Home Blog Page 1516

TGH Exclusive: Harry Vatiliotis has been hand making exquisite violins for 66 years

“When I was a young boy in Cyprus, I used to play the violin as the bride walked down the aisle,” Harry Vatiliotis tells The Greek Herald as he reminisces about the good old days. “I always liked the violin.”

Almost 66 years later and Harry’s passion for the violin has only grown stronger. The Cypriot Australian is now arguably Australia’s best regarded and most prolific luthier (someone who makes instruments with strings, a neck and sound box). He has singlehandedly made more than 780 violins, many of which are now played by leading musicians in Australia and internationally.

With all these accomplishments, it should have come as no surprise that Harry was recognised for his craft in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List for 2020. But according to the humble man himself, he really didn’t expect the recognition.

Harry Vatiliotis was recognised in the Queen’s Birthday List for 2020. Photography: Pete Dillon.

“When I found out I had become a Member of the Order (AM) I was overwhelmed and surprised. I didn’t expect it,” Harry says.

“A lot of my clients were really excited as well. Maybe even more so than me. A couple of them said: ‘it’s about time one of us got a gong’.”

It’s not surprising Harry’s clients were his biggest supporters. For years, Harry has worked continuously from his Concord workshop, ensuring his violins are handcrafted to perfection to meet the exact needs of those who pay for his services.

However, whilst he is happy to experiment with different oil and spirit varnishes if the client requests him to, Harry still favours the traditional methods of the Cremonese school of violin makers. This was a method he was introduced to when he first arrived in Australia from Cyprus in 1952 at the age of 15.

Harry is a skilled luthier. Photography: Pete Dillon.

“I was born in the village of Vatili in Cyprus but when I was 15, my family and I came to Australia. My first job was at the Eveleigh railway workshops in Sydney, where one of my fellow workers told me that if I was serious about making violins, I should get an apprenticeship with A E Smith and Company. They were Australia’s leading violin makers and repairers back then,” Harry explains.

“I took his advice and it was a success. I joined the company in 1953 and a year later, I made my first violin.”

Harry remained with the violinery and learnt all the tricks of the trade until 1970, when he eventually decided it was time for him to mentor other aspiring luthiers. He did this by conducting Australia’s first (and only) stringed instrument-making course at the University of Sydney’s Art Workshop from 1981-84. Something Harry says brought him a lot of happiness.

Harry enjoys teaching the younger generation how to play music on his violin. Source: Sydney Morning Herald.

“I’ve got no secrets. I’m happy to teach anyone and I think people got a lot of pleasure from my teaching. I really just want to pass on my skills to other people,” Harry says with a smile.

It’s clear that Harry has lived a happy and fulfilled life. So fulfilled in fact, that he says he will probably semi-retire this year and close the door on a lifetime of the violin craft.

“I wanted to keep going until 2023 and complete my 70 years in the trade, but I think I might semi-retire at 66 years instead. That’s still good! I won’t go cold turkey that’s for sure. I’ll still be in touch with the musical world in any way I can,” he exclaims.

A resounding promise that the Greek Australian community will definitely be relieved to hear.

Read this article in Greek in The Greek Herald‘s print edition on June 19.

Greek Orthodox Archdiocese responds to reports concerning Archbishop’s alleged residence

His Eminence Archbishop Makarios has responded to recent reports concerning his alleged $6.5 million Sydney Harbour apartment.

Read the full English statement:

The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia makes the following comments in relation to the purchase of a property by the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia Consolidated Trust (‘Consolidated Trust’) in Sydney, where the headquarters of the Archdiocese are situated:

1.Given that a) the Archdiocese does not possess a suitable residence for the Archbishop, and b) the Archbishop, together with some of the services provided by the Archdiocesan Central Offices in Redfern, are shortly to be relocated to allow for extensive renovations, various options were considered, including the possibility of renting a suitable property for this purpose. However, due to high and unfavourable rental prices in Sydney, the Consolidated Trust decided instead to proceed with the purchase of a property.

2. After examining the property market in Sydney, an apartment in Kent Street, valued at $6.5M, was identified, both for its suitability for the specific purpose, and as an excellent investment opportunity for the Archdiocese. Certain renovations to the property, enhancing its value, were then carried out and funded in total by a private benefactor of the Archdiocese.   

3. The process relating to the acquisition of the property was absolutely legal and there was no formal objection regarding this matter. The property in question does not belong to a private individual or to the Archbishop but is vested totally in the Consolidated Trust, the statutory corporation established by the NSW Parliament with the task of holding the real estate assets of the Archdiocese in trust for the Church. Furthermore, there is no outstanding debt to the Archdiocese for the said property.

