In this premiere issue: |
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A philhellene is someone who loves Greece and the Greeks. The word has a
significant history tied
to European support of Greece's 19th century war for independence. Today it
can be applied
informally to those who want to look beyond the beaches and the justly
celebrated quality of the
light to know more about this fascinating country and people.
But learning about Greece, staying in contact with Greece when you aren't
there is difficult in the
United States. Oh, all the surface information is readily available in a
dozen guidebooks and
assorted picture books, but there is so much more! More places than the
standard tourist haunts,
more history than the miraculous century that produced the Parthenon, and
more life, culture,
politics and people than as a colorful background for the tourist trade.
I've been looking for this "other" Greece for the last two years, and so
the purpose of this internet
magazine is to both share what I have found about this fascinating place,
and provide a forum to
stimulate the sharing of more information.
In the months ahead, look for reviews of books, magazines, mailing lists,
web sites, publishers that
will open up the world of Greece to you. Look for comments and
interpretation of current Greek
affairs. Greece inspires passion, and I hope some of my passion for the
place comes through.
To be sure there is a bit of the "phony war" about it all: tourism goes on
blithely. The one thing the
two countries agreed on is not to have any military maneuvers in the Aegean
tourist zone in the peak
tourist season of July and August.
But explosive issues are right at hand. Greece could extend its territorial
waters to the detriment of
Turkish commerce and Turkey could put more pressure on the Orthodox
Ecumenical Patriarch
already isolated in Istanbul. Periodically talk surfaces of turning the
ancient Hagia Sophia church in
Istanbul into a mosque. Both nations harbor small and vulnerable ethnic
minorities of the other who
could be squeezed.
External dangers also abound. Greece and Turkey sit at the edge of multiple
hurricanes: the Balkan
conflict to the northwest, the Chechen rebellion to the north, the Kurdish
conflict to the east, and the
Middle East conflict to the south east. A shift of political winds on any
of these fronts could send
heavy weather into the region. And rumors about oil deposits in the region
could bring trouble
coming from below as well.
Both countries work at being internally stable. The Turks are dealing with
Kurdish separatists, a
number of human rights issues and endless coalition governments, the most
recent of which brought
to power for the first time an Islamic leader, threatening a rift with the
secular army. The Greeks of
course not only invented democracy but factions as well. Faithful to this
heritage Greek premiere
Simitis takes so much flack from members of his own party that the insults
of the opposition must
seem trivial by comparison.
Add to all of this the bland U. S. refusal to see anything other than "two
valued NATO allies," (while
they ignore Turkish problems for the sake of having a western oriented
Islamic country) and its
enough to make a philhellene cry, or just head back to the beach. But there
are also signs of hope.
Beneath all the blustering, at least to this observer, can be discerned a
desire by the governments to
redefine the issues from hyper-nationalistic posturing towards the real
potential of the relationship.
Over the last year, both the Greek premier Costas Simitis and the former
Turkish leader, Tansu
Ciller, seemed to be reaching for a more stable relationship - but
venturing only as much
reasonableness as could go undetected by their hyper-nationalistic
fellow-politicians.
Simitis, upon his ascension to power around the start of the year, moved
swiftly on several
diplomatic fronts. He resolved the practical conflicts that Greece had with
the Former Yugoslav
republic of Macedonia, opening up economic activity and securing the
borders, leaving only the
name dispute to perhaps wither away. This issue (Greek refusal to allow the
country to call itself
Macedonia) continues to make Greece look foolish to the world. Diplomatic
and military
agreements were sought with
The Turkish side is harder to read, but while must blustering and posturing
continues, no offensive
actions have taken place.
It's as if no one dares be reasonable, as if to actually make peace with
the other would prove fatal
to the government. Perhaps that is correct. Two examples may show it.
Recently, a Turkish army
officer made an absurd claim that the island of Gavdos, south of Crete, was
"disputed." Despite the
bizarre nature of the claim (as if Russia laid claim to the Farallon
Islands off San Francisco), the
Turkish government was paralyzed, unable to disavow the actions of its army
officer (apparently)
for fear of seeming weak.
The Greeks went ballistic, of course, and eventually, even the United
States government had to
intervene. Several weeks of this critical non-crisis were necessary before
it could be said that the
Turkish officer only meant to object to certain changes in Greek military
exercises, and no sovereign
issues were involved. Who knows if this was the case, but it illustrated
the inability of the Turkish
government simply to say, "the army officer doesn't make Turkish policy,
and we have no claim on
Gavdos." Even "giving up" a claim you never had is too reasonable for the
politics of this region.
Equally illustrative of the fear of being reasonable is the corner that the
Greeks have painted
themselves into over talking with Turkey. "No negotiations" is the cry: no
negotiations to surrender
sovereignty over an island, or anything else. Perhaps this is an effective
strategy with a child
demanding another toy, but it makes no sense with a neighboring country.
Greece and Turkey are
intimately connected, most obviously to Americans by tourism, to the
discerning by history and
culture, and in geopolitical realities by a common stake in economic
development and stability. How
else will Greece know what exact claims Turkey is making (if any) unless
they talk to them? How
could either Greece or Turkey be an active part of the global economy if
the other was either a
basket case or excluded behind a boycott?
Simitis and his government explored various ways of "talking" without
"negotiating," each seized
upon by the opposition and by part of his own party as yet another sign of
appeasement.
