Showing posts with label greek church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greek church. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Thursday, December 20, 2012
SIGN A WHITE HOUSE PETITION TO PROTECT CHRISTIANS IN THE MIDDLE EAST
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The website Orthodox Christian Laity has posted an appeal to Orthodox Christians in the U.S. to sign a petition to protect Christians in the Middle East:
THIS IS AN IMPORTANT EFFORT. PLEASE TAKE THE TIME AND REGISTER YOUR SUPPORT.
Friends,
Are there 25,000 Orthodox Christians in America who are ready to stand up for Orthodox Christians in the Middle East this holiday season?
Hellenic American Leadership Council (HALC) is launching a petition asking President Obama to respond to the fact that religious minorities need protection across the globe, and we need your help.
In Turkey alone — which boasts a population of over 75 million — the number of Greek Orthodox Christians has plummeted to just 3,500 because the Turkish government refuses to grant the Greek Orthodox Church its full religious freedom.
In occupied Cyprus, Turkish forces have stopped Christmas liturgy from being celebrated by enslaved Orthodox Christians. In Iraq, Syria, and Egypt, religious minorities are unable to worship in peace this holiday season.
Under the White House rules, if we can find 25,000 people to sign the petition, the White House will have to issue a response. Can you help us reach our goal?
To sign the petition, click on the link below:
Thanks,
Endy
Endy Zemenides
Executive Director
Hellenic American Leadership Council
Executive Director
Hellenic American Leadership Council
P.S. This isn’t just a Greek Orthodox issue. Freedom of religion is a basic human right that all people should fight for, whether they’re Christian, Jewish, Muslim, agnostic or atheist. Forward this email to your friends and family and ask them to join the call in protecting this fundamental human right.
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Matt Barrett's Easter in Greece
Easter is one of my
favorite times to be in Greece for a couple of reasons. First of all even if
you are not a devout Christian you can't help but be moved by the ceremonies
and the way life begins again on Easter Sunday after winter and 40 days of
fasting. If you go to the countryside or to the islands wildflowers are in
bloom and the hillsides that are usually parched brown in the summer are green
from the winter rains. You can't even imagine the fields of flowers and theway
life seems to be popping and sprouting up from every crack and crevice.
If you are not able to go to the islands or a village but have to stay in Athens, the city also seems blessed because everyone is gone. The streets are quiet and those people who have nowhere to go or who are like me and prefer to stay in Athens when everyone else has left, take walks in the streets and parks and the hills around the Acropolis which are also adorned with green grass and wildflowers.
If you are not able to go to the islands or a village but have to stay in Athens, the city also seems blessed because everyone is gone. The streets are quiet and those people who have nowhere to go or who are like me and prefer to stay in Athens when everyone else has left, take walks in the streets and parks and the hills around the Acropolis which are also adorned with green grass and wildflowers.

I never really cared much about the church ceremonies leading up to Easter, with the exception of the candle lighting ceremony that begins at 11pm on Saturday night and ends after midnight when all the candles held by the people in and around the church have been lit by the holy flame and they begin their journey home, each person holding one.
To me there is something beautiful and magical about this. I think it is the most important ceremony in Christianity because it affects believers and non-believers. To see the church begin to glow brighter as each candle is lit and then the masses of people walking through the city streets or the towns and villages fills me with a spiritual feeling of being part of something bigger than myself. Even in the USA when I have gone to the tiny Saint Barbara's church in Durham where people take their lighted candles and get into their cars and drive home, there is something special about being on the highway after midnight on Easter Sunday and seeing the interior car next to you aglow.
Lately though I have taken an interest in the
whole Easter celebration, not just the Easter Sunday ceremony and then the
roasting of the lamb and drinking wine which of course is my favorite thing
about Easter. For one thing people ask me about Easter all the time and by
telling them that for me it's all about lighting candles, eating a lamb and
getting drunk they may think I am some kind of pyromaniac, gluttonous drunkard,
which is only part of the story. I actually come from a very religious Greek Orthodox family. However my father was the least religious member of the family, a socialist agnostic who took us to church twice. Once when our grandmother died and once for Easter in 1963 at Agia Thomas in Goudi, Athens. It was this Easter service that had a profound affect on me. We lived in an apartment right across the street from the church and from our balcony we could see the people leave the church with their candles(photo) and the fireworks at midnight.