4. The Archbishop continues to reside within the Archdiocesan building in Redfern. The Archdiocese unequivocally refutes any suggestion that the Archbishop currently resides in this particular apartment, or that he has stated that he will reside there and places on record that, up to this point, no such decision has been taken by him.

5. Regrettably, certain persons, lacking both competency and any legal responsibility, are stirring up the issue relating to the purchase of the property in question, by publishing letters and promoting media articles, with a view to harming the good reputation of the Archdiocese and Archbishop Makarios. The Archdiocese, responsibly and officially, declares that the Consolidated Trust is represented only by its members. Statements relating to the actions of the Consolidated Trust originating from any other source cannot be considered objective or reliable and are disseminated in order to serve other self-seeking interests.

From the Offices of the Archdiocese I 18 June 2020

Read the full Greek statement:

Η Ιερά Αρχιεπισκοπή Αυστραλίας ανακοινώνει τα εξής, σε σχέση με την αγορά ακινήτου από το Consolidated Trust στο Σύδνεϋ, όπου είναι και η έδρα της:

1. Δεδομένου ότι: α. η Ιερά Αρχιεπισκοπή Αυστραλίας δε διαθέτει κατάλληλη αρχιεπισκοπική κατοικία, β. ο Αρχιεπίσκοπος και κάποιες από τις υπηρεσίες θα πρέπει να μεταφερθούν από τα Κεντρικά Γραφεία, λόγω της εκ βάθρων ανακαινίσεώς τους,  μελετήθηκε κατ’ αρχάς το ενδεχόμενο ενοικιάσεως ακινήτου, προκειμένου να χρησιμοποιηθεί για τον συγκεκριμένο σκοπό. Ωστόσο, λόγω των υψηλών και ασύμφορων ενοικίων στο Σύδνεϋ, το Consolidated Trust αποφάσισε να προχωρήσει στην αγορά ακινήτου.

2. Μετά από μελέτη αγοράς κτηματομεσιτικού γραφείου προκρίθηκε το ακίνητο στην οδό Kent, αξίας 6,5 εκ. δολαρίων, αφενός μεν για την καταλληλότητά του για το συγκεκριμένο σκοπό, αφετέρου δε για τη μελλοντική υπεραξία του, η οποία εγγυάται μια άριστη επένδυση για την Αρχιεπισκοπή. Στον επενδυτικό αυτό σκοπό συνέτεινε επίσης και το γεγονός ότι την ανακαίνιση του ακινήτου, η οποία αυξάνει την αξία του, ανέλαβε οικονομικώς εξ ολοκλήρου γνωστός επιχειρηματίας, ευεργέτης της Ιεράς Αρχιεπισκοπής.

3. Όλη η διαδικασία της αγοράς είναι καθ’ όλα νόμιμη και δεν υπήρξε καμία επίσημη αντίδραση επ’ αυτής. Το ακίνητο αυτό δεν ανήκει σε ιδιώτη, ούτε στον Αρχιεπίσκοπο, αλλά απολύτως και εξ ολοκλήρου στο Consolidated Trust. Δεν εκκρεμεί κανένα δάνειο της Αρχιεπισκοπής σχετικά με τη συγκεκριμένη περιουσία.

4. Ο Αρχιεπίσκοπος συνεχίζει να διαμένει στο κτίριο της Ιεράς Αρχιεπισκοπής Αυστραλίας. Διαψεύδουμε απερίφραστα όσους ισχυρίζονται ότι ο Αρχιεπίσκοπος διαμένει στη συγκεκριμένη κατοικία ή ότι έχει δηλώσει ότι θα διαμένει εκεί και επισημαίνουμε ότι μέχρι στιγμής δεν έχει ληφθεί τέτοια απόφαση εκ μέρους του.

5. Δυστυχώς, κάποιοι, δίχως να είναι αρμόδιοι και δίχως να έχουν κάποια νομική ευθύνη, ανακινούν το ζήτημα της αγοράς του συγκεκριμένου ακινήτου με σκοπό να θίξουν την Ιερά Αρχιεπισκοπή και τον Σεβασμιώτατο Αρχιεπίσκοπο Αυστραλίας κ. Μακάριο, γράφοντας επιστολές και προκαλώντας δημοσιεύματα. Υπεύθυνα και επίσημα δηλώνουμε ότι το Consolidated Trust εκπροσωπείται μόνο από τα μέλη του. Πληροφορίες σχετικά με τις ενέργειες του Consolidated Trust που προέρχονται από οπουδήποτε αλλού προφανώς δεν είναι αντικειμενικές και αξιόπιστες και διασπείρονται γιατί εξυπηρετούν ιδιοτελή συμφέροντα.

