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Navarino Challenge 2019 thrills and educates in Greece

The award-winning Navarino Challenge lived up to its theme “Sports Unite People” as 2,700 people of all ages participated in the activities for a 7th consecutive year, October 11-13 in Messinia and Costa Navarino.

With ideal weather conditions and a rich program of more than 30 activities, the event, hosted by The Westin Resort Costa Navarino supports the ideals of the Olympic Movement, contributing towards the development of a peaceful and better world without discrimination, through sports.

The wellness event promoted the benefits of exercise and raised awareness of the Mediterranean diet in the effort to fight childhood obesity and the event exhorted young people to get involved in games and sports, through the Active Kids program, by adding even more kids’ activities this year.

Navarino Challenge brought together athletes, families, and children from 40 countries.

The full schedule of the event included activities for the whole family.

On October 11, Greek Hall of Fame basketball icon Nick Galis, this year’s guest of honor, tipped off the 4on4 basketball tournament by Nutramins that was held with the participation of the basketball legend Joe Arlaouckas and two-time Olympic silver medalist Alexandros Nikolaidis.

The day continued with many sports activities and ended with the screening of Barney Spender and Roddy Gibson’s award-winning documentary The Road to Sparta at the Agora, Costa Navarino.

On October 12 sports action was held in the Municipality of Pylos-Nestor that supported the event for another year and helped in the smooth implementation of the activities at Navarino Bay with the assistance of local companies. For the first time in the event, participants had the opportunity to try sea kayaking and headed to the island of Sphacteria with the support of Explore Messinia.

Open water swimming enthusiasts had the chance to compete in a chip-timed event at the beautiful Navarino bay from the scenic Pylos harbor, covering the unique 1 mile (1.6 km) route of the open water swimming race by Vikos.

The Challenge The Wind interclub sailing race of triangle course with OPTIMIST and LASER 4.7 boats was co-organized with the Maritime Athletic Pylos Association “Nestor”.

The sea activities also marked the beginning of the Navarinia event for the 192nd anniversary of the Battle of Navarino, which will culminate this week.

In addition, Pylos came alive with local flavors and scents. A station with traditional lalagia, loukoumia, pasteli created by Poseidonia and Pylos Poems welcomed visitors.

A visit to the refurbished family home of the Olympic champion Kostis Tsiklitiras was held with the presence of Olympic medalist Spyros Gianniotis.

Greek sporting greats honoured

Hall of Fame basketball legend Nick Galis was honored for his contribution to sports by Costantza Sbokou-Constantakopoulou on behalf of TEMES, along with the Minister of Tourism, the Deputy Minister of Culture and Sports, and Theresa Cissell, Qatar Airways Country Manager for Greece and Cyprus.

The Greek-American ultramarathon runner and the event’s ambassador Dean Karnazes was awarded by the Minister of Tourism.

Greek gold Paralympic medalist and world champion in boccia Grigoris Polychronidis was awarded by Byung Moo (Theofilos) Shin, President & Chief Executive Officer of Samsung Electronics Hellas.

Silver Olympic medalist Spyros Gianniotis was awarded by the Deputy Minister of Culture and Sports.

Two-time Olympic medalist in rowing Vassilis Polymeros was awarded by Petri Logara, Operations Manager of Ford Motor Hellas.

World karate champion Eleni Chatziliadou was awarded by Cissell, while bronze medalist in sailing world championship Maria Tsamopoulou was awarded by Stefanos Theodorides, Managing Director of TEMES. The event was presented by Joe Arlauckas with music by the Pylos Conservatory duo.

The Half-Marathon route is described by runners as one of the most beautiful around the world, and the 5km route also impressed participants. Navarino Challenge was included in World’s Marathons world community with runners from the Sports Club with people with special needs from Kalamata, Diaforozo, celebrating their participation at the event one day before the International White Cane Day (October 15).

The eco-friendly event included strictly smoke-free areas for the start and endpoints of the Navarino Dunes runways and declared the beautiful Voidokilia beach strictly plastic-free.

Navarino Challenge supports the Institute of Preventive Medicine, Environmental and Occupational Health, Prolepsis with a program on Food Aid and Promotion of Healthy Nutrition, DIATROFI, and through Captain Vasilis and Carmen Konstantakopoulos Foundation, WWF Greece and Karkinaki, through the GivenGain online platform.

Navarino Challenge is part of the #BeactiveHellas 2019 program of the European Commission and was held under the auspices of the General Secretariat of Sports.

The event was held under the auspices of the Greek National Tourism Organization with the approval of the Hellenic Swimming Federation.

Navarino Challenge was co-organized by Costa Navarino, The Westin Resort Costa Navarino and Active Media Group with the support of the Municipalities of Pylos-Nestor and Trifilia.

Sourced from Tornos News.

Basketball EuroLeague: Greece’s Panathinaikos beat Turkey’s Anadolu Efes

Greece’s Panathinaikos defeated Turkey’s Anadolou Efes, on Thursday at the Turkish Airlines EuroLeague.

Greece won the match 86-70.

Home team Panathinaikos’ Point guard Nick Calathes was a key player for his team as he had a “double-double” in the match, scoring 11 points and dishing out 10 assists.

Greece’s point guard Tyrese Rice was on fire against Anadolu Efes as he scored 18 points, coming off the bench.

Jimmer Fredette helped his team with 11 points, while Georgios Papagiannis tallied 10 points in the victory for Panathinaikos.

It was the second less for the Turkish club in EuroLeague, this year.

Sourced from Hurriyet Daily News.

Vasili’s Taxidi: Danas Deli Café – Marrickville’s longest running shop

By Vasilis Vasilas

Climbing up Illawarra Road, as you approach Marrickville, the first shop situated on the very edge of the suburb is ironically Marrickville’s longest- running Greek shop, Danas Deli Café, run by Dimitris and Agathi- and their two daughters, Tina and Olga.

As the shop’s awning states, the shop has been operating since 1962; over 57 years, the Danas family has witnessed Marrickville’s so many changes and they have adapted accordingly to continue providing its customers high quality products and great service.

When Dimitris bought the shop, Marrickville was a very different suburb to what transform into- only a few years later- with the mass influx of Greek migrants. Buying the shop off a New Zealander, who had owned the shop for many years, he highlights the difficulties in undertaking a new business as he was now the ‘dago’ running the shop and all of the previous owner’s customers no longer came to the shop.

Dimitris praises the support of his previous employer, Andreas Antoniou, who ran a delicatessen in George Street, Sydney city, as he gave him enormous support to transform the shop into a delicatessen, Mediterranean Delicatessen.

Shopping attitudes and behaviours were very different at the time; as Flemings supermarket was down the road, the Greek shoppers would do their shopping there, then come and buy what they needed from the delicatessen… then, Dimitris would deliver all their shopping- including all the items from Flemings- to their homes.

With so many newly arrived Greek migrants not knowing English and how various financial and bureaucratic institutions worked, Dimitris’ delicatessen was also a hub for advice, support and services. Becoming a Justice of the Peace, he helped so many migrants with officiating legal documents.

Having married Agathi in 1974, they are a dynamic duo as they have worked together ever since. Business grew and the delicatessen was extended to accommodate more products to satisfy customers’ yearning for Greek products. In the meantime, Dimitris diversified his business by owning a liquor store in Leichhardt and buying Marrickville’s Flemings supermarket.

However, the opening of Woolworths across the road from Danas’ delicatessen had a great impact on the small businesses in the area; customers could conveniently do their fruit and vegetables, groceries and meat shopping in the one place.

Moving with the times, the Danas reinvented the family business into a deli café in 2004; the front section, run by Dimtris and Agathi’s daughters, Tina and Olga, is café while Dimitri and Agathi run the delicatessen in the rear of the shop. Dimitri does not hide his joy of working with both his daughters in the deli café as it highlights they are a family business.

Until recently, the outside of the deli café proudly waved both an Australian and Greek flag as Dimitri is proud of his two homelands; he wishes the younger generation of Australians of Greek heritage maintain a strong sense of Greek identity and support the Greek business network.

For me, what I admire about the Danas family is their perseverance and determination to continue servicing the local area; they have experiences so many changes in the local area and adapted to them… successfully.

Greek airline Sky Express partners with Qatar Airways

Greek airline Sky Express said, on Thursday, it had signed an agreement with Qatar Airways to cooperate on flights connecting Doha with the Greek islands, in a boost to the country’s key tourism industry.

Tourism accounts for about a quarter of economic output in Greece, which saw a record number of about 33 million visitors last year.

The privately owned carrier, which competes with Aegean Airlines’ subsidiary Olympic Airways on domestic routes, flies to 24 Greek destinations, including the popular islands of Corfu, Santorini and Crete on ATR42 and ATR72 twin engine turboprop aircraft.

Sky Express said the deal would allow passengers to travel across its network.

Qatar Airways, the country’s flagship airline, has been flying to Athens since 2005. Last year it added flights to Thessaloniki and Mykonos.

Sourced from Reuters.

Greek Minister Lina Mendoni meets Ariana Rockefeller in Athens

On Wednesday, the Greek Minister of Culture and Sports, Lina Mendoni, met with Ariana Rockefeller, the granddaughter of the philanthropist, David Rockefeller Sr.

The Rockefeller family relationship with Greece goes back decades. John D. Rockefeller Jr., David’s father, appreciated and adored antiquity and the history of ancient Athens, Pericles and the creation of the Acropolis. David Rockefeller maintained his family’s love for Greece and ancient Greek Culture by visiting Mount Athos.

In addition, the Rockefeller Foundation funded excavations in Ancient Agora in the 1930s. In 1929, the Foundation provided the capital to complete the construction of the Museum of Ancient Agora along with scholarships to train archaeologists.

For their meeting, Rockefeller gifted the Minister of Culture and Sports with her grandfather’s memoir along with a copy of the record of the donation from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1949. This bequest gave $150,000 to the American School of Classical Studies to continue their work excavating Ancient Agora. The original document lives in the archives of the Rockefeller Foundation in New York.

Rockefeller assured the Minister that she would continue the Rockefeller legacy with her continued involvement in Greek issues as a representative of the Rockefeller Foundation.

Sourced from Cision PR Newswire.

Greece and Israel Foreign Minister’s “eye to eye” on military cooperations

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Israel’s Foreign Minister, Israel Katz, is in Greece for an official two-day visit.

On Thursday, Katz met with Greece’s Foreign Minister, Nikos Dendias, where sources say their discussions touched on diplomatic relations between the two countries and their need to find “new ways” to further increase their military cooperation.

The same sources said talks focused on the threat posed by Iran, Turkey’s policy in northern Syria and its actions in Cyprus’ exclusive economic zone.

The Israeli embassy announced the discussions would centre around defence and energy issues.

“Mr. Katz’s visit to Athens at a time when deliberations are being held in Israel for the formation of a new government after elections is a sign of the importance Israel attributes to Israeli-Greek relations and maintaining their momentum,” the Israeli embassy notes.

“The two countries attach the highest importance to ongoing exchanges on regional and global developments.”

Foreign Minister Katz is also set to meet with President Prokopis Pavlopoulos and Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

Bank of Greece head worried over risk of new global economic recession

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Bank of Greece governor Yiannis Stournaras on Thursday expressed his concern over the risk of a new global economic recession.

He warned that in such a likelihood monetary policy would not be able to lift “on its own” the burden of defence against a new crisis, ANA reports.

Stournaras underlined that central banks can no longer fortify the global economy against any danger and said that uncertainty in the relations between Britain and the European Union, geopolitical concern in the Middle East, a trade war and its repercussions on Asian economies, are some of the main challenges facing the global economy, raising concern over the possibility of a new global recession.

Sourced from Tornos News.

Greece will extend 112 emergency number nationwide

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The European emergency phone number 112 will be fully operational in Greece by the end of 2019, Kyriakos Pierrakakis, the minister of digital governance, pledged on Thursday.

The introduction of the 112 service has been repeatedly delayed in Greece, and “systemic failings” were identified in the aftermath of the summer 2018 wildfire in Mati, a seaside resort near Athens, which claimed 102 lives.

Authorities believe that Greece, as one of the world’s most popular tourism destinations, also needs to introduce all necessary measures to ensure the safety of travellers.

“Citizens’ security, safeguarding their property and environmental protection is a matter of life and death for all of us involved in the General Secretariat for Civil Protection,” said Nikos Hardalias, general secretary of Civil Protection.

