Kathimerini English

The Greek bicentenni­al and the third century

- BY JEFFREY LEVETT * * Jeffrey Levett is an Internatio­nal Gusi Peace Prize Laureate and a professor of public health and health diplomacy.

Two hundred years ago, the Greek War of Independen­ce was marred by disease and dissension, its triumph lost in typhus, plague, cholera, chickenpox, malaria and tuberculos­is, its vocal messages-signals lost in the noise of division. It took Greece a decade to come together and to coalesce into rebirth and an additional one and a half centuries for Greece to arrive at the status of sister-state, a result of public health developmen­t. This year the bicentenni­al celebratio­n, Greece 2021, was glorious and inspiring even though shadowed by Covid and unending, unresolved political squabbling. It was celebrated with a sense of determinat­ion and subdued optimism. While Greece’s initial response to the pandemic was largely effective, the response in the third wave saw the health sector straining at its limits. Too much media, too many voices. One reference to the public health needs of the nation at the time of Covid came from Katerina Sakellarop­oulou, president of Greece, and from the Sacred Rock.

My poetical advice is still:

Once again, to Greece I say, do not unlock, stay put, / Lay low, protect the loved ones that you know, / While in the words of a Nobel, noble poet, / Just a little more and we shall see, / Almond trees in blossom, / Marbles shining in the sun. / Don’t frit away the glory there, coronaviru­s is not fair.

From my vantage and virtual point from Hill of Lykavittos, I followed the exhilarati­ng celebratio­ns on March 25. At sunrise, a 21-gun salute sounded from above me as I drank my Greek coffee. Sometime later the flag-raising ceremony took place on the Acropolis in the presence of the president and prime minister of Greece, Kyriakos Mitsotakis. The National Anthem was sung a capella by the internatio­nally renowned soprano Anastasia Zannis. The light of Athens buoyed by crisp sunshine beamed out that all’s right with the world.

Nothing could deprive the bicentenni­al celebratio­ns of their special symbolism and splendor as the blue and white flag was unfurled on the Sacred Rock of the Acropolis, colors that spread out throughout Greece, covered multiple places and draped landmark buildings all around the globe. Nothing can deprive Greece of its historical significan­ce following on from the American and French revolution­s; its victory over tyranny, its revival of all things Greek (ours once more) and its rebirth as a nation.

The 1821-2021 celebratio­ns in Greece were inspiratio­nal, simple and substantiv­e, informativ­e and exceptiona­lly moving. Three frigates from Britain, France and Russia anchored in the harbor of Piraeus. The renovated and extended National Gallery displayed paintings representi­ng scenes from the 1821 Greek War of Independen­ce. The Prince of Wales said that Greece is the wellspring of Western civilizati­on; its spirit runs through our societies and our democracie­s. Greece stands for freedom and provides hope. While Navarino should be remembered, it must not be forgotten that predatory loans created a debt crisis.

Paraphrasi­ng the words of the prime minister, to remember is to be human; to educate on events, past and the responsibi­lities of the present is a given. After the successful celebratio­ns of 1821 what now Hellas takes becomes much more significan­t; 4,000 years of linguistic history and concentrat­ed philosophi­cal wisdom, two centuries of the modern Greek state and a moving bicentenni­al that grabbed the world’s attention, painting it blue and white; Greece in its third century and the rejuvenati­on of Hellenism – a unique, ambitious and significan­t cultural project (Greece 3.0), the here and now health status of the Greek people – a necessity after the imposition of austerity, the difficult demographi­c challenge and the search for migration’s solution within the context of the European Union as well as freedom from geopolitic­al harassment in the Aegean, a life with quality and fulfillmen­t for all Greeks and the divine interventi­on of Hygeia, goddess of public health – with a push from Classical philosophy.

Greece remains an infinite historical source of knowledge, but with too few readers. While it is still an inspiratio­nal flame, there are still too few global citizens. Change will take over if inequality falls and as the newly born enter the world with more possibilit­ies for life with quality better than their parents as well as expanding options for youth. A new national narrative must emerge and with new blood, with discord as an obstacle to future triumph set aside and the several different readings of the 1821 celebratio­ns resolved. Greece has a role to return the world and ensure the principle of panta rhei and the universal status of the earth.

Below and from the sadness of a forlorn bell, we hear the sadness of the world, / A world that walked in beauty through the seasons till its fall, / Apple blossom time will come again, another eternity will pass, olives falling to the grass, / Lilacs will be gathered in the spring, when some go home again… / A splash of red I see above, some poppy bed in radiant bloom, / While buttercups their golden cups reach up towards the warming sun, / Upon the hill; Golgotha and Lykavittos.

(Easter 2020)

 ??  ?? Members of the elite Presidenti­al Guard raise the Greek flag on the Acropolis during Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns, which also marked the 200-year anniversar­y of the start of the Greek War of Independen­ce, in Athens, on March 25.
Members of the elite Presidenti­al Guard raise the Greek flag on the Acropolis during Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns, which also marked the 200-year anniversar­y of the start of the Greek War of Independen­ce, in Athens, on March 25.

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