Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Greek teacher’s TV classes give inmates hope

- By Elena Becatoros

AVLONA, Greece — Setting up a television channel from scratch isn’t the most obvious or easiest thing for a math teacher to do — especially without prior technical knowledge and for use inside a prison.

But that is the task Petros Damianos, director of the school at Greece’s Avlona Special Youth Detention Center, took on so his students could access the lessons that coronaviru­s lockdowns cut them off from.

Greek schools have shut, reopened, and closed again over the past year as authoritie­s sought to curtail the spread of the virus. Like their peers across much of the globe, the country’s students adapted to virtual classes.

But the online world isn’t accessible to all.

The Avlona detention center, a former military prison, holds nearly 300 young men ages 18-21, and sometimes up to 25. The school Damianos founded there in 2000 now teaches primary grades through to college, following the national curriculum and awarding graduation certificat­es equivalent to any Greek school.

While attendance is voluntary, the prison school has grown in popularity and saw record enrollment in September, when up to 96% of inmates signed up. But with internet devices banned in their cells, the prison’s students had no way to continue learning when the lockdowns canceled classroom lessons.

“Our teachers couldn’t reach the kids like they reach all other kids in Greece,” said Damianos, a mild-mannered man in his 60s. “This was a big problem, a very big problem that seemed almost insurmount­able.”

The fact that inmates are stacked four or five to a cell with less space per person than the prison classrooms didn’t matter. Their school had to shut along with the rest during lockdowns in March and again in November.

When he heard in early December that Greece’s schools wouldn’t reopen before Christmas, “I felt ... despair,” Damianos said. Making matters worse, the lockdown ended visits and furlough leave, so inmates “experience­d a double prison,” he said.

While access to education is important for all students, it is perhaps even more critical for Avlona’s, some of whom have been convicted and others who are awaiting trial. Many never graduated or even completed primary grades, and education is the most concrete tool they can use to turn their lives around.

Desperate for a solution, Damianos had an idea: he could reach his students through the television­s in their cells if he could figure out how to create a dedicated TV channel to broadcast their classes.

Technician friends told Damianos it was possible with the necessary equipment. The next hurdle was obtaining the equipment with shops also closed during the nationwide lockdown. Then the school’s staff had to learn how to use it.

The school’s music teacher, Nikos Karadosidi­s, took on the role of technician, using experience from occasional concert tech work and guidance gleaned from YouTube tutorials.

“I very quickly realized — and this is the magic of it, too — that this whole thing is essentiall­y DIY,” Karadosidi­s said. “Do it yourself, with whatever materials you have, with whatever tools you have, to try to do the best you can.”

Through donations, volunteers and online orders, the staff cobbled together what they needed. A critical piece of equipment — a modulator to transmit the TV signal — ran into delivery delays, so a store lent them an older one. Two hundred meters (feet) of cable arrived, and inmates helped run it from the school to the prison’s central aerial.

One prison classroom was converted into a rudimentar­y studio, with a cheap handheld video camera taped to a tripod. Multicolor­ed Christmas lights served as a makeshift recording light, warning those outside to keep quiet during recording sessions.

On Jan. 8, about a month after Damianos had the idea, the channel was ready. They named it Prospathod­as TV, Greek for “Trying TV.” Through word of mouth, they got inmates to re-tune their television­s to capture the new channel.

The pilot program was a half-hour math class. Now the channel operates 24 hours a day, running six hours’ worth of prerecorde­d lessons on a loop on weekdays, and eight hours of content on a loop on weekends.

The teachers record new lessons daily: from math and handicraft­s to economics and music. Karadosidi­s edits into the night and broadcasts the classes the next day, since live broadcasts are still beyond their technical capabiliti­es.

For the students, going to class provided more than just education. Beyond the series of barred metal doors, past the courtyard with soccer balls caught in coils of razor wire, school was a brief respite from the harshness of prison life.

 ?? THANASSIS STAVRAKIS/AP ?? Music teacher Nikos Karadosidi­s uses Christmas lights as a makeshift recording lightdurin­g recording sessions Feb. 10 at a school in the Avlona Special Youth Detention Center.
THANASSIS STAVRAKIS/AP Music teacher Nikos Karadosidi­s uses Christmas lights as a makeshift recording lightdurin­g recording sessions Feb. 10 at a school in the Avlona Special Youth Detention Center.

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