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Greek Festival set to return to Brighton-Le-Sands in October

The Greek Festival of Sydney is returning to Brighton-Le-Sands this year as part of the festival’s 40th anniversary celebrations, The Leader has reported.

The announcement comes after festival organisers met with Bayside Council last week. The desired date for the Festival is October 23 but The Greek Herald will announce final dates once confirmed.

READ MORE: Bayside Council calls for Greek Festival to return to Brighton-Le-Sands in 2022.

The last time the Greek Festival took place at Brighton was in March 2003. 

This year’s event is expected to feature live Greek music and dancing, Greek food stalls, as well as activities for children.

Source: The Leader.

Why Putin lost the war in Ukraine

By Professor Anastasios M. Tamis*

Ethnism is an ideology that promotes the cultivation of national consciousness, without disregarding the history and identity of other nations.  Its basic principle is that the national consciousness of a people and a nation is strengthened and consolidated through revolution and resistance to all kinds of national danger and diversion of its sovereignty. The Americans, an amalgam of European races, a Euro-Asian and African ethnic and racial composition, created its American consciousness during its revolution against the British colonists. Ethnism defeated feudalism,  it abolished the empires and stood on the path of imperialism and the expansionist struggles of foolish and megalomaniac dictators and all kinds of authoritarian and totalitarian regimes everywhere. This ideology of Ethnism dominated Ukraine with the Putin invasion a few days ago. 

President Putin, the leader, of one of the most important countries on our planet, a country that gave humanity a huge light and voice of culture, arts, literature, music, letters, sciences, architecture, a country without which Europe and European civilisation cannot exist, wanted to believe that there is no Ukrainian people and no Ukrainian nation. President Putin, like his compatriot Stalin in the past, proclaimed that modern Ukraine is the result of ethnic composition of German-Polish peoples, Slavs and Hungarians, fugitives of wars and products of peoples’ relocation. He believed, as did Stalin, that Ukraine is simply a province of Russia. They believed that the cereals and fruits of this country, together with their people, belong to them, or at the very least that as same-religion and same-race people, they have the right to control them.

So, under the pretext that the Ukrainians supposedly did not want to declare themselves as “neutrals”, detached from Europe and NATO and demilitarized (this is what Erdogan is also demanding for the Greek islands), President Putin invaded Ukraine to “conform” them.  He violated Ukraine’s sovereignty, humiliated international law, disregarded “the rule of law”, trampled on human rights and wreaked havoc on thousands of young soldiers and civilian populations. President Putin brought the man of Europe back into the jungle from which they had emerged, by European standards, seventy-so many years ago.

The Putin invasion of Ukraine is one, perhaps the worst defeat of combat operations experienced by Russia’s proud history. President Putin, even to win all the battles, and to flatten cities and drag millions of people into refugees, and to wipe out infrastructure, he actually already lost the war in Ukraine. He suffered a huge defeat.

He was defeated on all fronts that he himself either wished to conquer and impose himself, he was defeated in his goal of turning Ukraine into his province, he was humiliated into a united and unbroken West and lost strong friends, if not allies (even the despotic Ertogan on the issue of Ukraine stood against him, with the exception of the imposition of sanctions,  so as not to lose the Russian tourists of the summer).

Why then Putin had decisively lost this War. Let’s analyze it briefly. 

  1. He lost the war and defeated its objectives, because it caused the awakening of the national consciousness of Ukrainians, as a fighting people for altars and hearths as well as for its national dignity and its right to exist. 
  2. Even if he will conquer the whole of Ukraine, he had lost the war because he had awakened the hatred of the gallantly defending Ukrainian people towards Russia and of course against the tyrannical Putin regime. The hatred aroused among modern Ukrainians and their children will remain unquenchable intergenerationally. Future generations will grow up to hate Russians and remember the invasion of their homeland. Hatred is the worst emotion in man, it is man’s most powerful innate power, unquenchable, mighty, ready to avenge both now and tomorrow and beyond. It is an animalistic innate feeling that fundamentally discredits man.
  3. Even, if he will conquer Ukraine, he had lost the goal for which he made the War, because he managed to rally the Ukrainian people and lead them from now on to various forms of national resistance, of a political, diplomatic, cultural and ecclesiastical guerrilla movement, both within Ukraine and Europe and the Diaspora.
  4. He had lost the War because he provoked the resistance of the Ukrainians, gave them national credibility, pushed them forever to Europe and the West, although Ukraine historically from 478 AD, with the dissolution of the Roman Empire, had been part of the Eastern Roman State.
  5. The Putin invasion managed  to turn even Ukrainian Russians, Russophiles, Russian-speaking, and children from mixed marriages against Russia, a Slavic brotherly nation. 
  6. This invasion caused huge and abysmal social rifts, wounds that time will not heal. It led and will lead to the dissolution and destruction of families that were established and blessed as products of Ukrainian-Russian marriages, injuring the social cohesion of Ukrainian and Russian societies.
  7. While Mr. Putin’s goal was to shrink the influence of NATO and Europe in Ukraine (he did not do this for the Baltic states, nor for Moldova, nor for Romania), he actually achieved the opposite. It rallied all neighbouring countries to Russia to turn openly to the West and to immediately demand that they become its organised members of the EU and NATO.
  8. The Putin invasion awakened Europe’s sleeping giant, and Russia’s hitherto only friend in Europe, Germany, not only turned against him, but also made sure that she was shielded by spending EUR 100 billion in a year on defensive and offensive armaments.
  9. The new imperialism, now called revisionism, has taken care to unite the 30 NATO countries decisively, to give for the first time a military role to the E.U., to unite the European states in a cohesive manner, against a common danger, and to give the E.U. political credibility and an essential role in international issues concerning the Union of Europe.
  10. Russian imperialism has now become visible and has caused the awakening and reorganisation of all the states neighbouring Russia, from Finland and Sweden to Romania, in order to protect their national and territorial sovereignty in Europe. For the first time it also united all western states against Russia in a cohesive manner with cultural, economic, artistic, sporting sanctions.

The unfortunate thing for humanity is that this conflict is unpredictable because of its proclamation by a difficult regime and an unpredictable leader-oppressor. What the end will be for humanity remains unknown. Many, of course, are the sufferings, but none is more evil than man himself. 

*Professor Anastasios M. Tamis taught at Universities in Australia and abroad, was the creator and founding director of the Dardalis Archives of the Hellenic Diaspora and is currently the President of the Australian Institute of Macedonian Studies (AIMS).

READ MORE: The first national disaster for Hellenism (1922 – 2022)

Prime Minister Scott Morrison declares floods a national emergency during visit to Lismore

Australian Prime Minister, Scott Morrison, has declared a national emergency in response to catastrophic floods in northern New South Wales.

The declaration gives the federal government power to deploy money and resources faster. It is a legislative power that Mr Morrison sought after the 2019-2020 bushfire crisis.

Mr Morrison said he intended to ask the Governor-General to formally make the declaration which would cover both NSW and Queensland.

“I have made this decision today, in consultation with the Premiers … and it will ensure our Ministers and agencies don’t face any unnecessary bureaucracy as they roll out what communities need,” he said.

Mr Morrison made the announcement before he spoke in Lismore today, where he was greeted by angry residents whose lives have been upturned.

He also said residents in the Local Government Areas (LGAs) of Richmond Valley, Lismore and Clarence Valley would be able to access a further $2,000 for adults and $800 for children through an extension of the Disaster Recovery Payment scheme.

This announcement comes as earlier today, His Eminence Archbishop Makarios of Australia also issued a message of support for all flood victims who have lost their lives, homes and belongings in the unprecedented flood crisis across NSW and in Queensland.

Submerged car in northern NSW due to the flood damage. Photo: AAP / James O’Brien.

“I pray for the souls of our fellow human beings who have lost their lives and for the consolation of their relatives and loved ones, as well as for the relief of the injured and for the strengthening of those who continue to fight against the destructive floods,” the message reads.

