Monday, July 20, 2015

Temenos 2015--Epilogue






Temenos 2015—The Epilogue

Just six short days have passed since that final morning swim in the Mediterranean, where an azure sea laps the long stretch of white sand on Mavrovouni beach in Finikounda.

In the last week, Greece met some sort of accommodation with its European creditors and it appears that another (short-term) solution to that nation’s dire financial morass is at hand. But as with all things capitalism, there is a severe price to pay for the bailout—the German dearth of compassion extends, for example, to the new proposal for taxing basic food items at 23 percent, further cuts in pension payouts (already eviscerated after five years of austerity), and the "stripping" of Greece’s national assets (E50 billion worth) by the bankers, who hold all the cards. On the hopeful side, Greece’s own banks are set to reopen and there is some suggestion that Greece’s unsustainable debt load and repayment schedule might be revisited. But economic growth and optimism will remain in short supply for years to come.

Are there a few choice words to describe Greeks themselves? A disparate vocabulary comes to mind: anti-authoritarian, resistant, resilient, magnanimous, generous (even in the face of want and desolation). The compare-and-contrast with their overseers to the norht is also illustrative: Greece (intimate, neighborly), Germany (peevish, faceless, arrogant, mean-spirited)…

Many of the very things that make Greece special and “different” (the Ottoman-bazaar, the independence of bakeries, casualness, to name just two examples) will end forever because of the economic-cultural changes being foisted on the nation. But, surely, many things need to be changed (opening professions, streamlining the bureacracy) and so there may be some kind of silver lining. But only time and history will reveal a happy ending, if one ever exists.

At least the Greeks know how to throw a party. Paying the bill is another matter.

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Now, a large continent and two oceans away—one warm, clear, and inviting, the other cold, richly diverse, and opaque—a cool fog rolls off the Bay of Fundy, an across this quiet peninsula. It is the North Atlantic’s retort to Greece’s endless summer. The skies here in Maine are ashen grey, the vibrant, ticking pasture is wet under foot, the days are noticeably shorter, the air temperature thirty degrees cooler than in lovely Hellas. In short, this Downeast home is a world away from the southwestern Peloponnese—but every bit as beautiful, intriguing, and “home” in its own way. One thing, however, remains abundantly clear and perfectly obvious: Maine is not Messinia, and Messinia is not Maine. Each place has its special charm, its catalog of positives and negatives, but they are very very different in a multitude of ways: in spirit, in temperament, in lifeways.

And yet the longing for Greece, that burning ember of desire, cannot be easily extinguished.


So, in parting, here is a paean of photos….until next year: Temenos 2016.







Saturday, July 11, 2015

The Dance Festival



Dance Is Life—and Life Is Dance

There is surely nothing more emblematic of the unbridled joy of Greek life than dance. So it is with some sadness at departure, but greater joy in the certain knowledge of returning, that Temenos 2015 concludes with the annual Finikounda dance festival. Held on Saturday evening in the village amphitheater, on the edge of the fishing harbor, people come from the many villages miles around to celebrate, to bask in a shared heritage…and to simply have fun.

The dancers, the sons and daughters of this proud village, basking in the unique movement and garb of rural Greece, expertly performed these complex dances, which represent the islands, the mainland, northern Epirus and Macedonia, and—of course—the Peloponnese.  This is not a show of ossified tradition; rather it is a living thing, a part of the Greek continuum to which this blog is partly dedicated.




Included here is a small sampling of photos and videos, including the concluding dances,which brought the audience on stage with the dancers. Your correspondent, with his three right feet, was duly conscripted into the dance circle. Wine, cheese, and sweets were served by women carrying baskets and the salutation (chronia polla, “many years!”) was repeated again and again.

The dance includes the very young and the old. The joy on people’s faces must be seen up close to be fully appreciated.





Greece may have lost much of itself since becoming part of Europe in the early 1980s. And the crisis of the last six years, ongoing and unresolved, has sapped some of the spirit of this proud nation of 10 million souls—but it has hardly extinguished the pride of place, the self-awareness, the historical and cultural legacy, the richness of language, foodways, and long-held skills of survival. There will always be an elemental Greekness, a quality that sets this land apart from the rest of the world.


Opa!!



Celebrations

Now a roadside planted in oleander, cypress, and citrus trees

150 meter stone wall--inch by inch, rock by rock

Back to harvest our olives in November? 

loft stairs

rudimentary kitchen--a work in progress

What? Can't I  help you?

Brush fire near our house






Every Day Is a Celebration

The days count down and soon Jonathan will head back to Maine—via Munich and Boston, and then an eight-hour drive Downeast. Not counting the drive to Athens on Monday, the journey will take upwards of thirty hours.

This is an exciting (or nerve-wracking) time for Greece. Here in Finikounda it’s a special weekend. The church is the repository of a very special icon, a long-ago gift from the monastic community of Mount Athos, in far northern Greece. The icon of the Virgin Mary is said to have miraculous qualities, and this is the weekend that it is celebrated. People were bussed in from all over Greece; there are ecclesiastical, political, and military representatives in residence for the weekend celebration; and the community band of nearby Pylos lead the procession—after the church service—through the village on Saturday morning.

If divine intervention doesn't protect the icon, a phalanx of men and women toting M-16s will do the trick.

The celebrations continue tonight with the annual dance festival, which is held in the village amphitheater, located near the fishing harbor. Photos to come.








At 10 a.m. Jonathan arrived in the village center with his camera, ready to document the morning procession. He was waylayed by Petros, the Albanian stonemason (who has done work on the house) and promptly seated for a treat of spit-roasted port and local wine--a local breakfast treat. While the women and the devout crowded the suffocatingly hot church, the men sat outside, eating port and drinking wine. But when the icon procession begins, they all stand reverently, cross themselves, and follow the procession through the village.




The Final (Final) Deadline

Greece’s existential dance with its creditors draws toward a conclusion of some sort or other—no one is really sure what that might be. Will it be Catastrophe 2.2 or Resolution 1.1? Like all things Greek, it will only be known with certainty at the eleventh hour. In the meantime, bring on the roast pork, finish last year’s wine, and get ready to dance! Did we mention swim...and swim again? and again?



Both domestically and internationally, the Greek default negotiations (for no better phrase as this point) is entirely perilous for all concerned. As an aside, Puerto Rico has defaulted on it’s debt (at $70 billion, just a quarter of Greece’s), mighty China is stumbling, the weaker eurozone nations—Portugal, Spain, Ireland, and Italy—remain highly attuned to the situation, as their fate is also questionable. There is a rising chorus of voices, both inside Europe and beyond, urging Chancellor Merkel and her utterly joyless finance minister, Wolfgang Schauble, to lighten. Each some pork, drink some wine--take your clothes off Angie, and go for a swim--like most of your countryfolk here in Messinia. It would be a sight to behold.

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And yet life goes on—to use a tired phrase for which there is no better. The festivals, the music, the song and dance: Isn't this what really matters? After all, it is summer in Greece. There is time enough to worry for tomorrow--maybe tomorrow?--but today is a day of celebration.


It is perhaps apt that Jonathan arrived at the apex of the crisis and will leave at the conclusion of the crisis. Or during a deeper crisis. Either there will accommodation (and relief) or no accommodation--and a bonafide Greek tragedy will ensue, the likes of this country has not seen since the (first) German occupation.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Slow-speed goodbye






Jonathan was invited to his friends Dimitri and Yioryia’s house for dinner last night, on the road that leads to the village of Lahanada, with their balcony’s incredible view of Finikounda and islands beyond.

Dimitri spoke of his recent trip to Italy, as an emissary from Messinia to the ethnically Greek community that is located an hour from Naples. In 1532, a group of thirty families escaped the incredibly oppressive turkokratia, the Ottoman occupation of Greece, which was contested by the bloodthirsty bey named Barbarossa—an Egyptian warlord sent by the sultan to control his Peloponnesian holdings.

These families followed on the heels—that is, about 1,800 years later—of a much larger group of Messinians who, escaping the Spartan domination, took residence in the “heel” of Italy and in Sicily. Even today, both communities speak an Ionic dialect of Greek known in Italy as Grexica, and self-identify as Greek Italians—although in the case of the latter group, the pope abolished the ancient Orthodox faith there and forced conversions to Catholicism.

The latter group was given land in exchange for feilty to the Italian king, and served as soldiers and warriors, of which they had ample pedigree—having endured nearly two millenia of constant combat, first against the Spartans in antiquity and then against the Ottoman Turks during the late Middle Ages.

In the 1860s these Greeks, who had lived independently in Italy for more than two hundred years, joined forces with the nascent Italian liberation movement (under Gharibaldi) and for this they incurred the wrath of the Vatican, which forbid the practice of Orthodox Christianity.

