Showing posts with label Greek flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek flowers. Show all posts

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Negotiation, Taxation, Crisis, and Grimbo; Holidays, Flowers, and Hope



Nothing is Certain Except Death and Taxes


Our dressers and beds have been buried under piles of summer and winter clothes lately. Greek closets are divided vertically, so one must shift all the winter and summer clothes up and down as seasons change, and—for kids’ clothes—check what fits and what doesn’t. Meanwhile, laundry never ends, with much of it hung out to dry since many clothes sold here are not designed to go in dryers, and many families don’t have them. Wall to wall carpeting is a rarity, possibly because of all the blowing dust. So Greeks use large area rugs in the winter and then wash, air dry, roll up, bag, and store them in the summer. Lots of fun, generally for women. Of course, as an Albanian woman correctly pointed out to me, such endless housekeeping projects are proofs of prosperity. Many of her relatives have just two outfits, one to wear and one to wash, with so little electricity in many villages that they have no washing machines, no refrigerators, no irons, and hence less housework. Their challenge is to find enough clothes, shoes, and food for their children.

Since I have been spared that challenge, I feel obligated to read the news. Most of us here in Greece are sick of hearing it, especially since so many articles sound nearly the same. (If you don’t want to hear another word about it, go ahead and skip to the next section; if you don’t live here, you don’t need to know what I do.) Here is a one-paragraph summary of the news about Greece over the past several months: the Greek finance minister and Prime Minister are optimistic that Greece and its creditors will agree on reforms leading to a final disbursement of bailout funding soon; the friendlier elements in the EU say everyone is working hard to reach a good solution; the German finance minister and those who agree with him assert that the Greeks must agree to more reforms and cooperate more and faster; sympathetic commentators in the U. S. and elsewhere point out the mistakes of the IMF, European leaders, and bankers and say Greece needs leeway to reduce its humanitarian crisis and enable its economy to grow; Greeks blame creditors for unreasonable demands, the lenders blame the Greeks for failing to reach an agreement, different members of Greece’s governing coalition make incompatible claims, and the IMF and the EU seek different changes from Greece; Greece is struggling to pay its next debt installment as well as public sector salaries and pensions; without another loan disbursement, the government will run out of money in one or two weeks or months; Greeks who still have savings remove more money from their bank accounts; Greece will or will not default on its debt and will or will not remain in the Eurozone. Nothing is certain except death and taxes, but ordinary people go about their business as well as they can, feeling powerless to determine the course of their country’s future.

As Pantelis Boukalas wrote, Greeks find it irrational “that they are being forced to continue, with little change, a course of treatment that has already been proved to be responsible for sky-high unemployment, frozen growth, the cancer of business closures and a rise in suicides, acknowledged by international organizations” (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly). A disturbing New York Times article describes the tragic circumstances facing many Greeks. For example, at the nation’s largest (125,000 student) public university, three quarters of the budget has been slashed since the crisis started. In Athens suburbs, the wealthy are paying the police for protection. And at least one surgeon worked 20-hour days for a month until his exhaustion endangered his patients. His hospital’s director, Theodoros Giannaros, works similarly long hours for 1,200 euros a month rather than the 7,400 he used to receive, with a hospital budget cut from 20 million euros to only 6 million and 200 doctors treating twice as many patients as 250 did in the past. Greek public hospitals got just 43 million euros from the government in the first four months of 2015, as opposed to 650 million during the same period a year ago. The cheap surgical gloves used at one hospital sometimes break during surgery. “Greece has been forced by its creditors to cut spending by €28 billion — quite a sum in a €179 billion economy,” equivalent to $2.6 trillion in the U. S. economy. As Mr. Giannaros says, “Maybe the crisis makes us better people — but these better people will die if the crisis continues”—like his son, who committed suicide recently (With Money Drying Up, Greece Is All but Bankrupt). Enough is enough. This austerity is literally killing people. I do not want to hear any more talk about the “sacrifices” of the Greek people; human sacrifice belongs to ancient times, not the present. 

I am often reminded that Greeks are so right to emphasize the importance of good health in their daily lives and their most common greetings: they say “ya,” or “γεια,” which also means “health,” for hello, hi, goodbye, and bless you (after a sneeze). They tend to say “may you be well” instead of “you’re welcome” in response to thanks, they constantly ask if you’re well, and they often end discussions of how things are with “let us have [good] health,” clearly emphasizing that that’s what’s most important. When I talk with a neighbor whose struggle with her aging husband’s emphysema-related infirmity and complete dependence on her ended recently in his death, or with an elderly woman who doesn’t know whether her legs will support her when she needs to stand up and walk to the bathroom, or if she’ll fall down, and when I read of thousands killed in Nepal earthquakes and “Five billion people [who] 'have no access to safe surgery,'” I see how much the Greek emphasis on health makes sense. Of course, since the current economic crisis has reduced many Greeks’ access to adequate healthcare and medicine, the importance of good health becomes even clearer: let us be well, να είμαστε καλά, because if we’re not, we may be in serious trouble here.

In “Suffering Being a Greek Taxpayer,” Thanos Tsiros provides downright shocking statistics about the high taxes and social insurance contributions required of Greeks, starting with the highest contribution among OECD countries for a worker of modest income (earning 1,440 euros gross per month) with two children, who is taxed at a rate of 43.4%, and leading up to the taxes on gasoline (62.66%) and cigarettes (up to 90%). (The article is in Greek; use Google translate if you like.) With businesses facing a sales tax (called VAT here) of 23% on their products, plus an income tax of 26%, they end up losing about half of their “income” to taxes. The OECD calculates that a worker with two children who smokes, drives, and is supposedly earning 40,000 euros per year actually returns 61% of that to the government, once we add in taxes on property, car, gasoline, and cigarettes, on top of the general sales tax. These taxes, some of the highest in the world according to experts’ studies, provide tremendous incentive for both extensive smuggling and the world-famous tax evasion in Greece—which is actually not that high, comparatively speaking, as I wrote last month. Yet Greece’s creditors want the Greek government to raise taxes even more! Are they really looking at the numbers they claim to want to see? For most of us here, both statistics and true stories about human beings continue to confirm that Greeks need more relief and hope rather than more or higher taxes. 

On April 9, also known as Holy Thursday, I was astonished by two things: a brief, very rare hailstorm here in Crete, and a report that “the IMF has made €2.5 billion of profit out of its loans to Greece since 2010. If Greece does repay the IMF in full this will rise to €4.3 billion by 2024” (IMF has made €2.5 billion profit out of Greece loans)! Was that the goal? To impose misery on Greek people in order to build up International Monetary Fund cash reserves? I’d never thought of the IMF as a for-profit organization. The other week, Greece used IMF money to pay the IMF, and the government has been trying for months to get the last installment of the bailout funds so it can pay back a few more installments of a debt worth about 180% of its GDP. This is ridiculous. Greece needs debt forgiveness, since its debt is way beyond sustainable.

So far, life in Crete, a relatively prosperous island far from Athens, has continued  almost as usual for those of us who still have adequate income—but not for the new beggars outside the supermarkets, those who have closed their businesses or lost their jobs, or the refugees waiting here in limbo. However, life may change for all of us, since the Greek government seems more likely to run out of money, default on its debts, and leave the Eurozone than it ever has before. We really don’t know, though. Last month, an economist who doesn’t have to live through whatever may happen in Greece came up with another catchy little term: Grimbo. That’s what we seem to be in, since the Grexit forecast in 2012 and the Grexident or Graccident discussed in recent months still haven’t materialized (Grexit is so 2012. Citigroup introduces 'Grimbo' to crisis lexicon). I am not amused.

Most Greeks are not amused, either. A gynecologist says the government is making a mess of the healthcare and education systems, for example by forbidding gynecologists to prescribe breast ultrasounds and mammograms under the national insurance plan, although they are expected to examine the results. She’d like to leave Greece for the sake of her teenage children, but her husband is too attached to his land to go. A gas station attendant suggests that it might have been worth Greece leaving the euro in 2010, but now it would do no good, and no one in Greece wants to do it, so (he says) it won’t happen. He argues that we’re much better off in Crete, where jobs as farm laborers are available for those who really want them, than people are in Athens, where there just aren’t enough jobs. A widowed grandmother believes the current government doesn’t know enough about what needs to be done, so its leaders say one thing but do something else. She is exasperated by the latest public transport strikes. We had a few months’ break from strikes after this coalition government was elected, but now the strikes are back.

