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GCM to hold panel discussion on ‘Sexism, Misogyny and the Migrant Woman’

The Greek Community of Melbourne (GCM) will hold a panel discussion entitled Sexism, Misogyny and the Migrant Woman, at the Greek Centre on Thursday, March 17 at 7pm, as part of its Greek History and Culture Seminars series.

The facilitators of the panel will be Professor Joy Damousi and Dina Gerolymou, while the panelists will be Melina Mallos, Fotini Kypraios, Anatoli Amanatides and Alkistis Pitsaki.

This panel discussion will examine notions of sexism and misogyny in relation to migrant women in Australia.

Drawing from their experiences and those of Greek women in Australia from past generations, the four panellists will look into the absence of migrant women voices from the current public discourse, the biases and stereotypes that persist, and the new faces of sexism and misogyny.

The panel will also delve into the limited voices and, in many cases, exclusion of CALD women from the public discussion, and even institutions, in an era dominated by diversity.

Who are the panellists?

Melina Mallos:

Melina Mallos is Visual Art Education Lecturer within the Melbourne Graduate School of Education at the University of Melbourne. She was formerly the Education Manager at the Museum of Chinese Australian History in Melbourne’s Chinatown.

For 15 years, Melina was responsible for developing education programs for families, schools and teachers at the Queensland Art Gallery ı Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA). She holds a Bachelor of Education in Early Childhood, a Master of Education (Research) and was a Queensland-Smithsonian Fellow 2009-2010.

Her debut children’s bilingual book, Catch that Cat!, received wide acclaim both nationally and overseas. Whilst teaching at Melbourne University, Melina is finishing her PhD. Her research explores the way new media usage shapes the identities and sense of belonging for Greek migrant youths living in Melbourne.

Fotini Kypraios:

Fotini is the Founder and Principal Lawyer at Prisma Legal, a boutique commercial legal practice, specialising in corporate legal and governance advisory services where she has over 20 years’ experience advising clients in range of legal areas, including litigation, management, international tax consulting, governance and commercial legal issues.

Fotini holds Bachelors degrees from Monash University in Arts and Law, and is the Board Chair of the Hellenic Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (HACCI) where she actively mentors young professionals.

Fotini was awarded her Graduate Diploma of Applied Corporate Governance in 2012 by the Governance Institute of Australia and is a regular presenter of their governance certificate courses while also undertaking governance advisory roles for private clients and Not-For-Profit organisations.

Most recently, Fotini also joined the Faculty of Law at Monash University as a sessional supervisor of the Innovation and Start Up Law Clinic, teaching practical commercial legal skills to penultimate and final year law students.

Anatoli Amanatides:

Anatoli has been with the University of Melbourne since 2015 and worked across a number of different departments across Student Services, Research and is currently an International Agreements Adviser in the University’s Chancellery division. She also co-owns Eleni’s Kitchen and Bar in Yarraville, with her sister Eleftheria.

She has also worked with a range of culturally and linguistically diverse organisations including the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry – Japanese Society of Melbourne and ethno-specific service provider, Pronia, where she was also the youngest person elected to the Board of Directors (2016-2020). 

Anatoli holds a Master of International Relations and a Bachelor of Arts (Majors in Japanese and Political Sciences) from the University of Melbourne.

Alkisti Pitsaki:

Alkisti is a young artist from Athens, Greece, that began her career as a singer/ actor on stage and TV. Upon graduating with a BA(Hons) in Theatre Arts and receiving an award for Best Graduating Artist, Alkisti directed self-written shows in Greece and Australia.

As a director, Alkisti focuses on physical theatre plays and works that explore political and social issues, such as war and violence. Since moving to Australia, Alkisti has worked on professional shows at Victorian College of the Arts (VCA) and as a directing intern at “Harry Potter and The Cursed Child.”

Alkisti is now focusing on her roots and aims to create performances based on Ancient Greek myths and other Greek stories.

In 2021, Alkisti graduated with a Masters in Theatre Directing from the VCA. Her graduating piece Αριάδνη / Ariadne was a self-written, bilingual audio play that explored the ancient myth of Αριάδνη / Ariadne of Crete. Alkisti aims to bring Ariadne to Melbourne as a live performance later this year.

Event Details:

When: Thursday 17 March, 7.00pm

Venue:  Mezzanine level, The Greek Centre, 168 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne

Online Platforms: Facebook and YouTube

‘Nothing has survived’: Dimitria and George Volikas start clean-up after NSW floods

George Volikas, 85, and his wife Dimitria, 80, returned to their Oakville home in northwest Sydney over the weekend to find that they had lost everything.

The couple had lived with their daughter Irene Connelley and her husband Frank for 35 years, occupying the bottom floor of their house near the Hawkesbury River.

Mrs Connelley was helping her parents clean up their home on Sunday when she was interviewed by The Australian. She said they weren’t prepared for last week’s flood crisis, which saw waters peaking in the area at a record 13.74 metres on March 9.

Dimitria and George Volikas outside their home last year reading The Greek Herald.

“This is their livelihood – it’s ­literally everything – nothing of theirs has survived – no heirloom, nothing,” Mrs Connelley said in the interview.

“[My dad] is devastated – he can’t believe this has happened to him after everything we’ve been through.”

The Volikas’ are currently staying at Westmead for one week in temporary accommodation, but after that they aren’t sure where they will live.

Wilberforce butcher Dean Diasinos in his store, which was completely flooded after being renovated last year post-floods. Picture: Sam Ruttyn.

Elsewhere, Wilberforce butcher, Dean Diasinos, also told The Daily Telegraph how his shop was completely flooded last week after being renovated post-floods last year.

He said he was still cut off from his wife and children on the other side of the Hawkesbury River.

This devastation comes as NSW Premier, Dominic Perrottet, promised a review into the State Emergency Service’s response to the flood disaster on the NSW north coast on Sunday.

READ MORE: ‘I’ve read it for 56 years’: Greek migrants share what The Greek Herald means to them.

Source: The Australian.

Greek American, George Tsunis, confirmed as new US Ambassador to Greece

Prominent Greek American businessman, George Tsunis, has been officially confirmed by the United States Senate as the next US Ambassador to Greece.

The confirmation came after a late-night vote in the US Senate on March 10.

During the vote, Mr Tsunis said that as Ambassador he will aim to strengthen Greek-American relations and will focus on accelerating trade and investment opportunities between Greece and the US.

Mr Tsunis will also work on strengthening energy cooperation between both countries and encourage Greece to invest in renewable energy sources and projects aimed at regional energy security.

In a post on Twitter, the US Mission in Greece said it “looks forward to welcoming you and working together to advance our many shared goals in Greece.”

Mr Tsunis’ appointment to this ambassadorial post comes at a critical time not only because of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, but also because Greece and the US are currently in the midst of likely the most “warm” period of relations between the two countries in living memory.

Source: Tornos News.

Russian airstrikes bring war close to NATO’s border as Greece calls for more humanitarian corridors

Russian missiles hit a large Ukrainian base near the border with NATO member Poland on Sunday, killing 35 people and wounding 134, a Ukrainian official said.

An American journalist and filmmaker was also shot and killed on Sunday – the first Western journalist confirmed dead in the conflict.

These latest attacks come as Ukraine reported renewed air strikes on an airport in the west, heavy shelling on Chernihiv north-east of the capital and attacks on the southern town of Mykolayiv.

READ MORE: Why Putin lost the war in Ukraine.

Authorities in Ukraine’s capital Kyiv are also stockpiling two weeks’ worth of essential food items for the two million people who have not yet fled as Russian forces encircle the city.

Elsewhere, the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol has endured some of Ukraine’s worst punishment since Russia invaded.

