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MEET THE INSPIRATIONAL PHILHELLENE WHO HELPED MAKE CHICAGO’S GREEK INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE A REALITY

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BY APHRODITE KOTROTSIOS, CO-PUBLISHER SPECIAL TO THE HELLENIC NEWS OF AMERICA

Catherine Greenspon, Chief Change Agent of Project Infinite Green, is changing the lives of school children in Greater Chicago, with an after school program she developed. It is a nonprofit organization created to educate public school children for a better and cleaner tomorrow. Project Infinite Green encourages STEM education by taking school children on a journey through U.S. energy sources. What does STEM mean? Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics. “These subjects were gifted to us by the Greeks,” said Catherine.

The beauty of this program is that the children learn from Energy and Business experts. They learn to create clean energy business plans that are feasible, reasonable and sustainable. Currently, one student has created a portable collapsible bio digester prototype for emerging countries. “Unfortunately there are no public sewage systems in place in these countries and the water is contaminated. This is a problem because this is the water that people drink, cook and bath in. This is also a Global Issue! This contaminated water eventually leads into our oceans,” said Catherine. Catherine has partnered with Mariyanna Spyropoulos, President of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District (MWRD) of Greater Chicago. MWRD does something similar to keep their water clean, by filtering out all organic waste and converting it into energy. MWRD under the leadership of Mariyanna Spyropoulos has done wonders for Greater Chicago’s water systems. The children participating in Project Infinite Green have remarkable leaders to look up to and ask for advice for their own projects. Aside from the fact that Catherine has devoted her life to help and inspire children through their development, Catherine was the only Philhellene that made a notable donation to Chicago’s Greek Independence Day Parade. “It’s not the amount that our friend Catherine donated to the parade this year, but the gesture! She was the only Philhellene to make such a donation, and for that we thank her for believing in the Greek Community and what we stand for,” said Bill Mataragas, President of ENOSIS.

greenspon katheryn greenspon IMG_0664

The post MEET THE INSPIRATIONAL PHILHELLENE WHO HELPED MAKE CHICAGO’S GREEK INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE A REALITY appeared first on Hellenic News of America.


The under construction Leounes/ Laconian Museum at UCONN

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Dear friends,
This is the last concrete wall for the under construction Leounes/Laconian Museum completed yesterday.
This wall has two square and three round columns. You can see at the photos the two square but you can not see the three round columns until we remove the forms in about ten days.
This is the front wall people to see walking from the lower level parking lotto the museum and to the theater.
We are making sure the front view of the museum to be impressive dressed with marble art work.
Tomorrow morning complete also the last concrete base for a steel column and after this, in a day with good weather, will finish the concrete floor.
This Saturday and Sunday our plumber Petros Iosifidis will place all underground water and sewer lines.
Together with our Architect Stefanos Nousiopoulos and Structural Engineer Paulos tsakopoulos will make final measurements the steel fabricator needs for the heavy structure which will support an 8,000 SF roof(concrete flat roof).
Best wishes,
Ilias Tomazos

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Traditional Greek Wedding Held through the Streets Leading to a Greek Orthodox Church

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By Catherine Tsounis

 

Eva Constantine of Mattituck, New York and Daniel Fiorentino of Frankfort, New York had a traditional Greek wedding on Saturday, August 20th, 2016. The procession through her neighborhood streets led to the ceremony performed by Rev. Constantine Makrinos at the Transfiguration of Christ Greek Orthodox Church on Breakwater Road, Mattituck. A violinist and a luto musician serenaded the bride from her home with songs such as “I Nyfi Pantrevi” (the bride is getting married). A carriage driven by two horses made their way with music and happiness. This is a tradition celebrated in villages of Cyprus. This is the first time such a wedding procession has been celebrated in the rural hamlet of Mattituck, located on the East End of Long Island. The community was invited to celebrate with champagne immediately following the religious ceremony conclusion on the church grounds. The wedding reception was held at the Vineyards Caterers in Aquebogue, New York. In honor of the groom’s Italian background, guests will be serenaded through dinner by a Frank Sinatra performer.

 

Photo1 (1)

The Bride’s parents are Emanuel and Amal Constantine. Mr. Constantine, a retired businessman, is of Cypriot descent. His father, Thomas, is from Asgata, Cyprus and late mother, Loula was from Kyrenia, occupied Cyprus. The bride’s father is Parish Council Vice-President of the Transfiguration of Christ Church. His grandfather, Haralambos Constantine, was a founder and original member of the Greek-American pioneers who created the first Greek Orthodox Church on the East End in the late 1960’s. Emanuel Constantine is continuing his family tradition of community service. Mrs. Amal Constantine is from Beirut, Lebanon from the Christian community. The groom’s parents, Dennis and Doreen Fiorentino are from Frankfort, New York. Mr. Fiorentino is a landscaping business owner. Mrs. Fiorentino is Franfort village treasurer.

Miss Eva Constantine is a graduate from SUNY Oswego. She received her Master of Science  degree in Teaching Literacy from Touro College. She is currently working as a High School English teacher in Frankfort, New York. Mr. Daniel Fiorentino is a graduate of SUNY Oswego. He is employed by the Frankfort Power and Light Department. The couple will reside in Frankfort, New York.

 

Photo 1 – Bride Eva Constantine, parents and Greek musicians in horse and buggy on the way to church.

Photo 2 Bride Eva constantine

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Review: Criss Angel and The Supernaturalists mesmerize at The Fox Theater SPECIAL

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Mashantucket – On Aug. 27, superstar magician Criss Angel performed with The Supernaturalists at The Fox Theater at the Foxwoods Resort Casino in Connecticut, for an excellent turnout.

The show began with a comedic magic skit with Fifi, and her quest of becoming a showgirl, where she was joined by “The Great Maestro,” who is also known as “The Joker.” “Welcome to my world, The Supernaturalists,” Angel said, via a video greeting on the televised screen. “Prepare to witness the impossible. Are you ready?”

 

Criss Angel s The Supernaturalists

Criss Angel’s ‘The Supernaturalists’
2014 ANNIHILATE…LLC. Angel Productions Worldwide Incorporated

 

He went on to introduce Johnny Dominguez, the dog conjuror, as well as female magician Krystyn, mentalist Banachek, “Magician of the Year” winner Stefan Vanel, close-up magician Adrian Vega (where he was able to get a kernel of corn out of his eye), and Landon Swank, who was able to blow away the competition on America’s Got Talent for 10 episodes, whom he subsequently dubbed as “badass.”

“How are we doing Foxwoods?” Swank asked, prior to sharing that there are 52 cards in a deck, and he asked a random spectacular to select a card, the four of hearts. He was able to retrieve that card that was picked via a neat crossbow act, where the arrow shot that particular card on the dartboard. It was also great to see Swank teleport Harmony on stage with him, and together they performed a neat teleportation act. Finally, Swank made himself disappear after he placed a white cloth on himself.

Krystyn went on to take the stage, as he nailed Houdini’s straight-jacket escape in 30 seconds, while she was up in the air, and Stefan performed an exquisite card manipulation segment, which left everybody in total awe. It was fun The Great Maestro do a parody of Stefan’s manipulation act, which was clever, yet Fifi revealed how The Great Maestro did it, which was also fun to watch, as she poked fun at him.

Banachek made the crowd’s jaws drop with his mind-reading routine, and Dominguez, performed a new and improved dog conjuring act. Angel, through a video screen, described close-up magic as having the dexterity of fingers to manipulate random objects, and the very best close-up magician he could find is Adrian Vega, and rightfully so. He made a woman select a card from a deck, which was the five of hearts, he made her sign it and placed it back in the card. By melting the deck with smoke, he was able to successfully retrieve the signed card for the lady. In addition, Vega was able to put pieces of thread together, all of which he initially ripped up, and he was able to transform four one dollar bills into hundred dollar bills with his impressive sleight of hand techniques.

The Supernaturalists saved the water escape act for last, especially since it was the most dangerous. This time, illusionist Landon Swank performed it, and he was able to have the fans at the edge of their seats the entire time as he was trying to escape the water chamber in full view. Swank deserves a big round of applause for taking the challenge and for delivering this brave and life-threatening demonstration.

Following the intermission, world renowned magician Criss Angel starred in the second portion of the show, where the crowd went absolutely nuts. “Foxwoods. How are we doing?” he asked. “It’s so awesome to be back at our second home. Are you having a good time?” and the answer was a resounding “yes.”

Angel went on to perform his classic demonstration, the “metamorphosis” with Harmony, and it was a major success. “I can’t hear you Foxwoods,” he screamed, prior to revealing that he has a new television on A&E, which is called “Tricked.” He shared that he loves performing at The Fox Theater since it is “cozy and intimate.” As a kid, he would show his mom his tricks 30 times a day, and that’s what helped him get better. Back then, he didn’t have any large screens or lights, and it took him “18 years to become an overnight success.” He did acknowledge that he did have “10 little assistants,” which were his “10 little fingers.” His most fascinating demonstration, was the close-up magic that he performed in front of his spectators’ eyes with the quarters on a table, which he made appear and reappear out of nowhere. If anybody blinked, they would have missed an awesome demonstration. When he was a student in high school, he would perform this trick in the lunchroom, where a classmate of his was convinced that he was not from this planet. His clever response was as follows: “Maybe, I am, from a black star,” and a haunting version of Celldweller’s “It Makes No Difference Who We Are” played in the background, which helped capture the mood and essence of the illusion.

The aforementioned trick made everybody in the audience inquire how he did it, and Angel acknowledged the fact that it took him “years and years of rehearsals.” “In Two,” where he split up Harmony in half, was equally remarkable, yet gruesome for some to watch.

Angel invited all his fans to his after-party at Shine nightclub, following the second show, and he discussed the importance of the September 12 charity event that he is doing at the Luxor Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, for his son, Johnny Crisstopher, who has been battling leukemia, and he is raising money to help make pediatric cancer disappear. He encouraged everybody to go check out his website at Criss Angel HELP, in an effort to donate and help out this great cause, which is so dear to his heart. They are trying to raise one million dollars, where all the money will go towards research and treatment for pediatric cancer.

Angel has many celebrities involved in this cause, including Dee Snider of Twisted Sister, Richie Sambora of Bon Jovi, Flavor Flav, Siegfried & Roy, Tony Orlando and Jerry Lewis, among countless others. Speaking of Snider, Angel directed an acoustic music video for the classic Twisted Sister hit “We’re Not Gonna Take It.”

The Verdict

Overall, “The Supernaturalists” get better with each and every live show, and there is something different every time, to keep things fresh. They were all extremely talented and gifted magicians in their own right. Criss Angel, as always, was in a league of his own, and a master of grand illusions. Seeing Angel perform live at The Fox Theater in the second act was like watching the summer Olympics, and he was our Michael Phelps. They earned five out of five stars.

Photo Credit: Criss Angel publicity photo

The post Review: Criss Angel and The Supernaturalists mesmerize at The Fox Theater SPECIAL appeared first on Hellenic News of America.

EUROPEAN TRAVEL CELEBRATES PEARL ANNIVERSARY

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European Travel is celebrating its 30th year in business. Family owned and operated, we are focused on

detail and perfection. It is our goal, to customize the perfect itinerary for our clients. As part of our

celebration, we have added a luxury line of tours and cruises to our program, along with various other

specialty trips, unique accommodations and VIP services. Maintaining our high quality of customer

service, we are always a phone call away.

