News about Greece 16-30/4/95
From: Thanos Tsekouras <thanost@MIT.EDU>
Copyright 1995 The New York Times Company
The New York Times
April 30, 1995, Sunday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section 1; Page 4; Column 1; Foreign Desk
LENGTH: 632 words
HEADLINE: Greeks Help Serbs Get Oil, U.S. Asserts
BYLINE: By RAYMOND BONNER
DATELINE: VIENNA, April 29
BODY:
American intelligence officials have determined that Greek oil companies are
shipping thousands of barrels of fuel to Albania, and that most of it is
smuggled into Yugoslavia in violation of international sanctions.
The volume of smuggling tripled in the first three months, despite promises
by Albania to control it, intelligence reports show. The reports have been the
focus of closed-door meetings this week of the sanctions committee of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the European Union.
The sanctions were imposed by the United Nations in retaliation for
Yugoslavia's support of the Serbian military in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The American reports say the smuggling is providing Yugoslavia with almost
half of its fuel; the rest comes from oil wells and refineries in northern
Yugoslavia.
The Albanian representative to the European security organization, Zef Mazi,
said on Friday that his Government fully supported the sanctions and was doing
its best to enforce them.
What most concerns the diplomats is that the Serbs in Yugoslavia have
abundant fuel just when a frayed cease-fire in Bosnia is to expire -- "enough
for the tanks to move, the planes to fly, the ships to sail.
The Clinton Administration is now putting together measures to put pressure
on Albania to deal with the problem, the State Department said.
One weapon is economic assistance, one diplomat suggested. Last year Albania
received $16 million in economic aid from the United States.
The Administration could invoke a law enacted last year that provides for a
halt in assistance to countries that are not effectively enforcing the sanctions
against Yugoslavia.
There is nothing illegal about selling fuel to Albania, but European and
American diplomats there and in other Balkan countries say the Greek companies
must know that the fuel is being sent to Yugoslavia. In March Albania imported
9,000 more barrels a day than it needed for domestic consumption, one of the
American intelligence reports said. In January, the excess came to 3,645 barrels
a day.
Greek companies have replaced Italian ones as the principal source of fuel,
the intelligence reports show. But a Greek official, who declined to be
identified, took issue with the reports, saying Italy, not Greece, was the main
culprit.
The American intelligence reports say Greek companies provided 59 percent of
Albania's fuel imports last year and Italy provided 37.
Washington has made repeated overtures to Greece to control the trade. The
response has generally been that there is nothing illegal about selling fuel to
Albania. That has also been the Italian response.
While American and European officials concede this, they note that Greece is
generally sympathetic to the Serbs, who, like the Greeks, are mostly Orthodox
Christians.
Another report on Friday, by the sanctions committee of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, indicated that the most blatant violator of
sanctions after Albania is Macedonia. The report says 5,000 trucks crossed from
Macedonia into Yugoslavia in February and March. One truck carried six tons of
parts for a telephone exchange, another a ton of computers.
Earlier this year, Albania introduced a system under which the Albanian
Government is to verify that a shipment is intended for a legitimate user in
Albania before it is allowed to leave Italy or Greece.
Greek and Italian officials say they rely on that system instead of taking
actions against companies.
But the system is not working. In some cases, the sanctions committee's
report showed, Albania is improperly approving shipments. In other cases,
fuel-laden ships and trucks are being allowed to leave ports even when Albanians
have withheld approval, the report said.
GRAPHIC: Map of Greece and Albania.
Copyright 1995 The Sunday Telegraph Limited
Sunday Telegraph
April 30, 1995, Sunday
SECTION: INTERNATIONAL; Pg. 25
LENGTH: 771 words
HEADLINE: Greece 'trains Kurd guerrillas'
BYLINE: By Amberin Zaman in Bodrum
BODY:
THE tourism war between Turkey and Greece has taken a sinister turn amid
allegations that Athens is allowing Kurdish guerrillas to train on its
territory, before the separatists return to wreak havoc on Aegean beaches. Last
year a woman from Manchester died in a bomb blast at a Turkish resort. The
device was planted in a bin by members of the Marxist guerrilla organisation
fighting to establish an independent "Kurdistan" which would straddle Turkey,
Iraq and Iran. There are now strong indications that resorts on the western
coast of Greece, just a few miles from the nearest Greek islands, have become
key transit points. From there, it is said, Kurdish terrorists have been
travelling to Greece to learn bomb-making skills and then returning to murder
foreign tourists, thus sabotaging the Turkish economy. The most important of the
staging posts is allegedly Bodrum. This will come as some surprise to the tens
of thousands of British holidaymakers expected to descend here over the next
months. The small town is dominated by a magnificent Crusader castle and known
locally as "Bedroom", because of its reputation for sun, sea, sand and holiday
romance. Over glasses of raki, local fishermen relate in confidential tones how
PKK guerrillas are secretly making their way from nearby villages such as
Akyarlar and Karaincir across the narrow gulf of water separating Turkey from
the Greek island of Kos. Usually the Kurds go across at night in small fishing
boats, the men say. Some even swim and one is said to have windsurfed to Greece.
