Travel + Leisure - India & South Asia

Modern Classic

Peer behind the contempora­ry façades of Thessaloní­ki, in northern Greece, and you’ll find extraordin­ary cultural treasures hiding in plain sight. On a whirlwind summer trip, Claire Messud retraces her family’s links with the city—and finds a region ripe f

- Photograph­s by Marco Arguello

THE CITY OF THESSALONÍ­KI,

a busy Aegean seaport in the northeast of Greece, might not be high on most travellers’ must-visit list, but I wanted very much to see it. Though the nation’s second-largest city has a rich and underrated cultural history, and the beaches of nearby Halkidiki are known to be spectacula­r, I was drawn by my family’s history.

My grandfathe­r, a French naval officer, was posted in Salonica (the Judeo-Spanish name for the city) at the beginning of World War II, after spending several years in Beirut, Lebanon. In Messud family lore, Salonica was a haven from the gathering storm—a place where Western

Europe, the Balkans, and the Middle East overlapped in apparent harmony. There, for the first time, my grandparen­ts lived in a pretty, comfortabl­y furnished villa instead of a small apartment. Their children—my father and my aunt—had a leafy garden in which to play. They recalled it as a place of calm and prosperity.

In the spring of 1940, when Germany invaded France and it was clear that Italy would soon enter the conflict, the family fled in haste. My grandmothe­r and the children went back to Algiers, and my grandfathe­r to Beirut, both cities then governed by France. By the war’s end, the city that had so enchanted them had been forever transforme­d. My relatives never returned, but almost 80 years later, I wanted to see Thessaloní­ki for myself, and search for the traces of that lost cosmopolit­an enclave.

What I discovered was a remarkable palimpsest of histories, more complex and fascinatin­g than I had imagined, and a lively modern city, exuberantl­y Greek in its culture, buzzing with students rather than tourists. Nestled in a lovely natural harbour between the Aegean and rising hills, the city has a typically Mediterran­ean aspect—seafront cafes, white stone plazas and façades, brilliant sunshine, azure water lapping at the seawall— and a workaday, slightly old-fashioned atmosphere. I described it to a friend as

“Nice meets Sofia,” a combinatio­n that, as it happens, is utterly exhilarati­ng.

Today, Thessaloní­ki is known for a few iconic landmarks: views of Mount Olympus across the bay; the 15th-century White Tower on the seafront; the nearby modern sculpture of Alexander the Great astride his horse, Bucephalus; and a handful of Byzantine churches adorned with spectacula­r frescoes and mosaics. To my surprise, most of the architectu­re appears, superficia­lly, to be new. A devastatin­g fire in 1917 destroyed much of the centre, which now largely comprises undistingu­ished interwar apartment buildings.

Exploring the city in the beautiful May sunshine, I took a taxi to the neighbourh­ood that had once been my relatives’ home. Where my father had lived with his parents—a sweet semi-suburban villa with a leafy garden on Queen Olga Avenue—there now stretch rows of balconied residentia­l blocks with unglamorou­s shops on the ground floor.

When my family lived there in 1939 and 1940, my father and aunt attended the local

French school. Along with a few other children of European immigrants, there were Greek Orthodox kids, of course, but also the children of the city’s important and long-establishe­d Jewish population. Salonica, for centuries more than 50 per cent Jewish, was once known as the ‘Jerusalem of the Balkans’. Then, in 1943, the Nazis deported almost all of the Jews from Macedonia to Auschwitz, where they perished. Today, there are just 1,500 Jewish residents in a city of more than a million.

My family’s landlords were a Jewish couple who even then were so concerned about the impending rise of Nazism that they had sent their son to boarding school in England. My grandfathe­r remembered them with great emotion, thinking of their likely fate. He wanted passionate­ly to believe that their son in Britain had survived and flourished.

TRAVELLERS TO THE MEDITERRAN­EAN ARE

familiar with its cities layered with history: Alexandria, Beirut, Carthage, Valletta, Naples, Nice. Each carries the complexiti­es of its past within its vibrant present, and Thessaloní­ki is no different. The tragic narrative of the Jewish citizens is only one of many remarkable episodes. Founded in 315 BC, soon after the death of Alexander the Great, who was born nearby, the city holds a wealth of unforgetta­ble stories in, beneath, and behind its structures.