Coming full circle, a schooner-load of these Italian Greeks returned to Messinia, and are settled today in a village near the site of ancient Messene. It is a fantastic history, told so well by Jonathan’s friend Dimitri, as a point of pride and another example of the long arc of Greek history.

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Common sense did not prevail when he left his friends’ house at midnight. He ducked into Finikounda and there he stayed until nearly 3:30, engaged in lively conversation with his friend G. and a German couple. The subject got “stuck” on the European bailout of Greece, the stalled negotiations, the steep precipice on which Greece now hangs by mere fingertips. G. maintained that the Europeans generally—and the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, in particular—are “fascists.” The term was thrown around loosely and was calmly refuted by the German couple, nice people with a gentle bearing and a logical rebuttal. But G. would have none of it. “They are all fascists, and that is my opinion.” The harsh words notwithstanding, it was a friendly conversation among people who have known each another for many years. But it was surely a futile effort at finding that holy common ground.

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A run at 8:00 (on just three and half hours of sleep), some pulling of rocks—an endless task that is making a world of difference to the little orchard’s character—and then, following a lead, Jonathan found Vaso and Panayioti—what else could a male be named in this province, beside “Dimitri”?—who raise bees and sell honey.

A short introduction and J. was soon on receiving end of the typically copious Messinian hospitality: given coffee, cold water, a large piece of comb honey—and sent packing with three one-kilo tins of honey (one orange blossom, one thyme, and one wild flower), a bottle of wine, and a bag of garden vegetables, including a fantastic white eggplant shaped like a UFO.



Panayioti keeps his bees in various locations, including (of great interest to Jonathan) on the slopes of Mount Taygetos (elevation: 8200 feet), east of the Gulf of Messinia and west of Sparta. The conversation led to his interest in tackling this peak, which is the plan for next year.

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It was 90 degrees by 9 a.m., and in the high nineties when he arrived at his favorite beach spot, just beyond the dunes. The sensation of extreme heat followed by the relief of an ocean immersion is indescribably pleasant.

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A Foreign Story

Jonathan’s American friend describes this area as the “United Nations of Finikounda” and it is an apt description. Nearly every European nationality is represented in this corner of the Peloponnese. Some are long-time visitors, often multigenerational, while many others live here full-time or periodically throughout the year in houses, some new, some renovated—on the hilltops (Germans and Dutch) or tucked into the folds of olive groves (most everyone else). Here is the best guess for represented nationalities, in order of magnitude: Germans, Austrians, Dutch, English, Swiss, Italian, French, Russian…and a tiny smattering of Americans.



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Jonathan took his English friends P. and D. out to dinner in Vasilitsi, a village about 15 kilometers up the road from his little spitaki. None of them had been there before, so it was a shared adventure. It is a large cluster of houses on a hillside, with a broad view across the Bay of Messinia toward Mount Taygetos, and an incredible church located on the village heights..

Nikos’s taverna serves exceptional, traditional food—including delicacies such as zuccini flowers stuffed with rice, baked Messinian cheese, and an array of main courses that would satisfy the most discriminating gastrinome.


In an act of self-preservation and common sense, Jonathan was home before 1 a.m., the earliest night, by far, in six weeks. A chance to rest up for the final three days of “goodbyes.”

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

How Hot Is Hot?





A rose is a rose--even Lucia's rose



How Hot?

Mid-summer approaches in the eastern Mediterranean and it is so hot that, lacking a sunshade on the open beach at noon, one risks utter annhiliation through dessication by around 2 p.m. Hydration and shade are critical components in daily living. More importantly, any strenuous outdoor activities—gardening, construction, and in Jonathan’s Herculean task, piling up small mountains of rock from the recently plowed field—are best accomplished in the early morning. But coming home from the village at 3 a.m. and waking at 7 a.m., day in and day out, takes its toll. And so the siesta, the quiet time or more likely full-scale napping that is part and parcel of afternoons (between 3:00 and 6:00), is nothing less an imperative restorative, the basic tactic for survival in the summer heat. One is revitalized—and another impossibly late night is viable.

This part of Greece—Messenia—is said to enjoy 320+ days of sunshine per year and among the hottest temperatures in all of Europe. One fools around with summer heat at one’s own peril.

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A few days ago Jonathan had the great pleasure of playing music, just after siesta hour, with his daughter Lucia’s friend Christos. A self-taught bouzouki player, in a few short years he has become a virtuoso—a walking catalog of memorized tunes from all regions of Greece and islands. (Not unrelated, he and his older brother are fantastic dancers, and will take part in the Finikounda’s regional dance festival which will be held on Saturday. The rhythms of traditional Greeke dance—meters such as 9/8 and 5/4—are largely unfamiliar to Western ears. Concentration and practice, like most things in life, are essential for mastery.)