They’re back partly because the government’s popularity has finally begun to decrease after months of unsuccessful negotiations with the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the IMF, formerly known as the troika, then the institutions, creditors, or (with the addition of the European Stability Mechanism) the Brussels Group. The government’s falling popularity was apparent in the ferry workers’ and railway workers’ strike on the major travel date of Labor Day (the first of May here) and in mayors’ angry reactions to the federal government’s demands that local cash reserves be transferred to the central bank to pay salaries, pensions, and debts. It was clear in the elementary school teachers’ union’s anger that the government did not consult it about educational reforms, and of course it was evident in polls.
In February, 72% of those surveyed approved of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and finance minister Yanis Varoufakis’s negotiating strategy; in late April, only 45.5% approved, and that had decreased to 35% by mid May, according to one source (Labor minister sees deal within coming days). However, a different “poll conducted in May by Public Issue for the pro-government newspaper Avgi, shows 54 percent backing the SYRIZA-led government's handling of the negotiations” (Greeks back government's red lines, but want to keep euro), and far more would vote for SYRIZA than for the conservative centrist New Democracy, the second most popular political party. Since a majority of Greeks still wants to remain in the Eurozone, even if that means compromising with lenders and continuing or even adding to the austerity measures and high taxation SYRIZA had vowed to end, what will happen here is uncertain—aside from death and taxes, both of which are constantly on the minds of my generation as we lose our income, our parents, and the grandparents in our neighborhoods.

Holidays and Hopes, Flowers and Fruits, a Local Shepherd, and Everyday Heroes 


Most Greeks do still celebrate holidays, however. So we enjoyed a traditional Easter feast with friends on a lovely sunny day after a very cold, windy Holy Week kept some away from church services they would generally attend. Once again this Easter, I was struck by the way this holiday is like an American Christmas in several ways: in terms of its importance, the two-week vacation, the ever-present holiday wishes, and—even now--the commercialism. Here, there is more fasting (although it varies from nothing to everything) and more emphasis on the religious reason for the holiday. For example, after Easter, outside a café in Chania I saw a chalk board with a beer company’s logo displaying the typical Easter and post-Easter greeting among friends and family: ΧΡΙΣΤΌΣ ΑΝΈΣΤΗ, or CHRIST IS RISEN! (That was followed by ΧΡΟΝΙΑ ΠΟΛΛΑ ΜΕ ΥΓΕΙΑ, or MANY YEARS WITH HEALTH—also very typical wishes at any Greek holiday.)

However, there is also so much shopping for so many gifts, just like an American Christmas: Easter cookies and breads, wine, chocolate eggs or bunnies, clothes and shoes for children. Godparents always give kids outrageously expensive Easter candles called lambadas, which they light at church. These lambadas are either lavishly decorated with ribbons or attached to additional gifts, such as watches, bracelets, little dolls, small musical instruments, or even—in an elaborate set of boxes—Hotwheels cars and toys! I liked our local soup kitchen’s idea of selling some beribboned candles for 8 euros to raise money for food for the hungry, but the elaborate attachments and far more excessive prices of the candles sold in stores do not appeal to me. Since they are not part of a tradition I grew up with, they just appear wasteful in my eyes--unlike household Christmas decorations. I know such an unfair judgment involves acculturation vs. prejudice against what I’m not used to. Better to condemn the wastefulness of Christmas decorations, too—as I did when I heard about the millions of dollars spent on them by New York companies—but I’m too attached to my own old, modest ones, which represent a strong link to the childhood, family, and first home about which I’m very nostalgic. As Tevye sang in Fiddler on the Roof, “Tradition, tradition! Tradition!”

