XpatAthens

XpatAthens

Friday, 06 March 2015 12:46

SkyGreece Authorized To Fly

SkyGreece Airlines SA has announced that the Canadian Transport Agency (CTA) has given its permission to the airline company to schedule international flights between EU member-states and Canada. 

“We are extremely happy with the CTA decision and it simply shows our determination to meet and surpass the requirements of the agency as well as the Canadian and Greek consumers,” said Nikolaos Alexandris, accountable manager and co-founder of SkyGreece Airlines SA.

SkyGreece Airlines SA is the only Greek transatlantic airline. The private company founded in October 2012 by a team of Greek-Canadian entrepreneurs with extensive backgrounds in aviation and tourism, is based in Athens, Greece, while there are offices located in Montreal, Toronto and New York.

The company’s main mission is to connect the Greek Diaspora to their homeland by offering non-stop flights between Greece and North America, with eventual plans to also offer flights to South Africa. Additionally, the airline’s aim is to offer “authentic Greek hospitality.”

To read more, please visit greekreporter.com

By Ioanna Zikakou

The new Greek government is considering a different strategy for claiming the Parthenon sculptures from the British Museum and will likely stop cooperating with Amal Alamuddin-Clooney and her law firm. The new Minister of Culture, Education and Religious Affairs Aristides Baltas told foreign reporters that Greece is seeking a new strategy to bring back the sculptures.

He was quoted by The Times as saying, “Our campaign will continue, but the strategy and how we go about that may be tweaked, if required. We’ll be looking over these details in the coming weeks and if we see a need to alter them, we will.”

Deputy Culture Minister Nikos Xydakis told the Greek Press that the marbles issue has gained good publicity after the involvement of Mrs. Clooney, who is a lawyer for London’s Doughty Street Chambers law firm.

According to The Times report, the new leftist government of Greece wants to cancel Greece’s contract with Amal Alamuddin-Clooney and the firm for financial reasons.

To read more, please visit greekreporter.com

By Philip Chrysopoulos

20 selected destinations competed for the prestigious title of Best European Destination 2015. After a three week period of online voting (244,696 voters made their choice and influenced the result!), Bordeaux has been elected the Best European Destination 2015, followed by Lisbon second and Athens third!

Bordeaux, Lisbon, Athens, Valetta, Riga, Zagreb, Ljubljana, Innsbruck, Milan, Brussels, Vienna, Rome, Barcelona, Istanbul and Madrid are the next best destinations for a holiday or city-trip in 2015.

European Best Destinations describes Athens:

'Athens is considered the cradle of western civilization. Over the years, a multitude of conquerors occupied Athens, and erected unique, splendid monuments - a rare historical palimpsest, evident everywhere in the city.

The contemporary urban scenery of the sprawling city reflects its exciting history, its multi-cultural modern personality as well as the infrastructure and facilities. In other words, Athens is a must destination that combines modern urban innovation with history, culture and natural beauty throughout the year.'

XpatAthens would like to thank everyone who voted for Athens!

 

Source: www.europeanbestdestinations.com/

Friday, 06 March 2015 12:34

Halkidiki Introduces Itself to Europe

There is an old joke that Greeks tell among themselves. A Northern Greek gets to swim in the sea of paradise, but once he comes out of the water and is asked whether he enjoyed it, his reply is "It was nice, but not as good as Halkidiki." People in Halkidiki do not brag for nothing. Home of Aristotle and Mt. Athos’ monastic community, founded in the 9th century, the region’s three peninsulas stand out for their natural beauty, history and spirituality.

Local agents boast an industrious campaign to boost tourism in the area. During the last East Med Tourism Exhibition, in Istanbul (22-25.01), local authorities had forty B2B meetings with Turkish business people, in an effort to raise arrivals above 3,000, which was recorded in 2014. A charter flight from Ankara is expected to accommodate this target. Direct flights seem to have worked well also in the case of the Netherlands.

Halkidiki was visited by 3,500 Dutch in 2014 but the figure is expected to double in the current year. A direct flight from Amsterdam to Thessaloniki made it easier for tourists to reach the peninsulas.

To read more, please visit greeknewsagenda.gr

In this issue you will find the work of Elizabeth Jameson, Marissa Tejada, Hrair, Ezra Peace, Dancelen(D)s, Christina Lambert, Victoria Hislop, Bad Mathematics, Jake Kelley, Chrys Roboras, Gallery 7, Alexia Marouli, Kevin Champeny, C.Z. Heyward, Ana Brotas, Teodosio Sectio Aurea, Kate Salvi, Keith Edmunds and Katerina Koutsouri.

