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‘Everything I do, I find a little success in’: Violinist Dimitri Calligeros reflects on his career

As Dimitris Basis walks towards the front of the stage with conductor George Ellis to begin the show on the 200th Anniversary of the Greek War of Independence, principal violinist Dimitri Calligeros holds on his musical instrument tight and gives the concert pitch along with a bright smile. 

Everything is ready to go. The vibrant and warm on-stage energy spreads like a peplum over the audience at Adelaide’s Town Hall.  

Ellis bows in front of the attendees before he goes on to silently introduce to the crowd his right-hand man, Dimitri Calligeros. 

Violinist Dimitri Calligeros with conductor George Ellis. Photo: The Greek Herald/Argyro Vourdoumpa

The two men, met working for the Sydney Opera House Orchestra nearly 20 years ago and they developed a strong musical rapport as well as a very close friendship as George Ellis reveals to The Greek Herald.

“He is a superb musician. As my concertmaster, he not only plays by example on stage but also helps me behind the scenes by collating and sorting the music. He is my right-hand man and my go-to person for all our Greek music orchestral performances. I respect him highly,” says Ellis.

So much respect they have for each other, that George trusted Dimitri to conduct the concert held in Brisbane last week. Only a few hours before this major undertaking, a first of this scale in his career, the violinist spoke to The Greek Herald about his career in music, his future plans and shared his advice for aspiring musicians.  

Dimitri Calligeros conducted the 200 Years of Greek Independence concert in Brisbane

Who is the virtuoso violinist?        

A Sydney-born, third generation Australian of Greek heritage, Dimitri Calligeros doesn’t recall exactly when he first saw or heard the violin.

“What I remember is that I was about three years old when I started telling my parents that I wanted to play the violin,” he says. 

But nothing happened until some years later when Dimitri was in primary school.

“One day we did some music trials and I got to try out the violin by chance. I was very enthusiastic and my teacher, who ended up being my mentor for many years, called my parents to suggest that I should play the violin and this is how it all started,” Dimitri says.

“I finally got to play and that was that. I have been playing for more than 30 years.”

Dimitri Calligeros in Adelaide. Photo: The Greek Herald/Argyro Vourdoumpa

A proud Kytherian 

As passionate he is about his music, he is proud of his Kytherian background.

“I’m a Tsirigoti (a Kytherian),” he tells me in fluent Greek and explains how his yiayia (grandma) who migrated to Australia with her husband, was the first person to teach him the language. 

“She would sit me down and talk to me all the time,” he says, explaining how his upbringing has influenced his career.

“When you speak a different language, your mind thinks in a different way, from a different perspective.”

Asking him if he can sense the impulsiveness and the emotion of a Greek audience while on stage, he nods and smiles. 

“You can feel the energy. For us – me and colleagues – who are classically trained, it’s so refreshing to come to a stage and a concert like the one we currently perform for the 200 Years from the Greek Revolution, around Australia. There is so much involvement and this brings a great feeling all round.”

The audience at the Adelaide Town Hall. Photo: The Greek Herald

‘Everything I do, I find a little success in’

What does the musician consider the biggest success of his career so far?

“This is a hard question,” he says, “it’s like when I’m being asked what’s my favourite piece to play.”

“Everything I do, I find a little success in. My biggest success is that I do what I love doing full time and at the same time I have the opportunity to work together with great people like George Ellis.”

I ask him to give his advice to people who want to follow in his footsteps.

https://www.facebook.com/AdelaideConcert/posts/883997908996727

“Believe in yourselves, work hard because nothing can be achieved without hard work and do what you love doing with passion. Follow your heart,” says the violinist who is also a music teacher. 

Speaking about his future plans, Dimitri looks forward to releasing a solo violin recording of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, that will be available soon. 

Aliki Diplarakou: All you need to know about Greece’s first Miss Europe

By Ilektra Takuridu 

Aliki Diplarakou was born on August 28, 1912, in Athens, although her family was originally from Mani. She was one of the three daughters of lawyer Georgios Diplarakos and Elena Nikolesi. The original family name was Vavouli, but it was converted to Aliki’s paternal grandmother’s maiden name of Diplarakou. After being elected Miss Hellas, she became the first Greek contender to win Miss Europe.

The beauty queen had big brown eyes, and thin beautifully shaped lips, with a of height 1.68m and a thin figure she was the ideal woman of that era.

In 1929, the Aliki represented her home town as Miss Athens in the Miss Hellas contest. She won first place and was awarded the chance to represent Greece at the Miss Europe contest in Paris. Aliki was also successful in this contest and was ultimately crowned Miss Europe on 6 of February 1930.

That same year, the 18-year-old Greek beauty was chosen to represent her nation and continent (Europe) in the Miss Universe Pageant. Diplarakou came so close and finished second in the event, which took place on October 13, 1930, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 

Aliki was most renowned for her success in these pagents, however this Greek beauty had more than just a gorgeous face. Diplarakou, who was well-educated, independent, and eloquent, defied stereotypes about beauty pageant participants. She was a polyglot who knew four languages and subsequently lectured on ancient and current Greek culture in the United States. She could speak fluently English, French and Italian.

In 1932 Diplarakou married Paul-Louis Weiller, a rich French director from the Gnome et Rhône family. The couple had only one child, Paul-Annick Weiller, he would later be married to Princess Olimpia Torlonia di Civitella-Cesi. Alika and Paul Annick became grandparents of the Princess Sibilla of Luxembourg. Diplarakou and Paul’s marriage did not last and they seperated.

Her second marriage was with Sir John (Jack) Wriothesley Russell, a descendant of John Russell, the sixth Duke of Bedford. Through this marriage Diplarakou received the title of Lady Rusell. The couple had two children, Georgiana Alexandra Russell and Alexander Charles Thomas Wriothesley.

In 1953, more than two decades after Aliki became Miss Europe the Times Magazine published an article titled “The Climax of Sin.” In the article the focus was women liberation and it featured a story about Aliki in 1930, when she dressed herself as a man and entered sacred Mount Athos, where women are not permitted. The narrative of Mount Athos showed the world how strong and forward thinking Aliki was. 

Aliki Diplarakou, who passed away in her 90s, was buried as Lady Alice Russell on November 7, 2002, by the Hagia Sophia Orthodox Cathedral in London.

Aliki Diplarakou is remembered not only for her beauty, but for her strength and inelegance as a woman. 

Queensland mother Natalie Tsokas furious with actions of local Council

Queensland mother, Natalie Tsokas, says she lived through the trauma of her eight-year-old son’s death all over again when local authorities totally cleared his grave, leaving only a patch of dirt, the ABC reports.

The community has vented its disgust over the actions of the Scenic Rim Regional Council, with numerous other residents claiming it cleared their relatives’ graves without fair warning.

Natalie Tsokas said she received an email last week informing her that her son Ollie’s grave had been cleared of a number of unauthorised items that contravened Tamborine Mountain Cemetery’s policies.

Ms Tsokas, who will mark the third anniversary of Ollie’s death in three weeks’ time, said she was “devastated” by the news.

Ollie’s mother placed petals and a small candle where he’s buried after the council stripped the site bare.(ABC Gold Coast: Tara Cassidy)

“His grave was left without a marker on it, without anything on it, it was completely empty, everything taken away,” she said.

Ms Tsokas said in the last year she was notified by Scenic Rim Regional Council that she would need to keep her son’s grave site tidy which she did.

“I did so and at that time, I contacted a mason to see how to go about putting a proper headstone there,” she said.

In a statement, Scenic Rim Regional Council said its workers had removed the items and plants from Ollie’s grave, but it had been in touch with the family.

Ms Tsokas said seeing Ollie’s grave cleared made her feel as he had been left alone. Photo: ABC

“The Scenic Rim Regional Council has been in contact with both families and wishes to respect their privacy and grief by not sharing details of our correspondence on these sensitive matters,” a spokesperson said.

“After several compassionate notifications were made to both families about unauthorised items at gravesites, as per council policy, council has removed the items and held them in safekeeping for collection by the families.”

Ms Tsokas said since the ordeal, a fundraising page had been set up by a friend of Ollie’s, asking for donations to help purchase a headstone for him.

Full Story: ABC

Hellenic AC crowned the winners of Darwin’s inaugural GleNTi Cup

There was plenty of excitement in the air as thousands of spectators gathered on Tuesday night to watch the Hellenic Athletic Club claim victory over its rival, Darwin Olympic, at the inaugural GleNTi Cup.

The Cup, which was held at the Darwin Football Club, kicked off at 6pm with a special exhibition match featuring the under 16 women teams, with Hellenic AC claiming victory 3-1.

“The girls loved it. They came off the football ground pumped and now next year, the senior women teams will be holding a match for actual competition points,” Nick Poniris, President of the Greek Orthodox Community of Northern Australia, tells The Greek Herald.

READ MORE: ‘Taste of GleNTi’ kicks off a big week of Greek festivities in Darwin.

From there, the men’s Premiere League match was officially launched with the help of Mr Poniris and the CEO of Football Northern Territory, Bruce Stadler.

READ MORE: Darwin GleNTi returns with a bang in 2021 and is set to mark Greek Revolution bicentenary.

Mr Poniris first initiated a special tribute ceremony in honour of worthy past members of both clubs. This was Matthew Boubaris from Hellenic AC and Alki Athineos from Darwin Olympic. The past achievements of both players, who have passed away, were read out proudly as spectators watched on respectfully.

“The tribute was well received by the public. The families were touched and pleased we showed the players honour, dignity and respect,” Mr Poniris says.

After the solemn tribute, the fierce match between the two men teams started, with both goals by Hellenic AC being scored in the first half, followed by a heavily contested second half.

But ultimately, as the final bell rang, Hellenic AC were crowned the winners of the match, 2-0, and cheers quickly erupted from the crowd. At the trophy ceremony, a player from each team was then selected as ‘Player of the Match.’

“There really is only one serious match that needs to be won and it’s called the GleNTi Cup match,” Mr Poniris says.

“Apart from the prestige of being the winner of the inaugural cup, the team also gets bragging rights throughout the whole GleNTi Festival on the weekend.”

Hellenic AC players will receive their trophy during the festival this weekend on June 12-13.

Operation Ironside: Greek Australians among those arrested in SA

So far 95 South Australians have been charged in the Operation Ironside police sting among them a number of Greek Australians, the Advertiser reports.

Of those, 48 were arrested on Monday when police blew the operation wide open in a series of 5.30am raids across Adelaide. The individuals are facing charges ranging from manufacturing and trafficking drugs, participating in a criminal organisation, firearms offences and conspiracy to murder.

In total, police have seized 90kg of high-grade methamphetamine, with a street value of $45m, 50L of fantasy, 350kg of cannabis and 10,000 ecstasy tablets.

Here’s a list of who some of the people arrested, where they’re from and what they’ve been charged with according to the publication.

THEODORE TASMAN BROIKAS 

Aged 45 from Wattle Park. Charged with possessing illegal firearms, ammunition and silencers as well as trafficking in a large commercial quantity of a controlled drug.

APOSTLE BROIKAS 

Aged 18 from Burnside. Charged with trafficking in a large commercial quantity of a 
controlled drug.

ISSA BOULOS

Aged 35 from Two Wells. Charged with possessing firearms and ammunition without a licence

https://www.facebook.com/SouthAustraliaPolice/posts/155480369949868

LUKE KOKOTIS 

Aged 44 from Hackham. Charged with trafficking in a large commercial quantity of a 
controlled drug.

CHRISTO NICKOLAS 

Aged 32 from Ascot Park. Charged with two counts of money laundering.

