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Traditional Greek Recipes: Magiritsa

Eating magiritsa is a high point of Easter for many Greeks, traditionally eaten in the early hours of Easter Sunday following the midnight service celebrating the Resurrection.

Magiritsa is the rich soup with which the faithful break their Lent fast.

It is typically made with lamb liver and other organs such as the lungs, heart and spleen as well as lamb intestines, plentiful dill and a roughly chopped head of lettuce. Another hallmark of the soup is the egg-lemon liaison added at the end.

Below you’ll find a traditional recipe to make your magiritsa perfect.

Kalo Pascha!

Ingredients (Serves 6):
  • 1.5 kg lamb liver and other organs* cut into cubes (about 2-3cm)
  • 1 small intestine (about 300gr), well cleaned** and cut into 3-4cm pieces
  • 1 bunch dill finely chopped (remove any thick stems)
  • 1 bunch parsley finely chopped (remove any thick stems)
  • 1 large head of lettuce, washed and coarsely chopped
  • 5 spring onions finely chopped
  • 150ml white, dry wine
  • 150ml olive oil
  • 100g glutinous rice
  • 2 eggs, yolks and whites separated
  • 1 tbsp vinegar
  • The juice of 1 lemon (or to taste)
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper

Cleaning the Intestine:

The night before place the intestines in a bowl and cover them with water, squeeze the juice of a lemon into the water (to whiten them) and place it in the fridge.

The next day take one end of the intestine, stretch the opening with your fingers and place the opening under the running tap. Allow plenty of water to flow in and then, squeezing the intestine, (it will swell like a balloon) push the water down towards the other end. Repeat the procedure a number of times until the water that comes out of the other end is clean.

Method:

1. In large stock pot heat plenty of salted water to a rolling boil and add the lamb liver and organs (not the intestine) and cook for about 2-3 minutes until they changes color and soften. Strain the meat and discard the water.

2. In the same, now empty pan, heat the oil on a medium head and sauté the onions with the lettuce and a little salt for about 2 minutes until they are soft and shrink in size. 

3. Add the lamb liver and organs, the small intestine, the dill and the parsley and continue to sauté for 3-4 minutes, stirring the ingredients with a wooden spoon until they are covered in oil. Add salt and pepper and pour in the wine. Let the mixture cook for 2-3 minutes until the alcohol has evaporated.

4. Add 1 liter of water and cook for 1 hour until the ingredients have softened.

5. Add the rice and continue cooking for 20 minutes until the rice is cooked.

6. In a bowl whisk the egg whites with the vinegar and a little salt until it forms a stiff meringue. In another bowl, beat the yolks with the lemon juice until light in color and frothy. Add the meringue, mix and gradually add broth from the soup with a spoon to the egg, mixing continuously so that the mixture gradually warms up.

7. Empty the egg-lemon into the mageiritsa, and shake the pan so it mixes in. Let it rest for 5 minutes for the flavors to combine and serve. 

Recipe sourced By: Greece-is.com

Apostolos Santas: WWII hero and Manolis Glezos’ partner-in-crime

By John Voutos

On this day in 2011, the late WWII resistance veteran and hero, Apostolos Santas, dies.

Apostolos Philippos ‘Lakis’ Santas was born on the 22nd of February 1922 in Patras, Greece, to Lefkadan parents.

He was 12 years old when he moved to Athens with his family in 1934.

Santas began studying law at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens in 1940. Here, he would share classes and become close friends with the late-great Manolis Glezos, and graduate after Greek liberation in 1944.

Manolis Glezos (L) and Apostolos Santas (R).

Meanwhile, Santas prescribed to join the fledgling National Liberation Front (EAM) and the Communist Party’s guerrilla force ELAS in 1942 to help battle rapid escalations from the Nazi/Axis Armies throughout central Greece.  

Santas and Glezos were a pair of teenage law students when they decided to kick-off a defining gesture of opposition against Nazi occupation in Greece.

“Hitler had said in a speech that, ‘Europe is free’. We wanted to show him that the fight was just beginning,” Glezos reflected to the Agence France-Presse in 2011. 

Glezos (L) and Santas (R) [Courtesy of ONEMAN at oneman.gr (1 April 2020)].

An act of defiance

April 27, 1941. WWII began a year-and-a-half before German tanks rolled into Greece to claim siege.