They either return via the same route or fly back from Europe, posing as
gastarbeiter, using fake passports provided by powerful Kurd drug barons. The
Turkish government supports these claims with the testimony of captured PKK
guerrillas, in which they describe travelling secretly to Athens via the Aegean
islands - mainly Kos, Rhodes, Meis, Lesbos or Samos - and then on to a "training
camp" 75 miles outside the Greek capital. Western officials say there is
mounting evidence that Greece is openly encouraging, if not actually
co-operating with, the PKK. American intelligence sources were recently quoted
as saying that they had photographic evidence of a PKK base north of the Greek
city of Salonica. Activity at the Greek base is apparently concentrated on the
making and planting of bombs, booby traps and mines. Camps in Iraq, Iran and the
Bekaa valley in the Lebanon provide training for the PKK volunteers in the
waging of guerrilla warfare. Turkish officials say that with its cheaper prices,
Turkey has the edge in the lucrative Aegean and Mediterranean holiday trade.
What better way then to redress the balance and damage a Turkish economy
dependent for foreign currency on the hordes of tourists from colder climes than
terrorism, they ask? Joanna Griffiths, a Mancunian tourist in her mid-20s, died
after a bomb went off in a rubbish bin in Marmaris last June. More than 20 other
Western tourists were hurt in separate explosions. The PKK claimed responsiblity
for all the attacks and has threatened to repeat them. Some of the evidence the
Turks have unearthed points to Greek complicity rather than active collaboration
with the Kurds. There are photographs of Greek deputies posing with the PKK
leader, Abdullah Ocalan. Speeches made by Greek officials and politicians have
expressed support for the "legitimate struggle of the oppressed people of
Kurdistan". The PKK's so-called political arm, the ERNK, was recently permitted
to establish offices in Athens, despite Turkish objections, and the Greek
government continues to welcome Turkish Kurd asylum-seekers, who are housed in a
refugee camp outside Athens. Unlike Turkey's Western allies such as the United
States and Britain, Greece refuses to describe the PKK as a terrorist
organisation. The Greek ambassador to Ankara, Dimitrios Neziritis, flatly denies
all the accusations. "We have observed with regret that Greece is considered
automatically as a sort of evil spirit moving behind the scenes to undermine
stability and peace in Turkey. This is stupid. If there is anyone who wants
stability here it is us." Athens had investigated all the Turkish authorities'
claims and "found nothing". However, Greek officials have said that while there
is no question of state involvement, some individuals may be helping the rebels.
One commented: "In Greece everything is possible. After all there is a long and
bitter tradition of hostility between us and the Turks. "There may be some
people who have the primitive idea that if my neighbour is in a bad situation
then I'll be in a good situation."
Copyright 1995 Reuters, Limited
Reuters World Service
April 20, 1995, Thursday, BC cycle
LENGTH: 343 words
HEADLINE: Ex- Cypriot president to lecture Turkish Cypriots
DATELINE: NICOSIA, April 20
BODY:
A former Greek Cypriot president of the divided Mediterranean island of
in a conference.
It is unusual for senior Cypriot officials to visit the north since the
island was divided in 1974, following a Turkish invasion sparked by a
short-lived coup in Nicosia engineered by a military junta then ruling Greece.
deliver a lecture at a conference on the economic implications of a solution to
the island's political question.
In 1983, the island's Turkish Cypriot minority declared an independent state
in northern Cyprus. It is recognised only by Turkey which maintains some 30,000
troops there.
''My lecture will be on the European community and Cyprus and I believe it's
very important that I have been invited over. It's the first time that a Greek
Cypriot will give a lecture to Turkish Cypriots,'' Vassiliou told Reuters.