Unceasing Russian attacks have thwarted repeated attempts to bring food, water and medicine into the city of 430,000 and to evacuate its trapped civilians.

READ MORE: EU leaders meet in Versailles to discuss Ukraine war and energy independence.

Satellite imagery of the hospital area in Mariupol. Credit: Satellite image ©2022 Maxar Technologies.

More than 1,500 people have died in Mariupol during the siege, according to the mayor’s office, and the shelling has even interrupted efforts to bury the dead in mass graves.

READ MORE: Russian attack destroys maternity hospital in Mariupol as Greece ramps up evacuations.

There is a strong Greek presence in Mariupol and the Greek Consul General Manolis Androulakis is still in the area, Greek officials have confirmed.

This has led the Greek Foreign Ministry to call for the creation of more humanitarian corridors from cities in Ukraine “in order to ensure the supply of the civilian population, as well as the possibility of their escape to safer areas.”

READ MORE: ‘People are scared’: Ukraine’s Greek communities in agony as war rages on.

“We call on everyone to respect humanitarian law and to avoid targeting the civilian population,” the Ministry said in a statement. 

So far, Greece has repatriated nearly 200 of its own nationals from Kyiv, Mariupol and Odessa. Over 4,600 refugees from Ukraine have also reached Greece since the Russian invasion, including over 1,400 children.

READ MORE: ‘Terrified of the war’: Expatriates, refugees reach Greece after escaping Ukraine.

Source: ABC News.

Mitsotakis and Erdogan agree to improve ties during meeting in Istanbul

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The leaders of Greece and Turkey held talks over lunch in Istanbul on Sunday in a rare meeting between the neighbouring countries, which have been at odds over maritime and energy issues, the status of Aegean islands and migration.

During the talks, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan agreed to improve ties, according to a statement by the Turkish presidency.

Russia’s recent invasion of Ukraine was also discussed.

“Despite the disagreements between Turkey and Greece, it was agreed at the meeting to keep communication channels open and to improve bilateral relations,” the Turkish statement said.

“Pointing out that Turkey and Greece have a special responsibility in the changing European security architecture with Russia’s attack on Ukraine, the meeting focused on the mutual and regional benefits of increasing cooperation between the two countries.”

Greece and Turkey are nominal NATO allies but have strained relations over competing maritime boundary claims that affect energy exploration rights in the eastern Mediterranean.

READ MORE: Turkey claims “sovereign rights” over the Greek island of Kastellorizo.

Greece has also accused Turkey of allowing migrants to cross its land and sea borders despite a deal with the European Union to prevent illegal crossings.

Erdogan told Mitsotakis during the meeting that “with the goal of starting a new page in bilateral relations,” Greece and Turkey can make headway on issues like the Aegean, minorities, combating terrorism and migration.

READ MORE: Erdogan thanks Mitsotakis for well wishes after testing positive for COVID.

PM to Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew: Meeting with Erdogan hopefully went well

Later in the day, Mitsotakis expressed his belief that his meeting with Erdogan went well to Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew when the two met at the Greek Consulate in Istanbul on Sunday.

“I must tell you, it was a meeting that took place in a good atmosphere. I hope we agreed we face so many challenges as humanity and as two NATO allies at this time that it is more important to focus on what unites us and less than on what divides us,” Mitsotakis told the Patriarch when they met.

The Greek Prime Minister said he believes “we set the foundations to improve our relations,” and added that if there was good progress, Greece might organise a High-Level Cooperation Council meeting in autumn. This was a mechanism the two countries set up in 2010 for their rapprochement.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, center, talks to Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, after attending a ceremony for Orthodox Christians at the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in Istanbul. Photo: AP Photo/Emrah Gurel.

In response, Patriarch Bartholomew said “every step to build mutual trust between the two governments and the two peoples fills us with joy.”

This meeting between Mitsotakis and the Patriarch came after the Greek Prime Minister also attended a service for Orthodox Christians at the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople earlier in the day.

READ MORE: ‘Differences remain’: Mitsotakis, Erdogan meet at NATO to discuss Greece-Turkey relations.

Source: Ekathimerini and AP News.

Victorian hospitality veteran, Matt Nikakis, to open new bar in restored church hall

A new local bar is breathing new life into the historic old Trinity Hall on the corner of Brighton Road and Chapel Street in St Kilda. It is set to open in early April.
 
Originally Holy Trinity Church Hall, established in 1925, the building has long been a gathering place for the local community. Now, owner Matt Nikakis is carrying on its legacy with a beer garden, event space and food truck rotation.
 
As a third-generation hospitality veteran with two hotels under his belt, Trinity is Nikakis’ first purely food and drink-focused venture.


“My grandfather George came from Greece in 1920 and owned a café in the city,” he says.
 
“My father Nick dedicated his life to hospitality, later becoming president of the Australian Hotels Association for many years. Now as a third-generation publican, I take pride in my family name and the years we have spent in the hospitality industry.”

In addition to twelve tap beers, the bar menu will herald a selection of Australian wines and signature cocktails, plus an expansive range of non-alcoholic options.

Matt Nikakis inside his new venture, Trinity.

Trinity’s entrance is marked by its red brick exterior, iconic arched doors and the shining silver airstream that sits in front of them. Nikakis has renovated the caravan to work as a functioning food truck, offering a considered range of burgers and bar bites. The rest of the spacious front courtyard is reserved for two additional food trucks which will alternate nightly.

The interior has undergone a full renovation including the addition of lush green booths, copper beer tanks, and a deep blue bar that spans the length of the main room. Meanwhile, the church hall’s original hardwood trusses and iconic windows have been restored to peak condition.

What was once a community performance space is now a private mezzanine with its own separate bar. Perfect for special events, the window-lined room offers uninterrupted views of Trinity’s main entrance as well as the bluestone façade of Holy Trinity Church, which sits just behind the venue on the same block.

Also at the rear is a smaller courtyard and designated kid’s play area, featuring a 1960s wooden ski boat nestled in the sand pit.

“A throwback to the old-school monk beer brews, church dances and school fetes, the design draws upon the history and community of Holy Trinity Hall and reinvents this venue for the next generation of St Kilda, Elwood and Elsternwick communities,” says Luke Ponti of BSPN, the architects and interior designers behind the redevelopment, who recently completed Melbourne CBD’s recent Covid Safe Outdoor Dining Activation.

Pet and child-friendly with a capacity of 300, Trinity is poised to become a landmark amongst Melbourne’s hospitality scene.

“It’s a venue that will make all demographics comfortable and welcome,” says Nikakis.

Opening hours
Sundays – Wednesdays 12.00pm to 11.00pm
Thursdays – Saturdays 12.00pm to 1.00am

Memories of growing up in the 1970s: The rise of retro and Australia’s ‘Golden Years’

By Kathy Karageorgiou

The popularity of things retro and vintage has been increasing over the years, yet many may merely shrug this off as another fashion trend.

As a Greek-Australian living in Greece for many years (including a few trips back to Australia), I have noted with curiosity, a rise in ‘retro/vintage’ shops and associated memorabilia in both countries. Furniture, vinyl records, and clothing with a 50’s, 60’s and 70’s look, for example, seem to be in demand. Now, even the 80’s and 90’s are considered ‘retro’ eras.

‘Retro’, comes from the word retrospective. A dictionary meaning of retro, cites it as “similar to styles, fashions, etc. from the past.” Vintage though, refers to the time something was made, whereas retro is about the appearance of an object or style, regardless of its date of actual construction.

Apart from clever marketing campaigns perhaps, what is this current appreciation of retro (and vintage) due to? Could this retro emergence attest to something beyond a consumer fad, and be privy to a deeper, psychological yearning? Does the popularity of retro style, of essentially nostalgically looking back, refer to something that is perhaps lacking in our lives today?

