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Michaela Laki enters the Top 10 junior tennis world rankings for first time

Rising Greek tennis star, Michaela Laki, has entered the Top 10 junior tennis world rankings for the first time after she progressed to the quarter-finals of the Australian Open Junior tournament at Melbourne Park.

Laki’s qualification in the quarter-final was her first for a Grand Slam and this achievement saw her jump from No.13 to No.9 in the ITF junior world rankings.

READ MORE: The top 5 Greek highlights from the Australian Open 2022.

Rising Greek tennis star, Michaela Laki.

Speaking with The Greek Herald in August last year, Laki said she hopes to be like Greek tennis legends Stefanos Tsitsipas and Maria Sakkari one day, as their wins keep her motivated.

“Stefanos and Maria are perfect examples of how a professional athlete should be and especially for someone like me who’s just starting out in the industry,” Laki said at the time.

“It’s really important to have two Greeks so high up in the rankings. It motivates me to keep trying.”

READ MORE: The new wonderkid of Greek tennis, Michaela Laki, puts no limits on her dreams.

Dimitra Pavlou

Laki wasn’t the only young Greek to jump up in the junior rankings this year with Greek-Belgian, Sofia Kostoula, also climbing to No.5 in the world after reaching the final of the Australian Open Junior championship.

Even Dimitra Pavlou, who made her Grand Slam debut at Melbourne this year, climbed to No.140 in the junior tennis rankings.

READ MORE: Dimitra Pavlou’s tennis dream to become a world-class player.

Source: Tennisnews.gr.

NSW Government links with multicultural communities to roll out Rapid Antigen Testing

The NSW Government is partnering with key multicultural organisations to deliver rapid antigen tests (RAT) to vulnerable culturally and linguistically diverse communities across NSW.

Minister for Multiculturalism, Mark Coure, said that the Ethnic Communities’ Councils of NSW (ECCNSW), including those in the Hunter, the Illawarra and Wagga Wagga, will be the first multicultural organisations delivering the RATs across the state.

“Within multicultural communities, grass roots organisations like the ECCNSW are the first port of call for people who need a bit of support,” Mr Coure said.

READ MORE: The Greek frontline workers in south-west Sydney helping multicultural communities in lockdown.

“Since the pandemic hit our shores two years ago, local multicultural communities have really stepped up, helping the NSW Government spread important health messages and providing a safety net for vulnerable people.

“One of our key take aways from early in the pandemic was that these organisations are often best placed to support their communities. We couldn’t have a more trusted partner to get RATs out to those who need them.”

Chair of ECCNSW, Peter Doukas OAM, said the organisation was excited to be part of the NSW Government’s release of RATs to communities. 

“As the peak body representing multicultural communities across the State, we believe it is our core role to be part of this process,” Mr Doukas said.

Rapid Antigen Tests are being rolled out by multicultural communities.

“We will be aiming to provide these tests for those vulnerable communities by utilising our networks and member base.”

READ MORE: Greek-Australians celebrated on Australia Day Honours List 2020.

CEO of MCC Illawarra, Chris Lacey, thanked the NSW Government for making the RATs available.

“There are more than 50 associations that support multicultural communities locally and most are volunteer based,” Mr Lacey said.

“They have worked non-stop during the pandemic to support people from migrant and refugee backgrounds, and RATs are now an important part of ensuring the safe continuation of these services.”

Multicultural NSW will continue to work with NSW Health and other agencies to translate important information on RATs.

JPMorgan CEO says he’s ‘optimistic for Greece’ as financial giant deepens investment

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The Chief Executive of JPMorgan Chase & Co, Jamie Dimon, has confirmed the institution is willing to expand its office in Greece, invest further in Viva Wallet and attract high-level staff in Greece.

Dimon, who is the son of first-generation Greek immigrants, met with Greek Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, on Thursday to discuss his future plans.

The meeting came just two days after the US financial giant announced it was acquiring approximately 49 percent of the Greek online bank Viva Wallet.