While Simitis deserves our respect and encouragement for his attempt to
make peace without
getting caught being reasonable, its left to the ordinary citizens to reach
out in courage to a common
human future. Recently all of Greece was ecstatic with pride at the
gold-medal-winning performance
of gymnast Yiannis Melissanidis. As reported by the Athens paper Ta Nea and
recounted by Derek
Gatopoulos, Melissanidis in 1994 gave his silver world championship medal
to the family of Murat
Canbas, the Turkish athlete killed in a car accident. Canbas' father, a
Turk, rejoices at the Greek
Melissanidis' success, "he is my son too." This isn't likely to make Dick
Enberg's justly celebrated
Olympic moments, but it should.
Of such reasonableness is a secure future made. That's this philhellenes'
perspective.
It's gone largely unnoticed in the "mainstream" (read: superficial)
American news media, but Greece
and Turkey have been continuing their long term sniping at each other. They
nearly went to war this
past January over the tiny island of Imia, protests are hurled back and
forth about airspace
violations by military overflights, and then there is the impasse over
Cyprus. But the rhetoric! Check
out soc.culture.greek for your daily dose of insults.
Albania. As regards Turkey, while mouthing all the correct words
about "not one inch" of sacred Greek soil would be surrendered, he agreed
to blink (just a bit)
during the crisis over the Imia islet in January, saving a war without
giving up an island.
Every couple of months in the rec.travel.europe newsgroup somebody says they're going on vacation in Greece in the winter, and will it be warm enough to swim? The newsgroup regulars grit their teeth and try to explain: Greece is not a tropical country. It gets cold and rainy in the winter, nothing to impress someone from Norway, but too cold for the beach.
I've compared weather information from a number of sources, tried to resolve the contradictions that I found to give you a consensus opinion.
Data comes from "Athens: A Knopf Guide," "Greece: Travel Agent's Manual for 1995"; "Cadogan Greek Island Guide," 5th ed, 1993; "Thomas Cook Greek Island Hopping, 1995", "Greece: the Rough Guide," 1993; Rick Steves' "Europe through the Back door, 1995; and last, but definitely not least, The National Technical University of Athens
Avg Avg Daily Daily High Low Rain Avg. hrs. (F) (F) Days Sunshine JAN 54 43 14 FEB 57 45 12 MAR 59 46 10 APRIL 68 52 9 MAY 77 61 6 9 JUNE 86 68 4 11 JULY 91 71 2 12 AUG 91 73 1 11 SEPT 84 66 2 9 OCT 75 59 7 7 NOV 66 52 12 5 DEC 59 46 14 4
For those of you who don't like numbers, here are three points to keep in mind:
(i). Greek temperatures vary more by altitude and exposure than by north to south. There are only slight climatic differences from the islands to the far north. Height above sea level and exposure to ocean breezes make more difference.
(ii). Look at mid-May to mid-June and September as good times to visit. Both have good weather and fewer crowds. Most things are open full blast then.
(iii). Winter is winter. Greece is not a tropical country, its too far north. In winter it is dark, cold, rainy and windy. That can have a stark beauty, but you aren't going to sit on the beach all day in that weather.
"Vanishing Greece" Photographs by Clay Perry, introduction by Patrick
Leigh Fermor, text by
Elizabeth Boleman-Herring. Cross River Press, New York, 1992. Large
format (approx 10x7) soft
cover book, 190 pages, slick paper. I think it was about $25. Also
available via Cosmos Publishing
of the Hellenic Literature Society.
There are many picture books of Greece that show off the standard sites:
the Acropolis, Santorini's
view, etc. This is not a book for that, but a book that shows off the
rest of Greece.
The book is a collection of photographs with accompanying text, that
attempts to document what
the authors see as the vanishing aspect of (largely) rural Greece. There
is only one shot of the
Parthenon, almost none of any tourist sites. Rather there are numerous
photos of rural villages, both
mainland and on the islands, including 26 pages on Mt. Athos and 37 pages
on Crete. We see
portraits of rural folk, including both men and women, some in
traditional attire, showing the
work-a-day life of the bakers, craftsfolk, priests and others of rural
life. The text is more than simple
photo captions, and includes some interviews with the people pictured. A
surprisingly extensive
bibliography for a "picture book" is included. Don't buy this as your
first book about Greece, but as
your second one.
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This section, to be a regular in this journal, will contain pointers to good resources for learning about Greece. This time let's look at two magazines: one paper, one internet. Published bi-monthly by Zephyr Publications of Athens. Represented in New York at 1790 Broadway, New York, NY 10019, Tel: 212/977-6719. Subscriptions: $30 a year. Odyssey is a unique magazine: a slick, colorful journal of contemporary Greek affairs covering not only Greece but the Orthodox church (to some extent) and the world-wide hellenistic diaspora. It's tone is worldly, sophisticated, a bit flip, very hip. It's not a puff piece; recently it critiqued the Greeks about Greek-American lobbying in Washington and dissected Greece's hopeless quest to get the 1996 Olympics. You will find articles debunking the Black Athena, interviews with significant Greek leaders, and looks at regions and islands. The graphic content is up to the minute and its a visual pleasure to examine. Each summer they run a review of the Summer festivals in Athens and other places in Greece. An average issue of the 8 1/2 x 11 inch format magazine has 80 or so pages. My only complaint is that reading the thing makes me sad that I'm not in Greece. I have to admit that I'm not sure what is up with this magazine since it produced one internet edition several months ago and nothing since, but check out that one issue if you've got a yen for some heavy-duty analysis of Balkan issues from a Greek perspectives. |
In defense of Athens: can this marvelous city get any respect? Patmos journal: The Revelation, the computer, and the ATM. And: more book and internet reviews. |
is published once a month to the newsgroups soc.culture.greece and rec.travel.europe as well as appearing on the web. It is published by John P. Nordin who is solely responsible for its contents. You may reproduce this material, in whole or in part provided you provide proper acknowledgement of the source, and you don't distort the content. |
The Philhellenic Perspective web-site
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