The Nazis hoisted a swastika flag atop a 50-foot-high flagpole at the Acropolis in Athens to mark the beginning of a 3-and-a-half-year occupation.

A month later on the night of May 30, 1941, Santas and Glezos would take a gallant stand against this gesture’s “[offence] to all human ideals.”   

The pair discovered a cave route to sneak passed the sentry and climb the steep Acropolis Hill. A torch, a pocket knife, and the Battle of Thermopylae in mind was all the pair had when they crept through the undergrowth and up the caves of the Acropolis.

The 3-hour operation saw the pair scale the pole, cut the banner down, tear off trophy pieces of the flag and hide the rest before making their escape. They were greeted at the base of the Acropolis by a Greek police officer who let them go.  

Nazis hoist the Swastika flag on Acropolis Hill, March 1941 [Dimitris Bousounis on Pinterest].

The Athenian populace awoke the next morning to find a Greek flag flying in its place and front-page editorials led by the tightly censored Athenian press spreading mystique around the town like wildfire.

The Gestapo would launch a manhunt and sentence the pair to death in absentia.

It was seen as the first, symbolic act of resistance against the month-old occupation and inspired and symbolised Greek and wider European resistance to Nazism.

Meanwhile, with their identities unbeknownst, the boys’ mothers were turning all evidence, including diaries and the flag pieces, to ash. Santas would narrowly dodge his death sentence even after being arrested in March 1942.

Later life

The liberation of Greece in mid-1945 allowed for a brief sigh of relief before the onslaught of a new Civil War (1946 – 1949) between the capitalist Democratic Army of Greece (DSE) and the Communist Party of Greece (KKE). Santas began fighting for the KKE as a communist partisan in 1943.

The fallout of the KKE’s unsuccessful attempt to claim power led Santas on-the-run across eastern Greece and saw him exiled to Ikaria, Psyttaleia, and interred in the concentration camps of Makronisos between 1946-1948. Santas was imprisoned in Makronisos in 1948 until managing to use Italy as a gateway to receive political asylum in Canada. Canada is where Santas would live for almost 20 years before returning to Greece in 1963 where he would continue his struggle against the Monarchy and later the Junta from 1967-1974.

Death and legacy

Apostolos Santas died aged 89 on the 30th of April 2011 in the Sotiria Hospital of Athens, Greece. Santas died of respiratory failure.

Santas’ wife, Cleopatra, predeceased him. He is survived by their two daughters.

Λάκη Σάντα Road near Palaio Faliro, Athens, Greece [Courtesy of Vima Online)

Santas received numerous awards from various institutions in Greece and other Allied countries for his role in the resistance. Parnassos Street, in Athens’s Palaio Faliro, was renamed “Λάκη Σάντα Street” on February 21, 2019.

“It was the first gasp of resistance… Two 18-year-olds toyed with history. They saw a symbol and decided to become symbols themselves,” a Greek Parliament resolution proclaimed in 2008, during a plenum session honouring the pair.

Meet the Greek Australian rapper, ‘Masked Wolf’, topping international charts

A Greek Sydney boy has been topping international charts, performing live on Jimmy Fallon and becoming an overnight sensation. But who is he?

Harry Michael, who is known professional as ‘Masked Wolf’, was born and raised in suburban Sydney.

Michael entered rap music at young age as a form of escapism from when his parents split. Triggering ongoing bouts of anxiety and depression, he moved in with his Greek Orthodox grandparents as a teenager.

Michael later become stuck in an artist management deal he couldn’t afford to get out of.

“I couldn’t release any music for about five years,” Michael said to GQ.

“I think that was a crucial part of me finding myself.”

“I could’ve given up on music and stuck with my day job. But I chose to work hard and articulate my sound. I look back on that time and I think to myself: I used it wisely.”

Michael found himself a new manager and released his first single, ‘Speed Racer’ in 2018, but it failed to take off on the charts.

It wasn’t until late 2020 that Astronaut in the Ocean – which had been on the Internet for almost 18 months by that point – began to appear on playlists everywhere.

“I call it the Scar Face song. It had this period of almost two years where it was out, just doing little numbers. No one said it was crap but it just wasn’t getting the push. I knew it was good, it just needed to be heard by more people.”