READ MORE: Microsoft plans $1 billion data center venture in Greece.

Haris Karonis and Makis Antypas. The co-founders of Viva Wallet.

“This may become a technology hub for JPMorgan Chase throughout the world,” Dimon said at the time.

Later, in an interview with Ekathimerini, Dimon added that he is optimistic about Greece as “it has a rational government that makes rational decisions” and he finds it amazing that Greece has its first start-up with a value of over $1 billion.

For his part, Mitsotakis noted that JPMorgan’s decision constitutes a vote of confidence in the country and its economy.

“What I can tell you is that the country has turned a page and that Greece in 2022 has very few similarities with Greece at the time of economic crisis…” Mitsotakis concluded.

“I think we have laid the foundations for long-term and sustainable growth and we want you to be part of this story, not just because of your Greek descent, but because you truly see the opportunities that exist in the country.”

READ MORE: Australian company, Macquarie, given minority stake in Greece’s national grid operator.

Greece affirms solidarity with diaspora in Ukraine amid tensions with Russia

Greek Foreign Minister, Nikos Dendias, visited Mariupol and the village of Sartana in Ukraine’s Donetsk region on Monday to meet with the local Greek community.

The visit took place amid fears of a Russian invasion of Ukraine after Russian President, Vladimir Putin, deployed around 100,000 troops near the border with its former Soviet neighbour.

In a press release, Dendias said he visited the area, which is just a few kilometres from the line of tension, “in order to support with my presence, upon instruction from Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, the Greek Community living here; a community numbering over 100,000 people.”

“Greece will always be on the side of diaspora Greeks, particularly at difficult times,” Dendias added in a tweet on Sunday.

Earlier that same day, Dendias also paid a visit to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Special Monitoring Mission. During the visit, he was briefed on the current security situation in the country and the Mission’s work.

The visit was praised by the outgoing United States Ambassador to Greece, Geoffrey Pyatt, who called it “an important and very welcome signal of support.”

To conclude his trip to Ukraine, the Greek Foreign Minister also spoke on the phone with his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, and expressed Greece’s support.

“Greece, out of principle, always supports the independence and territorial integrity of all states, in accordance with the principles of International Law and the United Nations Charter,” Dendias said in a press release.

“I would like to express the hope that the tension which currently exists will not continue, that the situation will return to calm and de-escalation.”

Greek Prime Minister meets with Archbishop Makarios to discuss Hellenism in Australia

Greek Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, met with His Eminence Archbishop Makarios of Australia on Monday at the Maximos Palace in Athens.

According to local Greek media, Mitsotakis and Archbishop Makarios spoke about the role of the Greek diaspora and Hellenism in Australia.

Kyriakos Mitsotakis meets with Archbishop Makarios of Australia. Photo: Thema.com.

The Prime Minister also reiterated his support for the work done by Archbishop Makarios in Australia.

This meeting comes just days after Archbishop Makarios met with Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew on January 29 in Constantinople.

The Archbishop was accompanied on the day by three of the four newly ordained bishops, Bishop Kyriakos of Sozopolis, Bishop Christodoulos of Magnesia and Bishop Evmenios of Kerasountos, as well as Archdeacon Athenagoras Karakonstantakis, Dr Theodosios Penklis and his wife, Marianna Penklis.

Meeting with the Ecumenical Patriarch. Photo: Nikos Papachristos / Ecumenical Patriarchate.

According to a post by the Ecumenical Patriarchate, Bishop Bartholomew of Charioupolis “was unable to travel from Australia to Constantinople due to the continuing force of restrictive measures in his area” of Canberra.

Despite this, the meeting was a success with Archbishop Makarios offering the Ecumenical Patriarch a dedicatory book titled, ‘Βαρθολομαίω τω Οικουμενικώ ευλαβικόν αφιέρωμα,’ which was edited by the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia to mark the 30th anniversary of the Ecumenical Patriarch’s enthronement.