“In a very complex environment and having to deal with a global crisis such as the climate crisis, we have undertaken a very difficult task: to make the citizens of this country feel safe again,” he said.

The system, he said, “will be able to inform citizens in highly targeted and specific areas if necessary. It can isolate the most remote and small areas across the territory and inform a specific number of citizens who face an extreme threat.”

“The system will be ready at the end of the year,” Pierrakakis said, adding that the Greek authorities have resolved important problems with the system, such as including the required software in all smartphone brands.

The line will operate 24 hours a day, 365 days a year and will allow the immediate location of the caller.

According to a Eurobarometer survey, six to eight percent of Greeks do not even know that the 112 emergency number exists, let alone how to use it.

Sourced from Xinhua.

How a British photographer dedicated his life’s work to the Cyclades

Mark Wilman grew up in London’s Notting Hill area in the UK, to British parents with a Caribbean background. Starting from his childhood and spanning throughout his entire life, he found himself being constantly drawn back to Greece, particularly the Cyclades.

This commenced the journey that would see him dedicate his life’s work to photography projects in Greece. His most recent project being ‘Discovering the Beauty of the Cyclades‘, had a solo exhibition in Milan this year. The exhibition gained international recognition across Italy, Greece, Israel and more.

Mark discusses with us his intimate and authentic experiences in Greece that inspired him to share the beauty of the Cyclades, which he hopes “can help others look for and find a greater sense balance and peace” by immersing themselves in pure nature.

1. Why did you choose to focus your work on the Cyclades/Greece?

My first visit to the Cyclades was at the age of ten in 1974, with my parents and three younger sisters. A classmate in London was Greek and our parents became good friends. Also, a member of the British Sub Aqua Club, where my father was a director, was from Greece and they dived a lot together. Suddenly, we’d mostly be in the company of Hellenic people: Christenings at Saint Sophia Cathedral, the Greek Orthodox church in Moscow Road in the Bayswater area, parties and other social events. The Greek language became a familiar sound in our house. It was a special time for the family; my mother is from the Caribbean and she loved the festive atmosphere and exceptional flavours of the food we were all enjoying. At home, we’d eat Greek meals three times a week once the delicatessen near Saint Sophia was discovered.

Having experienced the beauty of the Cyclades that first year, we returned more times in the 1970s. Personally, I was amazed by the ever present blue sky, not a cloud in sight day after day, a miracle. I also loved the small, white hilltop houses, feta cheese, wild oregano and donkeys in the small streets whose owners wore shoes made from tyres.

As a young adult in the mid 80s, I visited again exploring the rugged landscapes and free-diving to the depths, as I’d learned to do in the Sub Aqua Club pool and with my father’s guidance in the Aegean a decade earlier.

I bought an inflatable boat and would travel with it from Milan, where I worked as a university lecturer and consultant particularly in the sectors of advertising, banking, fashion and law. The boat helped me discover the islands more completely above and below water, my profession permitted lengthy periods of holiday.

Each adventure had a story: battling 3 metre waves caused by ferocious Meltemi winds at dusk on return from far off free-diving explorations; the huge tuna that swam circles around me while groupers gazed up in amazement from their cave entrances far below; following steep goat paths for several kilometres to reach a historical mountain monastery where a yearly festival takes place. With the advent of digital cameras, describing these experiences to friends became more visual and interesting especially for those who’d never been to the islands, or even Greece.

I had the basic material in ideas to move forward with and actually create a project, though until the arrival of the woman who plays the role of the female in the work, I didn’t yet feel the impulse to start, the key was missing.

If the photos of undisturbed beauty in the Cyclades can help others look for and find a greater sense balance, peace, the desire to explore enhanced by exercise, and benefit from being more immersed in nature, I’d be most pleased.

2. How did Professor Angelos Delivorias influence your work?

I met the late Professor Angelos Delivorias, a prominent archeologist and director of the Benaki Museum in Athens for over forty years, in the late 1990s, the same year and in the same Cycladic Bay (one which Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis also chose for his holidays), where I met a former U.S. President and future Secretary of State, were vacationing on a ship.