''I know I will be criticised over this decision but I also know that if you
are doing the right thing you are not scared of criticism. After all, the EU
wants the whole of Cyprus to become a member,'' he added.
The Republic of Cyprus, run by Greek Cypriots since 1974, has applied for
full EU membership. On March 6, EU foreign ministers agreed to start accession
negotiations six months after an intergovernmental summit in 1996.
Vassiliou, a strong supporter of EU membership, and about 20 Greek Cypriot
businessmen and journalists were invited over to the north by the Turkish
Cypriot Young Businesmen's Association.
Association chairman Engin Ari told Reuters: ''This is the first such event
of its kind. It has no political strings whatsoever.''
''It is purely a businesslike move and is expected to shed light on the
importance of the problem of economic imbalance between Turkish Cypriots and
Greek Cypriots which will be quite a problem for a permanent and viable
solution.''
Copyright 1995 Xinhua News Agency
The materials in the Xinhua file were compiled by The Xinhua News Agency. These
materials may not be republished without the express written consent of The
Xinhua News Agency.
APRIL 20, 1995, THURSDAY
LENGTH: 144 words
HEADLINE: turkey warns greece over report against its diplomats
DATELINE: ankara, april 20; ITEM NO: 0420266
BODY:
turkey has warned its neighbor greece over a greek newspaper report which
described two turkish military attaches in athens as "spies," said foreign
minister erdal inonu today. the ultra-right athens-based stohos published on
tuesday names, pictures and addresses of the military attaches, accusing them of
spying on greece. the paper has targeted other turkish diplomats in athens
before, which led to terrorist attacks against the diplomats. "this is an
alarming action," inonu told reporters. "we have asked greece to take
necessary security precautions for the safety of our personnel." cetin gorgu,
turkish press attache in greece, was killed in an armed attack in athens in
1990. deniz bolukbasi, counselor at the turkish embassy, was seriously wounded
in another attack in 1993. the extremist november 17 group claimed
responsibility for both attacks.
Copyright 1995 Newspaper Publishing PLC
The Independent
April 17, 1995, Monday
SECTION: COMMENT; Page 13
LENGTH: 1096 words
HEADLINE: Ancient art, but what does it mean?; Classical scholars are all of a
twitter over a reinterpretation of the events in the Parthenon frieze If our
sons must die for Athens, why should our daughters not do so as well?
BYLINE: JAMES FENTON
BODY:
An American scholar called Joan Connelly has come up with a theory that
completely overthrows the traditional view of what the Parthenon frieze is
about. Not surprisingly, she has met opposition, and a kind of patronising
indifference, although every classicist with whom I have discussed the matter
has taken the theory seriously and in some cases greeted it with enthusiasm. One
could hardly imagine a more prestigious achievement in classical studies than
a reinterpretation of the frieze. Ms Connelly has yet to publish her theory in
full, but she has lectured on it, and been answered in print, and I believe
modified it a little. Here is a summary of the state of play so far.
One supposes that the Parthenon, which was designed as a whole, would make
sense as a whole, in its sculptural programme. In classical times, the main
attraction was the colossal statue of Athena by Phidias, which is described in
detail by Pausanias in the second century AD but has long since disappeared.
Pausanias also gives the subjects of the east and west pediments (which are so
damaged as to be hard to decipher): the birth of Athena from the head of her
father, Zeus, and the struggle between Athena and Poseidon for the land of
Attica (which is where Athens lies).
The other elements of the decoration of the Parthenon are the metopes (the
square panels) and the frieze. The metopes represent scenes of struggle between
gods and giants, Greeks and centaurs, Greeks and Amazons and Greeks and Trojans
(with scenes from the sack of Troy). Pausanias does not mention either these or
the great continuous frieze itself, and we have no earlier account of either
element.
The frieze was originally 524ft long. Of this, 420ft survives, 60 per cent
of which is in the British Museum. Most of the rest is in Athens, with bits
and bobs in Paris, Rome, Palermo, Vienna and Heidelberg. Apparently the best,
most complete reconstruction in plaster cast is in Basel, but short of going to
Basel you can buy a new book by Ian Jenkins, The Parthenon Frieze (British
Museum Press, pounds 17.99).
