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Greek islands included among the 12 greatest of all time

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Writers at The Sydney Morning Herald have reviewed their options and voted on their favorite islands of all time, featuring destinations that span beach escapes, art hubs, and foodie hotspots.

Among the 12 best islands in the world, Greek destinations were essential inclusions.

Santorini and Mykonos are both highlighted as must-visit destinations.

The article notes, “be cognisant there are more than 200 other options to include on a Greek island-hopping adventure,” adding that “many, like Syros and Amorgos, flaunt ravishing coastlines, bougainvillaea-draped villages, chic beach bars, rustic seafood tavernas, and relatively few tourists.”

The top choice was the Fijian islands, described as “a gift to Australian families.”

Source: The Sydney Morning Herald

Greece’s easternmost island Strongyli is about to receive its first road network

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Strongyli, the easternmost island in Greece, is poised to receive its first-ever road network. 

This development is part of an initiative by the Southern Aegean regional authority aimed at enhancing infrastructure on Greece’s remote islands.

According to ekathimerini.com, after completing recent upgrades to the port on the nearby islet of Ro, officials have shifted their focus to Strongyli, which lies close to the Turkish coast, roughly four kilometers southeast of Kastellorizo.

The new road, measuring three meters in width, is expected to be completed by the end of November. It will run from the island’s pier to its highest point. Despite challenges posed by the island’s rocky terrain, this road represents a significant step forward in improving accessibility and connectivity on Strongyli, an island that has historically lacked basic infrastructure.

According to the 2021 census, Strongyli has a single resident and also features a lighthouse.

Source: ekathimerini.gr

Michael Theo among top 10 rising stars of 2024

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The Casting Guild Association’s Rising Stars for 2024 have been announced, according to an article by The Daily Telegraph. Among the 10 of the country’s best and brightest on screen and stage is Michael Theo.

The awards have a strong track record of identifying Australian talent who are truly on the cusp of greatness.

Thirty-year-old Michael Theo is an aspiring actor and voice-over artist from West Wollongong, NSW.

Recently, he played a leading role in the eight-part ABC comedy Austin and was also the breakout star of the ABC/Northern Pictures documentary series Love on the Spectrum, which followed Michael and other young adults on the autism spectrum as they explored the unpredictable world of love, dating, and relationships.

“I feel very proud and honoured to be named a CGA Rising Star. It is quite a milestone and an impressive accomplishment,” he said to The D, mentioning that he first got his big break back in 2019 with Love on the Spectrum, a documentary about people on the autism spectrum and their quests for love. Love on the Spectrum then led him to Austin four years later.

“Acting is something I have wanted to do very much since early childhood. I always felt that acting is what I really wanted to do in the future,” he mentioned.

Asked what advice he has received that has helped him along the way, he said, “Some of the advice I have received includes: natural talent can’t be taught; if you know your lines, you won’t have any trouble; find a way that works for you; enjoy your time on set; connecting with the audience is important.”

Source: The Daily Telegraph

Meet the Australians of Greek heritage elected to your Victorian local council

With Victoria’s 2024 State General Election final results announced today, November 15, The Greek Herald has compiled a list of all the Australians of Greek heritage who were elected.

Boroondara City Council

  • Maranoa Ward: Chris Pattas

Brimbank City Council

  • Horseshoe Bend Ward: Virginia Tachos

Darebin City Council

  • North Central Ward: Vasilios Tsalkos
  • South East Ward: Emily Dimitriadis
Vasilios Tsalkos.

East Gippsland Shire Council

  • Ian Trevaskis

Greater Geelong City Council

  • Deakin Ward: Andrew Katos

Kingston City Council

  • Bunjil Ward: Tony Athanasopoulos
  • Wattle Ward: Georgia Erevnidis

Manningham City Council

  • Ruffey Ward: Jim Grivas

Merri-bek City Council

  • Harmony Park Ward: Helen Politis
  • Westbreen Ward: Katerine Theodosis
Helen Politis.

Monash City Council

Moyne Shire Council

  • Jim Doukas

Stonnington City Council

  • Malvern Valley Ward: Jami Klisaris
  • Wattletree Ward: Steve Stefanopoulos

Philhellene Nick Reece – who’s wife Felicity Pantelidis is Greek – was also elected as the City of Melbourne’s new Lord Mayor, having run alongside incumbent councillor Roshena Campbell on a shared ticket.