Christos showed Jonathan some basic bouzouki techniques and the two played (bouzouki and guitar, and also guitar and drum—illustrative of the meter) for an hour or so.

When it was Jonathan’s turn to call the tune, he chose (what else!) a few Beatles songs. “Norwegian Wood,” accompanied by bass drum, somehow worked its way toward the 9/8 rhythm but still held together. “Octopuses Garden” engendered a likely question: “Yianni, I have speared octopus most of my life. They do not have gardens. They do not live in the shade.”

Jonathan was sufficiently inspired to dash to Kalamata the next day to buy a collection of rembetika sheet music. Rembetitka, often referred to as the “Greek blues,” arrived in Greece in the early 1920s from Asia Minor after the “catastrophe” that saw the forced exchange of Greek and Turkish populations. It is, most famously, the music of the the hashish dens of those earlier times, a genre of sorrow, loss, and longing—and it has a decidedly “Eastern” feel, both rhythmically and poetically.

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Just Don’t Call Me “Late for Supper”

His given name notwithstanding, Jonathan’s Greek name is Ioannis or Yiannis. Why then is it that, despite possessing Greek language skills that are credible, if occasionally imperfect, his village friends insist on referring to him as “Tson” (i.e., John)? Names die hard, and “Tson” has stuck.

The German “Miracle”

In all of the debates leading up to and since the Greek referendum—the primary topic in Greece these days, as it bears on Greece’s very survival if not membership in the European Union—one fact is lost on many analysts. That fact is the myth of the “German miracle.” The myth goes like this: after the catastrophe of World War II, Germany rose from the ashes through hard work and the steady Lutheran ethic (largely true) and became the powerhouse that it is today. The myth contends, by contrast, that the “lazy Greeks,” being Mediterranean people with vastly different temperaments than their northern counterparts, have taken a different course. And they alone are to blame for their current predicament.

This myth runs head on into the reality of European history. Germany’s recovery and dominance was hardly a miracle, but a fact of happy circumstance: in 1953 all of Germany prewar debt (substantially more than Greece’s currect debt) was largely forgiven by the international banking establishment, and their infrastructure was rebuilt courtesy of the Marshall Plan—this after slaughering, raping, and pillaging half of Europe. Then German industry, through the guestworker program, enjoyed the benefits of very cheap industrial labor (mostly Greek and Turkish; more recently eastern German). The moralizing, the tough talk, the veiled threats—it is all a bit maddening and disconnected from reality. And the hyprocrisy is not lost on Greeks and on many of their European champions, but is utterly lost on the government of Angela Merkel.

No doubt, Germans are exceedingly hardworking and frugal people, who have charted a highly productive course and built for themselves a vibrant, diversified economy. The Germans that Jonathan has met in Finikounda (the largest expat community) are, by and large, very nice people…if often a touch arrogant (an opinion widely held by other Europeans, particularly the British) and highly exclusive, living in mountaintop villas, the preeminent “gated communities” in this area. But let’s not cast too wide a net—not all Americans are imbecilic sods.

But this history has a very real bearing on the current debt negotiations—and is a topic that is happily avoided by Frau Merkel and her finance miniser Schaubel, who are the first to castigate the Greeks as being the sole architects of their current financial dilemma, which is now (officially) categorized as a “sovereign default.” But as everyone knows, it takes two to tangle (debtor and creditor) and in the happy days, Germany was more than happy to sell Greece useless attack submarines (now rusting away on land) at phenomenally high interest rates.

Germany now demands, somewhat self-servingly, that Greek hotels on the islands raise their value added tax (VAT) to a whopping 23 percent. The Greeks have balked, as such a move will only further undercut the all-important Greek tourism sector—the only bright light that Greece has to offer itself and its creditors. What is not reported is that, by and large, German corporations own most of the hotels along Turkey’s nearby Mediterranean coastline, where the VAT is, at their insistence, kept at a mere 6 percent. This may sound like economic goobleygook, but it fits nicely into a pattern of double-standards and misrepresentation of reality.

It Takes a Village

One of Jonathan’s Finikounda village friends asked recently, “So what exactly have you been doing these past five weeks?” The question was largely rhetorical and the subtext read: “Why aren’t you partying with me every night?” Jonathan paused and calculated his answer.