“It was put on a few playlists. But I think the most powerful thing about Astro is people were telling other people about it. I kept getting messages from kids like, ‘Yo, I vibe this track and I’m telling my friends and they’re vibing it’. It was the biggest chain reaction.”

The song is currently no.13 on the US’s Hot 100 Billboard chart, peaked at no.4 on the ARIA singles chart, and is the most Shazamed track in the world.

It was also the number three song on Spotify globally, a no.1 Spotify hit in countries including Saudi Arabia, Israel, Hungary and Ukraine, and its video has clocked around 86 million views on YouTube. 

Masked Wolf was recently announced as the headline act for the Lost City music festival, just days after his TV debut on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, where he performed Astronaut In The Ocean.

Greek court sentences ‘illegal’ Syrian refugee to 52 years in prison

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A Syrian refugee has been sentenced to 52 years in prison for crossing into Greece from Turkey last year, the Independent reported on Thursday.

A Mytiline court on the Greek island of Lesbos announced the decision last Friday on KS, the refugee identified only by his initials, ruling that his crossing was “illegal.” 

According to campaigners, KS had crossed from Turkey to the Greek island of Chios by boat with his family, including three young children, and dozens of others in early March 2020.

The family had originally sought refuge in Turkey after fleeing the civil war in Syria. However, KS claims that he had refused to participate in the Turkish military operation in Libya and was briefly imprisoned as a result.

Immigrants wait at a detention center in the village of Fylakio near the the Greek-Turkish border. Credit: AFP/Getty Images

Following his release, he and his family sought to escape to Greece, traveling to Chios, the closest island by boat, only to be denied the right to asylum upon arrival due to a controversial policy introduced earlier that month.

Caught up in the chaos at the Greek-Turkish border, KS was one of many to be hit with “illegal entry” charges.

However, he was also accused of “facilitating illegal entry” and causing a “shipwreck “after Greek authorities accused him of having been at the helm of the boat that his brought his family and as many as 40 others to Greek shores.

“They want to show people to stay away from Greece and to criminalise people who are fleeing,” Johannes Körner, spokesperson for You Can’t Evict Solidarity, a campaign supporting asylum seekers in Greece, told The Independent.

As a result, he said, KS “will be sitting in prison for nothing… for just fleeing Turkey and fleeing Syria”.

“It’s insane,” Körner said. “It’s crazy that he’s been given such a long sentence”.

Sourced By: The Independent

Greek Cypriots swiftly reject proposed ‘two-state solution’ at UN talks

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The Turkish Cypriot delegation to U.N.-sponsored talks proposed a two-state solution for Cyprus on Wednesday to end the conflict with Greek Cypriots and put the island’s two communities on an equal footing, but it was swiftly rejected by the Greek Cypriot side.

Greek Cypriot leader Nicos Anastasiades, who serves as president of the island’s internationally-recognised government, said that the proposal was a “great disappointment”.

“Of course I have told the Secretary-General that our attempt was to create a positive climate, without provocations, without any references to whatever unacceptable (things) we heard. I have also told the Secretary-General that we will submit, in writing, our own positions,” he said in a statement.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres attends a news conference after a 5+1 Meeting on Cyprus at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland April 29, 2021. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

The proposal was presented at informal talks with U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in Geneva, who had urged both sides to “be creative” after a four-year stalemate in peace negotiations.

Guterres said a new round of informal talks are planned, possibly in the next two to three months.

“The truth is that in the end of our efforts, we have not yet found enough common ground to allow for the resumption of formal negotiations in relation to the settlement of the Cyprus problem,” Guterres said. “But I do not give up.”

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres attends a news conference after a 5+1 Meeting on Cyprus at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland April 29, 2021. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

He summarized the two sides’ positions: The Turkish Cypriots believe that decades of efforts to ensure a “bi-zonal, bicommunal federation” have been exhausted and they now deserve “equal international status” like that enjoyed by the Nicosia government run by Greek Cypriots in the south.

The Greek Cypriots held to their position for a federation “with political equality on the basis of relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions,” Guterres said.

“As you can imagine, this was not an easy meeting,” he said. “To square the circle is an impossibility in geometry, but it is very common in politics.”

Sourced By: AP News

Federal Government and multicultural communities partner together for vaccine rollout success

More than 100 multicultural community leaders and representatives of Ethic Media outlets from across Australia attended a virtual roundtable held on Wednesday, with Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Immigration Minister Alex Hawke and Assistant Minister for Customs, Community Safety and Multicultural Affairs, Jason Wood.