My love of retro does admittedly symbolise a perhaps romanticised yearning for the past. Memories … of my childhood, of growing up in Australia in the 70’s which I truly do consider a ‘Golden Age’.

Retro objects of that era which come to mind, are deeply interlinked with fond memories; the above ground, backyard pool, the garden sprinkler that robustly spun around, while we as kids robustly ran around and into it, squealing with delight. The retro-loving link here is those shimmering, hot Aussie summer days, when one was a carefree child; when one’s parents were younger, … when everything seemed so bright!

And bright, things certainly were back then! Even our kitchen was bright – an almost blindingly bright orange. Cars too (especially those known as ‘muscle cars’) would come in bold orange, or lime green and even unabashed purple.

I remember the cool guys on the block that possessed these mean machines, whereas my dear bαbά (dad) drove us around – to Greek school, and to the Greek yiortes (parties), etc. in his beige Valiant Chrysler. I remember wishing it was a Charger instead! Nowadays such 70’s cars are quite expensive and much sought after.

The car back then, also brings to mind their radios (with knobs), that often blared out loud, rock music. Great Australian bands of the 70’s – like Skyhooks and Sherbet and so many more, found their way into our hearts, homes, and cars. If Dad were to get too hot and bothered (from my insisting on turning the music up), I’d open the little, triangular ‘wing window’ to let air in.

There was also the car’s glove box. When you flipped open the lid, it exposed drink (aka beer can) holders designed into it! Speaking of alcohol, how retro our parents parties seem, with the happy (and sometimes ‘respectably’ tipsy) Theies (aunts) and Thious (Uncles)!

At these parties, there was that monumental booze tub! The bathtub of the ‘Yiorti house’, filled with ice and loaded with ‘liquor all sorts’ – my play on the words ‘Licorice Allsorts’, one of the many varieties of sweets back then.

That brings me to the glorious milk bars, that sold our 5 cents worth of little, white paper bags of mixed lollies like Snakes Alive, and Freckles and Teeth and Musk Sticks … the list can go on and on. Not to mention the local milk bars’ savoury treats, like 20 cent Sausage Rolls and teeny tins of soft drink.

I almost forgot the big, glass, soft drink bottles with bright and beautiful lime, pineapple, raspberry, etc. that came to our door in crates via an open back truck once a week. We didn’t seem to obsess about the sugar or artificial colourings and flavourings back then. After all, we had Weight Watchers, or Limits biscuits to fall back on! And always at hand were those friendly dentists who tended to over insist that we needed more fillings.

Οur parents didn’t seem to obsess about as much back then, as we tend to today, We ate to our hearts content. When we, Greek families and friends got together, our tables were laden with food. A table, or even two were pushed together, loaded with glorious Greek foods like pastichio made by Thia Eleni (Aunt Helen), or the daintily hand-rolled, little dolmadakia that Thia Effie contributed to the trapezi (dinner table or buffet).

Most Thies and Thious were incidentally not blood relatives, but we referred to them as if they were. This symbolised the sense of community we had back then: real community – bonding, familiarity, with deep cultural and social, as well as strong one-on-one personal ties. A world in which the only ‘hi-tech’ gadget seemed to be a record or cassette player!

And then there were the phones – in a world before mobiles! I recently purchased one with a dial and beautiful curved handset like we had back home when I was growing up. Ours was a kind of olive green colour. This one is also olive green. Which reminds me … I better call my parents to see how they are. I guess the greatest things in life – retro or not, never change.

Excavation of Byzantine shipwreck in Aegean reveals 5th century ceramics

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The Culture Ministry of Greece has revealed after a 2021 excavation off the coast of Samos, that a number of ancient artifacts have been found in the Fourni islands complex, southwest of the island of Samos. 

