The Japan Times - 'Happy people': folk festivals punctuate Greek summer life

EUR -
AED 4.315152
AFN 77.708509
ALL 96.852138
AMD 448.491142
ANG 2.103707
AOA 1077.46608
ARS 1692.867744
AUD 1.766731
AWG 2.114983
AZN 1.996065
BAM 1.958827
BBD 2.365606
BDT 143.531799
BGN 1.957646
BHD 0.442923
BIF 3471.553207
BMD 1.174991
BND 1.516883
BOB 8.115541
BRL 6.345419
BSD 1.17454
BTN 106.215586
BWP 15.56238
BYN 3.462451
BYR 23029.817846
BZD 2.36217
CAD 1.617428
CDF 2631.978985
CHF 0.93526
CLF 0.027299
CLP 1070.885484
CNY 8.288974
CNH 8.27372
COP 4466.84467
CRC 587.522896
CUC 1.174991
CUP 31.137254
CVE 110.435656
CZK 24.285177
DJF 209.15766
DKK 7.470444
DOP 74.667289
DZD 152.34334
EGP 55.789738
ERN 17.624861
ETB 183.52108
FJD 2.648192
FKP 0.879185
GBP 0.877671
GEL 3.168367
GGP 0.879185
GHS 13.482835
GIP 0.879185
GMD 85.774311
GNF 10213.261358
GTQ 8.995863
GYD 245.719709
HKD 9.144171
HNL 30.922442
HRK 7.532747
HTG 153.951832
HUF 385.151393
IDR 19592.088787
ILS 3.766621
IMP 0.879185
INR 106.613135
IQD 1538.577555
IRR 49493.544354
ISK 148.41283
JEP 0.879185
JMD 188.054601
JOD 0.833059
JPY 182.086549
KES 151.515079
KGS 102.752804
KHR 4702.386633
KMF 492.911492
KPW 1057.491268
KRW 1720.480396
KWD 0.36051
KYD 0.978813
KZT 612.546565
LAK 25462.346819
LBP 105176.728999
LKR 362.920819
LRD 207.301224
LSL 19.815521
LTL 3.469442
LVL 0.710741
LYD 6.379995
MAD 10.805297
MDL 19.854766
MGA 5203.151106
MKD 61.58937
MMK 2466.617904
MNT 4166.358748
MOP 9.418054
MRU 47.004836
MUR 53.990968
MVR 18.088629
MWK 2036.690621
MXN 21.126092
MYR 4.808648
MZN 75.093803
NAD 19.815521
NGN 1705.53442
NIO 43.227904
NOK 11.911281
NPR 169.94896
NZD 2.027652
OMR 0.451782
PAB 1.174515
PEN 3.954311
PGK 5.062068
PHP 69.231624
PKR 329.162758
PLN 4.221642
PYG 7889.359242
QAR 4.280496
RON 5.094291
RSD 117.388641
RUB 92.967943
RWF 1709.478019
SAR 4.40866
SBD 9.607607
SCR 17.223335
SDG 706.756952
SEK 10.910905
SGD 1.51451
SHP 0.881547
SLE 28.346692
SLL 24638.971924
SOS 670.04968
SRD 45.293589
STD 24319.935326
STN 24.534259
SVC 10.276881
SYP 12991.498391
SZL 19.808863
THB 36.931722
TJS 10.793679
TMT 4.124217
TND 3.433491
TOP 2.829096
TRY 50.173396
TTD 7.970316
TWD 36.798371
TZS 2916.912694
UAH 49.627044
UGX 4174.450755
USD 1.174991
UYU 46.090635
UZS 14149.865707
VES 314.239221
VND 30925.755393
VUV 142.323844
WST 3.261166
XAF 656.986216
XAG 0.018396
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.175471
XCG 2.116771
XDR 0.81708
XOF 656.986216
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.241445
ZAR 19.712468
ZMK 10576.317779
ZMW 27.102111
ZWL 378.346528
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.3