Other additional measures announced by the government include:

  • $25 to cover “emergency relief”, food relief and financial counselling services
  • $7.8 million for businesses in NSW and Qld affected by the floods
  • Around $6.9 million for early childhood and childcare services which have been closed for more than seven days
  • $4.7 million to make sure primary health services can continue to operate in affected regions.
  • $10 million to a mental health program for school-aged children in Northern NSW
  • $31.2 million for mental health support services for affected communities in both states
  • $5.4 million for legal services within affected communities.

Source: ABC News.

Hellenic Museum is about Hellenism, not just about Greece: An interview with Sarah Craig

By Mary Sinanidis

Hellenic Museum CEO Sarah Craig says she feels like she’s on the set of a movie every time she walks down the opulent staircase of the Royal Mint, where the museum is housed.

It’s a movie with plenty of cliff-hangers since she took over its reins in October 2020. That month, despite a deadly pandemic dominating global headlines, the Hellenic Museum in locked-down Melbourne managed to make the news on at least three occasions. 

Herald Sun top story spotlighted the now-scrapped plan of a “$244 million CBD museum” at the iconic Land Titles Office to make Melbourne “the only city outside Greece with a permanent Benaki Museum on the site”. This was swiftly followed by a statement by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis referring to the Benaki Museum’s collaboration with the Hellenic Museum as “an example of how we can bring Greek culture to Australia”.

Before the month had ended, Ms Craig took the helm as the museum’s new CEO, with outgoing John Tatoulis stating the announcement of her appointment had caught him “a little by surprise” and was perhaps “naively distributed prematurely”. 

Ms Craig told The Greek Herald that she, too, was “surprised” when the Board made the decision to appoint her to the role but was also “fabulously honoured and delighted”. 

Remembering her predecessor, an “ideas man”, she feels gratitude. “We worked together for six years, and it was fabulous,” she said. “I’m grateful there was so much freedom given the size and scope of the museum.” 

Her rise to CEO has been swift and spectacular, starting her collaboration as an intern in 2014 while doing a Masters of Art Curatorship at the University of Melbourne. From there, she moved to volunteer, curator, assistant, curator of operations and now CEO. 

“When I started, there was only one exhibition and now all the galleries are full,” she said.

Benaki Museum artefacts, a flagship display

The display of “Gods, Myths & Mortals: Greek Treasures Across the Millennia” spans over 8,000 years of Greek civilisation from 5,800BC to the Greek War of Independence. 

Ms Craig knows the display well but never tires of it, stating her own connection is rejuvenated through visitors’ reactions. She learns from everyone ranging from the Australian Embroiders Guild who were “blown away by the detail, use of colour and the complexity of the stitches” to a Benaki Museum expert, who could look at animal-skin papyri and tell which hide they were made of. 

Asked to share her favourite item, her choice of a seemingly unremarkable coil pot indicates where her heart lies when telling history.

“Someone has gone through all the effort of making this beautiful pot,” she said, admitting that it looks like the creations of a Year 9 pottery class. “They’ve burnished it, they’ve fired it and it has survived for 8,000 years. And we’re only a moment of time in its life and it will probably last another 5,000 years beyond us. And I think it is a special piece, an everyday piece.” 

Ms Craig wants people to relate to the artefacts, to feel a connection. “So much of history is written by the victor. It was written by men up until recently. It’s written in the helmets and the gorgeous pottery and statues and gold, whereas these ones (the makers of the pot) are people like me,” she said. 

She stops short of offering me tea from the pot in question, despite the museum’s philosophy of object-based handling. Real objects, not replicas, such as a sword from 800 BCE from Ms Craig’s own collection are offered to visitors to handle as “a tangible way to hold your heritage”.

Heritage, like history, is quite intricate 

Wikipedia describes the museum as “one dedicated to showcasing the ongoing story of the Greek community of Melbourne”, but those hoping to find a narrative of the Greek-Australian story and tribulations of early pioneers may be a little disappointed. It’s more about art, thought and philosophy, than it is about immigrant struggles. 

“I think the notion of Greekness really depends on what period you are looking at,” Ms Craig said.

“The geographic borders have continually shifted over time so that is why we are the Hellenic Museum rather than the Greek museum.”