Greece and Turkey were the two beautiful destinations we started with 30 years ago. Today, both of these

destinations are popular for their history, culture, geographic location, beaches, hospitality, dining and

more… We have also expanded to other European countries, such as Italy, France, UK, Spain, Switzerland

and Germany.

During our 30 years of service to our community, we also listened to our customers needs and expanded

beyond Europe, to the Caribbean, Mexico, Asia and the Middle East, offering religious tours, leisure trips,

safaris, cruises, accommodations and more, for both individuals and groups.

At European Travel, it is our goal to accommodate each individual’s unique travel needs. For the group

traveler, we offer escorted tours in all destinations. Each tour varying from 3 to 10 days, at 3 to 5 star

accommodations. Each traveler will enjoy transportation in 5 star, air-conditioned coaches and will be

guided by professional, English speaking guides.

For those travelers looking for an individual tour, we are able to customize a tour that can include private or

regular tours, car rental, centrally located accommodations and rail tickets. All of our guides are

professional and knowledgeable. During a private tour, you will have the opportunity to explore more of

the city and focus on their main interests. During a group tour, you will have the opportunity to meet new

people, share their travel experiences and maybe even get some suggestions about a great restaurant or

show.

For those seeking a more relaxing getaway, whether by themselves, as couples or with their families, we

can offer them a range of luxury all- inclusive resorts worldwide where they can enjoy the sandy beaches,

the breathtaking views, the relaxing atmosphere and of course the authentic cuisine.

Let’s not forget the themed tours, such as wine tours, culinary tours, religious tours and shopping tours. If

your clients are looking for a unique experience where they would like to go wine tasting, we can

accommodate your request with our deluxe tours. Looking for a great culinary experience in Europe? We

can take you through the organic farms of Europe, visit the Limoncello factory in Sorrento or visit Agerola

where you can visit one of the local dairies where you can see how their famous cheeses, pasta fior di latte

and caciocavallo are produced.

Religious Tours are always popular both individuals and groups. We can take them through Jerusalem,

where they will have the opportunity to explore the fascinating historic and spectacular cultural sites.

Travel through Turkey, and explore the Steps of St. Paul or the Seven Churches of the Revelation. Why

not go to Greece and visit the different monasteries; or Meteora, A UNESCO World Heritage Site. The

options are endless and European Travel can put it all together.

Our specialized staff has visited each of the destinations we offer and therefore are not only familiar with

the products sold, but can provide suggestions and guidance when necessary. We work hard to set up our

scheduled programs to ensure that our clients who travel abroad from the United States visit the sights and

see the scenery that these destinations are known for. Nonetheless, we also understand that many clients

prefer to discover these fascinating destinations on their own, and therefore we have created extensive FIT

packages as well. With over 150,000 hotel contracted rates available throughout the globe, we give our

clients the upper hand on lower prices and immediate confirmations.

European Travel is committed to our valued clients by providing excellent service and top quality products.

Since we are family owned, we focus on providing our customers with fast, friendly and professional

service. Our passion for travel helps make your dream a reality. We look forward to planning your trip

real soon and hope to exceed your expectations.

The post EUROPEAN TRAVEL CELEBRATES PEARL ANNIVERSARY appeared first on Hellenic News of America.

Paideia/URI Center for Hellenic Studies is Under Great Threat

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Dear Friends,

PAIDEIA needs our attention and real involvement to save the situation so we can be able to perpetuate our Greek Heritage in the future in America.
Please read Mr. Tomazos’ statement below and respond with your donation.
Let’s help those that make history in the U.S.A. and in the Western Hemisphere by preserving the Greek Language, building Greek Orthodox Chapels, Greek Amphitheaters and more.  3 Years ago we were able to collect over 150,000 in pledges within an hour!  It is time to do it again.  I’m sending in my pledge as well.
Thank you for your attention.
Sincerely,
 Paul
Paul Kotrotsios, MBA
Member of the PAIDEIA Committee
Publisher of the Hellenic News of America
Founder of the Hermes Expo and
Past President of the Hellenic American National Council HANC
—-
Dear friends,
As you can see Paideia lawyer is informing us that the hearing at RI Superior Court has been postponed from today to September 14.
Paideia Attorneys in CT and RI are doing excellent work for a few years now and jointly with your care and assistance prevented the demolition of the under construction Center for Hellenic Studies at the University of RI.
Today our legal advisers are asking our help.
Paideia/URI Center for Hellenic Studies is in great danger for demolition and more than ever needs political support but also economic support at this critical month.
The Educational Building “Rodos”, the Chapel of Agios Loukas and the open air Greek theater will be demolished only if we turn our back and dont pay attention to our legal advisers.
Attached please find a Paideia/URI Center for Hellenic Studies pledge form. As you can see the under construction Center needs from you to find pledges. Paideia is not taking money until we have the permission for construction again.
Paideia for URI Center is working for construction loan. Because there is a threat for demolition from the University new administration Paideia can not go for a larger construction loan.
The future of Greek letters and Culture in RI is our hands.
We are confident that one more time the Greeks will prove to all that we never abandon our History, our faith, our culture, our patriotism, our children.
Please forward the attached pledge form to your communities, organizations, relatives, friends and encourage all with their signature in a pledge form to promise a small or a larger amount of money. We need to go in front of the Judge or a RI Political Leader with your love and support.
Please let me know If you would like to come in your area and explain more.  I will be happy and honored to come.
Best wishes to all!
Ilias
 Ilias Tomazos, Director
PAIDEIA Study Abroad Programs in Greece
Microsoft Word - PAIDEIA BUILDING.doc
IMG_2387 IMG_2395 IMG_2379 IMG_2369 IMG_2365 Hellenic Studies Building - URI -6-6-11-1-1

The post Paideia/URI Center for Hellenic Studies is Under Great Threat appeared first on Hellenic News of America.

Criss Angel discusses Criss Angel HELP, charity event for son

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By Markos Papadatos

Las Vegas – Greek American superstar magician Criss Angel took some time from his busy schedule to chat with me about his Sept. 12 event at the Luxor Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.

On Monday, Sept. 12, Angel is bringing together many talented superstar performances in an unforgettable event that benefits pediatric cancer research, treatment and ultimately a cure. 100 percent of every penny donated will go directly to fund pediatric cancer research. “I am very, very excited about it. It is going to be amazing event. It would be great to get people more engaged, because now I am one tenth there,” he said. “I am appealing to the readers to please understand that one child is diagnosed with cancer every two minutes. Cancer is the leading cause of death among children by disease, and it is very much underfunded and it is unequivocally unfair that children live moment to moment dealing with life and death, and many of them have no hope for the future to see their 16th birthday, prom or first kiss, or graduation. We need to band together and work together and support our children because they are the future, and we can make a difference. If everybody goes to Criss Angel HELP and donates one dollar, that can make a big difference. If people wants tickets for the show, that would be amazing.”

This event will include some “amazing” auction items and Angel is willing to give it all for this cause. “These 72 different experiences were created by my friends Jennifer Lopez, Celine Dion, Britney Spears. You can see their shows, meet them and you can bid on all that,” he said. “You can bid on learning the magic that I do in my show, including how I levitate and fly all over the stage. I’m giving away everything because there is not a more important cause than children that are dealing with this horrendous disease.”

He hinted that his son, Johnny Christopher, is going to be at this charity event, and “it’s going to be amazing.”

For the fans, he concluded, “I am grateful for my Loyals from all over the world for supporting my creative vision, my talent and of course, my charity, which is the most important thing. I hope they continue to spread the word about HELP, which is happening this Monday, on Sept. 12. We can all collectively make a difference, because the Loyals are all about love.”

To learn more about Criss Angel’s fundraiser or to donate to save a child’s life, check out his official website.

 

The post Criss Angel discusses Criss Angel HELP, charity event for son appeared first on Hellenic News of America.

In the Dumps with Clinton and Trump By Professor Robert Zaller, Special to the Hellenic News of America

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Last May, the New York Times columnist Charles Blow published an op-ed entitled, “The Election from Hell.”

It’s only gotten worse since then, and there are still weeks to go. Plus the four-year hangover that follows when the balloting is cast, and we wake up to either of the two most undesired and undesirable presidential candidates ever presented to the American electorate.

I’m not saying that Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are indistinguishable. I am saying that each would represent a different disaster for the country. So, it is worth considering how they came to be the offerings of our two major political parties, and what each is likely to represent.

It has been observed that the election of 2016 started out as a popular rebellion against both the Republican and Democratic parties, and in that sense a challenge to the monopoly—nowhere mentioned in the Constitution—they have had over the selection process of candidates for public office, from town councils to the White House, since the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860. The two candidates for the presidency we were about to be offered when the absurdly long nominating contests began in early 2015 were, respectively, Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush, representatives of the two political dynasties that had controlled the White House uninterruptedly between 1988 and 2008, and seemed poised to continue in the latter year until then-Senator Clinton was upended by an unheralded newcomer, Barack Obama.

Dynastic politics are a consequence of two-party systems and the overlapping elites they generate. Twice before the election of George H. W. Bush in 1988 and his son twelve years later, two families had enjoyed multiple presidencies, the Adamses and the Roosevelts. The Kennedy clan had bid fair to become an ever more far-reaching dynasty, with three siblings of the same generation—John, Bobby, and Ted—all bidding for the presidency, the latter two on the basis of the family martyrdom. Even Barbara Bush, the wife of one president and the mother of another, had remarked as Jeb’s campaign was being bruited that two members of one family in the White House were enough. Wiser—and perhaps more lethal—words were never spoken. It’s hard to run for president with your mom against you.

Dynastic systems are close cousins to monarchical ones, and they tend to prevail in countries where democracy is weak or grown sclerotic. Had everything worked out according to plan, we would have had, as in 1992, a Bush against a Clinton. The Bush part of the plan was derailed, though, and the Clinton one nearly so. The Republican “center,” if such a term can be applied to the GOP, failed to hold. The Democratic one did, but narrowly and at cost.

Let us first look, to borrow a phrase from Bertolt Brecht, at the resistible rise of Donald Trump. Jeb Bush, a plausible Republican candidate under different circumstances, had what proved an insuperable personal obstacle: not his mother (who relented, and finally campaigned for him), but his brother, George W., a figure of ridicule whose eight-year presidency, generating two unwinnable wars and a catastrophic depression, had been by general consensus the worst in American history. Jeb gave from the beginning the sense of a man lugging a terrible albatross. Donald Trump, the joke candidate among seventeen presidential contenders—a loud-mouthed casino and real estate mogul turned TV impressario—hung the perfect zinger on Jeb when he described him as “low energy.” It was not only the first of Trump’s many sexual innuendoes and insults, but a perfect hit on Jeb’s underlying embarrassment as a candidate: not only had he been passed over for the family succession in 2000 in favor of his feckless brother, but he now carried the cross of his record. Barbara Bush had correctly intuited that Jeb was likely to be crucified in turn in any election that replayed the horrors of W.’s administration, and Jeb himself, gamely lingering on through a succession of humiliating primary defeats, seemed only too relieved to finally call it quits.