Here is the link:

http://free.yudu.com/item/details/2726506/Anatomy-of-the-Artist---Art-of-the-Mind

... we hope you enjoy the issue!!

Justice Minister Nikolaos Paraskevopoulos told Parliament that legal cohabitation agreements will be made possible for same-sex couples in Greece, but the adoption of children by gay couples will not be permitted yet.

The new government‘s pledge to grant legal civil partnerships to homosexual couples is in response to a 2013 decision by the Council of Europe’s Court of Human Rights that awarded plaintiffs damages after successfully challenging the Greek state over the civil partnership law that has been available to heterosexual couples since 2008.

However, the support to same-sex marriage does not extend to gay adoptions. “It is a difficult issue that requires dialogue,” said Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras when asked about the subject recently. “There are disputes in the scientific community about this and we will not include it in our policy program.”

To read more, please visit greekreporter.com

By Philip Chrysopoulos
 

Friday, 06 March 2015 12:30

Interview With Former Evzones

Any tourist visiting Athens will not fail to experience the soldiers that stand guard outside Parliament, with dead straight faces, not flinching, not moving a muscle, and occasionally doing a funny walk.

I was interested to dig deeper—so when Anthe Mitrakos of Portes Magazine put me in touch with two brothers, one who served in the Evzone Company and the other who served in the Command Company of the Presidential Guard, I was chuffed to be afforded an interview with them!

Background - What’s an Evzone?

They’re the soldiers that stand outside the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (where most of the tourists head to have their photos taken—oh, and me too!), the Presidential Palace and the gate of the military camp, where the Evzones stay during their time.

It’s important to say, here, that Evzones are not paid for their service. It is part of the nine month military service that all Greek males must undertake. Not everyone is selected to be an Evzone—and for this reason, it is an honour. More on that later.

They are two parts of the Presidential Guard section of military service guards:

1) Command Company

– Not the ‘men in kilts’ (Foustanella) i.e: not the evzones themselves
– Consists of one platoon whereby they undertake administration duties such as:
• chefs
• office work
• laundry
• looking after the uniforms
• drivers
• guards of the military camp
• soldiers who manage the restaurant: serve food, etc 

To read more, please visit: Life Beyond Borders

Friday, 06 March 2015 12:26

From London To Athens ~ Moving For Love

Samar was Katy Perry and Norah Jones’ ‘right hand’. One day, she fell in love with a Greek, and left everything behind to come to Athens. Samar has taken off her shoes, has put on some music on her laptop and is waiting for us with a huge smile and the warmest handshake. She may only be 30 years old, but she has already managed Katy Perry, David Guetta and Norah Jones while working for EMI in London.

However, Samar means midnight whispers between two lovers in Arabic, and as it happens, love is what was meant to radically change her life, not her enormous professional success. “I was born in London to Arabic parents.

I found myself in Greece a year and a half ago because of love”, she tells us with a smile. My parents are from Iraq. They have been living in London since they were 17. Unfortunately, I’ve never been to Iraq, but my parents made sure to pass down Arabic culture and traditions to us. Holding on to their Arab roots, they gave us Arab names, they taught us to be open-hearted people, and to follow our dreams.

When I turned 18, I went to all of the record companies and told them “I want to work, give me something, I’m not interested in money”. The music industry was always my dream. I got a job at Sony interviewing musicians. At the same time, I was studying management because my parents told me that I could do what whatever I wanted, as long as I got a ‘serious’ degree. I graduated at 20 and started working at a music management company. I made coffee, tea, photocopies.. I started learning about the business and soon enough they started assigning me events that wealthy friends of my boss wanted to do. For example, one client wanted to have a party for his wife with only 10 guests.. and Sting singing live. Then I moved to EMI . I was working in the international department where each world-famous artist would need a specific person that would accompany them to their events, their shows, their interviews and photoshoots all around the world. In addition, I was the point of contact for all of the countries who wanted to book in an interview e.g with Katy Perry. I was their agenda. I was with them everywhere and always. Most of the time, it was one of the most glamorous jobs in the world. The rest of the time, it was 2am, I was in front of my computer, trying to eat and send emails at the same time. My brain was in Japan but my body-clock was still in Europe.