A believer in intercultural connections, Ms Craig points to another pot from the Benaki display, adorned with a swastika. “Greeks were inspired by Indian art, and that is reflected in their own,” she said pointing to “ancient connections”. 

“To say that culture is an island is a fallacy.” 

Proof of how culture transcends, transforms and triggers dialogue can be seen in sculptor Sam Jinks’ commissioned work, “The Messenger” – a hyperreal depiction of messenger goddess Iris using silicone, resin, calcium carbonate, fibreglass and hair. It was a huge success when it travelled from Melbourne to Greece in 2018.

In a bougie upstairs lounge, classicist/landscape photographer Bill Henson’s “Oneirei” consists of 11 images which incorporate artefacts from the Benaki display into a moody installation of light, darkness, reality, dreams and shifting perspectives. 

In another hall, the story of the Olympic Games is told through torches, while VR headsets by a Melbourne tech team allow visitors to explore ancient Olympia. 

“The museum underpins all that is Hellenic, but ultimately hopes to expand to the rest of the world so we can have more conversations with more people,” Ms Craig said.

“The bigger vision is to be recognised as a place where people can go and discover and be challenged and walk away with more ideas.” 

Ms Craig said this vision is not just in the museum’s DNA but at the core of Hellenic ideals. “Greece was always about growth,” she said. “The ancient Greeks were always challenging, always striving, always looking forward and I really think if we didn’t honour that here, we would be remiss.”

Looking to the museum’s future

Despite expansionist aspirations, the high hopes and hype surrounding the move to the refurbished Land Titles Office fell flat.

“We just couldn’t get it across the line,” Ms Craig said. “The Board decided it was not viable for us, which was disappointing because so much work had gone into it from both sides, but we’re still looking to grow.” 

Growth can take many forms. With the Benaki Museum display set to end in 2024 and the world slowly returning to normal, Ms Craig said that there are conversations brewing and discussions taking place. 

Ms Craig said the museum is “a Greek dream which changed over time”. She adds, however, that the original vision of businessman/philanthropist Spiros Stamoulis “to share Greek cultural heritage, but ultimately for everyone to buy into why it is important” is slowly being realised.

As a “passionate philhellene” who first fell in love with Hellenic culture through her mother’s telling of ancient myths tweaked with happy endings, Ms Craig is one who shares the dream and well positioned to carry on the legacy. 

The Hellenic Museum is located at 280 William Street, Melbourne. Telephone (03) 8615 9016. 

UPCOMING EVENTS AT THE HELLENIC MUSEUM

  • 11 March, 1-3pm

International Women’s Day Fund-raiser held by the Hellenic Museum Ladies’ Society, tickets $130

  • 22 March, 6.30-7.30pm

Live art and storytelling with John Hughs and Marco Luccio Art and storytelling collide as Greek myths are read aloud while art is created live, $20

  • 2 April, 11-12.30pm

Seasonal scents, Easter edition Guests must be over 16 to attend this soy candle-making workshop, $95

  • 14 April, 11am-12.40pm

Magic and Medicine Masterclass An educational workshop for students from 7 to 13 years during Term 1 school holidays, $18

  • 23 April, 11am-12.40pm

Pigments of the Past Experiment Experiment with ancient paints during Term 1 of the school holidays for students aged from 7 to 13 years, $18

  • 9 July, 5-9pm

Hellenic Arts Fest: Mythical Feast – Atalanta Greek myths via a gastronomic experience, $195 First Saturday of every month from 11.30am-12.30pm guided tours are held by the museum’s curator, Tickets at $17 (adults) and $12 (concessions).

Anastasia Lavrentiadis’ Greek vegan food hailed among South Australia’s best

With South Australia’s new plant-protein industry set to take off, The Advertiser has named the state’s best vegan cafes.

Among the list is Staazi & Co, which is a mobile food van and takeaway shop that brings delicious Greek vegan food to the streets of Adelaide.

The business was started by Anastasia Lavrentiadis, who wanted to share and spread vegan lifestyle education and awareness through food.

READ MORE: ‘Being Greek and vegetarian is not an oxymoron,’ says Helen Korakianitis.

Photo: Staazi & Co website.