That left the remaining contenderss for the Republican nomination, including senators, governors, and a former House Speaker—what George Will (who has since renounced his membership in the GOP) exulted in as an unusually “deep bench” of candidates. Will didn’t mean to include Donald Trump in this category, although at the same time he didn’t exclude him; Trump was simply a vanity act that would soon disappear. Will was not alone in this belief. No one in the political world took Trump seriously, and it was widely assumed that this included Trump himself, who was thought to be simply trying to leverage his next media venture. This remains a popular interpretation, even at this late date: Trump doesn’t really want to be president, but plans to segue into a career as a right-wing media kingpin and kingmaker with the likes of Roger Ailes as a guru. If Trump loses, this may well be his fallback option. But trust me, folks: he wants to win. He wouldn’t want to spend much time in the stuffy and leaky White House, so much less amenable to his tastes than Trump Tower, but I doubt that anything less than the presidency could sufficiently gratify his outsized ego now. When he says that his instincts for governance are infallible and that he knows more about fighting wars than the military, he means every word.

So, how did Trump win the Republican nomination? In brief, he saw that a significant segment of the Republican electoral base could be detached from the rest of his competitors, and he focused in on this group with laser-like concentration. His target was the white working class that, hived off from their former Democratic patrons by Nixon and his successors and variously dubbed the Silent Majority or Reagan Democrats, had seen its jobs, income, future, and perhaps above all its status eroded by elite policies of job exportation and union-busting that had been embraced from the 1970s on by both parties. The Republicans had pushed these policies most vigorously, while trying to keep working-class voters in the fold by flag-waving, social conservatism, and a carefully cultivated politics of class resentment. After forty years of Rust Belt economic constriction, however, these mostly older white voters were ready for a candidate who told them what they already knew, namely that they’d been had, that neither party represented them, and that they were economically and socially superfluous in an America they no longer recognized—they, the very workers and veterans who had carried the country through two world wars and built the greatest, freest, and most prosperous nation ever seen on earth. This candidate told them, again in a phrase immediately resonant, that he would “make America great again,” and restore their place in it.

In doing this, Donald Trump showed once again how to break the rules. In standard political discourse, America can always be made greater than before, but it is never conceded that it has ceased to be great. Trump told the white working class that it had been shut out of the very prosperity it had built, and America itself thus betrayed. Nothing less than a new revolution would restore it.

What Trump thus did was to declare war on the entire political establishment and the consensus politics that had governed it for nearly fifty years. First and foremost, he had declared war on the Republican Party itself. If he were to be its nominee, it would be on the basis of a hostile takeover. He would owe nothing to its former leaders, and it was they who would have to make peace with him. If they failed to do so, they would be left in the dust—and justly so, since had they not been a party to the Great Betrayal, and had their promises not been the most worthless of all?

Trump was thus breaking Ronald Reagan’s famous Eleventh Commandment: Thou shalt not speak ill of a fellow Republican. Trump spoke ill of them all, and with gleeful insouciance: Marco Rubio was “little,” Carly Fiorina was “ugly,” Ted Cruz was a “liar.” This language not only violated polite convention, but was intended to rip the veneer off political discourse in general, for although politicians indeed lie—some do little else—it’s been considered a little much for candidates to say so about their opponents directly. But Trump recognized no rules, and his language was imported from the no-holds-barred world of reality TV. Audiences loved it, too, whatever they thought of the politics behind it.

Trump’s rhetoric was also part of his overall political strategy. His goal was not only to defeat but to delegitimize his rivals, and in doing so to deliberately trash the party whose nomination he sought. In fact, his candidacy was a pure insurgency, and so required the destruction of the Republican brand. Did Republicans stand for lower taxes, limited government, and militant patriotism? Trump suggested raising taxes, extending government services, and questioning America’s military posture around the globe. Had Republicans long courted Evangelicals with faith-based policies, family values, and opposition to abortion? Trump flaunted his wealth and his marriages, bragged of sexual prowess, and brushed aside abortion. He ignored, in fact, every constituency but his chosen one, white workers, and his pitch to them was that the party that had wooed their votes had left them in the lurch—worse, that it sneered at their culture and snickered at their gullibility. And they followed Trump right out of that party by voting for him. Their votes were not for a Republican candidate for president. They were for Donald Trump, period. Trump had formed, in effect, his own political party, whose single tenet was loyalty to the man who had finally spoken the truth to them.

The conventional wisdom was that Trump, while sheering off a portion of the Republican base, had painted himself into a corner. He might appeal to angry workers, but surely he would repel the Evangelicals whose support was critical to the party’s electoral success? Ted Cruz counted on this, and doubled down on his appeals to the Christian Right. As other candidates faded one by one from the race, though, Cruz made an unhappy discovery: many Evangelicals were also angry workers, and even those who were not suddenly saw pocketbook issues as more important than social ones for the first time in more than a generation. The Carvile rule prevailed; it was about the economy, and after more than forty years of stagnant or declining income, empty pension promises, and communities left to die on the vine, millions of voters were ready to leave the Republican tent and follow the sassy demagogue who channeled their rage and frustration.

When it became apparent in May of this year that Trump would win the Republican nomination, the mainstream media concocted a fictitious narrative about whether Trump and the party establishment would find common ground, which meant in practice that Trump would yield his. Much was made of a summit meeting between Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan, who withheld his endorsement of Trump pending suitable genuflections. Ryan came around finally, only to have Trump ostentatiously withhold his own endorsement of Ryan’s reelection bid in a suddenly contested race. Trump tossed Ryan the bone after a suitable delay, but the point was made: Republicans could run with Trump if they liked, but he would not run with them. If he lost, so would they. If he won, the victory would be entirely his. Their power was lost either way.

As I write, there is still desperate speculation that the party might repudiate its own nominee and put up another candidate. Trump’s running mate, Indiana Governor Mike Pence, has been invited to step up for the task, and other party elders are being scouted. A lengthening list of Republicans have denounced Trump and stated the intention to vote for Hillary Clinton, but Trump, though he could probably produce his own list of Democratic defectors from the desperately unpopular Clinton, has not deigned to do so. Parties and endorsements don’t matter to him (apart from retired generals). It’s mano à mano between himself and Hillary, and there’s no one else in the ring.

Another rule Trump has broken is messaging. Presidential candidates are expected to have positions on every conceivable issue, carefully researched and vetted. Most of this constitutes the fine print of a campaign, which for the most part no one reads but which is focus-tested for key constituencies and can be trotted out when needed. From this pother, a few themes are selected for emphasis, and these are pounded home relentlessly in speeches and advertising. They are the message of the campaign, and candidates are enjoined to stay strictly “on message,” which is to say numbingly repetitive: the same few ideas expressed in the same few words. Candidates who stray from this rule spoil the product, which is themselves. They risk inconsistency, and even contradiction.

Donald Trump doesn’t do messaging. He says whatever comes into his head, and if he contradicts himself it appears to do him no harm. He does so, in fact, on purpose. Most political positions are fine-tuned to entice particular groups, but Trump has shown us that you can appeal to different groups by taking radically opposed stands on the same subject. You can do this, moreover, not over a period of time, but literally in the same news cycle. Thus, when Trump went to Mexico as the guest of its president he suggested a major softening of his signature pledge to deport all undocumented aliens, but the same evening, back home in Arizona, he reaffirmed the pledge in wholly uncompromising terms. Which Trump was one to believe? The simple answer was, either one.  Trump began his campaign as a populist willing to take positions normally associated with political progressives; he has since migrated far to the right on most issues, and his closest advisors are now in that camp. This doesn’t mean he is attempting to endear himself to Republicans, most of whom fear to be associated with the overt racism, sexism, and Islamophobia he has at various times expressed, and which would probably be toxic to them although it seems harmless to him, at least among his supporters. Trump isn’t selling positions; he is selling himself, and the more Trumps there are the more prospective buyers there may be. Whether this high-wire act can succeed in the end remains to be seen, but that Trump has come this far has turned electoral politics as we have known them upside down. The effects, or at least some of them, are likely to be lasting.

The other insurgency in this election has been that of Bernie Sanders. Sanders, too, came into the party whose nomination he sought from the outside, as a lifelong political independent. He, too, defied what appeared to have become a fundamental rule of American politics, namely that national campaigns can only be waged with support from wealthy donors and the bundled funding of so-called political action committees. The rule had been in effect for some time, but the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision, which removed most restrictions on political contributions, appeared to have literally engraved it on the tablets of the law. Sanders, however, vowed to take no contributions except from private donors as a guarantee of his political independence from the banks, big corporations, and consortiums that buy America’s politicians and write its laws and regulations. The idea that a campaign could actually be funded exclusively by small donors was so quixotic—much like the candidate himself, a white-aureoled, 74-year-old Brooklyn Jew who had made his career in the backwoods of Vermont—that pundits, where they did not dismiss Sanders with amusement, simply ignored him.

We know how the story played out: millions of small donors, their contributions averaging that now mythical figure of $27, sustained a campaign that ran more than a year, drew wildly enthusiastic crowds across the country, and gave Sanders primary and caucus victories in twenty-two states. Had the early primaries not been stacked (for both parties) so heavily in the conservative South, and had more of them been open to independent and crossover voters either favorable to Sanders or opposed to Clinton, Sanders might have pulled off the same kind of upset that Trump did, and our election might now be between two insurgents who upended conventional politics, and the parties aligned with them.

Why, then, did Sanders fail?

The chief difference between the two major parties in the primary races was the size of the field. The Republicans had seventeen contenders, and although Jeb Bush seemed initially to have the edge his brother’s administration cast a shadow it was unclear he could dispel. The Democrats had a single establishment candidate, so primed for the nomination by a potent political machine with its legions of retainers, organizers, and fundraisers that opposition seemed futile—as, but for Sanders, it was. This meant that Trump could bide his time in the pack, slowly nurturing support, while Sanders was engaged in a two-person race since last October: the moment at which, his crowds building and his coffers swelling, anyone in the Democratic Party even noticed that there was a race.

The early establishment response to Sanders was that he would provide a good tune-up for Hillary Clinton with no real risk. As the primaries approached, however, the Democratic National Committee and its openly partisan chairperson, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, began to get the wind up, limiting debate opportunities for Sanders and scheduling them opposite football games.  Pirated e-mails released in July showed a deliberate effort to sabotage the Sanders campaign, and led to Schultz’s resignation on the eve of the Democratic convention.

More significant for Sanders, however, was both the lineup for the primaries—a bizarrely ad hoc system in which the party apparatchiks of each of the fifty states sets their own rules and scheduling—and the exclusion of independent voters by both parties in many key states. By “tradition,” Iowa and New Hampshire—two small, white, rural states unrepresentative of most of the country—get first dibs in the primaries. These, however, are followed by a slew of Southern states, beginning with South Carolina and also largely rural, that are distinctly titled to the right. Why it is that the states of the Confederacy, defeated in their attempt to secede from the Union a century and a half ago, should have so disproportionate a say in contemporary presidential politics, is a question worth pondering. The result was that Clinton’s early stumbles—a nail-biting victory in Iowa by the narrowest of margins, and a decisive defeat in New Hampshire—could be repaired in the Deep South.   Sanders fell behind, and, although he kept up, he never caught up.