This book puts together all the visual information from every available
source (including some important 17th-century drawings) so that you can see
exactly how much we know of what the frieze was like, and how much must be left
to conjecture. The answer is that, as far as the general appearance of the
figures is concerned, there is very little left to conjecture. But as to
detail, and as to the significance of any individual figure, there is room for
conjecture everywhere. Ms Connelly's theory depends on a figure known in Mr
Jenkins's schema as E35 being female. Mr Jenkins believes it to be male. On the
evidence he presents, it seems to me at least as likely to be female.
As to the significance of the whole frieze, the traditional view, I learn
from an article by William St Clair in this week's TLS, dates back to 1787. This
is the theory that the frieze depicts the Great Panathenaic festival, which took
place every four years and involved a great procession to the Acropolis where a
newly woven garment, or peplos, was presented to Athena - that is, to Phidias's
statue in the Parthenon.
Mr Jenkins's book subscribes to this theory, but it also sets out the major
objections to it, of which the chief is this: if the frieze depicts the
festival, then it is the only temple frieze in ancient Greece to depict a
non-mythological event. Furthermore, things that we know were characteristic of
the festival are surprisingly absent from the frieze. Most notably, the peplos,
which was huge, was transported to the Acropolis on a ship on wheels, and that
it billowed out like a sail as it went.
But the peplos only features on the Parthenon frieze as resembling a folded
sheet or blanket (or, to my eye, a double duvet cover) that is being handed to
the young boy or girl (the crucial E35). This child stands next to Athena, but
the seated goddess has her back to the scene. If the point of the frieze is to
record the ceremonial presentation of the peplos to Athena, then it seems very
odd that the peplos gets given only to a temple servant, and that Athena has her
back to the scene.
The revolutionary theory says forget about the Panathenaic festival. Think
instead about the mythical war between Athens and Eleusis, in which Eumolpus
(the son of Poseidon) brought a large force of Thracians to assist the
Eleusinians, and laid claim to the throne of Attica in the name of his father.
Erechtheus was the king of Athens at the time. An oracle said that he must
sacrifice his youngest daughter Otionia to Athena. Otionia willingly agreed to
this, whereupon her sisters (who had once vowed that if one of them died
violently, they would all go together) submitted to death. Athens defeats
Eleusis and Attica is saved from Poseidon (reflecting the subject of the west
pediment).
Now the central group of the eastern frieze takes on an enormous
significance, appropriate for the focal point of the frieze. What we see is
Erechtheus giving his youngest daughter, E35, her sacrificial shroud. To his
left his wife, Praxithea, is in conversation with her older daughters,
Protogonia and Pandora (not the one with the box), who come with their own
shrouds balanced on trays above their heads, ready to die together for the
preservation of the city. On either side of this scene, the gods sit watching
the preparations for war.
You can find this story in Robert Graves's Greek Myths, which is based on
three ancient sources. But Ms Connelly was prompted by a text Graves couldn't
have known - a papyrus used as a mummy-wrapper in the Louvre, which turned out
to contain extracts from a lost play by Euripides, his Erechtheus. In this
extract, as quoted by Mr St Clair in the TLS, Praxithea says: "I hate women who,
in preference to the common good, choose for their own children to live." If our
sons must die for Athens, why should our daughters not do so as well?
The Parthenon stands next to the Erechtheum, which housed the tomb of
Erechtheus, and the two buildings, unusually, shared a common altar. The
Parthenon honours Athena, on whom Athens depends for its survival and its hold
over Attica and its subjection of Eleusis. The Parthenon frieze pays homage to
the sacrifice of Otionia and her sisters in securing the common good of Athens.
And you and I could have worked this out with a trip to the British Museum and a
copy of Graves's Greek Myths. Sickening , isn't it, and yet, seen in another
light, also somewhat inspiring.
Copyright 1995 Xinhua News Agency
The materials in the Xinhua file were compiled by The Xinhua News Agency. These
materials may not be republished without the express written consent of The
Xinhua News Agency.