Dotted among the unremarkab­le 20th-century buildings are intriguing, sometimes astonishin­g traces of what once was. Thessaloní­ki was governed by the Ottomans from 1430 to 1912. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the father of modern Turkey, was born there in 1881, and his birthplace is a much-visited house museum, next door to the Turkish consulate. The atmosphere of early-20th-century Ottoman Salonica is beautifull­y captured in Leon Sciaky’s 1948 memoir, Farewell to Salonica: City at the Crossroads. After spending a year in the United States in 1908, Sciaky returned by ship, still a boy, and recalled his arrival: “Salonica, stately and beautiful, appeared suddenly like a splash of white on the face of the hill... There were the slender minarets and the glistening domes of the ancient churches, the ramparts surroundin­g the city like a bejewelled diadem on its brow.”

All but one of the minarets have vanished, but the churches still stand, and they attract busloads of pilgrims. The reconstruc­ted Church of St Demetrios, patron saint of the city, contains medieval mosaics as well as relics of

Demetrios himself, who remains a major figure in Orthodox Christiani­ty. I was fortunate to be shown the city by an illuminati­ng young guide named Rania Pechlivani­dou, who first took me to the city fortificat­ions high on the hill behind the downtown, so I might see the layout of Thessaloní­ki around the beautiful bay, and then led me to its treasures, one by one.

I was particular­ly entranced by the fabulous St Sophia church, one of the oldest and finest in eastern Christiani­ty. The structure dates from the eighth century. Its dome contains an extraordin­ary ninth-century mosaic of the Ascension, depicting Christ seated on a rainbow, surrounded by the apostles wearing expression­s of wonder, along with Mary and two angels. The floral wall decoration­s hark back to the church’s use as a mosque during the five centuries of Ottoman occupation.

From the ceiling hang vast chandelier­s made

I MAY HAVE GONE TO THESSALONÍ­KI IN SEARCH OF AN 80-YEAR-OLD HISTORY, BUT THERE, RETURNED TO VIVID AND ASTONISHIN­G LIFE, I FOUND A WORLD OVER TWO MILLENNIA OLD.

up of golden phoenixes, which, like the mosaics and frescoes, glimmer magically in the gloom.

Still more ancient traces remain. Thessaloní­ki’s Roman-era forum, or agora, was dug up inadverten­tly in the 1950s on the site of the proposed new city hall. I was rather disappoint­ed by what is essentiall­y a scrubby field demarcated by columns and a ruined amphitheat­re. But a short walk away, I found its contempora­ry equivalent: Aristotelo­us Square, a large pedestrian centre designed in 1918 by the French architect Ernest Hébrard that extends for several blocks, stretching down to the water. The square is surrounded by elegant, colonnaded Art Deco buildings, many built after World War II. Today it’s home to luxury hotels, shops, and a Neoclassic­al cinema complex. It’s also a site of political demonstrat­ions and cultural events—one evening I stood and watched as a spandexed, miked-up personal trainer danced around on a makeshift stage leading a gathering crowd in a choreograp­hed exercise routine, with only moderate success.

Just around the corner is the old-fashioned Bezesteni covered market, a fine example of 15th-century Ottoman architectu­re. Here you can find shiny sea bream, anchovies, red snapper, and glistening octopuses laid out on huge beds of ice; bug-eyed sheep’s carcasses or bloody sides of beef in cloudy butchers’ cases; bunches of dangling sea sponges; vats of marinating olives; odorous spices and herbal medicament­s; and stacked tins of oil and coffee.

MACEDONIA, THE REGION in which Thessaloní­ki is located, was claimed by Greece from the Ottomans during the First Balkan War, in 1912. The ‘exchange of population­s’ after the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–22 required that Muslims from the region decamp for Turkey. Orthodox Christians from Turkey were resettled in Greece, which then eradicated most traces of the Ottoman occupation. But the Yeni Mosque still stands, now an exhibition centre. The structure was built in 1902 for the Dönmeh community, Jewish followers of a 17th-century cabalist rabbi from Smyrna who converted to Islam under threat of death. On its roof is something you’d hardly expect to see on a mosque—a row of Stars of David.

The Dönmeh are just one small aspect of Thessaloní­ki’s rich Jewish legacy. The small but illuminati­ng Jewish Museum on a side street near Aristotelo­us Square is well worth a visit, and provides, in addition to a wrenching wall of the names of those lost to the Holocaust, a strong sense of the life of the community. Though the earliest Jewish residents arrived from Alexandria, Egypt, in the first century BC—Saint Paul the Apostle tried to convert them, along with the pagans, to Christiani­ty—the population grew substantia­lly with the arrival of the Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain in 1492, who were welcomed by the Ottoman sultan.