The three new Bishops also asked for and received the venerable Patriarchal wishes for the beginning of their new hierarchical ministry.

Archbishop Makarios offering the Ecumenical Patriarch a dedicatory book. Photo: Nikos Papachristos / Ecumenical Patriarchate.

Vaughn Arambatzis wins in the Keep Australia Beautiful Sustainable Cities Awards

Vaughn Arambatzis is the 12-year-old Greek Australian boy who has raised thousands of dollars for the Sydney Dogs and Cats Home by collecting cans and bottles and recycling them through the NSW Government’s Return and Earn Scheme.

It’s no surprise then that Vaughn recently won his category of Young Legends for the Keep Australia Beautiful Sustainable Cities Awards.

These awards set out to recognise and celebrate positive actions taken by councils, community groups and individuals in metropolitan areas to protect and enhance their local environments.

Vaughn collecting his award. Photo: Freshie Photography.

Vaughn definitely fits the bill and to celebrate his win, we sat down to speak with him about his passion for sustainability and his future plans.

READ MORE: Vaughn Arambatzis aims to raise $1000 for Sydney Dogs and Cats Home by recycling bottles.

1. How does it feel to win and be recognised for your work?

I was really shocked and excited to win the Young Legends Award from Keep Australia Beautiful. The award was huge and I got to give a speech about what I’ve been doing. 

Vaughn gave a speech. Photo: Freshie Photography.

2. How much did you raise for the Sydney Dogs and Cats Home last year?

I ended up recycling over 12,000 drink containers and I raised $2000 for Sydney Dogs and Cats Home. Lots of generous Greeks helped me after you wrote the last article.  My local IGA donated money, The One Sauce, which is run by a Greek lady and a Texan man, donated some of their hot sauce and I was able to use it as a prize. I left a bin at our business, UFC GYM Gregory Hills, and lots of neighbours just kept dropping off drink containers. It was non-stop! Lockdown was a bit tough but I just extended my deadline by a couple of months.

Vaughn raises money for the Sydney Dogs and Cats Home.

3. What are your future plans?

I want to speak to Council to see if they can help me this year. I definitely need more bins but I also mainly need help with transporting everything to Return and Earn. I also just found out about the Purple Bin service so I need to investigate that too.

4. Is there anything else you’d like to say?

I think that Sydney Dogs and Cats Home is a really important charity. They need all the help they can get because they need to build their new shelter at Kurnell. If more generous Greeks want to help me again this year, that would be great!



Jacky Benmayor: The last speaker in Greece of a Jewish language close to extinction

There is currently a renewed interest in preserving the Jewish cultural heritage of Thessaloniki and Jacky Benmayor plays a key role in fulfilling this need.

Benmayor is the last speaker in Greece of Judeo-Spanish, or Ladino, a language derived from Old Spanish spoken by the Jews driven out of Catholic Spain in 1492.

Why? Because, as the curator of the Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki told Euronews, after the Holocaust and the annihilation of more than 90% of the total Jewish population, many Jewish people struggled to pass on Ladino, even for political reasons.

Headstones in Ladino. Photo: AP Photo / Nikolas Giakoumidis.

“Many survivors didn’t want to speak the language that had made them targeted. They believed that if extermination had happened once, it could happen again. As a matter of consequences, Jewish families claimed that they were first and foremost Greeks,” Evangelos Hekimoglu told the website.

Circumstances for Benmayor, however, were different. He was able to learn the language from his father, Leon, who was deported to Auschwitz at the age of 27.

“My father was the only member of his family to survive: he was not inclined to speak about his experience in the concentration camp, but he taught me Ladino, which was the first language spoken in my family,” Benmayor said.

This was a large Jewish population in Thessaloniki prior to the Holocaust.

Now, although retired and 75 years of age, Benmayor is determined to revive the sound of his mother tongue by teaching Ladino courses at the University of Thessaloniki.