Meeting these men had a lasting impact on my approach to the project. Other than developing a sense of guidance and instinct regarding the islands’ historical past…it reinforced the idea that I could be heard at the top and taken seriously, encouraging the proposal of the work about the Cyclades, now in its sixth year, to art and cultural bodies of the highest level.

The Professor and I talked many times over two decades. For such a busy person, I appreciated the time he’d dedicate to my descriptions and impressions and his always useful answers…This new understanding furthered my desire to trek to more complex areas and dive deeper, my eye now recognising better what was on display in this immense natural museum. The rule of not touching what lay in its resting place I fully respected.

‘The Lost Lady of Sikinos, Neiko’

In July 2018, archeologists uncovered a tomb hidden under the church of Episkopi in a remote part of Sikinos. On its exterior was engraved the name Νεικω. It was dated back to the 3rd century A.D.

Two years earlier, I’d photographed the female figure in the project dressed in a classical white costume at the church…A long time after, reading about the discovery of the tomb felt wonderfully familiar; we’d anticipated an important historical discovery, a strange sensation on reflection. The title of that gallery, till then unpublished, became ‘Lost Lady of Sikinos, Neiko’.

The director of the Ephorate of Antiquities of the Cyclades found the photos very interesting. 


3. Was there a purpose behind showing off Greece in Milan? How did the people of Milan react?

I began the project in June 2014, building a website some months later. The following year, metre long panoramic views were printed for a number of small exhibitions in various locations of a particular island. It was an opportunity to see if there was an artistic future; when I was five my teachers told my parents I was particularly arty, but only on that occasion!

In 2016, at the largest showing of the work, a retired couple from Milan, who were genuinely impressed by the display, insisted I should write to the Municipality and suggest the work for exhibition. This I did. Quite unexpectedly, a reply showing interest arrived soon after from the department of culture…The idea was presented to a specific committee who agreed on a public exhibition of the work, as a solo event, at the Aquarium close to the castle in the city centre.

Italians love Greece, particularly the Cyclades, so there was reason to believe the exhibition would be successful. With the dates confirmed several months before – May 9th to June 5th 2019 – preparation began in mid-winter. Finding a sponsor for the inauguration seemed a monumental task, until it wasn’t. The owner of a top Greek restaurant in Milan, Mykonos Taverna Greca, agreed to offer a buffet, which was thoroughly enjoyed by the many guests at the opening event.

People in Greece contacted me wanting to know specifics, while visitors to the exhibition wrote with enthusiasm.

Golden Sunset, Ios. Image via Mark Wilman

4. What impact do you hope to achieve from your work? Particularly for Greece.

On my 50th birthday, a question came to mind: ‘What would I do if I were free to do anything, simply anything, without restrictions?

The answer that quickly spoke itself was, ‘photograph the Cyclades, no doubts.’

I’ve now done it, expressed what it was I’ve wanted to say and feel good about it. When, at times, I’ve contemplated letting go due to a lack of interest from outside, something has come along, lifted me up and encouraged its continuation, e.g. an art museum requesting a detailed presentation, or a cultural office interested to talk telephonically and later presenting the work to a superior board.

An ambassador said to me in a mail recently that the texts in the project are as valid as the photography, which was pleasantly surprising. It was never about taking pretty pictures to impress others with. Being there, loving life because those places were available to me in those moments is and was the point, sharing my impressions in the form of individual images each telling its own story has been my joy. If the photos of undisturbed beauty in the Cyclades can help others look for and find a greater sense balance, peace, the desire to explore enhanced by exercise, and benefit from being more immersed in nature, I’d be most pleased. 


I was a teacher for many years and cared about the wellbeing of all my students, searching for ways to assist them in overcoming obstacles, obstacles in learning and those in their personal lives if necessary. I’d like to believe humankind can feel better about itself, do better, make better choices. Perhaps my photographic work and experiences can be inspiring in this sense.

The project has been proposed to UNESCO with the objective of helping conserve the archipelago for future generations. We should think about them more.

5. Is this a growing/continuing project? Do you have other plans for more work in Greece?

ANEK Lines, the historical Greek passenger and cargo shipping company, is a sponsor of further research of the project. Their trust is something I value decidedly. I hope other sponsors will follow.

