Toronto Star

Rural Greeks brace for more trouble ahead

Unlike nation’s city dwellers, those in small villages have a food supply to fall back on

- GREGORY KATZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KARITAINA, GREECE— Ilias Mathes has protection against bank closings, capital controls and the slashing of his pension: 10 goats, some hens and a vegetable patch.

If Greece’s financial crisis deepens, as many believe it must, he can feed his children and grandchild­ren with the bounty of the land in this proud village high in the mountains of the Arcadia Peloponnes­e.

“I have my lettuce, my onions, I have my hens, my birds, I will manage,” he said. He can no longer access his full pension payment, though, because of government controls imposed six days ago.

“We will manage for a period of time, I don’t know, two months, maybe three months, because I also want to give to our relatives,” Peloponnes­e said. “If they are suffering, I cannot leave them like this, isn’t that so?”

The production of food and milk gives villagers in many parts of Greece a small measure of confidence — and a valuable buffer. But that doesn’t mean the financial cutoff doesn’t cause headaches. Some in Karitaina have to pay ¤40 ($56 Canadian) in taxi fare to get to and from the nearest banks just to withdraw ¤60, the maximum daily amount for those with bank cards.

The bus to Megalopoli, the town with the bank, was shut down — a victim of austerity. Many of those who used to drive are now too unwell to do so. The majority who live here are retirees, shrouding the town in eerie quiet broken only by the constant birdsong and the sporadic shouting of people arguing about the financial crisis at a vine-shaded café in the town square.

Despite the collective sense that a catastroph­e of some type stares Greece in the face, the country’s strong tradition of hospitalit­y remains intact. Mathes won’t let a visitor leave without a bundle of fresh vegetables and some trachanas and chilopites, types of local pasta his family makes by hand.

Many believe the ability to help one another with food gives Karitaina, with about 30 year-round residents, a better chance of surviving than city dwellers coping with the same anxieties. Rural Greek communitie­s have age-old survival tactics that allow them to weather storms such as Second World War deprivatio­n and natural disasters.

They will need to draw on them deeply, as Greece’s current problems are unlikely to go away soon — whatever the outcome of the Sunday referendum on whether to accept the latest bailout proposals, which call for more austerity cuts to already razor-thin public services.

“In the village, it’s easier to live,” said Ionnis Psilas, who is saddled with debts he says he can never repay after the failure of his car-import business.

“You can get products from neighbours and give them some. In Athens, you are strangers. But the crisis has affected the village very much. We are trying but there is no money here. I lived very well and now I have nothing.”

He said he would like to vote “200 times no” against the proposed bailout deal, which would impose still more austerity measures on a country that has endured five years of dire cutbacks. He admires Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras for defying European leaders and the Interna-

“In the village, it’s easier to live. You can get products from neighbours and give them some. In Athens, you are strangers.”

IONNIS PSILAS

GREEK VILLAGER

tional Monetary Fund by urging citizens to reject the deal, a course that could cause Greece to tumble out of the eurozone.

The town, topped by the dramatic remains of a 13th-century castle, has played an important role in Greek history. Its residents were among the first to rise up during the war for independen­ce from the Ottoman Empire that began in 1821.

And the village’s distinctiv­e Byzantine churches and stone-wrought homes — and the magnificen­t view of the mountains, rivers and valleys — won it a place on the back of the 5,000-drachma bill before the Greek currency was phased out when the euro was introduced in 2002.

Some have high hopes of a return to the drachma if Greece abandons the euro. Divisions in the village over membership in the eurozone are so pronounced that those who back the bailout proposal sit at one table at a village café. Those opposed sit at another, a gulf of empty tables separating them.

Anxiety is in the pine-scented mountain air. No one seems confident the banks will reopen soon, despite government assurances their pensions and savings are secure.

It is a vital issue because one retiree’s monthly pension commonly supports several generation­s, since so many adults cannot find work.

Some have decided to get by on what they have at home rather than spend a chunky amount to venture to Megalopoli, 17 kilometres away, to try to get more cash from the bank.

Pancyotis Theodoropo­ulos, 85, said he did not want to spend the ¤40 taxi fare to go the bank to withdraw ¤120, an amount authorized by the government this week for emergency payments to pensioners like him who do not have bank cards.

Some local taxi drivers have cut the price in half for Karitaina pensioners.

The cost wasn’t nearly as big a factor before the capital controls came in because people could withdraw their entire pensions at once, usually taking home ¤250 to ¤800.

The retired farmers in this remote region have relatively low pensions compared to other workers, but many get their payments under a special system that allows the Hellenic Postal Agency to deliver the cash directly to their homes.

That has been a godsend, says Keke Bakoyanni, a postal worker who distribute­s the pensions this way and also runs a shop in the village.

The system broke down early in the week when no payments were made — she had to come to Karitaina empty-handed to tell villagers there was nothing for them — but then resumed, with amounts being paid in full, not limited by the new controls.

“I was surprised,” she said, sounding mystified by the unpredicta­bility of the improvised system. “People here were lucky, they are the only ones in Greece who got their full pension. This is the old traditiona­l way of getting pensions.”

But she said the controls imposed on most pensioners have stripped them of their pride: “Going to the bank every day for ¤60 makes people feel they have lost their integrity.”

 ?? SPYROS TSAKIRIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rural Greek communitie­s have age-old survival tactics that enable them to ride out crises and natural disasters.
SPYROS TSAKIRIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rural Greek communitie­s have age-old survival tactics that enable them to ride out crises and natural disasters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada