Cyprus Community of NSW secures leading historian for major cultural launch in Sydney

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In a significant cultural and intellectual moment for the Cypriot diaspora in Australia, the Cyprus Community of NSW has secured internationally respected historian Dr Emilios A. Solomou as the official guest to launch both the EOKA Struggle for Liberty Exhibition and the newly established Cyprus Community Liberty Medal.

This announcement, provided exclusively to The Greek Herald, marks a defining moment in the Community’s cultural programme.

Dr Solomou will deliver the keynote address live from Cyprus, joining the Sydney audience via a direct Zoom broadcast, before engaging in a real-time discussion with attendees – an exchange that brings academic authority into direct conversation with lived community experience.

Dr Solomou’s presence carries considerable intellectual weight. As an Emeritus Scholar at the University of Nicosia and Honorary Director of its UNESCO Chair, he has built a distinguished career examining the history of Cyprus, the discipline of historiography, and the role of education in shaping civic identity.

His work spans foundational texts on colonial and modern Cyprus, including the widely cited Historical Dictionary of Cyprus (Bloomsbury, 2021), and reflects a sustained commitment to understanding how history is constructed, interpreted, and transmitted across generations.

It is precisely this depth of scholarship that underpins the significance of the exhibition he will open in Sydney. The EOKA Struggle for Liberty Exhibition is not presented as a conventional historical display. Rather, it is a critical exploration of how the struggle for Cypriot self-determination was interpreted beyond the island – particularly through media narratives, political discourse, and diaspora experience.

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The exhibition examines how international and Australian media framed the conflict, how those portrayals influenced public opinion and policy, and how Greek and Cypriot migrants navigated identity and perception in mid-twentieth century Australia. In doing so, it extends the story of the struggle beyond Cyprus itself, placing it within the broader experience of migration, adaptation, and belonging.

Speaking ahead of the launch, Dr Panagiotis Diamadis, Director of Archives and Heritage of the Cyprus Community of NSW, emphasised the importance of grounding the exhibition in rigorous historical analysis.

“This exhibition represents a maturation in how we present our history,” Dr Diamadis said. “It is not simply about commemoration. It is about understanding how narratives were formed, how they travelled, and how they shaped both policy and perception. By engaging with these questions, we are not only preserving history—we are interrogating it in a way that is meaningful for future generations.”

The initiative also reflects a broader vision articulated by the Community’s leadership. Michael Peters Kyriacou, Honorary President of the Cyprus Community of NSW, described the event as a deliberate effort to connect historical legacy with contemporary responsibility.

“The story of Cyprus is not confined to the past,” Mr Kyriacou said. “It continues to inform who we are as a people – both in Cyprus and across the diaspora. This exhibition, and the introduction of the Liberty Medal, are about ensuring that the principles of freedom, dignity, and democratic participation are not only remembered, but actively upheld.”

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The Cyprus Community Liberty Medal, to be launched on the evening of the exhibition, has been conceived as a lasting institution recognising those who advance these principles in modern contexts. Its placement within the exhibition underscores the continuity between the historical struggle for self-determination and the ongoing global pursuit of liberty and human rights.

Community Director Kyriacos Panayi noted that the format of the event itself reflects this forward-looking approach.

“We are creating a space where history is not simply observed, but discussed and engaged with,” Mr Panayi said. “The opportunity for attendees to interact directly with Dr Solomou, to ask questions and exchange ideas, transforms the event into a living conversation. That is essential if our history is to remain relevant.”

By incorporating a live international address and interactive discussion, the event bridges geographical distance and brings global scholarship into direct dialogue with the Australian Cypriot community. It reflects a broader shift in how diaspora communities engage with their past – moving from preservation alone towards critical engagement and intellectual exchange.

As Cyprus approaches its Presidency of the Council of the European Union in 2026, the themes explored in this exhibition – identity, sovereignty, media influence, and democratic values—resonate far beyond their historical origins. They speak to contemporary global challenges and underscore the enduring relevance of Cyprus’ experience.

With the participation of Dr Solomou, the Cyprus Community of NSW has positioned this event not merely as a cultural milestone, but as a serious contribution to public history and international dialogue.

It is, in every sense, an exhibition that looks outward as much as it looks back.

For further information and to RSVP to the events:

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