Ambiguity surrounds reports concerning the purported residence of Archbishop Makarios

news.com.au article has sparked debate after alleging that His Eminence Archbishop Makarios has been residing in a $6.5 million investment property, purchased by the Consolidated Trust of the Holy Archdiocese of Australia. The Greek Orthodox Church of Australia allegedly purchased the apartment for the new Archbishop on December 20, 2019.

However, sources have confirmed to The Greek Herald that Archbishop Makarios is not currently living in the apartment, nor has ever lived there since his appointment as Archbishop of Australia 12 months ago.

RELATED: Greek Orthodox Archdiocese responds to reports concerning Archbishop’s alleged residence.

The Honorary Secretary & Trustee of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia Consolidated Trust, Nicholas G Pappas AM, reportedly told news.com.au that the apartment was purchased by the Trust as an official residence for the Greek Orthodox Archbishop of Australia.

The South Sydney Rabbitohs chairman confirmed that the Archbishop does not retain ownership of the property.

“The Trust, not the Archbishop, retains ownership of the property, as it does with other real estate assets of the Church. The Archbishop does not own any real estate or other assets,’’ he said.

“The Trust will not be making any further comment about the matter.”

It is understood that the sale itself is being used as part of a coordinated attack against Archbishop Makarios by other circles in Greece and Australia who view the primate as standing in the way of their own interests. 

Athens to host Champions League group stage draw and UEFA awards ceremony in October

Athens will host the ceremony for the UEFA Player of the Year Award in October, along with the draws for the European Cups’ group stages for the 2020-2021 season, government spokesman Stelios Petsas announced on Wednesday.

The executive committee of European soccer’s governing body convened on Wednesday to discuss how this season’s European competitions will be completed, as well as planning ahead for the following season which is set to begin far later than usual.

In a statement, Petsas revealed that the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center at Kallithea will host the annual event for the UEFA Player of the Year Award and other awards, plus the all-important draws of the lucrative group stages of the Champions League and the Europa League.

“The choice of Greece by UEFA constitutes a vote of confidence in our country, as this will be the first major event by UEFA after the restriction measures taken to contain the coronavirus pandemic,” Petsas said in the statement.

“The UEFA decision has a crucial contribution in the global promotion of Greece as a modern and safe country that is able to host events of such level,” the government spokesman added, revealing that “a decisive factor that sealed this agreement was the telephone conversation Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis had in recent days with UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin.”

Greek PM honours ‘heroic aunt’ at Jerusalem’s Garden of the Righteous

0

During the second day of his official visit to Israel, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis visited the Holocaust Memorial and located the name of his aunt at the Garden of the Righteous Among the Nations in Jerusalem.

Mitsotakis’ visit to Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial was marked by a wreath-laying ceremony to pay tribute to the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis during World War II.

This ceremony was followed by a visit to the Garden of the Righteous Among the Nations where trees are planted in memory of non-Jews who saved the lives of Jews during the Holocaust.

Greek Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, laid a wreath at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial. Source: Prime Ministers Office.

Among the names of all 300 Greeks at the memorial was that of the Prime Minister’s own aunt, Evangelia Georgiadou.

“This is a special moment for me. Evangelia Georgiadou was my grandmother’s younger sister. She was my aunt. I remember her vividly. She did an act of bravery during the war like many other non-Jews who are honored as the Righteous among the Nations,” Mitsotakis said.

Georgiadou, a mother of two, who lived during the German occupation in the Athenian suburb of Philothei, helped save a Jewish girl named Yvette Ventura by offering her a place of refuge in her home.

The Georgiadou family warmly welcomed the little Jewish girl, offering her shelter despite being completely aware of the danger. Yvette was simply treated as the third child in the family from the beginning of 1944 until the Germans evacuated Athens in October of 1944.

Georgiadou and Yvette’s mother remained close friends after the war and continued to meet regularly for many years.

“This personal story,” Mitsotakis said, reminds us that “every name written on this monument tells us a personal story of bravery.”

Georgiadou was proclaimed as one of the Righteous of the Nations on November 3, 1986.

READ MORE: Greek PM secures tourism pledge with Israel and warns on Turkey.

COVID-19 cases continue to spike in Greece with 55 in single day

0

Greek health authorities announced 55 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday in what is the highest jump in the number of cases for weeks.

Authorities say that most of the cases were recorded in Thrace, northeastern Greece, and in particular at the prefectures of Rodopi and Xanthi.