Looking over photos of our Greek Easter gathering, including some of gorgeous eggs dyed with onion skins alongside the traditional red eggs, I found dozens of pictures of my son playing with the snails we found in the three heads of lettuce a neighbor gave us from her garden after I took her a few outgrown clothes for her sons (in yet another instance of the exchange economy we live in today and/or the generosity of Greeks). We had almost enough for a snail meal to go with our salad, but my son was more interested in playing with and feeding the snails than in eating them. He built them a wall of lettuce, but that was too easy for them to scale, so he had to take them outside--especially after I discovered that one had escaped to the top of the pepper shaker above the microwave.

Redbuds and daisies were flourishing at Easter. By the end of April, the former had lost their blossoms, and the latter were starting to fade in the increasingly hot sun that better suits the tall grasses and lavender thistles that now predominate outside the sweet-smelling gardens of roses, honeysuckle, geraniums, and jasmine. Several weeks ago, the olive trees were blooming, their little clusters of tiny yellow-white flowers dropping pollen on me. Crepe-paper like pink Cretan rock rose (or cistus) blossoms too delicate to pick thrived on their hardy bushes all over the wild hills. When I walked to my mailbox to pick up mail, I smelled the chamomile I crushed underfoot. Clumps of daisies created wild gardens like carefully planted hedges in empty lots and by the roadsides. Twice, a neighbor invited me to climb her ladder and pick her loquats, and the first time I took almost as many photos as loquats. Interesting view up there, closer to the sky, next to a bee on a citrus flower, with loquat and citrus tree branches intermingling.

May Day is a real holiday here: no school, stores closed, workers’ marches. I celebrated in a traditional Greek way by gathering heaps of flowers and making May wreaths and bouquets. If we determined its date botanically, May Day would have to come to Crete in March or April, because by May 1 many of the wild orchids and all the anemones had long since disappeared, the crown daisies were beginning to dry up, and the field gladiolas were becoming rarer in the hot sun. The shrub verbena that grows wild in empty lots here was beginning to flourish, but its tiny clusters of multi-colored blossoms drop off the stems very easily. So I had to turn to the huge geranium bushes outside untenanted yards, take a few roses from homes used only in August, and beg a few fragrant blossoms from trees and gardens (including some lilacs, which I rarely see here). That provided plenty for a wreath for our family, plus one for our disabled, housebound elderly neighbor and his devoted wife, who spent nearly every minute caring for him. I am so glad I took the spring flowers into their house twice a week this year, since it turned out to be the last spring he would live through, and a smile lit up his face when he saw the flowers. 

I had no clue how to make a May wreath when I first tried years ago, but now I take pride in managing with all-natural ingredients, including long-stemmed wild carrots and other flowers with flexible stems, plus a few honeysuckle vines, wrapped around and around and tucked in for the base of the wreath. I know I need enough of the bright flowers that last a while if I want a wreath worth looking at for more than an hour. (Since my amateur floristry won’t last much longer than that, I take a lot of photos as soon as I’m done.) I spent many hours with flowers on May Day, with my kids and my mother in law helping part of the time. I was quite tired afterwards, especially once I’d also climbed a ladder and wall to remove the last loquats from my neighbor’s tree, but I was also proud of the floral creation I now feel compelled to produce yearly. That is one labor-intensive Greek custom I don’t mind adopting.

Walking along a dirt road between olive groves and uncultivated areas, a friend and I spoke with an older shepherd who seems to know the name and use of all the wild plants. He told us about one that can cause severe diarrhea when brewed as a tea (useful for pranks among young men when mixed with wine, he said), others that can be dried and used as seasonings (both thyme and a related herb called throombi here), more with different medicinal qualities he couldn’t quite remember, several plants whose roots or stems are edible, the spiny acanthus that lasts nicely in a dried bouquet but poked us when we tried to cut and carry it, and a scary looking thorny plant he broke off to show how its sap looked like blood on the skin. (According to local tradition, that one was used for Jesus Christ’s crown of thorns.) The shepherd also told us that the area where we were walking used to be the village of Tholaria, before pirates came and killed all the villagers. The shepherd told us about caves where the villagers kept their goats, and we realized that we’ve seen remnants of the village reservoirs in olive groves where we search for wildflowers. He said there are also grinding stones where the villagers crushed olives to make a cup or two of oil. My friend and I think the shepherd could survive on the land with his sheep and goats, if necessary, given the extent of his knowledge. With or without the euro, he’ll make it.