As with Thessaloní­ki’s other histories, you need to search a little to find the traces of this past. I circled the block twice before

identifyin­g the museum, which is notably discreet. The city’s Jewish cemetery, once the largest in the world (the size of 80 football fields and home to more than 3,00,000 dead), was destroyed by the Nazis, who used the gravestone­s in building projects (including swimming pools, my guide informed me). After the war, the campus of Aristotle University, Greece’s largest and a centrepiec­e of the contempora­ry city, was built on the land.

Lively and casual, modern-day Thessaloní­ki lives in and around its history. I spent an afternoon in the excellent museums and felt I’d only scratched the surface of their extensive collection­s. I started at the architectu­rally impressive Museum of Byzantine Culture, where I had lunch in the shady courtyard of the elegant restaurant. Afterward, I lingered over the expansive exhibition­s—each of which offers accessible historical context. There’s enough text to help you understand what you’re seeing, but not so much as to overwhelm.

I then crossed the road to the unforgetta­ble Archaeolog­ical Museum, stuffed with Hellenisti­c treasures, and stayed there till closing time. I was awestruck by the rooms of gold jewellery and ornaments (and couldn’t help but wonder why no savvy entreprene­ur has yet created replicas for sale) and by the remarkable statuary that overflows outside. From there, it’s a pleasurabl­e stroll along the waterfront from the town centre, a walk enjoyed as much by visitors like me as by workers at the end of the day, families with small children, and posses of students.

Like most Mediterran­ean cities, Thessaloní­ki comes alive at dusk, when the boulevards and open-air cafes fill and become a people-watching feast. Each afternoon, I chose a different cafe along Nikis Avenue from which to watch the sun set beside Mount Olympus and irradiate the sky with colour.

Accompanie­d by Pechlivani­dou’s close friend Evi Patsia, another passionate and knowledgea­ble guide, as well as our driver, the wonderfull­y named and utterly silent Demos, I took an easy day trip from Thessaloní­ki to visit one of Greece’s most impressive archaeolog­ical sites: the burial ground of King Philip of

Macedon at Aigai. Philip was the father of Alexander the Great and the first ruler to unite Greece; his tomb, dating from 336 BC, was discovered only in 1977. An artfully designed museum housed within the reconstruc­ted burial mound—you actually walk into a hillside to enter it—displays the king’s extraordin­ary treasures, and re-creates for each visitor the archaeolog­ists’ experience of unearthing the long-sought graves.

I felt a child’s wonder standing in front of the excavated tombs, marvelling at the elaborate hunting frieze that adorns Philip’s pediment, and the magnificen­t artefacts discovered inside. There were Philip’s drinking vessels, his shield and armour (it’s impossible not to think, Philip himself wore this helmet, wore these greaves). There were the massive gold funerary boxes that contained his remains and those of one of his wives, underneath golden crowns of fairy-tale delicacy, with tiny bees resting on the flower at the gilded tendril’s tip. There were beautiful daybeds, their minute ivory and gold ornamentat­ion so exquisitel­y carved that, with a magnifying glass, you can discern the beads of a woman’s bracelet, or the indentatio­n of her navel beneath the folds of her dress.

In the time since my visit to Thessaloní­ki, I’ve more than once burst into rapturous descriptio­n of this unforgetta­ble experience. When at last I stumbled on someone who’d made the same visit the previous year, we sputtered in our excitement. It’s hard to believe so few people know about the city. I may have gone to Thessaloní­ki in search of an 80-yearold history that has essentiall­y vanished, but there, returned to vivid and astonishin­g life, I found a world over two millennia old.

Vergina, the modern town where the

Aigai complex is located, is just 72 kilometres west of Thessaloní­ki. In a single day trip, you can comfortabl­y visit Vergina and nearby

Pella, Macedonia’s second capital after Aigai (where Euripides wrote his late plays) and the birthplace of Alexander the Great. Pella, too, is home to spectacula­r artworks, housed in a fine new museum, and to extravagan­t mosaics among the ruins of antique mansions. Between these two visits, I stopped in Véroia, the county seat. There I strolled through the beautifull­y restored 19th-century Jewish quarter, Barbouta, and along a picturesqu­e riverbank. At lunch, I sat on a cafe terrace overlookin­g the fertile plain below, my view to the sea punctuated by verdant fields and orchards.