Soon afterwards all the people left and walkied like a candle-lit parade through the empty streets of Athens while the bells rang all over the city. From another window we could see a procession of candles making its way down Mount Lycavettos. A psychologist would call this an imprint. I have loved Easter ever since.
In 2003 John L Tomkinson, a
scholar and teacher in Athens who has put out a series of books about Greece,
published Festive Greece: A Calendar of Tradition. The book describes in
detail all the holidays in Greece and how they are celebrated in various parts
of the country. It was this book that inspired me to create this page. I
suppose I could have written something about Easter before this, from my own
perspective, but John's book gave me the background that enables me to make
sense of my perceptions which in the case of Easter tended to focus on the lamb
and the wine and everything leading up to it was just something happening in
the background. Through John's book I have more of an understanding of Easter
to go with the childlike attraction I have had for the most beautiful and
holiest time in Greece.
Apokreas
Easter does not just happen
in Greece on that Holy week. It begins with Apokreas, which is to Orthodox what
Mardi Gras and Carnival is to Catholics. Several weeks of partying, a
tradition that may go back to the celebrations of Dionysious, take place all
over Greece with special celebrations in Patras, Athens, and in various other
towns and villages, many with special activities such as the famous Goat
dances of Skyros. In Athens the last two weekends of Apokreas people dress up in costume and go to the Plaka, hitting each other with plastic clubs that squeak, and throwing confetti. These clubs are thought to be a remnant of the veneration of the phallus from the ancient Dionysian festivals of Athens and in the town of Tyrnavo in Thessaly giant penises are paraded through the streets
There are celebrations in Moschato and Rendi, between Athens and Pireaus, that are similar to being in New Orleans on Fat Tuesday. In Patras the celebrating goes on for forty days and as many as fifty-thousand people take part in the parades.
But after the last weekend of Apokreas, known as cheese week (the week before is meat week) many Greeks begin their fasting on Clean Monday, which is a day for spending time with friends and family, going to the countryside and flying kites. From clean Monday to the week of Easter things calm down conciderably.
More on Apokreas
Great Week
The week of Easter begins on Palm Sunday and there are church services
everyday commemorating the last week in the life of Jesus Christ. The evening
services are the most well attended of course, except for Wednesday when the
Service of the Holy Unction is held in the afternoon. On Thursday morning the
service commemorates the Last Supper and the Betrayal of Christ. This is the
day that the hard-boiled eggs are dyed red, signifying the blood of Christ, and
the Easter bread, called tsoureki, is baked. The evening service is a long one
and features twelve gospel readings. It is in this service that a two-dimensional
figure of Christ on the cross is brought into the church and set up, while the
church bells ring. In some places a vigil is kept in the church all night.
From the point-of-view of a spectator from Friday it starts to get very
interesting. The nails holding the figure of Christ are knocked off and the
figure is taken down from the cross and wrapped in a white cloth. A large piece
of cloth, embroidered with the image of Christ, called the epitaphios which has
been decorated with flowers by the girls through the night, is
brought into the church where it is sprinkled with rose-water and more flower
petals are thrown upon it. The bells of the church begin to toll and all the
flags in Greece are lowered to half-mast in while women in the congregation
weep in mourning for the dead Jesus. In the evening a funeral service is held and at about 9pm the epitaphios is taken from the church and with the bells tolling mournfully, is carried through the streets in a solemn procession. In cities, towns and villages with more than one church the epitaphios parades may join together at certain points. In Hydra the epitaphios is taken into the sea at Kamini as it is in Tinos at the church of Saint Nicholas at Kalamia. In some places an effigy of Judas is burned while in others Barabbas is. In Skiathos the epitaphios service begins on Saturday at 1am and the procession through the town begins at four in the morning as it does in Zakynthos. On the island of Kea in the village of Ioulida the three congregations meet in the square with their epitaphios after taking different routes through the village.
On Saturday the Orthodox
Patriarch breaks the seal of the door of the tomb of Christ in the Church of
the Holy Sepulcher in Jeruselem and emerges with the Holy Fire, which is then
flown by Olympic Airways, accompanied by high-ranking priests and government
officials to Athens airport where it is met by an honor guard to the small
church of Agia Anargyroi in the Plaka. From there the light is distributed to
churches all over Attika and the rest of Greece.