In the sixty minutes long community forum, the attendees were informed for the status of the vaccine rollout and had the opportunity to address their questions directly to the PM and the Ministers.

This major roundtable, came nearly two months after the federal government released a plan to ensure COVID vaccine rollout information and services are accessible for CALD communities. 

The plan outlines the need for clear messaging that’s inclusive and emphasises the importance of working with community leaders and multicultural community organisations.

Hawke: “We really need your feedback”

In his opening remarks, Minister Hawke asked the attendees to reflect upon the health crisis India is facing and expressed his support to the Australian Indian community. 

“This has been an unprecedented year. Your feedback is continuing to be very viable for us in government, about what we can do to ensure Australia has a very cohesive society,” said Hawke. 

“We do need to stay close to each other, so we continue to react and stay stable and strong. We appreciate the sacrifices your communities have been making with lockdowns, with community needs, with challenges that have been unable to be met by governments state or federal”.

Hawke said that it is necessary for the communities to partner and support the government and provide “viable support” especially during the rollout that is expected to go ahead the second half of the year.

“It is going to be the key to our success,” he said.

Morrison: “The response to aged care is not too far away”

With regards to aged care issues and shortages, Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who joined the forum from Darwin where he was on a visit, made clear that “the response to aged care is not too far away” and that the budget “will address these issues comprehensively”.

“Of course, for the government, so much of our focus continues to be the impact of the COVID pandemic,” said the PM, thanking the participants for their leadership.

“Australia is leading the world out of the COVID-19 recession and that is overwhelmingly due, I think, to the resilience and determination of Australians and the way they’ve looked after each other and looked out for each other and that is especially true for our multiculturally and linguistically diverse communities.”

Mr Morrison referred to the number of fatalities due to COVID-19 in Australia, currently at 910.

“The majority of those were in aged care where people are most vulnerable to COVID and that’s why right now our focus on the vaccination program is very much on our elderly residents an those in aged care,” he said.

With regards to the upcoming budget, the PM talked about a “pandemic budget” and said that Australia is currently assisting India and focusing on repatriating Australians.

“Since about the end of October we have seen 140.000 Australians come home,” he said. 

Morrison said that the government will continue to work with communities to ensure the appropriate support is provided and with regards to the country’s economy he said that “in comparison is doing extremely well.”

When asked about the reopening of Australia’s international borders, the PM made clear that the vaccination itself is not a “silver bullet”.

“When it comes to our borders, we’ll have to consider our decisions very carefully. What we don’t want to do, is find Australia in a situation like so many other countries are. Where people can’t go out, can’t go to work or participate in important cultural events or go and visit family. That’s what we do in Australia now and we want to make sure we can keep doing that.”

International Students and Domestic Violence:

Replying to questions on international students and the difficulties some of them are facing with distant learning, Minister Hawke said that the government is aware of the issues, is working closely with the universities but explained that the offshore learning phase will continue for as long as required until international students can return safely. 

With regards to the increase in domestic violence within some communities, the Assistant Minister for Multicultural Affairs and former police officer, Jason Wood, encouraged the victims to come forward and seek assistance.  

“Just so everyone is clear, people experiencing family violence will not have their visa cancelled if their relationship breaks down because of family violence,” added the PM firmly. 

Mr Morrison and the Ministers called community members seeking information for COVID and the vaccine, to only do so via the Australian Department of Health website:  health.gov.au/covid19vaccines

Court hears St Basil’s Fawkner staff given outdated infection control training prior to COVID outbreak

Allegations of serious neglect at St Basil’s Homes for the Aged in Fawkner have emerged at a Supreme Court hearing into a major class action against the operators of the home on Wednesday.

According to The Age, the court has heard that staff working at St Basil’s Fawkner were given outdated infection control training in the lead-up to a deadly coronavirus outbreak, which led to the deaths of more than one-quarter of the 120 residents at the aged care facility.

The management hearing for the case was told training for staff was conducted by a doctor whose expertise in infection protection was unknown and who based their training on outdated clinical guidance.

