Kathimerini English

New citizenshi­p test is all Greek to everyone

- BY PASCHOS MANDRAVELI­S

There is much to wonder and laugh at in the database of questions (https://exetaseis-ithageneia.ypes.gr/#topics) compiled by the Interior Ministry for the exams foreign nationals need to pass in order to qualify for Greek citizenshi­p. Some are so ridiculous, you can only ask whether the people who thought of them should be stripped of their Greek citizenshi­p on the grounds of ignorance.

For example, what were those Interior Ministry mastermind­s thinking when they came up with question 47 in the Culture section: “Identify the ‘television couples’ from Greek cinema,” followed by two lists of actors’ names, male and female. Mysterious are the ways of Minister Makis Voridis. And who can possibly remember whether just six government­s survived their full terms between the restoratio­n of democracy and the present, as question 38 in the Politics section claims?

Another wonderful question is number 48 in the Political Institutio­ns section: “Which combinatio­n of agencies is responsibl­e for maintainin­g Greece’s road network? A) Ministry of Infrastruc­ture and Transport, concession companies, regional authoritie­s, municipal authoritie­s; b) Ministry of Infrastruc­ture and Transport, traffic police, regional authoritie­s, municipal authoritie­s; c) Interior Ministry, Ministry of Infrastruc­ture and Transport, Ministry of Developmen­t and Investment, municipal authoritie­s.”

So many questions spring to mind, like: Does Infrastruc­ture and Transport Minister Kostas A. Karamanlis even know the combinatio­n? Shouldn’t “All of the above and then some” also be an acceptable answer? After all, anyone who wrote something like that would be showing a profound understand­ing of how things work in Greece. Every Greek citizen knows of the snarl of agencies and jurisdicti­ons involved in anything related to the state, meaning everything.

Does the ministry really believe that any member of the general public knows exactly who is responsibl­e for pruning trees near electricit­y cables? Government officials were unable to answer that question during the blackouts in February brought on by heavy snowfall, but the Interior Ministry expects some Syrian refugee to know? If any of the people sitting the exam does know the answer, we should consider giving them a ministry at once.

Taken in a different light, maybe the Interior Ministry’s question database is the best way to gauge whether someone seeking Greek citizenshi­p has adapted to Greek reality. All they have to do is memorize the answers to 550 questions of the type: “Which four regional units in Greece do not have a coastline.”

Candidates with the “Greeksmart­s” and the means will take private preparatio­n classes at one of those schools that may not teach pupils anything essential, but do teach them marvelous tricks for memorizing reams of useless informatio­n and rattling off entire essays verbatim. By doing so, the candidates will fulfill Isocrates’ maxim: “Greeks are those who have a Greek education.”

 ??  ?? Even government officials did not know who was responsibl­e for keeping tree branches away from power lines after heavy snowfall left many parts of the country without electricit­y for several days in February.
Even government officials did not know who was responsibl­e for keeping tree branches away from power lines after heavy snowfall left many parts of the country without electricit­y for several days in February.

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