Meanwhile around Athens there is all sorts of activity this week. The
central market has thousands of lambs of all sizes and in Psiri the annual Lamb and Cheese Market has
given the neighborhood a village atmosphere as farmers from the island of Naxos
come to the city to sell their goods. Athenians who still have connections to
their islands and villages on the mainland are preparing to leave the city as
are people with no connections. On the islands people are working feverishly to
paint restaurants, hotels and shops, white-wash houses and get ready for the
second busiest holiday week of the year (after August 15th the Saint
Day of the Virgin Mary or Panagia). By Thursday ferries, flights and the roads
leading out of Athens will be full. By Saturday Athens will seem like a giant
village. It's a great time to be in Athens which is a good thing because it is
a terrible time to leave because the traffic is so bad.
The Resurrection or
Anastasis
At 11pm on Saturday night pretty much the entire country is in church.
The lights are turned off at midnight and the priest announces that Christ has
arisen from the dead as candles are lit from his and then from each other. The
tiny glow at the front of the church grows and soon the whole room is
illuminated by the light of everyone's candles.
At the stroke of midnight the priest intones the paschal hymn "Christ has risen from the dead and in so doing has trampled on death and to those in the tombs he has given life". The church bells ring in celebration, fireworks go off, ships sound their sirens and the light and sound makes the 4th of July seem tame in comparison.
People greet each other happily with the words Christos Anesti (Christ has arisen) which is replied to with Alithos Anesti (Truly He has arisen). Then everyone heads for home with their lighted candles where they trace the cross three times above the door and to bless trees and farm animals. Most people either stay home or go to a restaurant for the traditional bowl of margeritsa, a thick green soup made from the intestines of the lamb that will be roasted the next day, breaking their 40 day fast which began with the end of Apokreas. Gunshots, dynamite and fireworks will be going off for the next 24 hours or more shattering nerves and blowing off a finger or two.
At the stroke of midnight the priest intones the paschal hymn "Christ has risen from the dead and in so doing has trampled on death and to those in the tombs he has given life". The church bells ring in celebration, fireworks go off, ships sound their sirens and the light and sound makes the 4th of July seem tame in comparison.
People greet each other happily with the words Christos Anesti (Christ has arisen) which is replied to with Alithos Anesti (Truly He has arisen). Then everyone heads for home with their lighted candles where they trace the cross three times above the door and to bless trees and farm animals. Most people either stay home or go to a restaurant for the traditional bowl of margeritsa, a thick green soup made from the intestines of the lamb that will be roasted the next day, breaking their 40 day fast which began with the end of Apokreas. Gunshots, dynamite and fireworks will be going off for the next 24 hours or more shattering nerves and blowing off a finger or two.
There are many traditions
and ceremonies held around the country. in fact too many to mention here,
but Tomkinson's book goes into great detail and is a very helpful way to decide
where to spend Easter if you don't have friends or family to be with in Greece.
Easter Sunday
Easter day is most people's favorite day of the year. A lamb is roasted
and friends and families get together to eat, drink, talk and dance. In some
towns like Arachova and Livadeia, it is a community
celebration with rows of lambs roasting in the village square. In other
towns like Monemvasia, Rhodes, Hydra, Halkidiki, Koroni, Chania and
Leros the effigy of Judas or Barabbas is burned. In Syros and Karpathos
people bring their guns and shoot Judas as a scapegoat for society's ills. In
the town of Asine in the Argolid they actually have a street battle with the
men of the upper and lower parts of the village hurling insults and fireworks
at each other.
In southern Messenia people go to the main squares to watch the saetapolemos, which are rockets without sticks that the men hold while the force of the explosions makes them jump as if they are dancing. This practice supposedly goes back to the War of Independence when people of the area fashioned this home-made bombs to scare the horses of the Turks to force their riders to dismount and lose their advantage. During the afternoon the red eggs are brought out and each person takes one and hits their end against someone else's until the last person who has an un-cracked egg is considered the lucky person for the year.
In southern Messenia people go to the main squares to watch the saetapolemos, which are rockets without sticks that the men hold while the force of the explosions makes them jump as if they are dancing. This practice supposedly goes back to the War of Independence when people of the area fashioned this home-made bombs to scare the horses of the Turks to force their riders to dismount and lose their advantage. During the afternoon the red eggs are brought out and each person takes one and hits their end against someone else's until the last person who has an un-cracked egg is considered the lucky person for the year.
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Many Athenians who have not
gone home to their villages or to the islands will go up to Mount Parnitha or
somewhere in the countryside surrounding Athens. After their meal some people
pick wildflowers and make wreaths like Loula, wife of George The Famous Taxi Driver. (Every flower in this wreath
was picked on our Easter Sunday walk in the hills on the outskirts of Athens.
They were all growing wild on the side of the road.) There are very few ferries
running on Easter Sunday since most people are with their families. There may be
one boat a day to and from some of the popular islands and a few boats to the
Saronics. People who stay in Athens until Easter Sunday and then want to leave
town to celebrate in the country have to drive. From Monday until Wednesday it
is nearly impossible to get a flight or ferry back from the islands and the
roads are full of returning Athenians. Athens gets busier and busier and if
finally back to normal with traffic and horns blaring as people get back into
the swing of city life with renewed vigor. Besides being the holiest time of
the year Easter also means that in a few weeks it will be summer.
*
There are several family-run hotels that
invite guests to celebrate Easter with them. This is a great way to
actually take part in Orthodox Easter instead of just being a spectator.
See Easter in Poros.
On the beautiful island of Lesvos
you can join the Greek-Canadian Hahathakis family who own the Hotel
Aphrodite Beach in Vatera for a an island Easter celebration that will
not only have you taking part in the ceremonies but also learning how to
make the various Easter dishes and exploring the island. The Grand
Finale is a lamb roast at the beach with live Greek music. The price:
360 Euros per person for everything! See Easter
on Lesvos
If you are planning to be in
Greece for Easter be sure to make your reservations well in advance.
Most of the hotels on the islands are booked full for that weekend as
are ferries and
flights. To book hotels in Athens and the islands during Easter
visit Fantasy Travel at www.fantasytravelofgreece.com or use the Create-my-itinerary form
To order Festive Greece: A Calendar of Tradition by John L. Tomkinson visit Greek Books
Monday, December 5, 2011
Fairuz song: Syria - Aleppo
Fairuz is a Christian and
although she is a globally active peacemaker. People in the Middle East (
Christians and Muslims and Jews ) listen to Fairuz EVERY day......when
they sit on the balcony drinking their coffees and smokes, reading
newspaper, when they eat the lunch, when they go to the work, come back
home from work....Her voice unites the whole Mediterrenean.
This video shows the real beauty of Syria (Syrien) specially Aleppo (Halab) which is with Syria's capital Damascus the biggest city in Syria.
Aleppo is the most populous city in Syria, with a population of
2,181,061 as indicated in the official census of 2004. According to the
official estimate announced by Aleppo City Council, the population of
the city reached up to 2,301,570 by the end of 2005.
More than 80% of Aleppo's inhabitants are Sunni Muslims. They are mainly Arabs followed by Kurds and Turkmens. Other Muslim groups include few numbers of ethnic Circassians, Chechens, Adyghe, Albanians, Bosnians, Bulgarians, and Kabardin.
The Arabic-speaking population of Aleppo uses the North Syrian dialect of the Levantine Arabic.Being one of the largest Christian communities in the Middle East, Aleppo is home to many eastern Christian congregations, mainly Armenians, Syrian Christians
and Melkite Greeks. Nowadays, more than 250,000 Christians live in the
city representing about 12% of the total population. A significant
number of the Syrian Christians in Aleppo speak the Armenian language and hail from the city of Urfa in Turkey. The large community of Orthodox Christians belongs to the Armenian Apostolic,
Syrian Orthodox and Greek Orthodox Churches. There is also a strong
presence of Catholic Christians in the city including Melkite Greeks, Maronites,
Latins, Chaldeans and Syrian Catholics. Evangelical Christians of
different groups are a minority in the city. Several areas have a
Christian and Armenian majority, such as the old Christian quarter of
Jdeydeh. Modern Christian districts include Aziziyeh, Suleimaniyeh, Gare
de Baghdad, Ourubeh and Meydan. There are 45 operating churches in the city, possessed by the abovementioned Christian congregations.
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