Speaking to The Advertiser, Anastasia says their Greek food is “super delicious” because they always use “fresh ingredients.”

“Our customers are open minded and people who have to follow dietary requirements,” she concludes.

“But at the core of everything we do is animal rights and to not cause harm.”

READ MORE: Greece’s first fully vegan hotel is opening in Mykonos.

Source: The Advertiser.

Four Australians of Greek heritage named among the 50 most powerful figures in the NRL

The Daily Telegraph‘s rugby league writers, Michael Carayannis and Brent Read, have named their top 50 most power figures in the NRL and among the list are four Australians of Greek heritage.

The Greek Herald breaks down who they are.

#1: Peter V’landys, ARLC Chairman, Chief Executive of Racing NSW

Peter V’landys assumed the chairmanship of the Australian Rugby League Commission (ARLC) from Peter Beattie in 2019.

He ripped millions out of the bottom line in the NRL’s head office, kept the game afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic and helped the NRL become the first major sporting code to return to play. He also introduced a raft of rule changes.

READ MORE: Nick Politis and Peter V’landys named among Sydney’s top 100 most powerful people.

#8: Nick Politis, Sydney Roosters Chairman

Nick Politis is a migrant from the Greek island of Kythera who has helped save rugby league in Australia and turned a single car dealership into a $2 billion fortune.

Politis is one of the most powerful men in rugby league as the Chairman of the Sydney Roosters. He recently quit his post as a NSW board member.

READ MORE: Nick Politis, George Peponis quit NSWRL board over election dispute.

#20: Nick Pappas, South Sydney Chairman

Nick Papas is held in high regard by the NRL’s executives and fellow clubs alike and has long been touted as a potential chairman of the game.

While he has been in the thick of discussions regarding the game’s big picture, it has not detracted from running one of the game’s most successful clubs in South Sydney.

#31: Lee Hagipantelis, West Tigers Chairman

The Tigers chairman has been involved in the game for a long time via his business Brydens Lawyers.

The law firm are major sponsors of the Tigers and also sponsor a host of other teams including Newcastle, South Sydney and a range of junior clubs.

Source: The Daily Telegraph.

Chanel Contos stars in viral ‘Safety. Respect. Equity.’ campaign calling for systemic reform

Activist, Chanel Contos, has lent her voice and star power to a new Australian campaign aimed at ending injustice and inequity for women.

The Safety. Respect. Equity. initiative is calling for systemic reform in the areas of sexual harassment, domestic violence and consent education.

Contos is a part of the campaign after her petition for earlier sex education in schools inspired hundreds of former Sydney schoolgirls to come forward about their experience with sexual assault last year.

READ MORE: Chanel Contos’ petition sparks sex education changes across Australian schools.

She’s also joined by 11 other prominent Australian women including Grace Tame, Julia Banks, Christine Holgate, Brittany Higgins, Lucy Turnbull, Madison de Rozario, Michele O’Neil, Larissa Behrendt, Yasmin Poole, Wendy McCarthy and Georgie Dent.

In a video on the group’s website, Ms Tame starts by telling viewers, “Australia, we need to talk.”

The video explains that “2021 wasn’t the first year that Australian women were harassed or unsafe or violated or ignored or disrespected… and it wasn’t the first year that women spoke up.”

READ MORE: Chanel Contos receives Young People’s Medal at Human Rights Awards.

For her part in the video, Contos says now is the time to “educate the future generations of Australians” on equality for all women.

The group is specifically calling for the prevention of sexual harassment and bullying toward women and wants all 55 recommendations in the Respect@Work report implemented.

Source: ABC News.

Former bikie, Anthony Mavropoulos, killed in motorcycle crash outside SA school

Former senior Finks bikie, Anthony Mavropoulos, has been identified as the motorbike rider who was killed in a crash in Somerton Park yesterday afternoon.

Mavropolous, 45, crashed into a stobie pole at speed on Brighton Road outside Sacred Heart College around midday.

The horror scene, which played out in front of school students, took more than six hours to clear and Mr Mavropoulos died at the scene.

Police at the scene of the Somerton Park crash on Monday. Picture: Kelly Barnes.