Between May and July last year, family and friends visiting the home were not told to limit visits, despite rising community spread of the virus. Face masks were not enforced, hand sanitiser was not readily available and hygiene standards were lax in communal living areas, according to the writ submitted to the Supreme Court and seen by The Age.

Acting on behalf of the residents and their families, Andrew Broadfoot, QC, told the court the elderly residents were often left starving in their rooms due to under-staffing and in soiled clothing for days.

Effie Fotiadis was the first plaintiff to launch civil action against St Basil’s Fawkner, which is owned by the Greek Orthodox Church. Her 79-year-old father, Dimitrios, died on July 25 in the Northern Hospital after becoming infected with coronavirus at the home.

The hearing continues.

‘The ABC of Greek Easter’: Panagiota Andreadakis on her debut bilingual children’s book

From traditional Easter sweets to Lent period and the moving events of Holy Week, Panagiota Andreadakis’ debut educational bilingual book for children, The ABC of Greek Easter, has it all.

Beautiful illustrations help to captivate the interest of young readers as they are taken through the alphabet, with each letter corresponding to different cultural traditions and events from the Apokries season right through to Easter Sunday of Greek Orthodox Easter. Spread within the pages are also several learning prayers, hymns and the ‘Xristos Anesti’ chant in both Greek and English.

It’s clear from this description that a lot of time, love and thought has gone into The ABC of Greek Easter. But how did the idea even come about in the first place?

Panagiota’s new book, ‘The ABC of Greek Easter.’ Photo supplied.

Melbourne mother-of-one and now-author, Panagiota, tells The Greek Herald how after working for several decades as a health professional, she decided to pursue her true passion for writing books as a way of preserving the wealth of Greek heritage and passing it on to the next generations. From that moment on, she was set on creating a book focused on Greek Easter traditions and customs.

“Originally I was going to do an Easter book from the beginning of Apokries right through to the weeks after Easter. But realised very quickly that was just too much information for children to absorb,” Panagiota tells The Greek Herald exclusively.

“One day I thought about how quickly my son learned his ABC from a young age and realised it would be awesome if I could make it fun for children and find something for each letter. Keeping in mind it had to be simple and relatable, especially since it would be bilingual. 

“So not only are they learning their Greek alphabet, but they are also learning to read in both languages, and are learning prayers, hymns, kalanta and important phrases and events that take place on certain days.

“I wanted to get the Greek heritage, traditions and religion into every household no matter the level of Greek vocabulary.”

Of course, with such an ambitious aim comes many challenges and Panagiota says that although it was “very easy” to find Easter traditions for some letters, other letters were more “difficult to match up with an illustration that children could understand.”

Photos taken at St. Eustathios Greek Orthodox Church, South Melbourne. Photo supplied.

“At times, I even had to move certain events into another letter to make use of as many words as possible,” Panagiota says.

But despite these difficulties, The ABC of Greek Easter still holds a very special place in Panagiota’s heart, and she says she can’t wait to see it on people’s bookshelves soon.

“I love all the illustrations because they also feature my son, Stelio, who is the face of my Hellenic educational brand Stelakis. And when you have put in so much of your soul into creating something like this, it means you love every aspect of it. It really is the perfect family heirloom and keepsake book,” Panagiota concludes proudly.

If you would like to add this heirloom to your own personal book collection, you can purchase The ABC of Greek Easter online at www.stelakis.com.au.

NSW Premier, Gladys Berejiklian, sends hopeful Easter message to Greek community

NSW Premier, Gladys Berejiklian, has sent her well wishes to the state’s Greek community ahead of Orthodox Easter on Sunday.

In her message, Ms Berejiklian thanked Orthodox leaders and the community for their “compassion and collaboration in the face of recent challenges facing our community.”

Full Message in English:

I offer my best wishes for a happy Easter to Orthodox communities across NSW.

Easter is the holiest time of year for Christians around the world. It is an opportunity to reflect on the resurrection of Jesus Christ and the universal values of family, sacrifice and renewal. This message has particular resonance this year when we have worked so hard together to stop the spread of COVID-19.

I would like to thank Orthodox leaders and the wider Orthodox community for your compassion and collaboration in the face of recent challenges facing our community, including the COVID-19 pandemic. Your support for others reflects your continued commitment to our multicultural society.

As you gather with your families and friends at this time, I wish you all peace and good health for the coming year.

I wish everyone a happy Easter.

