XpatAthens

XpatAthens

Friday, 27 February 2015 16:05

New Novel “Sunsets in Oia”

A dazzling remote island, delectable food, soulful music, steamy romance and life-changing experiences – this sounds like the making of a remarkable vacation retreat. And it can all be enjoyed within the pages of Sunsets in Oia. Now, readers everywhere can escape their everyday lives and travel along with exciting characters as they explore a real-to-life location.

The debut novel by Canadian writer Sheila Busteed, “Sunsets in Oia” follows Selene Doherty, whose excitement from the successful tour with her band is cut short when she learns that her parents were killed in the Athens riots. After the funeral, she escapes to her bequeathed summer home on the island of Santorini to recover from the tragedy. She is haunted. The loss of her family leaves her with a feeling of disconnectedness that is unshakable.

But a chance reunion with a man from her past brings new romance – and hope. Drawing strength as he helps her get in touch with her roots, Selene begins the journey to redefine her life.

“Sunsets in Oia” offers a snapshot of a summer, blending vibrant characters, enduring culture, vivid scenery and impactful themes – plus a bit of erotica – that will leave readers cheering, “Opa!”

“Sunsets in Oia” is for sale through the FriesenPress Bookstore and will soon be available from other fine retailers, including Chapters Indigo, Barnes & Noble, Amazon, Google, iTunes, Kindle, Kobo and Nook, among others.

Author Sheila Busteed, 28, is a freelance writer, teacher, journalist, photographer and designer who possesses a deep connection to music. Originally from Tecumseh, Ontario, Busteed is an avid traveler, and the creation of “Sunsets in Oia” took her back to the island of Santorini for a writing retreat. After nearly a decade in Canada’s capital, Busteed moved to South Korea to begin a new career as an English teacher. She spends much of her spare time writing, traveling and learning about her newly adopted home.

By Anastasios Papapostolou

Greek Reporter

Thursday, 30 November 2017 07:00

Greek Culture Shock

“Ftou ftou ftou”…the old lady in the supermarket had just spat at me three times. OK, not literally, but I’d been helping this little old lady all swaddled up in black to pack up her shopping. “Efharisto copella” she proclaimed [“Thank you girl”], and then made an obvious spitting noise in my direction followed by a hand flick towards my face. To say I was in shock is an understatement…I’d barely been in the country a month and was attempting to adjust to the idiosyncrasies of Greek culture—I didn’t realise one of them would be being met with a slightly aggressive act after my act of kindness!

“That’s a good thing, don’t worry!” laughed my Greek friend over coffee that evening. “You helped her, she thought you were beautiful for doing this so she gives you a negative symbol to ward off any jealousy that may come to you as a result of your kind nature.” It was the first time I’d heard that being spat was a compliment—first time for everything I guess.

“Hadn’t we better order another coffee?” I enquired. My Greek friend snorted and patted my knee.

“No need. We can sit here for three hours with just one cup if we so require” my friend patted my knee reassuringly. I glanced around: the middle-aged couple in the corner had been there when we came in, over an hour ago, and I’d not seen the waiter approach them once. That was another difference: people spending hours relaxing over coffee with no pressure to buy, buy, buy.

Greece isn’t just full of lovely cultural differences. There are things that I still find difficult to understand or cope with, even after 4 years of living here. I’ll never understand the “no-one tells me what to do” mentality that pervades every aspect of society. Examples of this include not wearing seatbelts in the car or helmets on their heads on motorbikes. Despite the fact that these laws are made to help protect people in the event of an accident, the fact is, it’s a law hence it must be disobeyed. I always wear my seatbelt in taxis and once rode in the back of one where the driver became offended I wore it! I tried to explain it isn’t necessarily his driving I am insulting, but we have no control over other drivers, so I want to be safe! Long silence.

“You have right copella” he proclaimed in his pidgin English. “Apo pou ise?” [“where are you from?] When he found out I was British, he nodded sagely as if everything made sense. Almost an ‘Of course.’

