Stamatopoulos family’s Greek Christmas with Pontian lyra in summer heat

·

Step inside the Stamatopoulos home on Christmas Day and the heat outside evaporates. Around the table sit yiayia Ioanna Eleftheriadis, Simela and Jim Stamatopoulos, and their now adult children, Martha and Panos. The extended family also fill the house. Generations gather, laughing, tuning a Pontian lyra, and flooding their Melbourne home with the unmistakable warmth of a Greek Christmas.

Inside, the air smells of roasting meats and pites; the lyra warms up for carols; children thread tinsel through the branches. It’s part Pontos, part Macedonia, part Sparta, entirely Melbourne, and unmistakably Greek.

It all started with Ioanna

Yiayia Ioanna arrived in Australia on 18 November 1972, pregnant with Simela and overwhelmed. 

“My sister had this giant Christmas tree with lights and decorations,” she recalls. “But it was so hot. Christmas without snow? I didn’t understand anything.”

Back in her Macedonian village, Christmas was a winter fairy tale: fresh snow, hand-cut trees stuffed with cotton, new shoes and coats, and the long, magical walk to church at dawn. Her mother cooked the Pontian classic keshkek (chicken with wheat) – “the most delicious thing in the world,” Ioanna still sighs.

She never recreated the dish in Melbourne, though she still has the recipe. What she did carry, and pass on, was something deeper. 

“The feeling is what you keep,” she says. “When you experience something as a child, you love it forever.”

Simela’s childhood

Greek school concerts. Koumbaroi visits. A house overflowing with relatives. And the annual trapezi, the sprawling Christmas table straight out of the Alphavitario with etchings by Kostas Grammatikopoulos – the classic Greek schoolbook that portrayed traditional life, big families, and tables glowing with love and connection.

“Christmas is a day that symbolises family,” Simela says. “The warmth you find at home, you don’t find anywhere else.”

And then there were the kalanta, a joy many Greek Australian children never experience. 

“We went door to door,” she laughs. “People cooking pites would pull one straight from the oven and hand it to us. We’d come home full just from treats.”

The cassette tapes and keyboards of the ’80s eventually gave way to lyres, modern Greek kalanta eventually were sung in the Pontian dialect. Today, the younger generation arrives at doorsteps with three Pontian lyres, playing carols house to house, a Melbourne tradition the neighbours hear long before they see.

Pontian Estia provided the rest: Christmas parties, gifts, dances, music, belonging.

“We were never alone,” Simela says. “We never felt like a minority.”

Jim, the Spartan perspective

Her husband Jim didn’t grow up with Greek associations or Greek school; his Hellenism was formed in Sparta itself during childhood visits.

“In ’74 and ’80 we went back to Greece,” he recalls. “Life was different there. We felt free. That feeling never left me.”

With his Australian friends, Greek culture wasn’t discussed. With his children, it would be different. 

“If my kids ever rejected their culture, I’d take them to Greece,” he says. “After that, it’s their choice.”

In his household, tradition isn’t gendered. “There are no men’s or women’s jobs,” Jim says. “Whoever can help, helps.”

A quiet but radical shift from Ioanna’s era.

Martha keeps the magic alive

Martha’s childhood memories are golden: decorating the tree, writing letters to Santa, sprinting to the living room on Christmas morning, singing kalanta with Pontian Estia, then driving through Ivanhoe to see the lights. Year after year, photos were taken under the same tree, an archive of growing up Pontian Greek in Melbourne.

She still honours the Greek custom of opening gifts on New Year’s. “If someone gave me a present early, I’d leave it under the tree,” she says. “Otherwise it ruined the magic.”

Now active in Pontian Estia, the Pallaconian Brotherhood, and even Cretan groups, she has become a young custodian of Greek identity. As education officer, she even pushed NUGAS to speak Greek for ten minutes at every meeting. “It worked,” she smiles.

Panos brings the philosophy

“When you’re a kid, you don’t ask why you do traditions,” he says. “You just follow them without realising. When you grow up, you understand their importance.”

Greeks who keep traditions, he believes, understand each other instantly “in a way that can’t be expressed in words.”

It’s a connection forged through upbringing, a creation of an identity that he sometimes sees shifting away in Greece but his upbringing, he says, is the Hellenism he knows. 

When the lyra comes out, Panos says he doesn’t intellectualise it as being Greek or following customs and traditions. “It’s just what we do,” he says, an organic part of his identity. 

Together, youth play Pontian versions of the kalanta, echoing the tradition revived each year when Pontian youth serenade households and community centres, just as villagers once did. Music connects generations.

A Stamatopoulos Christmas

A Stamatopoulos Christmas isn’t a collection of separate moments – it’s a living tapestry. 

It’s Greece of yesterday and Australia of today woven into one story, keeping the best of values.

Three generations shape this feast: Ioanna brings the nostalgia. Simela and Jim bring the balance. Martha and Panos bring the future.

Together, they’ve created something special: a Christmas lived, loved, sung, roasted, photographed, danced, and passed on, one warm, noisy, heartfelt December at a time.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

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

Latest News

Greece records longest working week in the EU, Eurostat data shows

Workers in Greece recorded the longest average working week in the European Union in 2025, according to new Eurostat figures.

Cannabis use among Greek teens reaches 25-year high

Cannabis use among teenagers in Greece has climbed to its highest level in 25 years, according to new findings released.

Metallica fans shook Athens harder than Iron Maiden, seismologists find

Fans of Metallica generated stronger seismic activity than supporters of Iron Maiden during recent Athens concerts, according to a study.

Investigation underway after historic bell disappears from Pylos fortress

Authorities in southwestern Greece are investigating the disappearance of a commemorative bell from a chapel inside the historic Niokastro fortress in Pylos.

Standoff grows over reopening of Kalavryta’s historic rack railway

A disagreement has emerged between the Greek government and local authorities in Kalavryta over the reopening of the famous Diakofto–Kalavryta rack railway.

You May Also Like

Greek Australian among top real estate rookies in Sydney’s Inner West

The Daily Telegraph have listed 10 real estate agents who have made their mark in the Inner West with less than five years of experience.

Greek Jews petition for Holocaust monument in Thessaloniki

Calls from the Greek Jewish Community have been made to make Thessaloniki Liberty Square a place of remembrance in honour of “Black Saturday”

Nick Kyrgios criticises Jannik Sinner’s rehire of banned fitness coach

Nick Kyrgios has slammed Jannik Sinner’s decision to rehire fitness coach Umberto Ferrara, calling out the move on social media.