Sydney Greek schools celebrate Easter with hat parades and cooking activities

There was Easter hat parades, kolourakia making and red egg dying at All Saints Grammar, St Spyridon College and St Euphemia College to mark Greek Orthodox Easter this week.

We reached out to all three schools to hear how their students celebrated in the lead up to Anastasi, and this is what they had to say.

St Spyridon College:

* Written by Mrs A. Synesios, Principal at St Spyridon College, Junior School *

“Each year, during Holy Week, the children of St Spyridon College walk with Christ from His triumphant entry into Jerusalem, to His passion and glorious Resurrection.

From the youngest children in the school, our Kinder Minus One children to Year 12, the week is devoted to learning about the traditions and customs, the services, the chanting, the prayers and bible readings of Holy Week. According to their age and stage of development we practice patience, compassion, prayerfulness and watchfulness. We forgive and seek forgiveness knowing that only through Our Lord’s loving kindness are we saved. His Eminence Archbishop Makarios on Holy Tuesday evening reminded us that when we truly love God and our neighbour, every other care fades away and we live a joyous and peaceful life.

Each class at the Junior School participates in some traditional baking – Red Eggs, Koulourakia, Lambropites,  Augoules, Flaounes, Lazarakia and ka. Sarakosti. The children also make Palm Crosses and Lambathes. The boys serve in the altar at the services, the girls participate as flowergirls at the Epitaphios and many chant in the Engomia Choir on Good Friday night. The children embrace the opportunity to be involved.

These traditions and practices have been passed down from generation to generation and now to our children so that they may be shared with their children for the Glory of Christ and the hope that the resurrection brings.

May the joy of Christ’s resurrection bring health, peace and happiness to you all. We wish you all Καλή Ανάσταση!

Easter activities at St Spyridon College. Photos supplied.

All Saints Grammar:

“At the core of All Saints Grammar’s educational philosophy is the dimension of Cultural, Social, Spiritual Connection,” a spokeswoman for the school writes.

“The lived experience of this dimension means that our school deliberately creates opportunities for students to learn the value of connectedness, in providing them with a sense of belonging which enhances the development of their personal identity. Our Greek Orthodox Faith is at the core of this educational dimension.

As such, All Saints Grammar students from PreKinder to Year 12 have participated in various Easter activities, commencing with Kindergarten to Year 12 students attending the Holy Liturgy of the Pre-sanctified Gifts at All Saints Church on Holy Monday. Students received palm crosses made by All Saints Parish and Community, in which many of our students were involved. 1700 crosses were made, then blessed and handed out to the many faithful attending the Palm Sunday Holy Liturgy.  The symbol of the cross reminds us of Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem and His victory over death. 

Holy Liturgy of the Pre-sanctified Gifts at All Saints Church. Photos supplied.

Educating our students on the meaning and relevance of our liturgical celebrations is a core part of our efforts. Participating in a presentation of “Εληνορθόδοξο Πάσχα,” students learned about the significance of each day of Holy Week, highlighting the religious and cultural aspects of the Greek Orthodox Easter.

Our younger students from PreKinder to Year 2 also gathered in the Gymnasium for the 2021 Easter Hat Parade. While the parade is a fun activity that encourages creativity and community engagement, the main purpose of this parade is to create a sense of community where our students can gain a sense of belonging and identity. It was the first parade experience for many of the students, so the atmosphere was electric with dancing, clapping, cheering and even a visit from the Easter Bunny. 

Cultural, Social, Spiritual Connections, based on the Hellenic heritage and Greek Orthodox Faith, is an essential part of the holistic education offered at All Saints Grammar.

Our School, together with the Parish and Community of All Saints Belmore & Districts, would like to wish everyone a Blessed Easter. May the spiritually-filled Feast of the Holy Resurrection of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ fill our lives with peace and hope. Καλό Πάσχα.”

St Euphemia College:

Prep and Infant students at St Euphemia College got creative this Greek Orthodox Easter as they took part in an Easter Hat Parade on Friday, April 23 at 9am.

Students from St Euphemia College with their Easter hats. Photos: Facebook.

Held in the Peter Theophilou Wing of the school hall, the students performed Easter songs, such as ‘Jesus is Alive,’ in front of parents, who had huge smiles on their faces.

The event concluded with all students posing proudly for photos with the Easter hats.