There is still hope for Greece. It comes from both supposedly ordinary people like the shepherd and from some better-known, extraordinarily talented people. Greeks can be proud of the talented athletes who almost won the European basketball championship, as well as artists such as director Yorgos Lanthimos, whose movie The Lobster won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival this month, and the famous filmmaker Costa-Gavras, who was also honored in Cannes after winning major prizes there in the past. The world should be equally impressed by the “regular” people who are behaving like heroes in the face of potential disaster, such as the neighbor who cared so well for her husband through a long and difficult illness, the Greeks who rescued migrants after their boat fell apart on the rocky coast of Rhodes on April 20 (Migrant boat crisis: the story of the Greek hero on the beach), and the doctors who work unpaid overtime, trying to restore health and save lives.

On April 21, Dr. Dimitris Makreas spoke with 150 or 200 members of the small community where he works in the government-sponsored free clinic. What began as a talk about healthcare soon turned into an outpouring of gratitude and respect for this doctor, who was brutally beaten by people believed to be racist thugs in March, after he was seen standing next to a migrant who had been harassed. Audience members spoke of Dr. Makreas frequently working hours of unpaid overtime in order to accommodate all the patients who needed care. One older woman said his mother should be proud; another called him the best of men. It is nearly incomprehensible that anyone would want to attack this good doctor, unless the attack was prompted by professional jealousy or feelings of inadequacy in the face of so much goodness. During Greece’s current political and economic crisis, after that cruel attack, the community formed an oasis of love as audience members expressed their support, reminding one woman of old times in Greece when ties of gratitude and respect were more important than monetary payment for professional services. Ready to put the attack behind him, Dr. Makreas enjoys a wealth of devotion. I see more hope for Greece in the “ordinary,” caring human beings who reach out to people in their community, wherever they may come from, than in the national and international political and economic negotiations that appear to lack adequately skilled humanitarian diplomacy.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Anxiety Before--and During--the Greek Election: And Then What?


Spring into Summer:  Things Are Really Heating Up In Greece

It suddenly got hot in Greece last week, as schools closed a day early in preparation for the Greek national elections.  Before, it felt like spring--not the sociopolitical Greek Spring that some political party overoptimistically wished to invoke last month, with the most encouraging days of the Arab Spring in mind, but a more modest, pleasantly cool, botanical and meteorological spring with its delicate red anemones, small fuschia sword lilies, and abundant Cretan rock roses blooming among herbaceous shrubs under picturesquely puffy clouds.  These have given way to the hardier wild carrot (called Queen Anne's lace in my Pennsylvania days) and well watered gardens full of glowing bougainvillea, pink and white oleander that sways in our island winds, and the largest, hardiest rose and geranium bushes I've ever seen.  But what will this summer heat bring?  Will the current mess be followed by chaos?  The suspense and tension build as we await results of elections along with a surprisingly large portion of the world population.

Greek Political Parties, Slogans, Promises, and Fears, Old and New

SYRIZA, the Coalition of the Radical Left, has the political advantage as the party who can't be blamed for past corruption or mistakes.  It is now a full-fledged, highly visible  political party, although it had struggled along as a minor leftist coalition in previous years.  And it appears to have slogan writers skilled at taking advantage of that fact.  Last month's posters insisted, "They decided without us; we'll go ahead without them," referring to the entrenched political elite who'd gone along with the punishing austerity measures imposed along with the European bailout for Greece.  A few days ago, new posters appeared, proclaiming, "The memorandum past, we open a road to hope," referring to its rejection of the bailout agreement, at least as it now stands.  There's certainly an appealing logic to these slogans, given the extent of political and economic corruption and the failure of the two previously dominant political parties in Greece, the conservative New Democracy and the socialist PASOK.  One of the Communist parties (yes, there's more than one here) has ironically been reduced to a reactionary response on the posters that appeared recently:  "Don't believe SYRIZA!" 