The argument can be made that the candidates of each party should be selected by their registered voters—their actual, or at least putative electoral base—rather than by a process that invites spoiler votes from the outside. That argument would have more credibility, however, if the parties represented a decisive majority of the electorate, say 80 or 90%. But they do not. Only 29% of registered voters are Democrats, and 26% Republican. A full 42% describe themselves as independent, so that not far short of half the electorate is unaffiliated with either major party, and unrepresented as such in the halls of government—except for two U.S. senators, one of whom is Bernie Sanders. It is very difficult to argue that a nominating process which arbitrarily excludes the largest voting bloc in the country from its races answers to even a minimum notion of democracy.

Even had Sanders overcome these hurdles, there would have been another one, the 700-odd so-called superdelegates, unelected party functionaries overwhelmingly supportive of and in most cases publicly pledged to Clinton. As matters turned out, she actually needed these votes to reach a delegate majority, but her narrow electoral plurality, substantially the result of rigged scheduling and voter exclusion, made them noncontroversial. Had they been necessary to overturn a Sanders plurality, however, they would have torn the party apart.

Thus, Donald Trump was able to win his early primaries in a crowded field with no more than a quarter of the total vote, whereas Sanders was compelled to win actual majorities from the beginning in races from which many of his supporters were excluded. More than any other single factor, this made Trump’s victory possible, and Sanders’ nomination a long shot from the beginning to the end. Clinton had another significant factor working for her, too, namely the corporate-owned media, which at first disregarded and then disparaged the Sanders campaign. Sanders’ policy proposals—virtually all of which would only have brought America abreast of social reforms taken for granted elsewhere in the Western world for fifty to a hundred years—were subjected to rigorous criticism, while Clinton’s Wall Street-friendly agenda got a pass. Sanders’ electoral base, even among registered Democrats alone, was substantially larger than Trump’s among Republicans until late in the primary season, but Trump had strong media support on the right, and billions of dollars worth of free advertising from mainstream media that kept its spotlight on him. Just as Trump might be considered the Frankenstein created by decades of Republican electoral duplicity and racial dog-whistling, so too he was the creature of a media conditioned by reality TV to exploit (and be exploited by) the scandal of the moment. And Donald Trump’s entire campaign was designed as a scandal, day after day and month after month. The ratings lure was irresistible.

Had the Republicans, as some suggested, conspired to deny Trump his nomination by altering the rules of the party convention, it would have split the party. Sanders could have done the same by withholding his endorsement from Clinton or even running independently, but he played the game by its stacked rules and agreed to abide by its result. It is understandable that he does not wish to go down now as the man who enabled Donald Trump to become president, as Ralph Nader has been (wrongly) blamed for electing George W. Bush.

So it is that we are presented with Trump and Clinton. Trump does not require much comment at this point; he is far less qualified to be president than any reader of this article will be, even though he has proven himself to be a master showman and political innovator—in short, a demagogue who tells us far more about ourselves and the state of the Union than we would perhaps like to know. He is widely feared and detested by much of the electorate, including those fascinated by the abomination he represents. The establishments of both parties, and the interests they serve, are appalled by him. The mainstream media now regularly denounces him.

Even the most lackluster candidate should have little difficulty in beating Trump, and by a wide margin. Hillary Clinton, however, is not that candidate. She is deeply flawed personally, and distrusted—even disliked—on a visceral level by a majority of voters. The only points she wins is for her supposed competence, but there is scant evidence of that in the public record.   She failed, disastrously, with her first portfolio, health care reform, a defeat that cost Democrats the Congress and left Bill Clinton to triangulate through his terms of office. She won election to the Senate in 2000 on the coattails of Al Gore, who ran ahead of her in New York, and reelection in the Democratic Senate landslide of 2006. She made no speech worth remembering on the Senate floor other than the one supporting Bush’s war in Iraq, and sponsored no public bill of any note. On the basis of this record, she ran as an odd’s-on favorite for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, only to be defeated by a virtually unknown junior senator. Compensated with an appointment as secretary of state, she left the world with one less state than she had found it, Libya, and the strong impression that she had trafficked her office, and hence the foreign policy of the United States, in return for contributions to the Clinton Foundation (to which checks may still, thank you, be made for those wishing access to the White House come January).

At last report, 56% of Americans held an unfavorable opinion of Hillary Clinton. That makes her the second most unpopular candidate for the presidency in history—second, after Donald Trump. And, the more she campaigns, the worse it gets for her.

Eight years ago, Barack Obama famously—and condescendingly—told Clinton during one of their debates that she was “likable enough.” But that’s just the problem. Hillary Clinton isn’t likable enough for most Americans, or even likable at all. Even fewer trust her basic integrity: less than a third of the electorate.

Thus, we find ourselves stuck with the two least palatable choices for the highest office in the land in our history. Whom shall we blame the more? The Republican Party has gotten exactly what it deserved in Donald Trump, but not what it asked for. With few exceptions, its leading figures have made their embarrassment plain. But the Democrats anointed Hillary Clinton from the beginning, even after her rout by Obama in 2008 had made the country’s rejection of her clear. They embraced her not for lack of an alternative, but in spite of the most progressive candidate to seek their party’s nomination since 1948, and the first one to genuinely catch fire with the public since 1968. At a time when populist insurgencies on both the left and right showed the country desperately hungry for change, and for real engagement with climate disaster, rampant inequality, and a social alienation expressed in mounting violence, racial polarization, and a startling new drug epidemic, they turned from their best hope to the most unappealing representative of the status quo. That is much harder to forgive. And so it should be.

That’s why, at this uniquely dismaying moment, I find myself down in the dumps. I suspect some of you are there too.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The post In the Dumps with Clinton and Trump By Professor Robert Zaller, Special to the Hellenic News of America appeared first on Hellenic News of America.


Michael Johnson Honored with 2018 Jaharis Service Award

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Washington, DC, November 5, 2018 — At a moving ceremony at the National World War II Memorial in Washington, DC on October 25, Michael Johnson received the 2018 Jaharis Service Award. This award is presented each year during the Washington Oxi Day Foundation celebration of #OXIcourage in Washington, DC. It celebrates the life and legacy of Michael Jaharis by recognizing an individual for their dedicated service to our country during the Korean War and for their many contributions, in the spirit of Michael Jaharis, to the Greek-American community, to the United States and to the world. The award was presented to Johnson by the Executive Director of the Jaharis Family Foundation, Peggy Sotirhos Nicholson.

 


To see video of the introduction and acceptance remarks, click here

To see pictures from this ceremony, click here

The previous recipients of this prestigious award are John Payiavlas (2016) and Peter Vlachos (2017)


 

 

Honored alongside Johnson at this ceremony were three WWII veterans – a Greek, an American and a Greek-American. They were: 101 year old American veteran nominated by Senator Bob Dole (who previously received this award), Celestino Almeda; 97 year old Greek veteran who fought alongside US troops in the historic D-Day battle, Rear Admiral Theodoros Lymberakis; and (posthumously) Greek-American member of the remarkable OSS (the pre-cursor to the CIA), Alexander Georgiades.

 

Michael Johnson
Michael S. Johnson was drafted in the Korean War and served from September 1950 to December 1952. He completed basic infantry training at Fort Dix in Jersey and was then assigned to Fort Belvoir in Virginia where he taught photogrammetry and interpretation of aerial photographs.

In June 1951, Johnson was transferred to the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project (AFSWP), headquartered at the Pentagon. Working together with the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), he was involved with a program at the Nevada test site that consisted of detonating 15 atomic bombs, carrying from 1 to 31 kilotons, to obtain the first ever measurements of the heat and blast effects. Johnson offered advice (as a non-commissioned officer) and witnessed the detonation of all 15 bombs, one of which was the size of the bombs dropped at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Johnson was born in Maryville, Missouri in 1926. His father immigrated to America at age 14 in 1903. Johnson graduated from The Ohio State University in 1949 with a BA and MSc in Geology. He enjoyed a successful career in the oil and gas business, highlighted by his participation in the discovery of the Parshall Oil Field in North Dakota, one of the largest oil fields in North America. In 2008, he was awarded the prestigious “Outstanding Explorer” Award by the American Association of Petroleum Geologists. His exploration efforts over the past 57 years include over 10 oil discoveries spanning the entire Rocky Mountain Region, as well as projects in Greece, Italy, Guatemala, Panama and Canada.

For the past 60 years, Johnson has been an active supporter of Hellenism and Orthodoxy in the U.S. He is a member of FAITH, serves on the board of trustees for Leadership 100 and served for over 20 years on the Archdiocesan Council (where he first met Michael Jaharis). He has been a member of the Order of Saint Andrew since 1980 and is a major financial supporter of the Archdiocese, among several other causes. Johnson presently lives in Denver, Colorado with his wife of 59 years. They have two children, Alicia and Mark, and two grandchildren.

 

Michael Jaharis
Emmanuel Michael Jaharis was born and raised in Evanston, Illinois. Jaharis was the son of Greek immigrants from the village of Aghia Paraskevi on the Greek island Lesvos. Shortly after his college graduation in June 1950, Jaharis was called to duty to serve in the US Army during the Korean War and was eventually deployed to Zell am See, Austria to help run the medical and pharmaceutical supply.

After his service, while working full time as a pharmaceutical sales representative, Jaharis earned his Juris Doctor as a night student from the College of Law at DePaul University. In 1988, Jaharis founded Kos Pharmaceuticals, where he led his team to pioneer innovative drug therapies to treat cardiovascular disease. Aside from working hard to improve the lives of millions through pharmaceutical products, Jaharis along with his wife Mary worked tirelessly and gave generously through their public service and philanthropic endeavors. In 1986, Michael and Mary founded the Jaharis Family Foundation, Inc. Jaharis was a model of how to offer time, energy and intelligence in pursuit of a better world. He is survived by his wife Mary, their children Kathryn and Steven and his wife Elaine, and five grandchildren, as well as by the millions of people whose lives he has positively impacted.

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On the Road in Greece: Asclepeion at Epidaurus

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The Library of Alexandria contained the scientific knowledge of the ancient world. The  troops of Julius Caesar accidentally burned the library during or after the Siege of Alexandria in 48 B.C.  Knowledge partially lost. The Imperial Library of Constantinople, in the capital city of the Byzantine Empire, was the last of the great libraries of the ancient world. Long after the destruction of the Great Library of Alexandria and the other ancient libraries, it preserved the knowledge of the ancient Greeks and Romans for almost 1,000 years. A series of unintentional fires over the years and wartime damage, including the raids of the Fourth Crusade in 1204, impacted the building itself and its contents. The library continued in substantial form until the city of Constantinople was conquered by the Ottoman Empire on 29 May 1453 when the library’s considerable surviving contents were destroyed or lost.1

Persons interested in how the ancient Greeks solved health problems should not feel it is impossible to know because of the losses of two unique libraries. In the summer of 2018, take an excursion to Epidaurus. Get an insight into the workings of a major Asclepeion Center. I went in late spring when flowers and green bushes and trees were blooming without a heat wave. Today they hold Greek plays in the theater. In ancient times it was a major health center of Asclepius, the God of Medicine and his daughter, Hygeia.

The museum has statues and wall plagues of Hygeia showing a snake twisted around her shoulders. The armed Aphrodite is a copy of a 4th century B.C, statue, made in 1st century A.D. The armed Aphrodite is connected to Aphrodite Morpho, the feminine Goddess who gives sleep. Sleep was a fundamental element in the healing process.