At present, the islands included are: Anafi, Santorini (volcano and caldera), Ios, Sikinos, Folegandros, Poliegos, Kimolos, Milos, Sifnos, Serifos and Kythnos, each with its own intriguing personality. Exploration has been intense, done mostly on-foot covering great distances for many days at a time. I’ve enjoyed it a lot. 2020 could see a return to Amorgos, the Small Cyclades and Naxos.

I’ve also travelled extensively in other areas such as Crete, the Dodecanese, the Northeastern Aegean, the Sporades and Ionian islands as well as the Peloponnese. All of these would be potentially interesting subjects for future projects.

For more information on Mark’s projects head to his website http://www.markwilmanphotography.com/

Melbourne Greek Community hosts tribute dinner for Senator Arthur Sinodinos

The Greek Community of Melbourne (GCM) hosted a fundraising tribute dinner for Senator Arthur Sinodinos AO, Monday the 28th of October – ‘Oxi Day’. The event was hosted at the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club, ahead of the Senator’s move to the US to embark on his role as Australia’s next ambassador to the US.

Host, George Donikian curated a series of questions for the Senator that gave guests an insight into his young life, political highlights and experiences.

The GCM President Bill Papastergiadis introduced the evening by noting the complexity of the Senator’s life:

“…with many people like Arthur Sinodinos, his life resembles an iceberg, the tip is his public profile- the things you read about on Wikipedia but beneath the water is where the real depth is and it’s the hours and hours devoted to public life, committees and community groups that’s where we change people’s lives”.

The Senator then took questions from the invited guests for over 45 minutes. Topics ranged from Australian politics, to his role as Chief of Staff for then Prime Minister Howard and the Australian/US relationship.

When asked to comment on his involvement of the Greek Community of Melbourne the Senator was particularly praise-worthy of the GCM’s current approach to its administration:

My involvement with the Greek community here in Melbourne goes back a fair way. I had a lot to do with some of the former Presidents and Committees in the days when, it’s true to say that the Greek Community both here in Melbourne and in Australia was sort of very politically charged and were still very rooted in Greek politics…

So as the leadership here changed and they became new leadership, younger leadership… you seemed to be very plugged into the broader Australian Community that was important and very focused on how do we build our Greek community within the broader community. I saw that as a great change and one which made it easier for me as a person of Greek-Australian background to put the case as to why in government we should be helping communities like this in what they were doing.

Because if you go to the PM and say look these characters are building a Cultural Centre in the middle of Melbourne… they’re building something which will be a cultural icon not just for the Greek community but for the people of Melbourne… well, that’s the sort of thing that grabs the imagination of politicians. So in going out there and embracing the community and contributing to the Greek community, I think the Greek Community of Melbourne… have excited the imagination of politicians and got them feeling we’re dealing with people from Melbourne more… for me that’s been an important change and one which hopefully you’ve been able to capitalise on.”

Senator Sinodinos was effusive in his praise of the GCM and of the Community’s initiative in building the Cultural Centre and of the significance and value of the Antipodes Festival on a national landscape.

“…and every year now, any politician who doesn’t put on their calendars to come to the Antipodes Festival has got rocks in their head, because… this is the Centre of Hellenism. There’s no two ways about it. And when a politician of any type is on that stage looking down at Lonsdale St and seeing all those people, it makes a tremendous impression.”

Senator Sinodinos also reflected on how he changed former Prime Minister, John Howard’s stance on multiculturalism.

“You’ve got to remember that he grew up in1940’s and 1950’s Australia, and so for him and for his generation it was quite an adjustment as the society changed and he was always a great believer in the British institutions that we have inherited… and that’s fine, but I think in his own mind he couldn’t quite see, well how do you improve on it?

The way we improved on it without being very conscious about it, was we employed every…succeeding wave, first the Italians and Greeks and other European’s and then the Vietnamese followed by the Middle East and Africans and so on…

I think in the end he was surprised by the extent in which it went so smoothly, and I think in retrospect – and he said this in ’95 when he came out to leadership – he regretted some of the things he said earlier because he realised it could actually work. But it could work because of the values that brought us together.”

Senator Sinodinos will depart for Washington in the new year to commence his role as the next Australian Ambassador to the United States of America, becoming the first Australian of Hellenic background to hold such an auspicious role.