APRIL 16, 1995, SUNDAY
LENGTH: 253 words
HEADLINE: new method to clean ancient metal objects used in greece
DATELINE: athens, april 16; ITEM NO: 0416007
BODY:
a new method for cleaning and preserving ancient metal objects is being used
for the first time in greece at the democritus atomic research center in athens.
scientists are using the plasma method to clean the ancient metal objects, of
which the time needed to do so is 50 to 100 times less than conventional
techniques. museums throughout greece are full of ancient tools, weapons and
utensils made of iron, silver or lead which often have to wait for five to ten
years before they can be restored. the greek research center's institute for
the science of materials, in collaboration with the institute of microelectronic
and nuclear technology, has developed a cylindrical device using plasma to
completely clean numbers of metal objects in just 48 hours. in physics, plasma
is fully ionized gas of low density containing approximately equal numbers of
positive and negative ions. it is electrically conductive and affected by
magnetic fields. plasma physics is especially important in research efforts to
produce a controlled thermonuclear reaction. the relevant program which began
last year also involves researching the possibility of using the plasma method
to preserve ceramics, marble and icons. the method was first researched at the
institute of inorganic chemistry of zurich university and later at munich's
technical university. it is being used to clean metal objects at the museum of
zurich and in several german museums, while research is currently under way in
france, norway and japan.
Copyright 1995 The New York Times Company
The New York Times
April 24, 1995, Monday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section A; Page 4; Column 3; Foreign Desk
LENGTH: 933 words
HEADLINE: Pendeli Journal;
From Greek Church, a Louder Nationalist Voice
BYLINE: By MARLISE SIMONS
DATELINE: PENDELI, Greece
BODY:
There could be no doubt about the passions of Father Timotheos.
Outside the medieval monastery, the sun was bouncing off the walls and
polishing the domes, but the priest's face lit up only when he had reached the
depths of the vaults.
"These are the secret classrooms," said the tall, bearded archimandrite, or
superior. He was showing the tiny, arched alcoves where the monks used to run a
hidden Greek school. Next, with evident pride, he opened up the old hiding place
for gunpowder and weapons.
"I still have two guns," he confided and launched into tales of a heroic past
in which Orthodox Christian monks defended their sites and kept the Greek
language and religion alive during nearly 400 years of Turkish occupation,
ending in the 19th century.
"And please accept my book," he continued, handing over a copy of "Eternal
Greece of Mine." It carried the subtitle, "The Position and Brilliance of Greece
in World History."
Father Timotheos practices his zealous nationalism at the Pendeli monastery
on the mountains overlooking Athens. But he is far from alone. With the
convulsion in the Balkans, the Greek Orthodox Church has found new opportunities
to reclaim its long-held position of guide of the nation and guardian of its
traditions.
As Greece finds itself with warring or unstable neighbors, aggravating its
customary sense of insecurity, the church's voice has become more prominent on
foreign policy issues. While the Primate of the Greek Church, Serafim, is
considered a moderate, many clergymen have helped to cultivate the nationalist
wave of the last two years.
On radio, television and in newspapers, priests and bishops have regularly
attacked the "injustices" committed by neighboring Macedonia, which has
infuriated Greece by using a name and symbols that Greeks contend belong only to
them.
Likewise, priests have loudly condemned neighboring Albania, joining the
Government in charging that Albania oppresses its Greek Orthodox minority. In
the northern city of Florina, the Bishop even started a radio station to beam
messages of support to Greek-Albanians across the border. He was forced to close
the station recently after strong pressure from Albania, local press reports
said.
"The church has taken advantage of nationalist passions to promote itself,"
said George Tsakiris, who writes about church affairs in the Athens newspaper
Eleftherotypia. "In the last 15 years, the church lost a lot of power to
politicians, especially to the anti-clerical left."
In the days leading up to Orthodox Christian Easter -- celebrated this year
on April 23 and 24 -- priests and bishops have reached out to fellow Orthodox
Christians in nearby Serbia. While much of Europe treats Serbia as a pariah and
the aggressor against Bosnia, Greece regards Orthodox Christian Serbia as a
longtime friend and ally.
"We consider the Serbs our brothers," Father Timotheos said in a tone that
left no room for debate. "We are in solidarity with them."
At the office of the Patriarch, Ioannis Hajifotis, the spokesman, said, "We
are sending food and medicine to the Serbs, but we also sent aid to Sarajevo for
other groups."
The reaction of the flock has been mixed. Some Greeks say they expected
nothing less than a strong stance from a church that helped form the national
identity and is still an intrinsic part of it. Others argue that the church role
in politics belongs to the past and should stay there.
All the same, the clergy's activism has not filled empty church services.
While 98 percent of Greeks declare themselves to be Orthodox Christians, the
majority treat the church as a place for social rituals and go there mainly for
baptisms, weddings and funerals.