His days in the southern Peloponnese have passed with alarming speed, that much is true, but they have been far from unproductive. The daily routine goes something like this:

After having slept all of four hours (bed by 3 a.m., up by 7 a.m.) he wakes, drinks a hot Nescafe, and runs anywhere from 5 to 15 kilometers. His run usually takes him through the maze of agricultural roads—there is a nice ethic of open land for everyone—and down the mountain toward Loutsa beach. There he changes into his “birthday suit” and swims a parallel course along the ocean, sometimes as much as a mile of slow crawling, then finds his clothes (note: grateful that they have no been eaten by a goat) and runs back up the mountain. It is a rigorous routine that is good for burning the previous evening’s vast intact of calories.






While it’s still relatively cool (today is was 90 by 10 a.m.) he engages in several house- or property-related tasks—painting, urethaning, digging out boulders and stacking them as a nascent perimeter wall—and then, if ambition remains, copyedits for a spell, before heading up to the local cafeneion, where he listens to the old men complain about their government (and everyone else’s). Then he heads home and packs up for the de jure “beach time” (11:00 to 2:00), after which the sancrosact siesta hour(s) approaches.

Reinvigorated by several hours of serious sleep, he uses the cooler late afternoon to: work more in the pasture; play guitar; read; and plan the night ahead. One or another person calls about a planned taverna night, which usually begins at 11 p.m. and continues until the wee morning.

And there goes another day!

Last night he sat along on the porch at 3 a.m., the buzz of cicadas finally reduced to a murmur, and watched the horizon for meteors and the incredible display of stars. Far enough from Finikounda’s bright lights, the night sky in this mountain village is exceptioa;, not unlike that of eastern Maine.

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What Is Mediterranean Culture?

To speak broadly of “Mediterranean Culture” would be erroneous: life in Provence, France, is surely different than that of Sicily or of the southern Peloponnese. And yet there is a commonality.

What does it involve? There is family and friends, food and drink, the rhythms of agriculture and harvest, song and dance, and a vast horizon of sights, smells, and sounds.

It is pointless—if not hazardous—to compare places one truly loves. In Jonathan’s case, that is this incredible place, Messinia, and his own home in Downeast Maine. What one offers, the other lacks.

And yet, life in the eastern Mediterranean is everything that life in Downeast Maine is not—that is: warm, friendly, forgiving, light-hearted, garrulous, socially diverse, culturally rich, poetically deep, and always passionate. Alas, these many charms are in short supply Downeast, for all its beauty, its raw natural splendor, for the few good friends, and the sprinkling of foodways (Whoopie Pies? Fried food?) and culture (NASCAR? Budwieser?).

It is hard to explain—surely it must be lived, experienced firsthand, shared without reservation with those who simply do not know how incredible this place caled Messinia is.

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Above all else, stay hydrated!

Jonathan stumbled down the loft stairs at around 4 a.m. for a big drink of water. On the kitchen counter lay the many gifts of local friends: bottles of wine, bottles of olive oil, bowls of fruit. The local farmers, sensible as they are, recycle the standard 1.5 liter water bottle as a vessel to contain olive oil.


And so, when in the darkness he reached for what he thought was a water bottle, a large swig of olive oil greeted his thirsty mouth. Oh the sensation of warm olive oil against a parched throat in the early dawn!

Monday, July 6, 2015

The Vote Is In---Democracy Wins









And the Vote Is In

As the results from yesterday’s referendum were being counted, the handwringing was transformed into shouts of praise that could be heard from cafeneions and bars and the waterfront. In an overwhelming rejection of austerity (62 percent) Greeks held their heads high. Now the hangover begins.

Greece, the birthplace of democracy—not to mention literature, philosophy, science/technology, medicine, the arts, theater…the list goes on—the first European nation to defeat an Axis army in World War II, a small nation with a big heart and a restless pride…said No to unsustainable debt bondage, No to continued relentless austerity, No domination and oppression. What it is not? It is not a No to Europe. It is not a No to its financial obligations.



To frame it differently: it is Yes to dignity, pride, freedom, and above all else to self-preservation.



In an overwhelming show of national solidarity, the Greek people spoke in one voice in Sunday’s referendum. Their own “Occupy Movement” proved ascendant—for now, at least.

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Central Bank (ECB) sought to make an “example” of Greece, to show what happens when a sovereign nation fails to take its marching orders from internation capital, from the banking and corporate elite. Failure to play by the rules can be fatal, they warned. And it may still be. This is truly a new day for Greece and for all of Europe, the “beginning of the beginning.”

But the unprecedented attempt to topple a freely elected government—a government elected on a promise of easing (not eliminating) austerity—was and remains historic. Greece, for the moment, is the mouse that roared, the David that stood tall against Goliath.




But the banks remained closed. Pensions are not being paid. Supplies of gasoline (and cash in ATMs) are limited and shrinking daily. Tourists are canceling reservations out of fear of “unrest” or of “no food” and other journalistic fabrications.

The consequences of yesterday’s vote remains to be seen. But the message was sent loud and clear: this nation will not be coerced into greater suffering through overt threats.

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Φιλοξενία (filoxenia)

Greeks have a long tradition of expressing hospitality (φιλοξενία/filoxenia= “friend of foreigner”) which dates back to ancient times and is part of continuum like so many elements of life here. Sadly, this honorable tradition has been eroded in recent years, but nowhere is it more alive and utterly vibrant than in Messinia and on the island of Crete.

In that spirit, Jonathan finds himself on the receiving end of daily gifts by local folk—baskets of oranges and lemons, handfuls of tomatoes and cucumbers, bottles of olive oil and wine; or sometimes a simple request shouted from a cafeneion: “Come sit with us, what can we treat you to?”







It is heartwarming, generous, and offered with true grace. It is disconnected from the quid pro quo of the Western tradition. Hospitality in Greece comes from the heart.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

The Referendum and the Thieves




The Referendum and the Thieves

This is the day of the big referendum in Greece, the Yes or No vote about which so many have a slightly tortured conscience—does it mean leaving the EU, abandoning the euro currency, or simply sending a message to the banksters of Europe that “enough is enough”? Like many referendums in the West, on a host of subjects, this one is open to debate. The bottom line is that Greeks have endured five years of misery, and regardless of the outcome that misery will likely not abate anytime soon.

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Who are these elusive thieves, the ones that break into people’s homes and cars? Are they Albanians, Bulgarians, Gypsies? Perhaps Greeks? Maybe even Americans on the prowl? No can say for sure, but thievery generallly and breaking and entering specifically has become epidemic in the past few months.

There is a subtext of racism that exists the world over. In the West it can be discreet, subminal, couched in neutral language with pointed references. Here in Greece it can be overt and damning. Jonathan has met (and become friendly with) all of the aforementioned groups—Gypsies notwithstanding, who are clearly a people apart. A local resident warned him the other night about the “dark people.” They are “bastards,” he said, and “cannot be trusted, not a one of them.” Such language, born of ignorance and malice, along with a deep-seated fear of the Other, grates the soul, consigning humanity to the most primitive of states.

Fifty years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. said (to paraphrase poorly) that there may be a day when we can judge a person by the character of their soul, not the color of their skin. We are still a long way from reaching that mountaintop.

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Rhythms of Local Life

On the greatest pleasures of living in rural Messinia is engaging in the traditional rhythm of life, an essence that is bound up in agricultural cycles, the life of the church (especially panagyria, or religious holidays—both fasts and feasts), and the myriad local traditions and folkways: dance, music, theater. The “real” Greece that Jonathan first witnessed in 1973 is still found here, sometimes right in the open, but often hidden under a rock or in the shadow of an olive tree. The preference, being alone here for a spell, is to avoid the φασαρία (fasaria, or hubbub for no better word) of the tourist haunts and search out the quieter (but not always!) alternatives.







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The Italians Are Here!

As the height of the summer season approaches, one is astounded by just how quiet it is. Merchants, hoteliers, restaurant and café owners are feeling the pinch of reduced tourism—borne of fear (“will we be able to get money?” “Is there food”?) and a lot bad press in Europe. Still, many of the Europeans who “discovered” this special place so many years ago, many with vacation homes on the hillsides with broad views of the Mediterranean, are trickling in. Some families (Austrian, German, Dutch, French, Italians) do have long ties to the area. Some, like the Germans in particular, live isolated existences, in high-walled compounds outside of the towns, learn little Greek, and barely engage with the local people. Others—the Dutch come to mind—with multiple generations having resided here, speak Greek, are often brilliant dancers, and are much loved by the locals.

This morning, in nearby Pylos, Jonathan came across a large Italian family—highly animated and full of laughter and smiles, they seem to fit in seamlessly with the local way of life, with their positively Mediterrranean temperaments and passion for life. They reminded Jonathan, happily, of his wife’s robust Sicilian family. Hearing them chatter away and engage in an incredible array of body language made him smile inside.