*NOTE: If you have Greek heritage and believe you should be on this list, please email us at editor@foreignlanguage.com.au.

Resounding reception as Eleni’s Kitchen and Bar in Yarraville reopens

Costumers flocked to the beloved Greek restaurant Eleni’s Kitchen & Bar in Yarraville, Victoria, at the establishment’s reopening on Wednesday, November 13. This comes less than five months after a fire tore through the premises.

The new interior after the restaurant reopened. Photos supplied.

Eleni’s Kitchen & Bar closed in June this year after a suspicious fire charred the entire interior of the family-owned restaurant. The only thing that remained intact was a photo of Father Antonis Amanatidis, the great-grandfather of the restaurant’s co-owners and sisters Anatoli and Eleftheria Amanatidis.

Anatoli and Eleftheria “fired up the charcoals” again on November 13, welcoming back customers to enjoy some of their Greek favourites.

Eleftheria told The Greek Herald that the sisters were “so thankful and happy” to be reopening the restaurant.

“It’s been amazing seeing regular customers again and having new people support us that have waited for the reopening. Looking forward to a busy end of year,” she added.

Book online at: http://bit.ly/BookElenis

Emily Tsokos Purtill’s new novel ‘Matia’ traces Greek identity through four generations

The Greek Herald spoke with Emily Tsokos Purtill on the release of her new fiction novel, Matia, a multi-generational novel that connects four Greek Australian women from the same family across continents and time. 

Matia follows Sia as she emigrates from Greece to Perth in 1945, and her daughter Koula, her grand-daughter Athena and her great grand-daughter Clara grow up in Australia. The third-generation woman is at a “wavering point” with her heritage, and the daughter grows up in New York, without any “Greekness” around her.  

“Is she Greek? Is she Greek at all?” Emily asks rhetorically, while posing the question to Greek Australian women today who may feel the same way. 

The Perth-born Western Australian writer of Greek heritage debuted her novel on October 10. Emily’s father’s family was from the island of Evia, and her mother’s family was from Kastellorizo and Rhodes.

“I grew up in a Greek Australian family, and I was always fascinated by the traditions and the food and the women. I feel like it was a really rich environment,” she says about growing up with Greek heritage in Perth. 

“It was interesting be a grandchild of Greek immigrants, and to feel this difference in between the generations. It got me thinking, how long do we sort of stay Greek for?”

Emily says as child through to adulthood, she also observed how the women in her life had often led very different lives to the men. 

“I felt the impact they had on me was very positive, but I was always very aware that in my life, I had incredible privilege that they had not enjoyed,” she explains. 

Emily says she bought her observations into the fiction novel, which highlights inequality and cultural expectations throughout the generations; inequality she believes is still prevalent for women in Australia today although in different ways. 

“Arranged marriages were a massive thing for so many years, and there wasn’t this idea of free will or choice. I’ve also written a little bit in the novel about the bride ships that came to Australia from Greece. The women had absolutely zero control or say over what happened to them or who they were married to, or who they were sent to,” she says. 

“A lot of these women, they’ve grown up in very small villages, then they are going on a ship to Australia, this completely foreign place where they didn’t speak the language and married to a man they’d never met before.

“I read so much Australian fiction, and for the older women, or generations of Greek Australian women, I didn’t see their stories told anywhere. 

“I don’t want them to be forgotten. I wanted to make sure there was a book that had them—that had characters that weren’t stereotypes to became part of Australian literature. 

Emily and her husband Duncan in Broome, 2008.

“Your story doesn’t start when you move to Australia. The only people that can say that are the Indigenous Australians. Everybody else’s story started before then, in some other place. And that’s what’s so interesting about Australia.” 

Emily says the two-and-a-half years she spent living abroad as a child in the United Kingdom gave her insight into “British Australia” and the influence on Australian society. For the first time living outside of Perth in her primary school years, she understood the idea of “White Australia.” 

Emily’s life and career also exposed her to other cultures, which she has drawn upon to create the lives of the characters in her book. She has lived in Shrewsbury, London, Vancouver, Paris and New York. 

Emily at school in London, 1991.

Before becoming an author, Emily pursued a career in law, and practiced in Perth and Paris, where she lived with her husband. 

“I was a lawyer for a really long time, and I did what everyone thinks they should do if you’re good at humanities, you go down the law path,” she says. 