Most of the students who attend Benmayor’s lessons are not Jews, but historians and archaeologists interested in reading the city’s historical sources, such as archives and tombstones.

There are hopes that this will in turn fuel a deeper interest in Ladino at universities across the world.

Source: euronews.

Elfa Moraitakis nominated for Pro Bono Australia’s 2022 Impact 25 Awards

The CEO of SydWest Multicultural Services, Elfa Moraitakis, has been nominated for Pro Bono Australia’s 2022 Impact 25 awards.

Elfa has been nominated for her exemplary leadership and commitment to the social sector, bringing vision into action as a natural change agent and collaborator, advocating for Western Sydney communities and their needs.

READ MORE: Pilot program headed by Greek Australians aims to improve aged care services for older CALD people.

Elfa has been involved in the community sector for the past 30 years and has an extensive background in developing services for linguistically disadvantaged communities, with a focus on engaging community and stakeholder participation.

READ MORE: Calls grow for Multicultural Taskforce to help with Sydney’s COVID-19 crisis

Elfa (centre) was awarded 2017 Blacktown Woman of the Year.

Elfa was awarded 2017 Blacktown Woman of the Year for supporting migrant and refugee women establishing their businesses and was one of the 2020 UNSW Alumni finalists for Social Impact and Service. She is a Director of Settlement Services International and a Director of the NSW Council of Social Services.

The Pro Bono Australia’s 2022 Impact 25 awards began in 2014 and each year they aim to recognise innovators, collaborators and change-makers across the social sector who are making a positive impact in the community.

Show your support for SydWest Multicultural Services and cast your vote for Elfa here.

READ MORE: Isolation and community spirit: South-west Sydney’s Greek residents reflect on lockdown.

The top 5 Greek highlights from the Australian Open 2022

There were two weeks of magic at the Australian Open this year with many highlights from our favourite sport stars.

Rafael Nadal made history in the men’s final, claiming a record 21st major after fighting back from two sets to love down to defeat Daniil Medvedev.

Elsewhere, Ash Barty became the first local player to claim the Australian Open women’s singles championship in 44 years after defeating American Danielle Collins 6-3, 7-6 (7-2).

Nadal celebrates with the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup. Photo: Getty / Clive Brunskill.

But what about the top Greek moments from the tournament? The Greek Herald takes a look back at its top five.

1. The Special Ks become Australian Open doubles champions:

Nick Kyrgios and Thanasi Kokkinakis became grand slam champions on Saturday after claiming the Australian Open doubles title by beating fellow Aussies Matt Ebden and Max Purcell.

The best mates brought their typical spark to proceedings in front of a Rod Laver Arena crowd that was clearly on their side.

The Special K show is not for everybody, but plenty of people love it. Photo: AAP / Dave Hunt.

They weren’t broken a single time while one break of Ebden’s serve in each set was enough to win them the title, 7-5 6-4.

READ MORE: Thanasi Kokkinakis’ father shares feelings ahead of Adelaide International quarterfinals.

It means Kyrgios and Kokkinakis have both a junior doubles Slam (Wimbledon) and senior doubles Slam (Australian Open) on their resume.

The Special Ks now have their sights set on more grand slam and ATP Finals glory.

Photo: Facebook.

To celebrate their win Kokkinakis was spotted at Philhellene Provincial Greek Cuisine restaurant in Melbourne with his family, whilst Kyrgios was seen at Mr Wong in Sydney with his girlfriend.

2. Stefanos Tsitsipas makes his second Australian Open semi-final:

Stefanos Tsitsipas made it into his second semi-final at the Australian Open and played against the Russian Daniil Medvedev.

Ultimately, Tsitsipas lost the match 7-6 (7/5), 4-6, 6-4, 6-1 but not before he made the local Greek community proud with his tennis skills and determination.

Tsitsipas hits out against Medvedev. Photo: Getty Images.

The match itself wasn’t without controversy as well, with Medvedev fined just over $17,000 following his outburst at the chair umpire. He accused Tsitsipas of receiving illegal coaching from his father in the stands.