STAMATI TOULANTAS

Aged 24 from Park Holme. Charged with trafficking in a controlled drug, possess prescription drug and possess prohibited weapon.

*Full Story: The Advertiser

Pandemic pushes Athens to bottom of EIU’s most liveable cities rankings

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COVID-19 has shaken up the Economist Intelligence Unit’s (EIU) annual ranking of most liveable cities, propelling Auckland to first place, replacing Vienna, which crashed out of the top 10 as the island nations of New Zealand, Australia and Japan fared best.

The Austrian capital had led the list since 2018 and for years ran neck and neck with Melbourne at the top of the survey of 140 urban centres. New Zealand’s elimination of COVID-19 within its borders through lockdown measures helped by its geographic isolation, however, gave its cities a big boost

Auckland, New Zealand

“New Zealand’s tough lockdown allowed their society to reopen and enabled citizens of cities like Auckland and Wellington to enjoy a lifestyle that looked similar to pre-pandemic life,” the EIU said in a statement.

Illustrating New Zealand’s advantage this year, Wellington also entered the top 10. It came fourth behind Osaka, which rose two spots to second place, and Adelaide, which leapfrogged its compatriots Sydney and Melbourne to third place from 10th.

The latest ranking is from 2019 as last year’s was cancelled.

Glenelg, Adelaide

“The COVID-19 pandemic has taken a heavy toll on global liveability,” the EIU said.

“Cities across the world are now much less liveable than they were before the pandemic began, and we’ve seen that regions such as Europe have been hit particularly hard.”

According to the report, some countries among them Athens, continue to score poorly across the five categories.

“A consistently low stability score, owing to ongoing civil unrest and military conflicts, is the reason behind most of these cities featuring in the bottom ten. However, conditions have deteriorated even further as a result of Covid-19—particularly for healthcare,” reads the report.

The lower end of the rankings has seen less change, with the Syrian capital, Damascus, still the least liveable city in the world.

Greek PM considers mandatory vaccination for healthcare workers

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Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis hinted on Tuesday that the government could make vaccination against Covid-19 mandatory for healthcare professionals and carers in nursing homes, Kathimerini reports. 

Speaking during a debate on a bill for the digital covid certificate, the PM said that the government’s efforts to persuade the public on the merits of inoculation will “soon” be replaced by its “official position” on the mandatory vaccination of workers working in hospitals and clinics, as well as in elderly care units. 

“The government will decide with sensitivity and a clear priority in public health,” he told lawmakers.

In mid-May, Greece’s Fire Department announced that all members of its Special Disaster Unit (EMAK) will have to be vaccinated against Covid-19 to serve in the outfit, as they must be ready to travel abroad at any given time to help in disaster zones around the world.

Covid-19 digital certificate voted by broad party majority

Greek government bill introducing the Covid-19 digital certificate was approved in parliament by a broad majority on Tuesday.

Ruling New Democracy, main opposition SYRIZA-Progressive Alliance and Movement for Change (KINAL) voted in favor of the bill, while the Communist Party, Greek Solution and MeRA25 rejected it.

A pilot run of the EU Digital Covid Certificate started in Greece in June, ahead of its introduction across the European Union on July 1.

Greek citizens can obtain the certificate online at eudcc.gov.gr, using their Taxisnet or Social Security Registry (AMKA) number.

*Source:Kathimerini

US CDC eases travel recommendations on 110 countries, including Greece and Cyprus

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has eased its travel recommendations for 110 countries from its highest “Level 4” rating that had discouraged all travel to recommending travel for fully vaccinated individuals, the agency confirmed Tuesday.

The new ratings, which were not previously reported and posted on a CDC website Monday, lower 61 countries to “Level 3,” including France, South Africa, Canada, Mexico, Russia, Spain, Greece, Cyprus and Italy. A US State Department official said it was in the process of revising its travel advisory to reflect the CDC changes.

The CDC said the change comes after its revised its criteria for travel health notices. The CDC said it has also revised its rating for the United States to “Level 3” from “Level 4.”