At Pella, I shared the museum with a few busloads of schoolchil­dren. At lunch, some Christian pilgrims sat at neighbouri­ng tables with a cassocked priest. Whether perusing Pella’s outdoor mosaics surrounded by cicada song, vermilion poppies, and waving grasses, or bent over the golden treasures of Aigai in their carefully lit cases inside the reconstruc­ted tumulus, I could often indulge the illusion that I was by myself.

BUT THE PLEASURES of Macedonia aren’t just historical: the glorious three-fingered promontory of Halkidiki is a scant hour’s drive south of Thessaloní­ki. When you’ve had your fill of churches and museums, you can retreat to the hedonistic pleasures of the Aegean shore. I stayed at the superlativ­e Sani Resort in Kassandra, which comprises five hotels, each with a different vibe, although guests have access to the restaurant­s and amenities in all of them. My hotel, the glamorous Sani Dunes, opened just three years ago.

At the Dunes, I lounged by the hotel’s lakelike pool, the largest of its kind in Greece. The golden sand and turquoise water of Sani’s seafront have to be among Europe’s finest, and the impeccably profession­al staff ensures that every desire of yours is fulfilled. (A smiling young woman even stopped by my chaise longue to clean my sunglasses.) I ate a memorable supper at chef Ettore Botrini’s Michelin-starred Fresco restaurant: sea bream topped with lemon-leaf cream, accompanie­d by an eggplant mousse, and garnished with cucumber cream and sun-dried-tomato confit. The local rosé, from Kavála, was equally delicious.

Sani is also involved in important ecological preservati­on in the region, and the property offers regular walking tours of the adjacent Bousoulas Bird Sanctuary, an important wetlands area that it manages and maintains. Of the 447 bird species found in Greece, 220 have been spotted here, and of the 14 known purple heron couples in Greece, seven nest in

Bousoulas. The wetlands are a leisurely mile or so walk from the resort, through a peaceful, sandy pine forest crisscross­ed by endearing and surprising­ly busy tortoises (the Testudo graeca was an ancient Greek symbol of fertility). I encountere­d five in the space of an hour.

ON MY LAST morning in Thessaloní­ki, just after breakfast, I visited the Rotunda. Built by the Roman emperor Galerius in AD 306, the circular building’s reddish brick exterior appears stolid and impervious: its walls are, indeed, over six metres thick. But inside, it is jaw-droppingly beautiful. Modelled upon Rome’s Pantheon, and only slightly smaller, it became a church in the late fourth century and

remained a place of Christian worship for 12 centuries, until the Ottomans claimed it as a mosque in 1590. In 1912, when the city became part of Greece, the

Rotunda was once again made into a Christian church; five years later it was designated as a state monument.

The glittering mosaics in its dome, painstakin­gly restored over 40 years, are now on full display. Beautifull­y preserved representa­tions of birds and fruit gleam in small recesses. At 9 am on a Friday in late May, I was the only visitor in this enormous, unfurnishe­d, sacred space. I can still exactly recall the tawny stone, the intricate ornamentat­ion, the play of sunlight, the pristine silence, the pressing awareness that for almost 2,000 years people have prayed in this place. And I can still feel the cool air around me, alive with all the city’s histories.

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 ??  ?? Ocean breezes at Daios Luxury Living, a boutique hotel in Thessaloní­ki.
Ocean breezes at Daios Luxury Living, a boutique hotel in Thessaloní­ki.
 ??  ?? The central dome of Thessaloní­ki’s Rotunda.
The central dome of Thessaloní­ki’s Rotunda.
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 ??  ?? From far left: An evening stroll along the waterfront, as seen from the restaurant at Daios Luxury Living hotel; quality time with a book at Halkidiki’s Sani Resort.
From far left: An evening stroll along the waterfront, as seen from the restaurant at Daios Luxury Living hotel; quality time with a book at Halkidiki’s Sani Resort.
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 ??  ?? Stylish residents on Aristotelo­us Square—the place to be in Thessaloní­ki, especially once the sun goes down. Left: A monument to Alexander the Great on the city’s waterfront.
Stylish residents on Aristotelo­us Square—the place to be in Thessaloní­ki, especially once the sun goes down. Left: A monument to Alexander the Great on the city’s waterfront.
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AEGEAN SEA
Mount Athos
Thessaloní­ki AEGEAN SEA Mount Athos
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Athens
Greece Athens
 ??  ?? One of the coves at Sani Resort, home to some of the finest beaches in all of Greece.
Left: The 15th-century White Tower is the city’s most iconic monument.
One of the coves at Sani Resort, home to some of the finest beaches in all of Greece. Left: The 15th-century White Tower is the city’s most iconic monument.

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