Then there’s the smoking in bars and cafes. I’m not actually sure if people aren’t supposed to smoke in bars or not, but they do. OK, not all places allow it, but the majority do. It’s my one huge bug bearer: no matter how late I come home at night, I have to have a shower and wash my hair to wash the smoke away.

Overall I love this country. Seeing men, old and young, embracing when they meet or leave each other is refreshing…it’s natural. People know how to just ‘be’ in Greece, and this country has helped me to follow that trend. Take the rough with the smooth: soon you’ll be embracing the culture of your country and acting like a native (but I do still wear my seatbelt in cars).

By Bex (Rebecca Hall)
http://www.lifebeyondbordersblog.com/

As originally seen on: http://www.expatsblog.com/contests/402/expat-culture-shock-greece 

Have a story to tell? Send it to us at ideas@xpatathens.com.

 

Monday, 30 December 2019 07:00

New Year Traditions In Greece

New Year or ‘Protohronia’ is one of the most anticipated holidays and Greeks celebrate it extensively with thunderous jubilance. There are several New Year traditions in Greece and all of them are very interesting in their own aspect. Extensive fire work shows are arranged all over the country in different cities, as well as live music concerts and festivities. January 1 is not just New Year's Day in Greece, but also St. Basil's Day - the name day of Vasilis and Vasiliki. Here are a few of the different New Years traditions in Greece:

Vasilopita

On New Year’s Day in Greece, families get together for a big feast and it is on this day that St. Basil or Agios Vasilis delivers his gifts to children. It is the day that the traditional ‘Vasilopita’ is cut - a celebratory cake dedicated to St. Basil that is cut for good fortune.

Playing Cards

As New Years is considered as an enormously auspicious day with lots of good fortunes related to it, so it is the day when many Greeks engage in playing cards. Card playing or rolling the dice happen to be a custom in the country as the Greeks consider it to be lucky and look forward to the new year ahead with good fortune.

Carol Singing

People sing the New Year Carols. The children visit the houses in the neighborhood one after another and sing the "Kalanda" and wish New Year to everyone. It is also the practice to gift the children with money on the New Year Day.

The 'Podariko' Tradition

The first custom to take place with the advent of the New Year in Greece is called ‘podariko’ which is the Greek equivalent to the Northern English and Scottish ‘first foot’ tradition. According to Greek tradition the first person to enter a house on New Year’s Day brings either good luck or bad luck to the household. To this day many hosts keep the tradition alive by specially selecting the person who enters first into their house.

Hanging A Squill Bulb Or Onion

The Greeks hang bulbs of squill or onion on their front door on New Year’s Eve. This tradition is believed to date back to the times of the celebrated 6th century Greek thinker, Pythagoras. These plants can grow fast and survive when uprooted; as such, Greeks have designated bulbs of squill to symbolize growth and regeneration. After the New Year sets in, the the bulb is taken inside and preserved for the rest of the year.



To read the article in full, please visit: 123newyear.com

Friday, 27 February 2015 15:52

Wines & Ruins On Two Wheels

Greek wineries and biking in the countryside where traffic is sparse are two elements that make the Cycling 4 Wine events an entertaining way to spend a Sunday.  I participated in the most recent ride this past October, 2014 in Nemea, one of Greece’s premier wine regions, located about an hour and a half drive from Athens in the Peloponnese peninsula.

The Nemea and Attika regions have so many wineries that Cycling 4 Wine’s organizer, Themistokles Nicoletopoulos, is able to create new routes each year bringing cyclists and vinticulturists together.  Themos has a connoisseur’s knowledge of fine indigenous wines and appreciates an elegant bicycle, like his Bianchi which he dubbed Pegasus. 

This year 210 cyclists participated in the Nemea ride, most coming by their own car.    For twenty euros the car-less crowd (I, for one) were transferred to Nemea by a coach rigged with a two-tiered trailer holding the passengers’ bicycles.   