    -0.56%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    23.71

    +1.31%

  • BTI

    -1.2700

    57.1

    -2.22%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    74.93

    +0.32%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.7

    -0.15%

  • RIO

    -1.0800

    75.66

    -1.43%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.81

    -0.14%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    76.51

    +0.33%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    35.26

    -0.77%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    89.83

    -0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    14.6

    -1.71%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.25

    -0.65%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    40.38

    +0.25%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.59

    +0.4%

'Happy people': folk festivals punctuate Greek summer life
'Happy people': folk festivals punctuate Greek summer life / Photo: Aris MESSINIS - AFP

'Happy people': folk festivals punctuate Greek summer life

It's midnight in the Aegean Sea but on the Greek island of Ikaria, in the courtyard of the church of St Elijah, the revelry was barely getting started.

Text size:

Dozens of dancers and scores of onlookers, including many tourists, were attending the local "panigiri", a folk celebration that is an integral part of centuries-old summer traditions in villages across Greece.

Anyone can lock arms under the strumming of lutes and join the circle for the "Ikariotikos", a dance whose origins are believed to date to the 15th century.

"People of all ages dance together in a circle, and the energy that emerges is fabulous," said Katerina Gerner, a German yoga instructor who spends half the year on the eastern Aegean island of around 9,000 residents.

Some of the dancers were elderly men who are among Ikaria's notoriously long-lived residents.

"It's like entering a trance through music, dance, in the circle, people are happy," she said.

"There are large tables... we drink, we dance, it's a very friendly and cheerful atmosphere where everyone talks to each other," said Martine Bultot, a former doctor from France who has visited Ikaria for 35 years.

Most Greek summer festivals are held on August 15, an important religious holiday marking the Dormition of Virgin Mary.

In Ikaria, however, they go on to mid-September.

Each panigiri is associated with the feast day of a local patron saint, such as the Prophet Elijah on July 20 and Saint John on August 28.

Panagiota Andrianopoulou, an ethnologist at the Museum of Modern Greek Culture in Athens said the celebrations have existed "since the early years of Greek independence" in the early 19th century.

"We tend to associate them with entertainment, but in fact these celebrations had an economic, social, and symbolic function," said the researcher who has studied these festivities in northern Greece.

- Local values -

"It is the moment when local values are consolidated, such as hospitality, openness, and acceptance of the other," she told AFP.

And summer, the height of the harvest, was conducive to trade exchanges, she noted.

"Animals, fabrics were bought, dairy products and dried fruits were exchanged, for example," Andrianopoulou said.

Ikaria, which has a strong left-wing tradition and votes Communist, was one of the first islands to open up its folk festivals to outsiders.

"It is important for the community of a village to come together as one," said Kostas Politis, one of the organisers who helped prepare the food sold during the evening.

Goat, mutton and pork are usually on the main course, accompanied by resinated retsina wine.

Not without mishaps, some people have been hospitalised with food poisoning.

In the Peloponnese village of Ilia last year, nearly 40 people fell ill after eating boiled mutton. Another 30 were briefly hospitalised in Arta, northwestern Greece.

- Instagram guests -

The festivals have become so popular in recent years that some residents have begun to worry about the growing tourist turnout.

Some are upset about these panigiri becoming "Instagrammable", with people mainly showing up to take photos and videos for social network postings.

"In the past, these celebrations lasted three days, from Friday to Sunday," said Theodoris Georgiou, a retired engineer from Piraeus who spends his summers in Ikaria.

"Today it's a bit more commercial. It's linked to the development of tourism," he added.

The all-night duration of the panigiri is a more recent phenomenon, going back 40 years or so.

A young Greco-Belgian woman who did not give her name argued that tourism has irrevocably changed the nature of the celebration.

"I will never return to Ikaria; nothing is more respected in these traditions that tourists appropriate and destroy," she said, criticising the "post-colonial" attitude of visitors.

Vagelis Melos, who came to the celebration with his two sons, was more philosophical.

"When people change, the panigiria change," he said with a smile.

S.Yamada--JT