“But I always felt I’m going to be a writer and write a book. I’d written some stories, some fiction, when I was a teenager, and I won some prizes, but I didn’t see how I could be a writer. I didn’t really see how I could do it properly.”

Emily continued writing and keeping journals, as story ideas came to mind. 

“I was living in New York, and I had two young children at the time, and I was thinking about all these images in my head of the Greek food and of the traditions and different women at different points in their lives,” she says. 

“I did have some other books, other manuscripts, that I wrote—they didn’t go anywhere. I tried really hard, and a couple of times with a different manuscript, and I was pretty close. But then I kept coming back to this story [Matia].” 

Now in her 40s, Emily says she was eager to write her novel on the life of a Greek woman migrating to Australia, and the Greek Australian generations which followed, as a contribution to the Australian literature landscape. 

Emily says she was overjoyed when UWA Publishing chose to publish her book, as she felt it was the best story of hers so far. 

Matia graciously weaves together a story of generations by moving back and forth through time and characters. An underlying theme throughout the novel is the question of identity for women born in Australia with Greek heritage.  

“Hopefully, it really resonates with people,” she concludes. 

Polytechnic Memorial Committee to hold commemoration events in Melbourne 

These days we remember and honour the supreme act of resistance against the Junta. The 17th of November 1973 Polytechnic uprising marked the modern history of Greece and laid the foundations for the democratic consciousness of the post-Junta period known as metapolitefsi. 

The Greek Community of Melbourne (GCM) expresses its gratitude to all those who fought for democracy and freedom during the 7-year period, both within and outside Greece. Their legacy will always remind us that democracy is not won without struggle.

Greece may be experiencing the longest period of democratic governance, pluralism and peace since the foundation of the state, but we must not forget that hotbeds of war, religious fanaticism and ethnic cleansing have existed and continue to exist today. 

Photo: The “Greece 2021” Committee.

The placards of the Polytechnic students ‘Bread, Education and Freedom’ remain very relevant today as freedom and social justice eludes many parts of the world. The GCM said its thoughts are with the victims of these abuses and strongly encourage greater dialogue and an end to hostilities wherever there are conflict zones.

The GCM invite people to events that will take place to honour the students and citizens who stood with courage and unity against the oppressive regime of the dictatorship.

The Polytechnic Memorial Committee is organising the following events on Sunday, November 17, 2024:

  • At 11:00 am, a wreath-laying ceremony at the Australian Hellenic Memorial
  • At 2:00 pm, at the Alphington Grammar School – Lyceum Centre, with speeches and songs from that era.

Councillor Paul Klisaris elected as Monash Mayor

Councillor Paul Klisaris from Wellington Ward has been elected Mayor of Monash Council for 2024-25, the first year of a new council term after local government elections across Victoria.

Councillor Brian Little from Mayfield Ward will serve as Deputy Mayor.

Cr Klisaris is excited about working with both new and returning councillors.

“The first year of a new council term is an exciting time, and I look forward to working alongside Deputy Mayor Cr Little and returning colleagues, as well as getting to know new councillors Cr Elisha Lee and Cr Cameron Little.

“Voters in Monash have entrusted us with the important job of guiding their local council and, as the level of government closest to its people, we take this very seriously.

“We have several significant projects underway, and my colleagues and I are keen to get to work on finalising a new Council Plan following extensive community consultation last year.

“There are exciting Council projects in construction that will be open to the public in the next 12 months. These include the extension of Bogong Car Park in Glen Waverley to create more than 500 new parking spots and a new pavilion and facilities at Jack Edwards Reserve in Oakleigh to provide Monash’s first National Premier League standard venue for soccer, a project I have championed and am delighted to see its progress.

“We also need to continue to advocate for the best community outcomes in Monash from the Victorian Government’s Suburban Rail Loop project and their proposed housing and planning reforms. It is crucial that local voices and local government has input on these.

“As Mayor I will also continue Council’s advocacy to have stronger protections for Monash’s tree canopy and progress work on a new library and civic precinct in Glen Waverley.

“I thank the residents of Wellington Ward for choosing me as their councillor and my fellow councillors for electing me as Mayor.

“My thanks also go to everyone who ran for local government across Victoria and the Victorian Electoral Commission for coordinating the election, we are lucky to live in a country where everyone can have their say via the ballot box or put themselves forward for public office.

More about Cr Klisaris

Cr Klisaris is a long-term Monash Councillor, and this will be his fourth term as Mayor. With 24 years of experience in local government, he brings proven leadership, strong community connections, and deep understanding of local issues. His expertise in managing budgets, infrastructure development, and social services ensures he is well placed to advocate for Monash residents and drive positive change for the community.

Full list of Monash Councillors

The new Council includes two new councillors and nine councillors returning for another term.

Elected councillors are (in alphabetical order by ward):

  • Banksia Ward – Cr Cameron Little (new councillor)
  • Blackburn Ward – Cr Rebecca Paterson (returning councillor)
  • Gallaghers Ward – Cr Geoff Lake (returning councillor)
  • Gardiners Creek Ward – Cr Anjalee de Silva (returning councillor)
  • Jells Ward – Cr Elisha Lee (new councillor)
  • Mayfield Ward – Cr Brian Little (returning councillor)
  • Scotchmans Creek Ward – Cr Nicky Luo (returning councillor)
  • University Ward – Cr Josh Fergeus (returning councillor)
  • Warrigal Ward – Cr Stuart James (returning councillor)
  • Waverley Park Ward – Cr Shane McCluskey (returning councillor)
  • Wellington Ward – Cr Paul Klisaris (returning councillor)

Tottenham Hotspurs coach Ange Postecoglou wins Global Australian Award

Tottenham Hotspur head coach Ange Postecoglou has been honoured with a 2024 Global Australian Award for ‘Sport and Sports Administration,’ recognising his impact on the international stage alongside other distinguished Australians. The awards, organised by Advance Global Australians (AGA), celebrate Australians who have excelled globally across diverse fields.

Joining Postecoglou among the recipients are actress Margot Robbie, chef Skye Gyngell, Macquarie Group CEO Shemara Wikramanayake, Airtasker co-founder Jonathan Lui, and academic Professor Mimi Zou from UNSW and Oxford University.

Highlighting the significance of Australian talent worldwide, AGA CEO Kate McQuestin remarked, “Australia is punching well above its weight on the global stage, and our biggest asset is our people.” McQuestin noted that many Australians are humble about their achievements, and these awards help to raise awareness of the country’s capability and expertise.

Photo: AFP.

Coinciding with the awards, the 2024 Advancing Australia Global Report has been released, providing insights into global perceptions of Australians. The report highlights that Australians are well-regarded, particularly in North America, the UK, and Europe, with friendliness often cited as a key attribute. It also found that 80% of Australians abroad feel there should be greater recognition of their achievements, though only 32% are comfortable promoting themselves internationally.

The awards and report underscore Australia’s strengths in sectors like agriculture, sport, and education, celebrating the influence of Australians like Postecoglou on the world stage.

Source: The Daily Telegraph.

Nick Kyrgios set for a thrilling comeback at Brisbane International after hiatus

Nick Kyrgios gears up for his long-awaited return to professional tennis after 18 months sidelined by injuries. He will make his comeback at the Brisbane International, which starts on 29 December.

Known for his electric talent and unpredictable personality, the Greek Australian remains one of the tennis’ most captivating figures. His return is set to draw big crowds, with Brisbane’s tournament director, Cam Pearson, expressing fans’ anticipation: “Nick, who has had success here in the past, will kick off his 2025 comeback in Brisbane… to entertain the crowds in a way that only Nick can.”

Nick Kyrgios has battled injuries for the past two years. Photo: The Australian.

At 29, Kyrgios still has time to pursue his dream of winning a grand slam singles title. Since his impressive run to the Wimbledon final in 2022, injuries have kept him off the court, with only a brief appearance in Stuttgart in June 2023. After knee and wrist surgeries, however, Kyrgios is back in training and eager to compete. “I’m far from done, to be honest… I’m feeling extremely well,” he said in a recent interview, adding that he’s now hitting for three hours daily and is highly motivated.

Before Brisbane, Kyrgios will join the World Tennis League event in Abu Dhabi in December, following a cameo appearance in an exhibition match in New York in August. Although Australian hard courts may not suit his serve-and-volley style as well as Wimbledon’s grass, Kyrgios has a strong record at home, winning the Brisbane International in 2018 and teaming up with Thanasi Kokkinakis to clinch the Australian Open doubles title in 2022.

Source: The Australian.