Hygeia as well as her four sisters each performed a facet of Apollo‘s art: Hygeia (“Hygiene” the goddess/personification of health, cleanliness, and sanitation); Panacea (the goddess of Universal remedy); Iaso (the goddess of recuperation from illness); Aceso (the goddess of the healing process); and Aglaïa (the goddess of beauty, splendor, glory, magnificence, and adornment).

Hygeia also played an important part in her father’s cult. While her father was more directly associated with healing, she was associated with the prevention of sickness and the continuation of good health. Her name is the source of the word “hygiene“.2

The Asclepeion at Epidaurus was the most celebrated healing center of the Classical world, the place where ill people went in the hope of being cured. To find out the right cure for their ailments, they spent a night in the enkoimeteria, a big sleeping hall. In their dreams, the god himself would advise them what they had to do to regain their health. Within the sanctuary there was a guest house with 160 guestrooms. There are also mineral springs in the vicinity, which may have been used in healing.

Asclepius, the most important healer god of antiquity, brought prosperity to the sanctuary, which in the 4th and 3rd centuries BC embarked on an ambitious building program for enlarging and reconstruction of monumental buildings. Fame and prosperity continued throughout the Hellenistic period. After the destruction of Corinth in 146 BC Lucius Mummius visited the sanctuary and left two dedications there. In 87 BC the sanctuary was looted by the Roman general Sulla. In 74 BC a Roman garrison under Marcus Antonius Creticus had been installed in the city causing a lack of grain. Still, before 67 BC the sanctuary was plundered by pirates. In the 2nd century AD the sanctuary enjoyed a new upsurge under the Romans, but in AD 395 the Goths raided the sanctuary.

Even after the introduction of Christianity and the silencing of the oracles, the sanctuary at Epidaurus was still known as late as the mid 5th century, although as a Christian healing center.3

References:

1.     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Library_of_Constantinople

2.     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hygieia

3.     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidaurus

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Demetra Veltsistas: My experience participating in the Athens Authentic Marathon

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By Aphrodite Kotrotsios, Publisher

 

I had the opportunity to meet Demetra Veltsistas at the National Hellenic Society’s Heritage Classic Weekend back in October of 2018. Demetra shared with me that she would be running in the Athens Authentic Marathon and right away I congratulated her and told her we must share her experience with our readers. Here is what she had to say about her journey.

Demetra Veltsistas

 

AK:  Was this your first Athens Marathon?

DV:  As an avid runner and Greek American, the Athens Marathon has been on my bucket list for many years and it was such an amazing thrill to finally run it for the first time in 2018. After I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015, I made the Athens Marathon one of my main goals to achieve as soon as I was physically able. There were a few setbacks to get to this point but I was determined to make 2018 the year to make it happen.

AK:  How did you prepare for the Athens Marathon both mentally and physically?

DV:  Like any big goal that you want to achieve, the physical preparation was about staying committed to my training regimen.  I ran four times per week, lifted weights and took great care to keep injuries to a minimum.  Injuries were my biggest fear and they can happen to any runner so taking care as I trained was very important. In fact, just before the marathon, I developed some back pain and my doctor was concerned about me running.

So much of the physical preparation is related to mental training.  In my case, I was relentlessly determined to overcome any physical challenges.  When I was a kid my mother always used to say, “ don’t let obstacles get in the way of what you want to do, you can accomplish it if you are determined… so go make it happen.”  For me it wasn’t about being fast, it was about crossing the finishing line no matter what.

Published article in the January 2019 issue of the Hellenic News of America

AK:  What kept you going throughout the Marathon?

DV:  One of the proudest moments of my life was running the Athens Marathon. I have run other marathons in the U.S. but this one is THE marathon because it is in the motherland. Greece is so much a part of who I am and I wanted to make my family proud and show that you can do anything you put your mind to. Being there and seeing the people cheering the runners gave me the extra willpower to push through despite some back issues that I was experiencing. I listened to my body and my heart which helped me stay focused on the “prize,” to finish the race without any injury.

Demetra Veltsistas with Marathon onlookers in Mati, Greece.

AK:  What was it like running through Mati, Greece?

DV:  Running this race was filled with emotional highs and lows.  As I ran through this village that was destroyed by wildfires, I was overwhelmed with sadness knowing how much these people have lost—loved ones, their homes.  And yet these people who had suffered so much lined the streets to cheer the runners.  Overwhelmed, I stopped to talk with a few and thank them for their support which meant so much.  Instead, they were thanking me for running through their village.  What compassion and resilience they had to cheer on these complete strangers.

AK:  Would you encourage others to participate in next year’s Athens Marathon?

DV:  The feeling of being a proud Greek-American and crossing that finish line was like no other feeling I have ever had doing any race. I would encourage all of my fellow Greeks and runners of any stripe, regardless of where they live to go run or participate in some way in this event. There is no other race like it.

Running the Athens Marathon was the fulfillment of a dream.  Cancer changed my life.  It taught me to harness my energy and focus on the things that are truly important.  It also made me realize that you can truly do anything if you put your mind to it. It gave me the courage to go after my dreams.

My husband and kids mean everything to me and they supported me throughout this journey.  There were many times I missed family events so that I could go on long runs and they understood.  Their support gave me the strength to keep pushing forward to achieve my dream even when things got challenging, like when my back hurt. I also had the support of my many friends who helped me prepare to run this race.  To experience the place where the marathon began and where my family originated was an experience of a lifetime.  I feel blessed to have met so many incredible people and to have achieved this important milestone.

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Cliffs Of Freedom Premieres limited release in New York and LA

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SYNOPSIS:

 

The Greek peninsula in the early 1800’s: the fearsome Ottoman Empire maintains an iron rule over the indigenous population. Elite troops called Janissaries enforce the Sultan’s will with ruthless resolve, while an underground network of Greek freedom fighters struggles to keep the spark of hope alive.

Amidst this volatile backdrop, an unusual bond develops between ANNA CHRISTINA (Tania Raymonde), a dutiful 20-year-old Greek villager who chafes under the constraints of her patriarchal culture, and COLONEL TARIQ (Jan Uddin), a rising star in the Turkish army who harbors secret doubts about the Empire’s brutal methods. Unbeknownst to family and comrades, Tariq once spared 8-year-old Anna Christina’s life during a deadly Turkish raid on a Greek village… an encounter that planted the seeds of change in their mutual worldview. Now, as an adult, Anna Christina struggles to reconcile her feelings of attraction and cultural distrust. Similarly conflicted yet enlightened by the teachings of his long-time Greek tutor and confidante THANASI (Christopher Plummer), Tariq must hide his growing feelings for Anna Christina from his brother-in-arms SUNAL (Raza Jaffrey), a Janissary captain whose loyalty to superior officer Tariq is matched only by his hatred of Greeks.

Against Thanasi’s advice, Tariq puts himself at risk by covertly protecting Anna Christina and her people from Sunal and his troops. Before long, the dangerous relationship between Anna Christina and Tariq brings tragedy to her village, further increasing the tension between the two cultures. Enraged by injustice and estranged from Tariq, Christina devotes herself to the cause of Greek freedom.

With the advice and support of her fortune-telling grandmother YIA YIA (Patti LuPone), Christina and her male cousins make their way to a secret mountain hideout in an effort to join the Greek Resistance. Christina is initially rejected for being “just a girl” (and therefore a distraction to the all-male camp) but she soon earns the group’s respect by lethally defending her honor with a sickle.

The three cousins’ satisfaction in joining the rebels is short-lived: the “freedom fighters” have few real weapons, little organization and scant leadership; anxious to avoid detection by the Turks, they spend their days constantly on the move while awaiting orders from a legendary Greek general whose orders they concede may never arrive. When the ragtag group stumbles upon a Turkish supply caravan, a skirmish ensues, with the valiant Greeks badly outnumbered.  Shell-shocked by a cannon blast, Christina nevertheless follows her instincts (and a vision of her father) to save the day. The rebels gain a large cache of Turkish weaponry, and the legend of Christina is born.

As word of the mysterious female freedom fighter spreads throughout the mountain camps, other resistance groups are inspired and emboldened to attack the Turkish munitions convoys in an escalating series of guerrilla raids.

Frustrated by the loss of munitions and enraged by rumors of a Greek “sorceress” spooking his troops, the Turkish governor puts a price on Christina’s head. Desperate to warn her, Tariq implores Thanasi to arrange a secret meeting with her. Despite Tariq’s insistence that a chance may still exist for the two sides to forge a peaceful future, Christina knows idealism alone will not free her people.

Her misgivings are confirmed when Janissaries capture one of Christina’s cousins; worse still, the Turks are planning a massive attack on her village of Valtetsi. For the Turks, it’s an opportunity to crush the Greek resistance and destroy the legend of Christina once and for all; for the Greeks, it’s a chance to draw their overly-confident adversaries into a decisive trap. Even as Christina and the rebels prepare for battle, Tariq must continue to prove his loyalty to the Empire while finding a way to help Christina – all without drawing the unwanted attention of an increasingly suspicious Sunal.

Thus the stage is set for a pivotal battle between the forces of tyranny and freedom. Caught in the middle, Christina and Tariq will discover the price of victory and the meaning of sacrifice as they face the most difficult choices of their lives, the consequences of which stand to change the course of history.

 

 

All Star Cast Historical Epic Released March 2019 via Cineworld UK/Europe and AMC USA.

 

Starring Tania Raymonde, Jan Uddin, Raza Jaffrey, with Patti LuPone and Christopher Plummer. Directed by Van Ling. Written by Van Ling, Marianne Metropoulos & Kevin Bernhardt Produced by Casey Cannon and Marianne Metropoulos.

 

An Aegean Entertainment Production

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On the Road in Greece: Penelope Exhibition & Workshop, Halki Naxos

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By Catherine Tsounis

 

Naxos Tours passed through Halki. I came across a Folk Arts store called “Penelope” Exhibition & Workshop. I asked our guide, Evy, to wait for me while I shopped. I was dazzled by the folk art and loom created by Penelope. I saw looms at the Folk-Art Museum of Nafplion. The different types of Greek looms that coexisted were eventually replaced by the more advanced Cretan loom established in 1596. Penelope, whose store is named after her, had the latest, island loom. My family from Chios and Tseme, Asia Minor created rugs on looms that we have 100 years later.

On that summer day, Penelope entered her store upon conclusion of a church memorial service. “We just had a service in commemoration of my late brother,” she said. She described her merchandise that included: scarfs, towels, table runners and cloths, seat covers, rugs, colorful plates and plagues. They created a necklace with beads on the spot.

Penelope demonstrated the loom. She calls her loom “Penelope’s Argalio”.

“Weaving is a complicated, difficult art,” she explained. “It is disappearing., like all the jobs based on tradition. Weaving has a long tradition in my family. I learned to weave from two wonderful women, My Mother and Grandmother. The first step in the process of weaving is to fill up the instrument with a new reel. Here you can see the skeleton of the fabric which consists of one thousand and sixty-six threads, six hundred meters long. The second step is to pass the vertical threads one by one through these little loops and into this comb. Once I fix everything, I am ready to start weaving.” A display of natural sea salt with essential oils were displayed.