Two communities in these areas, Echinos and Agiasma, have already been placed in a “soft” lockdown quarantine and night curfew.

Two of the last victims to have died in the last 24 hours were from the village of Echinos in mountainous Xanthi, raising the total coronavirus death toll in the country to 187.

Health experts attribute the surge of COVID-19 cases in the area to the neglect of safety measures and overcrowding in the small, enclosed communities of the majority Muslim population. Extended families often gather together and perform their religious rituals at home and as a result, the virus spreads quickly among them and in the community in general.

Just 11 people remain in intensive care units around the country, with the median age of those patients being 69. At the same time, 117 people who were at one time confined to the ICU have now left intensive care and have recovered.

Australian borders likely to stay closed until 2021, Tourism Minister says

0

Australians hoping for an overseas holiday have had their hopes dashed, with the Tourism Minister saying the nation’s border is likely to stay closed until next year.

Simon Birmingham said the decision to shut the border was one of the main reasons for Australia’s success in suppressing COVID-19 and it would not be lifted for general travel any time soon.

“I do sadly think that in terms of open tourist-related travel in or out of Australia, that remains quite some distance off,” Senator Birmingham told the National Press Club.

“Just because of the practicalities of the volumes that are involved and the need for us to first and foremost keep putting health first.”

Asked whether that meant the border would not open until next year, he said, “I think that is more likely the case.”

Thousands of Australians are still holding travel credits for cancelled overseas holidays with Qantas and other airline providers.

Now many of them are banking on the pending trans-Tasman travel bubble between Australia and New Zealand to get their travel fix.

The potential trans-Tasman bubble:

Talks between Australia and New Zealand are underway about a potential trans-Tasman bubble.

The bubble could see leisure travel between Australia and NZ by September without the need for any isolation or quarantine period at either end of the journey. Passengers may still need to undergo a COVID-19 test and carry a certificate confirming they are free from the disease.

However, Birmingham suggested that business travel could also see an earlier opening than leisure travel.

“I hope that we can look eventually at some of those countries who have similar successes in suppressing the spread of COVID to Australia and New Zealand, and in working through that with those countries, find safe pathways to deal with essential business travel that helps to contribute to jobs across our economies.”

So, where can I take a holiday now?

Birmingham says people who can afford it should feel “an almost patriotic duty” to support local businesses by taking a holiday in Australia. But current travel options at the moment depend on where you live.

There are no border restrictions in either New South Wales, Victoria or the ACT.

South Australia has opened its borders to Western Australia, the Northern Territory and Tasmania, with others to be welcomed from July 20.

Source: ABC News.

Mandatory hotel quarantine has been dropped in the NT while Tasmania’s border closure will be revisited early next month.

Queensland has been working towards a July reopening although Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk has warned restrictions won’t be lifted if there’s active transmission interstate.

While in WA, Premier Mark McGowan is standing firm on his decision to keep the border closed until it’s “healthy and safe” to open again.

MTV cuts ties with Alex Kompothecras after racist comments

MTV has ended its relationship with reality television star Alex Kompothecras over offensive comments he allegedly made on social media. 

“We’ve made the decision to cut ties with Alex and are editing the current season to minimise his presence. He will not be in future seasons of ‘Siesta Key,’” the show stated on Twitter.

The Greek-American celebrity, who has appeared on all three seasons of Siesta Key, commented with the n-word in one resurfaced Instagram photo. He also commented laughing at multiple other racist posts. He has not commented publicly on his firing or the comments. 

Season 3 of Siesta Key returned with a new episode on Tuesday, June 16, but Kompothecras was cut out.

Several scripted and unscripted shows have recently fired cast members over racist comments and behaviour in light of the nationwide Black Lives Matter protests.

TGH Exclusive: Prepare to be amazed when ‘My Greek Odyssey’ returns for a third series

The third series of My Greek Odyssey will hit our screens this weekend and it’s definitely not going to disappoint with its picturesque scenes of the beauty and splendour of the Greek islands.

Set to air on Sunday, June 21 at 2pm on Channel 7TWO, the 8-part travel series invites viewers to several little-known Dodecanese islands including Kos, Astypalaia, Farmakonisi and Lipsi. The geographical location not only means that the Ottoman influence is strong, but the landscapes are much more arid, hot and dryer than other parts of Greece.

To tell us more about what to expect, The Greek Herald spoke exclusively with Peter Maneas, the charismatic host of My Greek Odyssey, and he says this third series has to be his favourite so far.

Peter Maneas, host of My Greek Odyssey, visits Samos in the third series.