While Medvedev’s blow-up was confronting to watch, it seemed to do the trick as the umpires proceeded to launch a crackdown on the Tsitsipas team.

Fellow umpire, Eva Asderaki-Moore, who can speak Greek, was placed in a strategic position in the tunnel directly below Tsitsipas’ box in a bid to detect any coaching going on.

The ‘sting operation’ paid off and Tsitsipas was hit with a code violation, as well as a fine worth around $7,000.

Despite this, it was still an enjoyable tournament for Tsitsipas in Australia. His iconic Tsitsipas souvlaki at Stalactites Restaurant in Melbourne was again for sale with all proceeds going towards Beyond Blue Australia.

This year, Tsitsipas is also matching the amount made in sales to double the donation.

3. Michaela Laki books her first-ever Grand Slam quarter-final:

Michaela Laki had a fantastic week at the Australian Open Juniors tournament, qualifying for the first time in the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam tournament.

This came after the 16-year-old achieved victory against the Czech Dominika Salkova, with 6-3, 6-7 (5), 7-6 (8).

Michaela Laki (left) and Dimitra Pavlou.

Laki, who is world No.11 in the juniors world rankings, won the match after 2 hours and 27 minutes of fighting in Court 6 of Melbourne Park.

Laki faced the American Liv Hovde, No. 13 on the board and No. 20 in the world junior ranking, in the quarter-finals but was defeated in straight sets.

4. Jaimee Fourlis reaches the Australian Open mixed doubles final:

Local wildcards, Jaimee Fourlis and Jason Kubler, finished as runners-up in the Australian Open mixed doubles tournament following a straight-sets defeat to Kristina Mladenovic and Ivan Dodig in the final.

Jaimee Fourlis (right) and Jason Kubler reached the final as wildcards. Photo: Getty Images / Darrian Traynor.

France’s Mladenovic and Croatian Dodig swept to a 6-3, 6-4 victory in 1 hour and 17 minutes.

Fourlis and Kubler were bidding the become the first all-Australian duo to win the mixed doubles championship since 2013.

5. Maria Sakkari almost reaches the Australian Open quarter-final:

Fifth-seed Maria Sakkari crashed out of the Australian Open in the fourth round after losing in straight sets, 6-7 (0-7), 3-6 to Jessica Pegula of the United States.

Sakkari was trying to reach her first Australian Open Quarterfinal but could not overcome Pegula, losing to her for the first time in their three encounters.

Despite this, Sakkari still made the local Greek community proud and she vowed to come back stronger next year.

“It feels like I’m at home back here. We all know that Melbourne has a very large Greek community and I’m very pleased and grateful to have them behind me,” she said in a post-match interview.

READ MORE: Australian Open: Sakkari eliminated whilst Kyrgios, Kokkinakis and Tsitsipas impress.

UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Thessaloniki available on Google Arts and Culture

The UNESCO World Heritage Sites of Thessaloniki are now available to view on the Google Arts & Culture platform.

“Thessaloniki: An Open Museum of Early Christian and Byzantine Art” includes exquisite photographs, videos and interactive street view features of the city’s ancient and Byzantine monuments, collectively inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage list in 1988.

Some of the ancient sites included on the platform are: the Rotunda, the Acheiropoietos, Panagia Halkeon, the Vlatadon Monastery, the White Tower and the Byzantine baths, among many others.

The Rotunda, with its unique interior mosaics, is one of the most important monuments of the Late Roman world. Photo: Greek Ministry of Culture.

The addition of Thessaloniki’s famous sites and monuments to the multilingual platform, presented in collaboration with the Thessaloniki Tourism Organization, is part of Google’s ongoing promotion of UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

The hugely successful Google Arts & Culture platform, which launched in 2011, uses high-resolution images and a range of interactive features to enable virtual visitors to explore artworks, sites and galleries at a number of museums and partner institutions worldwide.

Source: Ekathimerini.