Amongst the relics, almost fifteen ‘amphorae’ were found buried in sand along many table ceramics and wooden parts of a Byzantine shipwreck. The excavation site was dated between 480 and 520 AD, the Culture Ministry said. 

The ministry further revealed that this particular shipwreck was selected for further study due to the ship’s good state of preservation and its cargo, even though it was one of 58 that was found in the archipelago.

This shipwreck was found off the Fygos peninsula, off the east coast of Fourni. This area is known to be a sandy area with a sharply inclined seabed, which makes it one of the steepest and most inaccessible regions of the islands. 

The research that was conducted last year focused mainly on clearing the sand off the perimeter of the shipwreck and opening a trench to check the stratigraphy. This is where the artifacts were found. 

The type of Amphora that were found on this excavation trip have been linked to the city of Sinope on the Black Sea while the wreck contains six types of Amphorae from Crimea and Heraclea Pontica on the Black Sea coast. 

The shipwrecks approximate chronology includes the rule of Byzantine Emperor Anastasius I (491-518 AD), member of the Leonid dynasty who is linked to taxation and currency reforms. 

Underwater Ephorate archaeologist Giorgios Koutsoflakis headed the excavation with a team of 25 divers of several disciplines ranging from archaeology to conservation and photographers. This team carried out 292 individual dives amounting to nearly 220 hours of underwater work.

Source: AMNA

Lachlan Ilias and Katrina Ikonomou named on Sydney’s Inner West most influential list

Lachlan Ilias and Katrina Ikonomou have been named among Sydney inner west’s 30 most influential people 30 and under for 2022.

Who are they? The Greek Herald finds out.

Lachlan Ilias:

Lachlan Ilias, 21, is a star halfback at the South Sydney Rabbitohs after the departure of halfback Adam Reynolds.

Raised in Five Dock, educated at Trinity Grammar in Summer Hill, and a product of both the Wests Tigers and South Sydney academies, Ilias has the inner west in his blood.

Souths fans across the inner west will be eagerly anticipating seeing what Mr Ilias can do this NRL season.

Katrina Ikonomou:

Katrina Ikonomou, 24, is the current Inner West Young Citizen of the Year. She was awarded for her work as a social worker at Gunnawirra Mums to provide services to local young women and children.

The Inner West Council and many others have seen Ms Ikonomou‘s efforts to engage and connect clients to elders and cultural programs, as well as strengthen cultural identities and knowledge, and provide a platform for intergenerational learning and healing.

Source: The Daily Telegraph.

Tina Arena details how she felt Maria Callas ‘looking over’ her during amphitheatre performance

When Australian icon Tina Arena was invited by her good friend George Perris to perform with him at the Odeon of Herodes Atticus, she walked onto a stage that had been graced by the voice of so many historic voices. This includes that of the controversial 20th century opera singer, Maria Callas. 

Ms Arena reflected on her most memorable concert and lifechanging experience in an interview published in The Guardian Australia‘s series of ‘our favourite musicians.’ 

Ms Arena describes how although she’s been fortunate enough to play in venues such as the Sydney Opera House and the Royal Albert Hall in London, there was something “magical and mystical” about the Herodes Atticus.

“Performing in an outdoor stone auditorium – a Greek theatre in the true sense of the word – that is almost 2,000 years old, and to experience how the natural acoustics resonate, was a profound experience for me,” Ms Arena told The Guardian Australian.

The singer goes on to remember the massive poster of Maria Callas adorning the stage as she walked up to perform and says it was a “pinch-me moment.”

“I remember walking out there and having shivers,” she explains.

Odeon of Herodes Atticus in Athens.

“When I was walking out on stage with Maria Callas looking over my shoulder, I just thought: “Oh my god, this is really happening.” It was a pinch-me moment.

“When I stepped off that stage I was euphoric. Afterwards, we all went to dinner at a roof terrace restaurant that overlooked the Acropolis.

“We just sat out there and took in that extraordinary view and felt grateful to be alive.”

Source: The Guardian Australia