The internet says sea salt is beneficial.” Place underneath the pillow for a night of deep and relaxing sleep,” she said. “Use in a warm bath to cleanse and refresh your body. Use in wardrobes to keep insects out and give your clothes a fresh scent.  It can be used with car freshener.”

Four generations of her family work the old Naxos handicraft way. I bought placemats and a tablecloth in the traditional red and blue colors of Naxos.

“The loom is a wooden machine used in Greece since Homer’s era for weaving several fabrics. Penelope used to weave during the day and unpick the loom at night to deceive the suitors until Odysseus return home. On the loom, our ancestors used to weave their traditional set of clothes, the wedding dresses and the house’s clothes (sheets, curtains, tablecloths, carpets etc.). Me, Penelope Hamilothori, I use the loom too to make all those exhibits, which you can admire only at close range!  I was the last person on the bus, mesmerized by all the handicrafts he/she sees in museums. Special appreciation to Maria of Kapogiannis Tours, Tripoli and Evy Psarra, guide, who made this excursion possible.
 

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International Orthodox Christian Charities Publishes Lenten Reflections on Service 

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Staffers Offer Perspectives on Vocation of Service to Others

 

Baltimore, Md. (March 20, 2019) – With the season of Great Lent upon us, International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) has published a printed booklet of weekly reflections on the theme of service as a vocation.

Designed as a resource for Orthodox Christians to use during the Great Fast, the booklet opens with a message on “the work of love” from His Eminence Metropolitan Nicolae of the Romanian Orthodox Metropolia of the Americas, liaison bishop to IOCC from the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of the United States of America.

Reflections follow for each Sunday of Lent, penned by IOCC staff members based in the United States and in overseas field offices. The contributors, women and men who have chosen careers in the humanitarian sector, share ways their daily work is an offering of Christian service but also a humbling experience of God’s love for all humankind.

“St. Maximus the Confessor teaches that we find God as we comprehend His love for us and learn to love each other,” His Eminence writes. Each staffer’s brief reflection brings a unique perspective to the idea of service as almsgiving. The personal approach invites readers to collaborate with the women and men of IOCC in service, working to meet the physical and emotional needs of people facing hardship.

IOCC’s print booklet of Lenten reflections can be requested by calling 877.803.4622 (IOCC) or by emailing relief@iocc.org. A digital version is available at iocc.org/lent.

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International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) is the humanitarian and development agency of the Assembly of Canonical Bishops of the United States of America. Since its inception in 1992, IOCC has provided more than $661 million in humanitarian relief and sustainable development programs in over 60 countries worldwide. Today, IOCC applies its expertise in humanitarian response to human-caused and natural crises in Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and the United States, offering assistance based solely on need. Follow us @IOCCRelief on TwitterInstagram, and Facebook.

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Ambassador of Greek Gastronomy Shares Love for Olive Oil

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By  Lisa Radinovsky and Maria Loi

 

Appointed Ambassador of Greek Gastronomy by the Chef’s Club of Greece, celebrity chef Maria Loi celebrates the flavor and healthiness of the olive oil rich Greek diet. Loi recently took time out from cooking at her Loi Estiatorio restaurant in midtown Manhattan, New York to share her thoughts about olive oil and the Greek diet with Greek Liquid Gold.

As reported on the website of the World Happiness Summit, where Loi discusses “Achieving Happiness with the Greek Diet,” she embarked on her New York restaurant adventure six years ago. Before that, she reached millions of Greeks with dozens of cookbooks, including the official cookbook for the 2004 Olympics in Athens. Loi has appeared on television many times in both Greece and the USA, most recently on Live with Kelly and Ryan. She has also participated in numerous charity events and chefs’ panels, as well as preparing a meal for President Barack Obama and guests at the White House in 2012.

This is a slightly edited version of Maria Loi’s interview with Greek Liquid Golda cake recipe from her Greek Diet cookbook follows.

1.) Briefly, coming from a Greek village, how did you end up with major American TV appearances and a famous restaurant in New York City?

My journey from Thermo, Greece to NYC has had many parts, including my previous life as a jet-setting lobbyist for major telecommunications companies and shedding that “skin” to go back to my roots…. By learning all about Greek cuisine, ingredients, history, and heritage, I was able to follow my passion, cook with my heart, and become a chef and TV personality in Greece. Always thinking about my father’s words, “There’s nothing you cannot do – it’s only if you don’t WANT to do something,” and knowing the world is a big place, I heard Frank Sinatra in my head, “If you can make it there, you’ll make it anywhere,” and I decided New York was the right place for me!  Through hard work and determination, I have achieved success, as I work to change the world, one healthy Greek bite at a time!

2.) How would you describe your duties as the Ambassador of Greek Gastronomy?

My mission in life is to change the world, one healthy Greek bite at a time. As the Ambassador of Greek Gastronomy, it is my duty to spread the word about how tasty, healthy, and easy Greek cuisine really is. I want people to understand how accessible eating Greek is, and how delicious and nutritious following the Mediterranean/Greek Diet is. We, the Greeks, gave the world everything — math, philosophy, politics, science, literature. Of course, we gave them the basis for cuisine too!

3.) Do you have childhood memories of Greek olive oil and olive groves?

Growing up, my house always smelled like olive oil — the fragrance came from our cellar, where we stored barrels of the olive oil we would make every harvest season. I remember planting hundreds of olive trees with my father, and caring for them in order to get the best fruit for the harvest.

4.) Did your mother and grandmother tell you anything memorable about Greek olive oil?

They told me so many things about olive oil — how good it is for my hair, my skin, my body, even my soul! Greek Olive Oil belongs in everything we do; we Greeks are fortunate to have the best olive oil in the world, and so we need to use it.  My grandfather used to feed us a spoon of olive oil every day, like medicine. While some people say “An apple a day keeps the doctor away,” in my family, we felt that way about olive oil!

5.) How would you describe Greek olive oil, in general?

Greek olive oil is liquid gold. It’s vital to my existence, my ability to function, to cook, to live! It’s grassy, fruity, peppery, luscious and light — it’s full bodied and robust, yet soft spoken and subtle.

6.) What led you to appreciate olive oil?

My childhood — planting the trees, caring for them and the land with my father, being a part of the harvest, tasting the first drops from the “elaiotriveio” (olive mill). Olive oil is part of my blood; it’s part of who I am!

7.) How do you use olive oil?

Olive oil is part of all my foods, even my desserts at Loi Estiatorio! It’s the only fat I use, and I use it in everything, from salads and soups to proteins and desserts. There’s nothing in my kitchen that isn’t kissed with olive oil in some way or another!

8.) Why do you use and recommend olive oil?

For starters, it’s good for you! It’s full of MUFAs [monounsaturated fatty acids] and polyphenols (specifically oleocanthal) that are full of antioxidants which help ward off all kinds of illnesses, as well as being beneficial for satisfaction and weight loss — you need good fat to fight bad fat! Added to that, it’s also delicious and lends different qualities to foods depending on how you use it, which is important for me as a chef!

9.) Do you use different kinds of olive oil when cooking for famous people like President Obama?

I use the same olive oil for everyone, whether I am feeding the homeless man down the street (which I do), or President Obama. Everyone should eat well and properly — that’s how I feel.

10.) What is one of your favorite dishes that is rich in olive oil?

Horiatiki Salata. The traditional Greek Village Salad with Dakos (Cretan Barley Rusks) is meant to be enjoyed with olive oil, and I always add a lot! I want the ripe tomatoes to bathe in the olive oil, and the dakos to be softened by olive oil. Truly, olive oil makes all the ingredients sing! 

11.) What is the most important advice you would like to give home cooks about using olive oil?

First, use extra virgin olive oil to cook with — the better the quality of oil, the higher the smoke point. To see if you’re using the right temperature for cooking with olive oil, add the olive oil to a cold, dry pan, and place it over your heat source at medium heat. As the olive oil heats up, it will begin to appear shiny and seem much “thinner.” Once it begins to look hazy, you’re just below the smoke point — that’s the hottest point you can cook at before the beneficial qualities of the olive oil are broken down.

Also, you can use olive oil in dessert; there’s no need for butter! You just need to combine the olive oil with another ingredient (like vanilla or honey) before incorporating it into the recipe, to break up the flavor. Then you get the richness of the olive oil without the grassiness.

12.) Have you been able to convince any celebrities to use olive oil?

Yes, many! Once they eat at Loi Estiatorioit’s easy to convince people that eating Greek is tasty, healthy, and easy — and it all starts with good olive oil!

Lemon Olive Oil Cake Recipe

From Maria Loi’s cookbook The Greek Diet

Serves 16

This cake highlights the fruit-forward qualities of the olive oil, while balancing out the citrus notes from the lemon. You can substitute a different citrus fruit, or even add some fresh herbs to make this cake yours — I love adding some fresh lemon thyme and serving it with a dollop of yogurt.

Ingredients:

1 cup extra virgin olive oil, plus more for the cake pan
2 cups cake flour (not self-rising)*
3 tablespoons grated lemon zest
4 eggs, separated, plus 1 more egg yolk
¾ cup plus 1½ tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
½ teaspoon salt

Method:

1.    Preheat the oven to 350°F. Coat a 9-inch spring-form pan with a little olive oil. Cut a round of parchment paper to fit the pan, place it on the bottom of the pan, and coat it liberally with some olive oil.
2.    In a small bowl, whisk together the flour and lemon zest. Set aside.
3.    In a medium bowl, with an electric mixer or an eggbeater, beat the 5 egg yolks and ½ cup of the sugar on high speed until the mixture is thick and pale, 3 to 4 minutes. Reduce the speed of the mixer/beater to medium-low and slowly add 1 cup olive oil and the lemon juice, mixing them until just combined. The batter might look as if it has separated, but that’s okay! Using a wooden spoon, mix in the flour mixture just until combined. You don’t need the electric mixer for this step.
4.    In another bowl, with the electric mixer or the eggbeater, beat the 4 egg whites with the salt at medium to high speed until foamy. Continue to beat as you slowly add the ¼ cup sugar, and keep beating until soft peaks form, 3 to 4 minutes.
5.    Carefully fold about one-third of the beaten egg whites into the batter and then gently but thoroughly fold in the rest of the egg whites.
6.    Transfer the batter to the prepared cake pan and gently rap the pan against a hard surface to release any air bubbles that may have formed during the mixing process. Sprinkle the top of the cake with the remaining 1½ tablespoons sugar.
7.    Bake the cake for about 45 minutes, or until it has risen, is a beautiful shade of gold, and a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean, with no traces of uncooked batter.
8.    Allow the cake to cool in the pan on a rack for 10 to 15 minutes. Run a knife around the inside edge of the pan and release the spring-form sides. Let the cake cool and rest for another hour. Flip the cake over onto a plate. Remove the bottom of the pan and the parchment paper.

*Tip: Cake flour is much preferred because it has less gluten, and therefore makes the cake light and fluffy, but if necessary, all-purpose flour can be substituted. However, the cake will be denser, with a much closer crumb structure.

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Thanks to Maria Loi for the photos of her and of her cake, and to the World Best Healthy EVOO Contest for the photo of Loi with Dr. Stefanos Kales at the awards ceremony in 2017.

All businesses, organizations, and competitions involved with Greek olive oil or agrotourism or food tourism in Greece are now invited to consider new advertising and sponsorship opportunities on the Greek Liquid Gold: Authentic Extra Virgin Olive Oil website, which reaches readers in more than 175 countries around the globe.

