Friday 28 August 2009

Cyprus conference

The latest news to come from Nicosia is that the the annual conference of Cypriots from the diaspora has gone as well as expected with the usual speeches and long discussions at the Akropolis Hilton. The local press has shown a bit more interest this year with the national newspapers and key journalists commenting on the fact that those of us who are based abroad, (and there are as many of us as there as there are living in Cyprus) are anything but a homogeneous group. What surprises Byzantinos is that fact that very little has been said or done to achieve greater integration and no effort has been made to address the issues and grievances Cypriots returning back to Cyprus have with the state. It will appear that the government in Cyprus sees the gathering of Cypriots from the diaspora as an annual party with no clear political aims or objectives and no follow up in other words wasting a brilliant opportunity. Byzantinos is hoping to have a presence there next year which will follow the operation Greek vote initiative which is key project for those of us here in Britain.

Tuesday 25 August 2009

Can we learn from history?

The reality is that history tends to repeat itself and trends come and go. The world keeps changing and man evolves and learns from previous experience. We as a nation of Hellenes have found ourselves in difficult situations when we allowed ourselves to become more focused on material gain. Another one of our problems comes from polarising and losing unity.
The Hellenes are not and never have been a homogeneous race. We have always been a good and diverse mixture of people who have a number of cultural individualities in common. We were best united during the Byzantine times and what brought us together was our culture, our religion and our language. We somehow allowed ourselves to lose that unity and faced occupation for 3 centuries and have been trying to define who we are since independence in 1825. But that should not be a great task as the elements that brought us together before as Greeks from Crete, Macedonia, Thrace, Cyprus or anywhere else are still there. We should all be proud of our specific differences but should also celebrate what unites us. We are modern Hellenes sons and daugthers of Byzantium and we must never allowe disunity to bring us down again.
Na tin valoume ti sklava pli sto throni, na tin proskinisi o kosmos rigisa trani...

Monday 17 August 2009

Operation Greek Vote

This is an initiative that needs to be developed and the work has to start to ensure that a coordinated campaign around the municipal elections (London region) in May 2010 and the general election take place. The initiative has to start around November 2009 to ensure that we are able to get Greek voters to vote tactically in the coming elections. Byzantinos will prioritise this in the next few weeks and those who have given their support will be asked to do more. There is still time to get the right people put in the right constituencies so activists like Peter Droussiotis, John Kazantis or our own Nick Venedi must be targeted and encouraged to stand.
Maria Arvanitaki

Sunday 16 August 2009

Protecting our identity

There are fundamentally two issues that concern those of us interested in preserving our Hellenic identities. The first is whether we as a community are able to pass on our history and culture to the generations that follow us and the second is whether we are able to defend the historical image we have inherited in a country where we as a group of people are part of a small minority.
But as some of us have observed there have been a number of obstacles in the way and the most dangerous one is the image promoted by those of the host country showing us as people of certain habits and characteristics that simply fit in to their own stereotypes. In some instances this is to do with an attempt to attack the confidence of those of us in the Hellenic community who may feel weakened by this attack. The notion or the obsession of certain parts of the media to associate a Greek with a kebab shop is an example of this negativity.
And of course the reason we are raising this as an issue is to question as to whether we as a community and our leaders have been able or capable of identifying these problems and doing anything about them? The Greek community in the U.K has a number of distinguished people amongst its own ranks and they are the ones we should be projecting but who in the community is doing this job and do we have a good PR machine to deal with these fundamental problems?
Questions need to be asked.
Helen Nicholas