“There are so many standout moments for me. We went to Farmakonisi for instance, which is a military island and no one is allowed on it. It’s only a square kilometre and it’s so close to Turkey that they need to put someone on it because if they don’t, it will probably be taken away,” Peter tells The Greek Herald.

“We got to see the raising of the Greek flag on the island, which happens every morning as the army plays the national anthem. And we also found some 2500-year-old watchtowers on the island that even the army guys didn’t know about. It was amazing.”

Peter’s frequent travels to Greece as a child inspired him to explore Greek islands like Farmakonisi, which are not as popular with tourists, and present their rich cultural and historical heritage to the world.

The flag is raised every morning on the small island of Farmakonisi.

“I’ve had my super maxi ‘Mia Zoi’ (One Life) docked in Greece for the last ten years and I’m not the kind of person who can just sit on a boat sunbaking and doing nothing,” Peter explains.

“So I’ve now travelled to well over 150 Greek islands and when you see the things that I have seen, it’s just not fair to the people that haven’t had access to these places. It’s just not fair to the Greek islands and to the public out there not to record this and to not show it in a way that anyone from five to 90 can watch it and understand it.”

According to Greek tourism experts, Mykonos, Santorini, Corfu, Crete and Rhodes end up getting 40 percent of the 30 million tourists that go to Greece per year. But Peter says the beauty of this season of My Greek Odyssey is that it has really captured the hidden gems that tourists can find on Greece’s remaining 222 inhabited islands.

Peter shows viewers the hidden gems of the Dodecanese islands in the third series.

“I see so many people going to the big islands and they crowd them to the extent that some people go there and are like: ‘Is this the Greek islands? This is like going to Disneyland.’ And that’s not what the Greek islands are about,” Peter says.

“I mean in this series, we go to a tiny little island of Pserimos which has one beach that gets invaded every day by hundreds of people who visit from the bigger islands. But after 3pm, there’s nobody left except maybe 100 hard and fast tourists that spend their whole holidays there.

“We met one couple from the UK who have been going to Pserimos for like 20 years and when we asked them why they kept visiting the tiny island, they said it was about the people. They connect with the people.

Greek hospitality is always on display on the Greek islands.

“There’s different types of people everywhere but the smaller the island, the fewer tourists, the more visitors, the more homely they are, the more local the food is. And that’s what we try to look for.”

It’s these heart-warming stories of the Greek people, filoxenia, Greek culture and heritage which people across Australia will also be looking out for when My Greek Odyssey hits our screens this weekend.

Read this article in Greek in The Greek Herald‘s print edition on June 17.

Nick Kyrgios says decision to let Grand Slam tournament go ahead is ‘selfish’

Nick Kyrgios has shown his distaste towards the Grand Slam tournament going ahead under restrictions, yet the Greek-Australian isn’t alone in his worries.

Upon the reveal that the US Open is to go ahead with no spectators, Nick Kyrgios took to Twitter to label the decision as “selfish”.

The Greek-Australian tennis player expressed that it wasn’t fair that Australian players will be forced to undergo a two-week quarantine period.

Kyrgios was backed up, however, by Women’s World No. 1 Ash Barty, who revealed her worries in a guarded email to The Associated Press.

Read More: Tsitsipas crushes Paire to close out day one of the Ultimate Tennis Showdown

Read More: Nick Kyrgios takes swipe at tennis’ biggest names in Instagram Live chat with Andy Murray

“I have concerns, too,” Barty said.

“I understand the tournaments are eager to run but keeping everyone safe has to be the priority.”

Ashleigh Barty of Australia reacts after missing a shot during her match against Jennifer Brady of the United States at the Brisbane International tennis tournament in Brisbane, Australia, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2020. (AP Photo/Tertius Pickard)

Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, said on Twitter the United States Tennis Association will take “extraordinary precautions” to protect players and staff at the grand slam tournament, including robust testing, additional cleaning and extra locker room space.

Despite his reassurances, Men’s World No.1 Novak Djokovic and reigning US Open men’s champion Rafael Nadal also expressed doubts about the tournament.

Spaniard Nadal said earlier this month he would not travel to the US Open in present circumstances, while Djokovic said playing the event this year would be impossible given “extreme” protocols that would be in place.

Nick Kyrgios has recently expressed his doubts over sport carrying on as a whole, responding to the new Ultimate Tennis Showdown tournament.

“I’m just not on board with new tennis events and sport going on in general with everything that’s going on at the moment,” Kyrgios said in a public reply to the UTS Showdown Twitter.

Despite his negative attitude towards the event, organisers of the tournament expressed that they would still love for him to “get involved” and to “get in touch with us if you’re down”.