On May 24, the State Department had urged against travel to Japan, citing a new wave of coronavirus cases before the Tokyo Olympics are set to begin July 23.

A general view of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia September 30, 2014. REUTERS/Tami Chappell

The CDC said the new criteria for a Level 4 “avoid all travel” recommendation has changed from 100 cases per 100,000 to 500 cases per 100,000. The CDC added that many countries have lower ratings “because of the criteria changes or because their outbreaks are better controlled.” The CDC added it expects more countries to get lower ratings.

Other countries being lowered to “Level 3” include Honduras, Indonesia, Jordan, Libya, Panama, Poland, Denmark and Malaysia.

Many of the countries that now have lower ratings remain on the US government’s list of countries subject to severe travel restrictions — and most have been subject to the restrictions since early 2020.

The United States bars nearly all non-US citizens who have been in China, the United Kingdom, Ireland, India, South Africa, Brazil, Iran and the 26 Schengen nations in Europe without border controls within the previous 14 days.

Roland Garros: Stefanos Tsitsipas defeats Medvedev, storms into semifinals

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Fifth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas was in superb form as he charged past Daniil Medvedev 6-3, 7-6(3), 7-5 on Tuesday night to book a place in the Roland Garros semi-final.

The FedEx ATP Race To Turin leader overcame the surging Medvedev, who was into this stage in Paris for the first time, to earn his first victory over the Russian since 2019 and improve to 2-6 in their ATP Head2Head. 

Both players came in with perfect 3-0 records in Grand Slam quarter-final matches. But after two hours and 21 minutes on Court Philippe-Chatrier it was Tsitsipas who went on to reach the semi-finals in Paris for the second year in a row. 

Tsitsipas will next face sixth seed Alexander Zverev as he seeks to reach the championship match at a major for the first time. Tsitsipas leads Zverev 5-2 in their ATP Head2Head (1-0 on clay courts). 

The second seed’s defeat also ended his bid to unseat Novak Djokovic at World No. 1. Medvedev would have risen to the top of the FedEx ATP Rankings by reaching the final if Djokovic did not, or by winning his maiden Grand Slam title in Paris. 

*Source: ATP Tour

‘My Christening Box’ modernise religious icons

Marble, Onyx, Brazilian crystal and Terrazzo. All luxury materials which most people don’t typically associate with religious icons.

That is until co-founders of ‘My Christening Box,’ Mary Panayi and Soula Violakis, came along with their brilliant and innovative idea to modernise and customise religious icons according to the needs and style of their business clients.

“We came up with the idea during COVID. Soula lost her job and I decided to leave an industry that I was in for 25 years,” Mary tells The Greek Herald exclusively.

Co-founders of ‘My Christening Box,’ Mary Panayi and Soula Violakis. Photo supplied.

“During this time, we recognised people were still having christenings without the celebrations as people still needed to christen their children. The thought was to create the essential christening box with a personalised icon to lower costs for an unpredictable future.”

From there, Mary and Soula, who have known each other for seven years, decided to launch their small business ‘My Christening Box’ and now offer “an Australian made perspex christening box with all the essential items included.”

“We decided to customise our icons with different types of marble, onyx, Brazilian crystal and terrazzo that is designed in Sydney for us and sent to Italy,” Mary explains.

“We crack the stone ourselves and then… transfer [the image] onto the cracked stone. We hand paint around the icon and then we use resin for a sleek finish.”

Modernised religious icons by My Christening Box. Photo supplied.

Although this process is clearly a time-consuming one, Mary says it’s rewarding and humbling to see how emotional clients get when they receive their icons.

“We strive to execute every single icon to perfection… We believe that our icons attract a Greek target market because it is a modernised take on a religious icon,” Mary says.

“Soula and I feel that if it is not up to us as parents to educate our children with our religious beliefs, it will all get lost. Our parents came here from Greece and passed on these beliefs and now it is our duty to do the same.”

If you would like your own personalised icon or christening box, you can find ‘My Christening Box’ on Instagram.