 

 

Of course, there were the 5 star hotels, the dinners, the parties and all of that – but there was also the jetlag, the constant running, the craziness. Think about it – we had to go to 20 countries in 2 months. I was the only constant person in the lives of the artists I was looking after. I was there to give them a sense of calm in such a chaotic whirlwind.

From the most famous artists that I looked after - Norah Jones, Katy Perry and David Guetta

– I can’t choose who was ‘the best’. And it wouldn’t be a fair thing to do being I had unforgettable experiences with all of them, and unlike some other artists, they were very nice and polite. I was closest with David Guetta because we started working together before he was famous. I was assigned to him when he was still an ‘underground’ DJ. Since my father spends his summers in Ibiza, I had heard David’s name and when I told EMI that I had heard of him, they assigned me to him immediately. I had just turned 24 and no one expected David to get so famous. For 6 months, it was just the two of us travelling everywhere. There were times when he would play in front of 50,000 people and call me to come to the side of the stage to have a look at the audience going crazy. Those are the kind of moments I’ll never forget.

The best part of the job was the annual party that happens in Miami, the Winter Music Conference. There were parties, DJs, people having a great time, we’d just hang out in Miami. I saw countries that I never dreamed of seeing. I went to Argentina, Brazil, Japan, Australia, Singapore. When I could, I’d take a few days off, and I’d stay on a little and spend some times actually seeing the countries I was in. The worst part of the job, however, was when I missed my mother’s birthday, important moments with the people closest to me. My friends just stopped calling me because I wouldn’t answer. I was so busy that I would forget to call back, and every time they would call, I was abroad. I lost touch with my friends, my life had become about my work. In the beginning, I was young, enthusiastic, free, I didn’t care. When I started realizing that I wanted to focus more on time on my personal life, I met Yannis.

I met Yannis in Tinos. When I was studying at university, there were a lot of Greeks, so I made a lot of Greek friends and I would holiday in Greece every summer. One summer, I met Yannis. It was the 6 th of July; we were like “hey, you’re great, I really like you”, everything was rosy, but then I had to go back to London. Yannis is a lawyer who lives in Greece - so when I went back to London, we both agreed that each of us had their own life and this summer-time romance didn’t really mean anything. But we kept in touch and soon enough, we realized we couldn’t stop talking. Two weeks after we met, he told me he had a few days off and suggested that we meet. I was supposed to go to Brazil and Argentina for work and I was really excited about it, so I told him it couldn’t happen because I was dying to go on the work trip. But then the trip got cancelled, so I took a few days off and suddenly found myself back in Greece with Yannis. We toured all of Western Greece together in ten days. I go back to London after the trip and again we tell each other that it’s a summer romance and it doesn’t mean anything. But then, Yannis came to London and we realized that we were kind of stuck with each other.

 

 

At first, I made an agreement at EMI that I could work one week a month from Greece. I went to my boss and told him “For 5 years I hadn’t been able to have a relationship because of work, and now I’ve found someone, I like him, and I need your help.” I explained that I needed some time for me. Everyone in the music business kind of gets it because we’re all in the same boat, so it wasn’t an issue. When EMI was put up for auction and sold to Universal and Warner Music, I decided I didn’t want to continue on and that this was my last chance to start something new in my life” she says, as she re-applies her lip gloss.

I was with Yannis for a year and a half, and I know he was never going to leave Greece because he had a good job and really loved his country. So I decided to come here permanently. I already had a lot of friends in Greece, which was really important to me. I didn’t come here just to be “Yannis’ girlfriend’. As soon as I came, I started Greek lessons. My parents thought I was crazy. But I wanted another quality of life. I knew about the crisis. But I wanted to come to Greece and offer what I could to the country, because at the same time I knew that this country had a lot to teach me. I came to Greece and I learned to be more relaxed, happier, to sit at a café with friends for 3 hours, to walk around my neighbourhood saying hi to all the locals and stopping for a chat. I came to Greece ready to let in whatever the country wanted to teach me. The only bad thing about Greece for me is that it tests my patience every day. All jokes aside though, I love Greece even though it tests my patience. The fact that my parents are from Iraq really helped me to understand and love the Greek mentality. We have a lot in common. I walk out on to my street and I know the butcher, the florist! I love all of that. Here in Greece, my friends call me just to say ‘hi’ – I still can’t believe that, that never happened in England. The weather, the people, the islands, the sun, I love everything about Greece. I totally changed my life, everything is new. I took a big risk, I don’t know if its all going to work out in the end but the truth is that in my heart I believe that I want to be here for the rest of my life, and to be with Yannis. I truly believe that.