According to The Advertiser, witnesses reported Mr Mavropoulos had been travelling in excess of 100km/h and had run a red light prior to the crash.

Tributes were flowing on social media for Mr Mavropoulos after his death, including from former Mongol and Fink bikie Tyson Ward.

Mr Mavropoulos was found guilty in 2009 over a shooting at Prospect in the midst of a cannabis turf war. He served eight years in prison for his crime.

Source: The Advertiser.

Greece marks International Women’s Day 2022

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Hundreds of people participated in a rally and march to mark International Women’s Day 2022 in Athens on Tuesday.

Besides chanting slogans in support of women’s rights, participants also chanted against the war in Ukraine while a central banner called for the reinstitution of the General Secretariat for Equality. 

Greece’s President, Katerina Sakellaropoulou, also added her voice to mark the day in Parliament on Tuesday.

READ MORE: International Women’s Day 2022: This is how Greek and Cypriot women #BreakTheBias.

Sakellaropoulou marked IWD 2022.

In a speech, Sakellaropoulou made special reference to the women of Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion of the former Soviet republic.

“On a day like today, a day of honour for women around the world striving for a better future, the women of Ukraine are in our hearts and minds,” Sakellaropoulou, who was dressed in the colours of the Ukrainian flag, said.

The female President stressed that TV footage and images of refugees escaping war in Ukraine brings up “painful memories” of refugee waves triggered by the Asia Minor disaster and Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus.

For his part, Greece’s Prime Minister marked International Women’s Day with a message on Twitter pointing out the strength of the “Ukrainian woman” who “stayed in her homeland to defend it from the Russian invasion.”

Later in the day, the European Union’s executive arm also unveiled plans to harmonise the criminalisation of rape across the 27-nation bloc on the strict basis of lack of consent. The plans also include the criminalisation of female genital mutilation and cyber violence.

READ MORE: Who is your female hero? Greeks share their personal stories.

People marched in Athens.

“I want Europe to be at the side of women with protection and support. I want a society where violence against women is prevented, condemned and prosecuted when it occurs,” European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said.

“The time for justice and equality is now. That’s why we come forward today with the right rules to accelerate change.”

The proposed directive also lays out targeted support from member countries to specific groups, including women fleeing armed conflict.

READ MORE: Why do we celebrate International Women’s Day on March 8?

Source: Ekathimerini.

Russian shelling damages Consulate of Greece in Ukrainian city of Mariupol

The building that housed the Consulate General of Greece in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol has been damaged as a result of missile and bomb attacks by the Russian army, Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry has confirmed.

The Foreign Ministry said that the office of the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine was also damaged, while the honoured consulates of Slovenia, Azerbaijan and Albania in Kharkiv were destroyed.

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

“Russia’s armed attacks on the premises of diplomatic missions represent gross violation of international humanitarian law, the Vienna Conventions on Diplomatic and Consular Relations,” the Ukrainian Ministry said in a statement.

“We call on the international community to condemn Russia for its barbaric shelling of civilian objects in Ukraine, which results in murders and injuries of civilians, including children.”

In response, Greek Foreign Minister, Nikos Dendias, wrote on Twitter that Greece is “very much trying to create a humanitarian corridor so that people that want to leave, can leave.”

READ MORE: Greek PM: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has ushered in new ‘cold war’.

“As we speak, I have a Consul General in Mariupol, the last EU diplomat there and we have a very difficult time getting him out of there. We are trying our best,” Dendias continued.

According to Ekathimerini, Consul General Manolis Andoulakis is currently sheltering in the building of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in Mariupol.

This comes after Dendias met with the Secretary General of the OSCE, Helga Schmid, in Vienna on Tuesday.

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

The two leaders discussed at length the situation and latest developments in Mariupol and Dendias stressed that his Ministry “will do everything in our power to bring the Greek consul general home safely.”

Dendias also thanked all Greek diplomats involved in the risky evacuations of Greek citizens and members of the Ukrainian Greek community from the country.

READ MORE: Greece evacuates expatriates in Mariupol as Russian troops encircle Ukrainian city.