From 10:00 am to 4:00 pm, participants rode at their own pace from winery to winery following arrows spray painted on the road to show the turns.  You can also download an app to your GPS or iPhone that maps the route.   This year’s mileage was 42 kilometers (26 miles) with long flat stretches enhanced by two hills rising to 415 meters (1361 feet). 

Nemea has an ancient history of wine making.   One of its most popular and oldest varieties is the Agiorgitiko, a deep dark red wine whose grape vines, legend has it, were stained by the blood of the Nemean lion slewed by Hercules as one of his Twelve Labors.  We were treated to an exquisite Agiorgitiko at the incomparable Pappaioannou Estate whose organic grapes have been cultivated by the family since 1876.   At Domain Rapani we tasted the exotic dry white wine known as Moschofilero whose ideal terrain is the high plateaus of Nemea.  At the Nemea Wine Cooperative, founded in 1937, we sampled Malagousia, a white wine with citrus and peach characteristics, which was rescued from extinction in 1983 by a Halkidiki oenologist.  The twenty euro entry fee included a buffet dinner at the Cooperative.  

There were four places in ancient Greece where athletic events were held every four years: Ancient Olympia, Delphi, Isthmia and Nemea.  The most exciting feature of this year’s Cycling 4 Wine was biking to Ancient Nemea for a private tour with Dr. Stephen Miller, a retired archaeology professor from UCLA Berkeley, who has been studying and digging at the site since 1973.   It was akin to touring Mycenae with Heinrich Schliemann!   Dr. Miller walked forty of us through the grounds and the museum explaining the history, telling rich stories and pointing out delightful aspects, such as the graffiti in the long spectacular tunnel leading to the stadium.   

Starting in 1994, Dr. Miller helped launch the Revived Nemea Games held every four years with sports and music and dance similar to the ancient Games.  Anyone eight years and older can run in the foot race competitions in the stadium, 90 meters in length.  Nowadays participants wear short white togas rather than compete naked as the original athletes did.   Just as in the past, winners are crowned with a wreath of wild celery.   The next Revived Nemea Games are scheduled for June 11, 2016 where a 7.50 kilometer race, “The Footsteps of Herakles," will begin at the Temple of Herakles in Kleonai and end in the Nemea stadium.  

The organizers of the Revived Games state that their aim is to reproduce the spirit of the original Games which sought to substitute athletic competition for war.   Coincidentally, that same spirit of camaraderie and brotherhood is present in Cycling 4 Wine events, too, where riders gleefully pedal along rural roads flanked with vineyards and raise their wine glasses in a series of toasts at each winery on the itinerary.  

By Colleen Mcguire
Managing Director of cyclegreece.gr

Friday, 27 February 2015 15:50

Video Of Antikythera Shipwreck Treasures

A new video of the Antikythera ancient shipwreck has been released by kithera.gr showing the impressive underwater findings. The video is seven minutes long and presents all important information regarding the findings so far, along with the historical facts pertaining to the ancient shipwreck, one of Greece’s most important archaeological findings.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The riches of the surrounding area are described in detail and all the pictures, reports, facts, graphics and animation are combined in a convenient and entertaining way.

The Antikythera shipwreck in the Greek Aegean Sea is a world-famous underwater archaeological site revealed in 1900 when researchers discovered an incredible mechanical device, now known as the Antikythera mechanism, which dates back more than 2,000 years. Archaeologists believe that there are many other important artifacts to be discovered within the Antikythera shipwreck.

For more information, please visit greekreporter.com

By Philip Chrysopoulos

Friday, 27 February 2015 15:48

Athens' First Cemetery

“In the midst of life we are in death”. How strongly that line rings true as you leave the noise and bustle of the city and step through the gates of Athens First Cemetery. Although physically so much a part of central Athens, the cemetery seems cut off and remote; a calming oasis or distant, peaceful island.

I think of it as Athens ‘secret garden’, its shady pathways green and full of surprising beauty.

First opened in 1837, the cemetery has many of the country’s major historical figures buried in its extensive grounds. Heroes of the Greek Revolution, politicians, poets, artists, intellectuals and shipping magnates all have tombs and memorials here. Melina Mercouri, Andreas Papandreou, Aliki Vouyouklaki, Odysseas Elytis, George Seferis and Sofia Bellou are just some of the well-known twentieth century names that are interred within its boundaries. Many foreigners are buried here, too, and it’s possible to find some illustrious names from the nineteenth century such as Heinrich Schliemann, Ernst Ziller and Sir Richard Church. (British General fought with the Greek army during the Greek Revolution and was later elected to Greek parliament)

Take a few hours to wander round the well-tended walkways and you’ll find a collection of some of the most eclectic funerary sculpture anywhere. Touchingly, many of the tombstones are very personal. A scout hat marks the grave of the founder of the boy scouts movement in Greece, Masonic symbols, ships, books, animals, even an airplane…each portraying the aesthetic and interests of the departed.

Some of the finest examples of nineteenth and twentieth century Greek sculpture are on display and one of the most famous monuments is the Sleeping Maiden.  This touching and beautiful work by sculptor Yiannoulis Halepas was created for the tomb of Sofia Afentaki and, to me, seems to encapsulate the faraway, otherworldly feel of the cemetery through a figure that represents death as an eternal dreamless sleep.

A walk through Athens First Cemetery would probably not be top on anybody’s “must see” list but take my advice and visit as it is a fascinating and emotional experience that can offer a deeper understanding of this city and it’s inhabitants.

www.athensliving.net

Friday, 27 February 2015 15:47

Picnic In Athens

Athens is often described as not having 'green space', but believe it or not there are many beautiful green corners around the city. All of them are lovely for a spring walk and just perfect for a picnic! Parks, forests, as well as the Riviera, provide a quick city escape. Here are some of our favourite spots for nature walks and afternoon picnics in Athens.

 

Park at the Skopeftirio of Kaisariani

Paved ways into the grass, benches and fences, bicycle lanes and a playground for the kids alternate with a beautiful café should you lack or have forgotten something behind. The park is open on a 24-hour basis.

Environmental Park “Antonis Tritsis”

A huge park (1.200.000m²) encompassing ponds, canals, a rich flora and a refuge of hundreds of species of birds and mammals will surely provide for relaxing time, trekking, jogging, biking and even horseback riding. Cafés and snack bars are also available.

Lycabettus Hill

Walk to the top of the beautiful hill of downtown Athens, or take the funicular from Ploutarchou Street in the area of Kolonaki. See the city of Athens from above and enjoy a light bite on one of the wooden tables under the trees.

Philopappou Hill

It is the common name of the Hill of the Muses. Paved walks through the pine trees lead you all the way to the top of the hill where you will admire the monument to Gaius Julius (2nd century BC) and the breathtaking view to the city, as well as the Acropolis, almost at eye-level with the monument. Remember that the main entrance to the hill’s area starts right across the main entrance to the Acropolis.

Attica Park (Galatsi area)

Sports facilities, playgrounds, an outdoors cinema, many trees of all kinds, gazebos with tables in them, and even a cave make up an enjoyable scenery.

Syngrou Estate

Being the favourite oasis of the residents of the northern suburbs of the city, the green-clad and flower-scented estate “hides” treasures to be discovered: the unique in Greece neo-gothic Orthodox Church of St Andrew and the mansion of the Syngrou family, designed by Ernst Moritz Theodor Ziller.

A little further out…

Athens is blessed with beautiful green slopes. Mt Ymittos, Mt Parnitha and Mt Penteli welcome friends and families, photography aficionados, and relaxation seekers alike for picnics and nature activities.

If you prefer the seaside, head south to the gorgeous Athens Riviera. Walk barefoot in the sand, picnic on the beach and listen to the sea breeze.

 

Source: visitgreece.gr

Friday, 27 February 2015 15:40

Balcony Life In Athens

For days now, my friend has been telling me about the fat Greek man in the string vest opposite her apartment. She wakes up to him being yelled at by his wife and today I received the following from her: "What a wake up call, seeing the old fat guy in his y fronts on the balcony across from me first thing in the morn...!" Which got us both thinking about Balcony Life in Athens. You see being a city, balconies become the 'gardens of the home.' Even in the country, people don't often live in houses and live in flats - thus the balcony becomes a great extension of the home.