Originally published on Greek Liquid Gold: Authentic Extra Virgin Olive Oil (greekliquidgold.com). See that site for recipes with olive oil, photos from Greece, and olive oil news and information

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Grecian Delight’s sharable and delicious Greek-style platters are a must try

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Mezze platters are the epitome of Greek-style entertaining, a standard of Middle Eastern dining and a perfect fit with the way today’s restaurant patrons love to eat – with sharable, snackable, elevated ethnic bites.
Translated literally, the word mezze (meh-ZEH) means a taste or a bite. It is used to describe small plates of savory snacks that are served as a complement to drinks.
Mezze platters provide an engaging and social way to introduce new ethnic foods to your menu. Create this contemporary, yet classic ethnic appetizer by combining slices of meats, breads, sauces, plus extras like olives and tomatoes. With new ReadyCarved Flame Broiled Off-the-Cone Slices, including authentic meats like Gyro, Shawarma or even Al Pastor is easier than ever before. ReadyCarved Slices go from freezer to plate in just minutes. No waste, special equipment or labor needed.

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 New Jersey’s BEST Greek Festival Returns

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                    New Jersey’s BEST Greek Festival Returns
May 16  -19, 2019
Now in its 46th Year!
Saint George Greek Orthodox Church, 1101 River Road, Piscataway, NJ
 
 PISCATAWAY, NJ – Kick-off New Jersey’s Greek Festival Season at St. George Greek Orthodox Church, 1101 River Road, Piscataway, during our 46th Annual Greek Festival, taking place May 16 – 19, 2019. NEW hours of operation are: Thursday, noon – 10 PM; Friday, noon – 11:00 PM; Saturdaynoon – 11:30 PM, and Sunday, noon – 7 PM.  May 2019 is the 46thAnniversary of this Central Jersey tradition, and as such, several of the Festival’s amenities have been improved and expanded.  As always, homemade Greek food and pastries, live music, traditional Greek Folk Dancing, as well as Church tours and cultural information will be found throughout the weekend. Admission is free all day Thursday; otherwise it is a $2 donation to enter the Festival. Free parking is available on-site as well as at Rutgers High Point Solutions Stadium, with free shuttle service to/from the Festival. Magic 98.3 FM will be joining us in the Outdoor Taverna from 6 – 8 pm on Thursday, May 16 for music and games.
Each year, the parish of St. George, Piscataway, works together to host the Festival and bring its well-known “Greek Hospitality” to the community.  The event is currently a staple in Piscataway Township and Middlesex County, and is one of the largest and well-attended Greek Festivals in the state of New Jersey with over 20,000 patrons attending throughout the weekend. This Central Jersey tradition is known for its warm hospitality, enthusiastic volunteers and delicious homemade Greek foods and pastries. The recipes used have been passed down for several generations within our community, and are a testament to the dedication we have to our Greek heritage.
“Our Festival is unique in that our volunteers prepare the pastries and foods from scratch, just like their parents and grandparents did. These recipes have been in our parish for generations, and have been used since the beginning of our Festival!” said George Athanasopoulos, Festival Chair. “Quality is important to us. We spend months preparing so that our guests can have the best experience possible.”
Returning & New Amenities: Outdoors: The Taverna space has been expanded and streamlined to expedite food pick-up, as well as to create more space to enjoy the festivities. Grilled items like gyro, souvlakia, loukaniko and grilled octopus bring a taste of Greece to Central Jersey. A “Gyro Platter” piled high with gyro meat, lettuce, tomato, Greek fries, and pita bread will join the Outdoor Taverna menu. The Youth Booth has also been expanded to offer more Baklava, Kataifi, and Greek yogurt sundaes. Indoors: In addition to the Bakery, Coffee Shop and classic Greek dinner meals like chicken Athenian, Pastitsio, Moussaka, and sliced lamb, vendors like Hellenis Imports, Mati Jewels, D’s Jewelers, Anastasia’s Costume Jewelry, and Demi Olive Oil will be available with a variety of Greek and Greek-inspired gifts ready for you to take home! Live Greek music and our award-winning Greek folk dance groups return to entertain patrons of all ages. We look forward to seeing you on the dance floor!
Short on time? Pre-order your food at: greekfestival.gocnj.org. Secure payment is through Paypal, and all major credit cards are accepted. There is also expanded dedicating parking, and pick-up located in the parking lot for pre-paid orders (look for the Blue tiny house!). “Take-Out is one of our most popular amenities, especially during lunchtime. We have streamlined the process with the online Pre-Order site, and the dedicated pick-up location in the parking lot. We hope this will help relieve lines, and get those patrons who are rushed, in and out quickly” continued Athanasopoulos.
    
Founded by Greek immigrants in 1916, the Community of St. George is the largest Greek Orthodox parish in central New Jersey and consists of over 800 families. Its parishioners are engaged in a wide variety of professional, social and volunteer activities throughout the State. As a 501 (c)3 non-profit, the church tends to the spiritual needs of its parishioners, and perpetuates the Greek culture through its youth programming, Greek language and religion classes, traditional Greek folk dancing program, and its Annual Festival.
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 The Benaki Museum expands its artistic horizons and legacy

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By Vasilis Papoutsis, Contributing Editor

 

The Benaki Museum of Greek Culture is housed in one of the most beautiful neoclassical-style buildings in Athens, near the National Garden and the Hellenic Parliament. The Benakis family mansion was donated to the Greek Government by Antonis Benakis and his three sisters, Alexandra, Penelope and Argine and was converted into a museum in order to house his collections.  Antonis Benakis began his career as a collector in Alexandria, Egypt and decided to donate his collections to the Greek State largely influenced by his father Emmanuel Benakis, a close friend and supporter of the great Greek Statesman Eleftherios Venizelos, who had donated his fortune to several charitable foundations and contributed to the settlement of refugees in the aftermath of the catastrophe in Asia Minor.

Although the museum initially housed a collection of more than 37,000 Islamic and Byzantine objects as well as Chinese porcelain, today the recently refurbished museum focuses exclusively on Greek culture from prehistoric times to the 20th century. Visionary museum director Angelos Delivorrias insisted that donated items must be displayed in order to encourage public participation and strengthen ties with the community. Under his leadership the museum added more than 60,000 objects, books and documents and the museum was further endowed by various donors and today the Benaki Museum is a cluster of satellite museums that focus on specific collections.

The seaside Kouloura Mansion houses the Toy Museum, the Benaki Museum located in the Kerameikos district features one of the finest Islamic Art collections, the Nikos- Hadjikyriakos-Ghikas Gallery in downtown Athens, the Benakis Museum on Pireos street and the Penelope Delta House in Kifissia which houses the Historical Archive Collection. The Yiannis Pappas Studio in the Zographou district it is in the same building that housed the family of this important artist and was also a workspace for the artist who loved both sculpture and painting. His son donated the home as he wanted the artist’s work to remain together in their natural physical space.

Benaki Museum Yannis Pappas Studio. Photo courtesy of the Benaki Museum.

The Patrick & Joan Leigh Fermor Centre, a beautiful villa that the Fermors built in Kardamily Messinia, was donated to the Benaki and will soon start operations. Patrick Leigh Fermor was an author, scholar and a British Special Forces officer who organized the Cretan resistance against the Nazi occupation and under his command allied forces captured German commander Heinrich Kreipe. The Centre’s operation will include residencies and educational activities in collaboration with world-renowned universities and cultural activities open to the community.

Benakis Museum’s Academic Director George Manginis has an impressive array of credentials having studied Archaeology and history of the Art at the University of Athens,  was awarded a Ph.D. on the history of Mount Sinai, Egypt from the SOAS/ University of London and was also a Stanley J. Seeger Fellow at Princeton University. Talking to the HNA Manginis said that “our Islamic art collection is one of the finest in Europe, and the Mentis Donation that includes all merchandise in storage, as well as the equipment of the MENTIS fibred manufactory, is one of the oldest and most unique in Greece.”  

The Benakis museum is very active in exhibiting both domestically and internationally. “We organize 30 to 40 exhibitions a year and most of them are self-funded. One of the most important ones is our collaboration with the Hellenic Museum of Melbourne that hosts our award-winning collection of Gods, Myths & Mortals for a period of 10 years that started in 2014. The exhibition covers a span of 8,000 years and with Melbourne being home to one of the largest Greek populations outside of Greece we bring our cultural heritage to Hellenes and also the very diverse populations of Melbourne” said director Manginis.  An impressive exhibit that came to Los Angeles, California “Heaven and Earth: Art of Byzantium from Greek Collections” was comprised by more than 200 objects and the LA Times in its review said that “The Byzantine art was beautifully encapsulated in the Getty Villa’s galleries, and it is reportedly the largest show of its kind ever to be seen in Los Angeles.” The exhibition was organized by the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports in a joint effort with the Benaki Museum and in association with the J. Paul Getty Museum. Costantza Sbokou-Constantakopoulou who is a member of the board of directors and was part of the Benaki Museum’s delegation that came to Los Angeles told the HNA that “the Benaki Museum has been in a transition phase for the last 5 years with organizational and financial restructure up and running with remarkable results. We are all very proud of the work that has been done and we continue to work in that direction. During the 5 years world famous exhibitions and events have taken place and we are very proud of the opening of the Benaki Toy Museum in 2017, which is among the most important in Europe with toys, books and clothing associated with childhood from Europe, Africa, Asia and the Americas.”

One fascinating exhibition coming up in October 2019, is The Landscape of Santorini in the Greek painting of 20th Century. A selection of 84 paintings of great Greek artists such as Yiannis Moralis and Vassos Germenis will illuminate the visitors with the unique landscape of Santorini. A book with the same title will allow the visitors to read the history of the creation along with personal stories of collector Dimitris Tsitouras who was a close friend with the artists.

 

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The PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation Hosts an Exceptional Alumni Weekend, Truly Going Beyond a Scholarship 

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The PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation Hosts an Exceptional Alumni Weekend, Truly Going Beyond a Scholarship 

Annual Scholarship Awards Gala and Mentorship Events 

Took Place from June 14 – June 16

 

CHICAGO, IL, June 18, 2019 – The PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation (PHSF) celebrated its annual Alumni Weekend from June 14 – June 16, 2019, awarding 40 exceptional students over $250,000 in scholarships, hosting a mentorship luncheon and announcing a new internship initiative, which will enable the PHSF to continue their mission of going beyond a scholarship.

This year’s Alumni Weekend began with a Welcome Reception Friday evening with Corporate Sponsors, Holland & Knight and College Year in Athens. Additionally, on Saturday, The Hellenic Initiative sponsored the third Mentorship Luncheon where recipients had the exclusive opportunity to gain career insight from fourteen exceptional mentors.

The weekend culminated with the Annual Scholarship Awards & Gala, where in front of approximately 600 attendees, 40 of the best and brightest students from across the U.S. received their scholarships. 

“Our 2019 award recipients are a group of extraordinary scholars who are flourishing academically, and we are excited to provide continual support through our mentorship program and internship initiative,” said PHSF Chairman of the Board of Directors, Robert A. Buhler. “The PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation has the incredible opportunity to make a historic impact in the lives of these recipients. Congratulations to all the scholars!”

