top-quality ingredients that would have otherwise been wasted. The tasty result was a ratatouille or vegetable stew with salad and a specially made bread, the recipe developed by Drexel University’s Food Lab, on the side. The celebratory banquet, supported by top food tastemakers such as chef Dan Barber, chef Jason Weiner, chef Evan Hanczor, was prepared in the kitchens of Great Performances Catering and Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen and furnished an additional 5,000 meals to City Harvest’s network of local food banks and soup kitchens, plus another 1,000 meals for the Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen.

Tristram Stuart, founder of Feedback, said that Barber, chef and co-owner of Blue Hill, was one of the first chefs Feedback reached out to about the New York event, and he supplied 300 nut press cookies, made from the leftover pulp after making almond milk, for the event. Stuart went on to thank all those in attendance. Also present, Jilly Stephens, Executive Director of City Harvest, who spoke about the organization’s efforts to feed the hungry throughout the five boroughs of New York since its founding in 1982. Previous Feeding the 5,000 events held in Athens, Thessaloniki, Paris, Dublin, Milan, and Brussels, and other European cities have served over 170,000 meals since Feedback began the project in 2009.

“Worldwide, there is growing recognition of the colossal problem of avoidable and unnecessary food waste. Thankfully, there is also a growing awareness of the menu of delicious solutions that exist to tackle it,” said Stuart. “Feeding the 5000 events are designed to celebrate these efforts while simultaneously empowering the general public to make informed decisions about buying and using food, and to demand change from the food industry. Supermarkets in particular must recognize that it’s no longer acceptable to discard food in dumpsters and cause farmers to waste crops while people go hungry. It’s up to us, the public, to recognize that every forkful, trip to the fridge, or visit to a grocery store is an opportunity to take a stand against food waste.”

To tackle the food waste problem, Feedback has suggested that “US supermarkets and manufacturers should agree between themselves, without delay, to a single uniform date labeling system for the whole nation to replace the confusing “best if used by,” “sell by,” “expires on,” and other labels that lead to consumers to unknowingly throw out good food. Supermarkets should sell “ugly” fruit and vegetables and stop causing farmers and suppliers to waste perfectly good food on account of overly strict cosmetic buying policies. Supermarkets and major manufacturers should measure and report precisely how much food they currently waste, as hiding the problem hinders the solutions. Supermarkets and food retailers should make all unsold, surplus, fit-for-consumption food available to organizations that can put it to good use by feeding people, rather than just discarding it.”

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