Me? I have the odd Aloe Vera plant on mine, the air conditioning pipe leaking into a dead plant, a storage cupboard for my hoover and my washing can quite frequently be found drying on it.

On the subject of washing, some people extend their washing machines onto it - others drag their living room furniture out there in the summer, turning it inwards to watch TV from the balcony... often Cd's can be found dangling off the (almost always) green awning that serves as both a cover from the sun and a cover from prying eyes (no "Friends" spying on you from their balcony across the way!), in order to reflect the sun and scare away the ever present pigeons.

Breakfast and dinner is often served out there - in fact, as mentioned: it is a real extension of the home. It helps if you've a big area and are not facing the main road, but even then it's great to utilise your balcony. Unless you live on the ground floor or in the basement, rarely does an Athenian home not have a balcony.

And if your even 'luckier,' like my friend, you can witness and hear everyday life going on around you - but maybe I draw the line at semi naked fat old Greek men in y-fronts, the Greek version of Ugly Naked Guy!

By Bex

lifebeyondbordersblog.com
Friday, 27 February 2015 15:31

Oct 28th is Ochi Day

On October 28th, expect to encounter parades and other celebrations commemorating Ochi Day, the anniversary of General Ioannis Metaxas' flat denial to the Italians' request for free passage to invade Greece. In October, 1940, Italy, backed by Hitler, wanted to occupy Greece; Metaxas simply responded "Ochi!" - "No!" in Greek. It was a "No!" that brought Greece into the war on the Allied side; for a time, Greece was Britain's only ally against Hitler.

Greece not only did not give Mussolini's forces free passage, they seized the offensive and drove them back through most of Albania.

Some historians credit the Greeks' fierce resistance to the later German paratrooper landings during the Battle of Crete with convincing Hitler that such attacks cost too many German lives. The from-the-air invasion of Crete was the last attempt by the Nazis to use this technique, and the extra resources required to subdue Greece drained and distracted the Third Reich from its efforts on other fronts.

Had Metaxas not said "No!", World War II might well have lasted considerably longer. One theory suggests that had Greece agreed to surrender without resistance, Hitler would have been able to invade Russia in spring, rather than making his disastrous attempt to take it in winter. Western nations, always happy to credit ancient Greece with the development of democracy, may owe modern Greece an equal but usually unrecognized debt for helping to preserve democracy against its enemies during World War II.

Was Metaxa really that succinct? Probably not - but that's the way the story has been passed down. He also probably responded in French.

On Ochi Day, all major cities offer a military parade, and many Greek Orthodox churches will be holding special services. Coastal towns may have naval parades or other celebrations on the waterfront.

By deTraci Regula

gogreece.about.com

Friday, 27 February 2015 15:27

Short Film: The Greek Secret

Arianna Huffington, George Stephanopoulos, Bob Costas and Greek Orthodox Archbishop of America Demetrios are among the nationally-known Greek-Americans who appear in a video titled “The Greek Secret” produced by the Washington Oxi Day Foundation. 

The video suggests that the secret to extraordinary Hellenic excellence — personal and as people — may spring from the uniquely Greek word philotimo.

 

The video features interviews with 29 leading Hellenes who each share their definition of a concept that only the Greek language has a word to describe: philotimo. Those interviewed defined philotimo as not only the “love of honor” but also as finding pleasure in sacrificing for: the good of others; doing the right thing; improving themselves and their families; and seeking to achieve respect and love from others.

 

“While it has not been released to the public until now, we gave a small number of Foundation supporters a sneak peek at this video over the weekend. It has already received over 10,000 views. Our prediction that this video can be transformational for our community and may help the Greek brand may be coming true,” said Oxi Day Foundation Founder and President Andrew Manatos.

 

To read more, please visit greekreporter.com

By Anastasios Papapostolou

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