Despite low church attendance, though, a different kind of spiritual interest
appears to be growing. Mr. Hajifotis said that in recent years, vocations to the
monastic life have started to pick up again, after a long decline. Educated
young men are leaving the cities and looking for the contemplative life again,
he said, above all in the isolated northern monasteries of Mount Athos. He said
precise figures were not available.
On another level, there is a broader curiosity, or perhaps nostalgia, for the
monasteries. At the Parousia bookstore in Athens, which specializes in
ecclesiastical subjects, sales of books on monasticism are up. A biography of
Father Paisios, an abbott of Mount Athos who died last year, has become his
store's best-seller. "It's young people who buy these books," said George
Tsakalos, Parousia's owner.
A kind of monastery tourism has sprung up all over the country. Father
Timotheos said that a decade ago, perhaps 100 people would stop each weekend at
Pendeli to talk to the monks or to attend a service. "Now we have weekends of
some 10,000 people," he said.
He sees this not as a spiritual revival but as a renewed interest in history.
"Of course people now have better cars and buses," he said, laughing. "What we
need is a better inner life."
At rest in a red velvet chair in the official reception room, Father
Timotheos turned his attention again to a favorite topic, eternal Greece. He
recalled the recent discussions in the European Union about reducing the number
of official languages by dropping tongues like Danish, Dutch and Greek that are
spoken by fewer people. He and other priests denounced this as an outrage.
"Greek is the mother of European languages," he said. "More than 10 percent
of their words are rooted in Greek." And, addressing far-off opponents, he
added, "Let them remember that even the word Europe is Greek."
GRAPHIC: Photo: In the days leading up to Orthodox Easter, celebrated yesterday
and today, the Greek Orthodox Church has reached out to Orthodox Christians in
Serbia. A priest baptized a baby at an Athens church. (Alain Kazinierakis)
Copyright 1995 Xinhua News Agency
The materials in the Xinhua file were compiled by The Xinhua News Agency. These
materials may not be republished without the express written consent of The
Xinhua News Agency.
APRIL 19, 1995, WEDNESDAY
LENGTH: 199 words
HEADLINE: fear of aids cuts abortions in greece
DATELINE: athens, april 19; ITEM NO: 0419220
BODY:
fear of aids and the increased use of condoms have apparently led to a 50
percent drop in the number of abortions in greece. a report by the greek family
planning organization, which was released here today, said that women had
apparently restricted the use of abortion as a method of birth control. "fear
of the disease led many to understand the need for prophylactics," the report
said. according to the report, the total number of abortions nation-wide had
fallen to 150,000 in 1993, which is said was a 50 percent drop. it did not
provide the year for which the comparison was made but indicated it was over a
10-year period. independent figures from the early 1980s show that there were
more than 250,000 abortions a year in the country. the report also found that
condoms were chosen by 50 percent of women as their primary method of birth
control in 1994, as compared to 36 percent in 1984. the report said most of the
women who chose prophylactics as a method of birth control and for protection
from the aids virus were over the age of 23. "prophylactics have not become as
widespread among younger people," it added without providing figures on women in
that age group.
Copyright 1995 Xinhua News Agency
The materials in the Xinhua file were compiled by The Xinhua News Agency. These
materials may not be republished without the express written consent of The
Xinhua News Agency.
APRIL 21, 1995, FRIDAY
LENGTH: 176 words
HEADLINE: d t 1300 bc- greece -tribe eaed042107hke -- greece to assist
alexandrian tribe in pakistan
DATELINE: athens, april 21; ITEM NO: 0421242
BODY:
two greek teachers unions have decided to set up a cultural center in the
hindu kush in northern pakistan to help preserve the way of life of a tribe
believed to be descendants of the army of alexander the great. the 5,000
members of the kalash tribe inhabit an area once part of the ancient greek
kingdom of bactria, founded by alexander's invading army. the tribe's language
reportedly has greek roots and is fairly easily understood by greeks, while
their dances are very similar to traditional dances of macedonia and thrace.
their attire has macedonian elements. despite harsh living conditions, the
tribe, which worships the twelve olympian gods, insists on remaining in the
region. a group of greek teachers recently visited the area and the tribe asked
them for help in preserving their customs and manners. two greek teachers
unions responded to the request by deciding to set up a cultural center there.
the center is expected to open in august to provide the tribe with language and
dance lessons and organize lectures and exhibitions.
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