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Time to Sleep?

When Jonathan mentions to his Greek friends about his inability to sleep—bed by 3 a.m., up by 7:30, with a one-hour siesta—the response is always the same, one of those quintessentially morbid, but humorous, Greek comments: “Don’t worry, you’ll have plenty of time to sleep when you’re dead.”




Can’t We All Just Get Along?

Some things here, however, are not so very  different than Downeast Maine. Jonathan finds himself navigating contrary social camps. Which is to say, he is caught in the middle of friends and family who can’t stand one another: the cousin who loathes Uncle Yioryio, the brother who won’t speak to sister Panayiota, and so on. He is smack in the middle of internecine squabbles, some going back many years, intersecting neighbors and family members in an arc of mistrust and backbiting. As at home, he avoids all sides, patiently listening to one person berate another’s character and demeanor, without uttering a single word of protest.

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The Final Word on the Referendum


One friend summed it up best this morning when Jonathan asked him, “Did you vote Yes or No?” The reply encapsulates the conflict: “I know that I should vote Yes—as a local businessman it is in my interest to vote Yes. But I will vote No because I have pride and a sense of dignity. Greeks need to stand up and do the right thing. Even if the right thing is quite possibly the wong thing.”

Friday, July 3, 2015

Won't You Please Lighten Up?

Let’s Get Serious—But Not Too Serious

Rising early yesterday morning—with four hours of sleep under his pillow—Jonathan dashed to Kalamata to price pull-out couches at the Praktiker, a German home supply store, arriving just before the doors opened. At 8:15 a.m., the heat was already building, even in a metaphorical sense. A group of middle-aged Greeks and a few pensioners were engaged in a lively conversation on the subject of (what else) Greece’s default and pending nationwide referendum, which is scheduled for Sunday, July 5.

The debate between two sixty-something, would-be store customers was heated and angry. The man was a communist, the woman obviously not, and their respective “solutions” to the current crisis were are odds, to say the least. Angry, animated body language and diatribes ensued, reminding anyone listening—everyone was listening—of the sharp divide in this country that dates back to the post-World War II civil war, a bloody affair that lives in people’s collective memory.

Ordinary Greeks, the 1 percent in the parlance of American politics, have suffered terribly since 2008—cut (or unpaid) salaries and pensions, phenomenallyhigh unemployment, reduced healthcare, police, and public services. The child mortality rate has doubled, the suicide rate (previously the lowest in Europe) has quadrupled, the catalog of misery goes on and one. This was the lenders solution to Greece’s “problems” and the medicine has obviously killed the patient.

In a nation that witnessed a horrendous blood-letting just a generation ago, one can’t help but understand that some fierce disagreement lay just beneath the surface of civil society.

Soon the doors opened and your correspondent was faced with the unlikely prospect of being an American shopping in a German big-box store in Kalamata, Greece, with Country Western music playing through the intercom.

Needless to say, this is a nation of contradictions.

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Jonathan deferred the big-ticket purchases and filled his basket instead with 40 euros worth of useful household items—solar lighting, cleaning supplies, a few hand tools. He then headed to Lidl, the Belgium supermarket chain down the road toward the Messene circle.

There, beside the Roma encampment, groups of gypsies milled about suspiciously. They enter the store in groups, overwhelm the bullet-proofed security, and steal. Plain and simple—they are professional thieves--this is not a slight, simply a fact--an occupation extending back hundreds of years. They also sell fruit and vegetables—a useful ploy for casing the next theft. The women lift their large, colorful dresses, and fill “compartments” (baskets hanging between their legs) with everything from whole chickens to processed foods. It is a truly bizarre scene to witness.

On the road beyond the traffic circle, beautiful dark young gypsy girls, fourteen or fifteen years old, walk the highway with infants strapped to their hips, begging for money. Gypsy girls are usually married off by age 13 or 14 and are mothers by age 15. They and their offspring learn how to steal and beg at a tender age and thus continue a not-to-proud tradition of their forebears.

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Greeks—one would be hard-pressed to find a people with a great sense of self-awareness and a sharpened notion of their own cultural heritage and historical legacy. There is a remarkable continuity of thinking, a manner of discourse, and an indefatigible pride that extends back 3,000 years. There is a word for it, of course—Greeks have a word for just about anything, but this one is rife with meaning: φιλότιμο (filotimo). It is translatable, for sure, but if you ask a Greek to define filotimo, the answer may take several minutes. Or hours. Or generations.

Filotimo, for no better definition, is honor, dignity, pride, or “face.” And in many ways, filotimo is precisely the thing that drives today’s internal debate.

Greece’s referendum on Sunday (July 5th—aka, our wedding anniversary!) is in one obvious sense a Yes or No on continued austerity in exchange for the European and International Monetary Fund (IMF) pipeline of financial support. It keeps the banks afloat, which keeps the pension system afloat, and enables the most basic of governement services.

But this is more than a vote on austerity, or on Greece’s membership in the European Union (EU)—it has taken on existential qualities that are unimaginable for most of the Western world. With that said, a large swath of the electorate believes that Greece is damned if they do, damned if they don’t, and a Yes vote will simply kick the proverbial can down the road for another three months when the next interest payment on its 300 euro debt—just the interest payment—comes do. The 7.2 billion that the IMF is withholding goes to pay back the IMF, not to help Greeks in any meaningful way. It is the ultimate Ponzi scheme directed against a sovereign nation, a credit card trap of enormous proportions.

Many Westerners are caught in an entirely unfair “they deserve it” manner of thinking, utterly incapable of putting themselves in the shoes of ordinary Greeks. Greece owes 300 billion in sovereign debt; the U.S., by comparison, owes $17 trillion. This makes Greece’s debt sound like an accounting error, by comparison. Should Americans, or Western Europeans for that matter, endure what the Greeks have enduring, real civil unrest would ensue. Americans take note: this reality is coming to a theater near you...or your grandchildren!

Some say that this is Greece’s most important decision since raising the banner of liberation against the Ottoman Turks in 1821 (the modern nation rose from the ashes of that victory in 1832). Yet for others, it harks back 2,500 years to the fateful decision by 200 brave Spartan warriors to defend the pass at Thermopolae against the barbarian (Persian) hordes, invading form the East.

In this view, today’s barbarians are the IMF, the European Central Bank, and, in the opinion of many, the German government. (A special note for the righteous reader: Germany’s vastly larger debt, accumulated from two world wars, was totally expunged in 1953, a mere eight years after slaughtering half of Europe. Fair is fair!). Swords and spears and shields are engaged in bloody combat against credit default swaps, interest payments, and the noose of the corrupt financial system that oppresses so many.

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Tomorrow is July 4th, a mythological holiday in which Americans proclaim their largely imagined independence. The mythology runs head-on into the reality of Wall Street politics (best represented by the broad spectrum of presidential aspirants—Bernie Sanders notwithstanding), corporate malfeasance, and America’s entrenched two-party system that is often confused with “democracy.” The plutocracy that is modern America bears little resemblance to the lofty aspirations of that nation’s founding fathers.

One is reminded these days of Thomas Paine’s admonition: America needs a revolution every 15 years in order to stay true to its democratic values.

The differences between Greece and America are large indeed. At least the Greeks are prepared to take their stand at Thermopolae regardless of the cost. Americans, by contrast, are napping at the wheel.

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On the subject politics, which is hardly the point of this family blog, Jonathan is obliged to respond to several friends’ worrisome messages from the homefront. One friend, perhaps taking his cue from America’s fine tradition of yellow journalism, recently read that “civil unrest” was imminent in Greece. CNN, Fox News, the New York Times, take your pick: these are the propaganda organs that leave Americans in a place of utter darkness and ignorance. (This follows in a long and proud tradition: Americans have a 200+ year history of being the least informed people on the planet.) Another friend suggested that Jonathan “escape” Greece while he still can, as if this is Saigon circa 1974, and the last helicopter will soon lift off from the embassy roof.

With all due respect to his friends in the States, should you want “civil unrest” look no further than—Ferguson, Missouri? Miami? New York City? Lest we add Baltimore?

America remains the murder capital of the world. The statistics are stark and frightening, taken from a recent issue of the Economist. A sampling of gun violence (death and injuries) for 2014:

Britain: 56
Holland: 11
Greece: 9
United States: 36, 523

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O.k., it’s time to lighten up. This is Greece, it’s summer, crisis or no crisis, the people of this nation of 10 million—and 17 million well-loved and pampered tourists—can always find a good time. A little parea (company) with a friend at the cafeneion, a swim in the cobalt sea, which is warming nicely, a meal out (or in, owing to the crisis) with family. This is the rhythm of life, this is why people who visit this great country always leave with the determination to return again one day.

Images of Finikounda

Photos taken during Jonathan's morning run--including Finikounda's big beach, the village harbor, and surroundings.