We take a little break and Samar shows us her ‘crazy diamond’, her ‘child’, as she calls it. “Crazy Diamond is me. I started it because I wanted to do something I love and I wanted to use the experience I gathered over the last few years. A lot of people have said to me “Come for me, you’re never going to make it opening a company by yourself”. But I take the risk because I believe in myself. I bring all of the lessons I learned in London. I used to talk with many different countries in one day at EMI, and I’ve learned that you have to speak different with people in each country because every country has its own customs and cultures. I would speak differently with the team in Japan relative to how I spoke to the team in Italy. I learned to adjust to different situations. At Crazy Diamond, we organize events and we provide PR services, in a different way. One of our biggest successes was a party we organized for a very well-known baby stroller company. We brought in a barman who made non- alcoholic cocktails and served them in baby bottles, we had hairdressers and masseurs who pampered the mothers. All of this was something very different and it was a big success. We try to have fun and be different in everything that we do”. Samar talks with a lot of enthusiasm about her company, and shows us the little diamonds that are everywhere around her house. Even on the kitchen worktop there are little diamonds.

“Do you cook?”, I ask. “Once a week, my mother-in-law comes over and teaches me how to cook Greek food”. The day before yesterday she came over and showed me how to make pastitio, biftekia, keftedes and pumpkin soup. Next week she’s going to show me to how make yemista. I love it! I feel so welcomed in so many ways in Greece. Greeks are open people. I miss my family a lot but I see them often. I’m really close to my mother and she comes as often as she can. She gets on really well with my mother-in- law, they watch the same Turkish TV shows, they have a lot in common. When my mother came to Greece for the first time, she said it reminded her of Iraq and that was really touching”.

Everything sounds great, Samar hasn’t stopped smiling and talking about Yannis, Greece, and Crazy Diamond, but I’ve got a question turning around in my mind that I just can’t shake: “And if you and Yannis break up, what will you do? Would you stay in Greece?” “You know, Yannis and I were talking about that the other day. You see, he’s a pragmatist. He asked me what I’d do if we broke up. And I told him that I have really good friends here, a good life, I’ve invested time, effort, money .. and a lot of myself into Greece. So I told him that I’d stay even if we broke up because I want to be where my ‘child’ is. Then again, I might end up moving to Japan tomorrow. You never know where life is going to take you. For the meantime though, I know that I want to have my children here, give them Greek names, and to learn Greek as well as I can so that my kids don’t make fun of my accent!”

www.crazydiamond.gr

This article was originally published in Greek here: http://grekamag.gr

Greece’s entry at the upcoming Eurovision song contest in Vienna, Austria, is “One Last Breath,” a ballad performed by Cypriot vocalist Maria-Elena Kyriakou. Kyriakou was one of five performers who competed late Wednesday in Athens in the finals of a local contest to determine Greece's representative at this year's song contest.

Kyriakou will represent Greece at the first Eurovision semifinal on May 19. A second semifinal takes place on May 21, with the final set for May 23.

“One Last Breath” features music by Efthyvoulos Theocharous and Kyriakou and lyrics by Vangelis Constantinidis and Evelina Tziora.

To read more, please visit ekathimerini.com

As pressure builds on Greece to implement economic reforms in order to secure crucial rescue funding, the country’s representative to the Euro Working Group on Wednesday presented to his eurozone counterparts the six proposals Greece intends to make at Monday’s Eurogroup meeting in Brussels.

During a teleconference discussion, Giorgos Houliarakis fleshed out the six proposed reforms Athens intends to discuss with representatives of the country’s international creditors in a bid to clinch a portion of a 7.2-billion-euro pending loan installment.

Those measures include tackling the country’s humanitarian crisis, reforming the public administration, introducing a payment scheme for Greeks with debts to the state and overhauling tax collection.

Greek efforts to prepare the ground for the Eurogroup came as European officials indicated that the country has little room for maneuver.

At a joint press conference with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker in Brussels on Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel refused to speculate on the possible need of a third loan package for Greece, noting that much work remained with the current program. “I think we now have all our hands full to make this... succeed,” Merkel said.

To read more, please visit ekathimerini.com

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