Chicago Sun-Times

Greek teacher, radio host

- BY MAUREEN O’DONNELL Staff Reporter Email: modonnell@suntimes.com Twitter: @suntimesob­its

When German invaders rolled into the tiny Greek village of Nestani during World War II, teen- aged Tom Chiampas was among themen and boys who used an ingenious, ancient maneuver to outsmart the Nazis.

“The Germans rode into the town, andmy father and all themen and young boys went running up into the hills and the mountains so they weren’t caught or shot. They would release the goats, and follow them, because the goats knew the paths that would take them up into the hills,” said his son, Dr. George Chiampas. “I remember hearing stories of him hiding behind a rock, and there were bullets flying.”

After immigratin­g to the United States, Mr. Chiampas taught the Greek language to thousands of students. He used his beautiful voice to sing Byzantine hymns as a cantor in many Chicago- area Greek Orthodox churches. He hosted weekend Hellenic American Radio Hour shows with Katina, his wife of 55 years, most recently on WSBCAM.

Before his Oct. 5 death from leukemia, the 90- year- old Mr. Chiampas had spent a lifetime encouragin­g his three children — and his students — to feel pride in their heritage. He told them about all the Chicago lawyers, teachers, bankers, engineers, restaurate­urs and business and tech leaders with ancestral ties to Nestani, which is also where former Chicago Blackhawk Chris Chelios traces his roots.

“We always heard about Greece being the cradle of civilizati­on and democracy,” said his daughter, Cook County Associate Judge Peggy Chiampas. “He told us when we went out in the world it was our responsibi­lity to represent that.”

Mr. Chiampas embraced his new country and city, too. In Ald. Anthony C. Laurino’s 39th Ward, “He did a lot of passing out of pamphlets on Election Day, and a lot of walking and knocking on doors with candidates,” said another daughter, Ourania “Rani” Prokos. He worked for the city Department of Human Services and the Chicago Transit Authority, his children said.

He enjoyed “The Andy Griffith Show” and had a special fondness for the musical “Oklahoma!’’ Said Rani Prakos: “I remember him as a kid loving ‘ O, What a Beautiful Morning.’ When ‘ Oklahoma!’ played [ on TV], he loved that.”

“I don’t remember a day in my entire life where my dad was not working not one but at least two jobs,” Peggy Chiampas said in a eulogy for her father. “He was either chanting at church, teaching at Greek school or working on the radio program. He even found time to attend night classes at Northeaste­rn University and received his master of arts in 1973.”

Mr. Chiampas taught Greek at Truman College and in the Chicago area at Holy Taxiarhai & Saint Haralambos, St. George, St. Nicholas and St. Basil. He served as a cantor at St. Demetrios in Elmhurst, St. John the Baptist in Des Plaines and St. Sophia in Elgin.

He grew up one of six children in Nestani, a mountainou­s village about 10 miles from Tripoli. His father, a farmer, died when he was 2 years old, his children said. His boyhood nickname was Avgoulas, from the Greek word avgo, or egg. “He would literally collect eggs and take them 20 kilometers away to sell eggs to try and make money,” his son said.

He learned intricate chants from a Byzantine cantor in Nestani. “He was born in the house adjacent to the altar of the church,” said his son.

Mr. Chiampas earned a teaching degree and worked five years for a Greek police agency before immigratin­g in 1955 to San Francisco. During a visit to Chicago, he was introduced to Katina Stratigou, a native of Gargaliani on Greece’s Ionian Coast, a region he loved. They married in 1961 at St. Andrew Greek Orthodox Church at 5649 N. Sheridan Rd.

They raised their children in Albany Park and Jefferson Park. He told them the value of a Greek diet, heavy on fish and dandelion greens dressed with lemon and olive oil.

Above all, he stressed education. “In my family, you had three choices — the law, medicine or education, and my mom and dad ticked off all three boxes with us,” said Peggy Chiampas. Rani Prakos is a middle- school teacher in Park Ridge. Dr. Chiampas is an emergency room doctor and medical director of the Chicago Marathon, chief medical officer for U. S. Soccer and a Chicago Blackhawks physician.

As a college student attending Panteion University in Athens, Mr. Chiampas didn’t have enough money for board. “He would sleep in the basement of an office building along with other men from his village,” Peggy Chiampas said. “When my brother graduated, my dad was in the front at Rockefelle­r Chapel so he could be the first one to shake his hand. And he was so proud of my sisterwhen she got her master’s in education.”

He was “papou” to five grandchild­ren. Services have been held.

After Mr. Chiampas’ leukemia diagnosis, his daughter realized he’d never seen her on the bench. Judge Chiampas arranged for him and her mother to visit her courtroom at 26th and California. As attendees were told, “‘ All rise,’ he tried to get out of his wheelchair. I couldn’t look at him. I was bawling,” the judge said. “My mom and the sheriffs were telling him, ‘ You don’t have to stand, Mr. Chiampas.’ But my dad, being my father, pushed them away. He stood.”

 ?? | SUPPLIED PHOTOS ?? Athanasios “Tom” Chiampas was a Greek teacher and radio host in Chicago.
| SUPPLIED PHOTOS Athanasios “Tom” Chiampas was a Greek teacher and radio host in Chicago.
 ??  ?? TomChiampa­s and his wife, Katina
TomChiampa­s and his wife, Katina

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