  • Demetra Alikakos: Music Performance-Bassoon and Actuarial Sciences, DePaul University
  • Fotini Anastopoulos: Psychology, Harvard University
  • Eugenia Angelopoulos: Biomedical Engineering, Boston University
  • Alexander Belchou: Physics, State University of New York at Geneseo
  • Athena Chapekis: Sociology, Miami University
  • Evangelia Eracleous: Communication Sciences and Disorders, and Psychology, Queens College, City University of New York
  • Stella Erickson: Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University
  • George Evangeloulis: Broadcast and Digital Journalism, University of Southern California
  • Mary Kathryn Fellios: Art History, Columbia University
  • Natalie Ganios: Biomedical Sciences, University of Akron
  • Jordan George: Political Theory and Constitutional Democracy, and Economics, Michigan State University
  • Andrew Gonedes: Neuroscience, Nova Southeastern University
  • Erini Kamarinos: Public Health, Regis College
  • Napoleon Kanaris: Religious Studies, Hellenic College
  • Constantina Karalis: Classics, University of California Santa Barbara
  • Kaitlin Kaye: International Studies, World Politics, The Ohio State University
  • Elisabeth Kotsalidis: Classical Civilization and Ancient Greek and Latin, Boston University
  • Andreas Kotsifas: Accounting, DePaul University
  • Panayioti J. Logothetis: Mathematical Finance and Information Technology Management, Seton Hall University
  • Christina Macris: Intercultural Studies, Cedarville University
  • Daphne Martin: Classics, History of Art, Yale University
  • Argyro Miliou: Marketing, University of Texas at Austin
  • John Malcolm “Mack” Nash, Robotics and Controls (Systems) Engineering, United States Navel Academy
  • Alexandra Niforos: English, University of Michigan
  • Julianne Papadopoulos: Music in the Liberal Arts and Psychology, Elon University
  • Elaina Patitsas: Civil Engineering, University of Akron
  • Dimitri Petrakis: Mechanical Engineering, Pennsylvania State University
  • Anastasios Roumeliotis: Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University
  • Christina Sellountos: Fine Arts – Animation, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Helen Tasho: Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience, Loyola University Chicago
  • Nicholas Tomaras: Biology, Loyola University Chicago
  • Elena Triantafyllopoulos: Biology and Psychology, University of Central Florida
  • Panayiotis Vandris: Biology (Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Track) and Comparative Literature, Stanford University
  • Eleftheria Varkados: Studio Art, Juniata College
  • Andreas Vassilakos: Information Technology and Management, Illinois Institute of Technology
  • Alexander Velis: Accountancy and Operations Management, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Maria Vonortas: Finance, The Ohio State University
  • Evangelos Zarkadas: History and Political Science, University of Maine at Presque Isle
  • Sophia Zervas: Piano Performance and Voice Performance, University of Colorado at Boulder
  • Michael Ziamandanis: Psychology, University of Albany

At the event, Buhler also announced several extraordinary transformations that will position the PHSF for continued growth.

  1. New Beyond a Scholarship Internship Initiative: The PHSF is now working with 15 inaugural companies to provide scholars and alumni with internships. Buhler noted that they hope to have an expanded offering next spring with numerous companies from across the nation. 
  2. Going National: This year’s scholars came from all parts the country, and a growing number increasingly come from outside the Midwest. Furthermore, many Advisory Board and Board members also hail from outside Illinois, demonstrating how the PHSF is expanding its national profile.
  3. Building a Sustainable Donor Base: The inaugural Scholarship Society 50 and 100 donor program expanded from 19 donors in the first year to 24 donors this year. This now includes the new “200” level, where donors who have fulfilled their “100” commitment will generously continue to provide a $10,000 Scholarship to 10 more exceptional scholars.

“We believe that by securing good internships for our scholars, it will greatly help them land their first job,” said Buhler. “By connecting our recipients and alumni with mentors and an internship start to their professional careers, we are truly going beyond a scholarship. We would like to thank our inaugural corporate leaders interested in helping the PanHellenic with internships.”

At the Gala, the PHSF also honored the success and accomplishments of its 2019 Paradigm Award Honoree, Matina Kolokotronis. Kolokotronis serves as Chief Operating Officer of the Sacramento Kings. Bringing decades of experience in sports and government law, community affairs and contract negotiations, Kolokotronis’ leadership has been integral to the development of the award-winning Golden 1 Center. The Paradigm Award is given annually to a distinguished Greek American whose career and accomplishments are a testimony to the Foundation’s mission and who the scholars can strive to emulate.

“Ms. Kolokotronis possesses all of the attributes of a Paradigm,” said Trustee and Board Member, Tom Sotos. “Her impressive career, dedication to her community and respect for her Hellenic roots will certainly inspire our recipients to also become trailblazers and the next generation of leaders in America.”

Dedicated to promoting education and leadership, the PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation recognizes and honors exceptional undergraduate students of Hellenic descent, supporting their efforts with significant monetary awards based on academic merit and financial need. Annually, the Foundation provides $250,000 in scholarships to 40 of the best Greek American undergraduates in the nation. 

Applicants came from nearly all 50 states, and a total of 20 received the need-based $10,000 award, while 20 received the merit-based $2,500 award. Scholarship awards are offered annually to recognize and reward students who have demonstrated exceptional academic performance, as well as to provide meaningful support to those with great financial need. By recognizing the achievements of outstanding students, the PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation encourages the Hellenic students to continue their scholarly pursuit and strive to accomplish their highest goals. The annual selection of Scholarship Award Recipients is conducted by an Academic Committee appointed by the Board of Directors. 

“The PHSF would like to thank our Academic Committee, in particular Chairwoman Anita Skarpathiotis, who stepped in and led the entire Committee in working hard to select this year’s scholarship recipients. They had to make many difficult decisions from among an increasing number of exceptional applications received from throughout the U.S.,” said Trustee and Board Member, John Manos. “Lastly, but with our highest appreciation, we thank all of our generous supporters. It is your belief in educational excellence, coupled with strong Hellenic values, that drives our cause. You make the PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation thrive.”

For more information about The PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation and Alumni Weekend, please visit: http://www.panhellenicsf.org.

About The PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation

The PanHellenic Scholarship Foundation is a public 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization dedicated to honoring and rewarding exceptional undergraduate students of Hellenic descent. The Foundation was established in 2002 by Chris P. Tomaras (1937-2015) with the goal of building a better America through Education and Hellenism. Every year, The Foundation hosts its Awards Ceremony & Gala to distribute the scholarship awards. The Foundation is administered by Trustees, a Board of Directors, and a Board of Advisors representing a broad range of professional disciplines, as well as an active Alumni Board comprised of previous PanHellenic Scholarship recipients. The selection of recipients is made by an Academic Committee who works independently and makes its decisions based on established criteria set forth in the Foundation’s policies, procedures and by-laws. The Foundation is only able to accomplish its mission through its dedicated Boards, Committees, staff, volunteers, and interns.

 

 

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The Eastern Mediterranean Partnership Protects and Secures American Interests in the Region

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INTERNATIONAL COORDINATING COMMITTEE JUSTICE FOR CYPRUS

 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s purchase of Russian S-400 missiles has exposed the vulnerability of American security interests as well as those of Western World nations in the Eastern Mediterranean.  Decades of our Executive Branch refusing to implement the laws of the land enacted by our Legislative Branch has contributed significantly to this vulnerability. In fact, it is the preeminent factor behind Erdogan’s verging on the first Islamist conquest of Western World territory and resources in modern history — the northern third of our ally Cyprus.  

In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson adhered to the law and stopped Turkey’s attempt to use American arms aggressively against Cyprus.  Subsequently, systemic neglect of laws has created a mounting number of problems. In 1974, when Turkey again moved to invade Cyprus, President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger decided to ignore 22 US Code Section 2314(d) that required terminating the shipment of American arms to countries using them aggressively.  Emphasizing the importance of adherence to the “rule of law”, the Legislative Branch enacted an embargo on arms to Turkey that the Executive Branch should have imposed. Yet, in contravention of both laws, the Executive Branch trans-shipped arms to Turkey through Europe.  

This occurred even though Turkey evicted 200,000 of our Greek-Cypriot allies from their homes and destroyed 500 historic Christian Churches in the occupied northern third of Cyprus.  This Executive Branch conduct started decades of our green lighting Turkish aggression. A few of the several other examples include: the Congress’ lifting of the Turkish Arms Embargo on the condition of its immediate re-imposition whenever the President could not certify to the Congress that Turkey was withdrawing from Cyprus.  In the decades since, Turkey has greatly increased its occupation on Cyprus, yet, our Executive Branch certifies to Congress every few months for decades that Turkey is moving to withdraw.  

The Executive Branch also refused major Congressional requests that they find out what Turkey had done with five American citizens they took prisoner when they invaded Cyprus.  Only when Congress passed a law did Turkey return the bones of vacationing 16-year-old Andrew Kasapis of Detroit. Our government did next to nothing for the other four missing Americans nor was Turkey condemned for executing and dumping them in mass graves with over 1,000 Cypriot men, women and children.  That green light moved Turkey to violate Geneva Conventions with the transfer to Cyprus of 400,000 Turkish settlers including extremist Imams to take over the small Western World Turkish-Cypriot community of moderate Muslims.  

Some good diplomats like the current Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who attended the meeting in Jerusalem of our Eastern Mediterranean Partnership (EMP) made up of Israel, Cyprus, Greece and America, and like Assistant Secretaries Dick Holbrooke and Wess Mitchell agreed with the Congress’ steady push for regional balance.  These diplomats rejected the Executive Branch’s treatment of the region as a zero sum game, which turns our back on our Western World allies. But the current perspective at the State and Defense Departments will not last forever. America must assure our Executive Branch’s implementation of laws like, the soon to be enacted EMP bills in the Senate introduced by Bob Menendez and Marco Rubio and by Ted Deutch, Gus Bilirakis and David Cicilline in the House.  

And it is extremely important for American security interest that it also institutionalizes the current positive relationship with our EMP allies.  Our nation’s Founder James Madison devised the way through our constitutional provisions that make our branches of government coequal. He refers to the Executive Branch’s power of the “sword” and the Legislative Branch’s the power of the “purse”.  The Congress’ control of all funds for the Executive Branch gives them great leverage.  

The Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee and the Foreign Operations Subcommittee, Nita Lowey, is beginning to exert that authority to preserve today’s policy of balance in that dangerous region. The Appropriations measure just approved by the House contains language to create, with the Department of State, a unique program for America’s EMP countries.  She is pressing for Washington to annually host officials from the ministries of Foreign Affairs, Defense and Energy from the three EMP countries. This is appropriate because Cyprus, Greece and Israel are the only countries in that region that are stable democracies and always “have our back”.   

Each year, EMP officials would have in-depth meetings with their American counterparts during a Washington Summit.  Our officials will learn that Cyprus, Greece and Israel are now and have always been part of America’s team and should be generously treated as such.  This treatment of our EMP allies will also help our country stave off our new challenges in that region from Russia, China and Islamist extremism. Injuries to America’s security interests in the Eastern Mediterranean can only be stemmed with the reassertion of Congressional authority.

The post The Eastern Mediterranean Partnership Protects and Secures American Interests in the Region appeared first on Hellenic News of America.

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