Greek flag to fly in Canterbury-Bankstown City to honour OXI Day

·

Canterbury-Bankstown Councillors have voted to fly the Greek flag in recognition of the annual OXI Day celebrations.

Councillors unanimously endorsed a Notice of Motion at last night’s Council Meeting (Tuesday, October 22) to fly the flag at Bankstown, Campsie and Earlwood.

Canterbury-Bankstown Mayor Bilal El-Hayek said Greek culture is a meaningful part of the City’s rich diversity.

“We’re lucky to have so many different cultures to celebrate in CBCity and we’ll be raising the Greek flag in honour of our wonderful Greek and Cypriot community,” Mayor El-Hayek said.

“The Greek community has contributed so much to the City. It’s a community that thrives on hard work and a commitment to family and boasts some of Australia’s leading entrepreneurs, businessmen and academics.”

greek flag canterbury bankstown
Greek flag raised at Earlwood Senior Citizens Centre. File photo.

Observed each year, OXI Day (also referred to as Ohi or Ochi) is also known as “Day of No.” The day commemorates General Ioannis Metaxas’ refusal to Italy’s Benito Mussolini to give free access for Italian troops to invade and occupy strategic areas of Greece during World War II. This ultimately led to Greece’s involvement in the war on the side of the Allies.

OXI Day is a cherished national holiday celebrated on October 28 annually in Greece, Cyprus and by their ancestral communities worldwide, which sees streets and homes decorated with the Greek flag and communities observing parades and services.

Mayor El-Hayek said Greek Australians make up the seventh-largest ethnic group in the country, with more than 22,000 calling Canterbury-Bankstown home.

Earlwood boasts more than 7,000 residents of Greek ancestry, one of the largest Greek communities in Australia.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Greek Australians recognised in King’s Birthday 2026 Honours List

The King’s Birthday 2026 Honours List has recognised several Australians of Hellenic heritage for their outstanding contributions.

Penny Pachos reinstated as St Euphemia College principal after Archbishop meeting

Penny Pachos has been reinstated as Principal of St Euphemia College, with the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese confirming her continuation.

5,000 years beneath our feet: A Kytherian dig that needs us

This month, a team of archaeologists from the University of Sydney is starting to dig into 5,000 years of our story there.

Antipodean Palette 2026 to celebrate the continuing story of Greek Australian culture

Antipodean Palette has become one of the most significant annual cultural events in Melbourne's Greek Australian calendar.

Thousands of free water-saving kits to be distributed across Cyprus

Cyprus is stepping up efforts to tackle water scarcity by distributing thousands of free water-saving devices to households and businesses.

You May Also Like

South Melbourne storm into Australia Cup semi-finals after Hume City thriller

An all-Victorian, extra-time, 3-2 classic between Hume City and South Melbourne kicked off the 2024 Australia Cup Quarter-Finals.

EU threaten Turkey with sanctions if ships don’t withdraw from Greek waters

EU foreign ministers met to discuss support for Greece after Athens ratified a pact on its maritime boundaries to counter Turkey’s claims to energy resources in the region.

From addiction to art: The poetic rebirth of JayZed

JayZed isn’t your average affluent Melburnian resident spinning suburban fairytales. He’s a tradie with a past who discovered poetry.