Unfortunately, there may be some merit to that response:  SYRIZA suggests that Greeks can have everything--enough money from Europe, the euro as their currency, and their own terms rather than the dreadful austerity from which they've clearly been suffering intensely.  Most powerful Europeans seem to disagree, as they implied by refusing to meet with SYRIZA's young, inexperienced leader during an international tour after the May 6 election.  So it's quite possible that belief in SYRIZA's message--appealing as it is for hopeless, jobless, overtaxed, struggling, fed up citizens--may increase the danger that Greece will return to the drachma.  We faced that danger last fall, when the former prime minister, George Papandreou, threatened to hold a referendum to see if Greeks really wanted to keep the euro (and all the “austerity” that goes with it these days).  For a few days, until it became clear that Papandreou would resign and there would be no such referendum, many feared that Greece would lose its chance of European debt relief and be forced to deal with life with the drachma and no foreign aid.  I hear that a return to the drachma would also mean drastic inflation; vastly higher costs for imports; shortages of imported goods such as medicines, certain foods, oil, and gas; a vastly lower value for our money; the closing of many businesses; and probably more civil unrest.  We face the potential for the same problem now. 

Last fall, a bank teller was asked what to do with money in savings accounts, those in euros and those in dollars.  The bank teller answered, almost in tears, that she had no idea what would happen, or what to do with her own money, either. She said some people exchanged their euros for dollars, others did the opposite, and she’d take hers home and put it under her mattress if she wasn’t afraid of being robbed on the way!  Since then, of course, billions of euros have been removed from Greece.  That was one of several times in the last year or so that I started stocking up on nonperishable grocery items in fear of a return to the drachma and general economic, political, and social chaos that might include empty grocery store shelves since Greece might not continue receiving imports from exporters lacking confidence they'd be paid.  Even my children seem to be concerned about a currency change, as they feverishly try to empty their coin banks by turning them upside down.  Fortunately, though, they remain blissfully ignorant of the economic situation here.

Last November, I was already struck by one of many ironic developments in the confusion that’s called Greek politics: for some time, government leaders failed to agree on a new cabinet for what was supposed to be a “government of national unity.”  The problem?  Everyone was more worried about how appealing he or she'd look to voters during the next elections.  No one—the just-resigned prime minister included, I presume—really wanted to have anything to do with being in charge of approving and administering the latest miserable package of so-called “debt relief” from Europe, given the “austerity” measures of layoffs, benefit and salary reductions, and tax increases we keep seeing to “relieve” those of us living in what the German government seemed to consider immoral laziness and luxury in Greece.  No matter that there was, and is, no chance for economic growth here.  It seems that the politicians were correct in fearing for their jobs, since the new party, SYRIZA, is the one that has gained ground, while the centrist old guard's popularity has plunged, both on the left and on the right.  Interestingly, as of yesterday, my drive through part of Chania did not reveal one poster from PASOK, which appears to have no chance of winning this election, or even New Democracy, which does have a chance.  That may be partly due to the fact that some Communist students were printing thousands of flyers on university printers, with paper and ink meant to be used for academic purposes, the other day.  Or does it have something to do with New Democracy's anti-immigrant message?

I am neither a political scientist nor an economist, so I'll end today's political commentary with links to some articles that strike me as useful.  I do not appreciate the flippancy of whoever coined the term "Grexit" (mentioned in a New York Times article) to refer to the possible exit of Greece from the euro zone, with far more concern for international financial markets than for the people of Greece.  On the other hand, the most sensible brief article I've seen about what's at stake in today's election, and what led up to it, appeared on Friday in the online English edition of one of Greece's major dailies, the politically moderate Kathemerini, titled "Greece's creditors matter as much as its voters"--and, we might add, vice versa (http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_wsite3_1_15/06/2012_447265).  I also like Ross Douthat's discussion of SYRIZA in the New York Times, except that it doesn't acknowledge the party leader's lack of qualifications to lead a country, especially one in as much trouble as Greece, or SYRIZA's lack of a concrete, detailed solution ("Sympathy for the Radical Left" (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/17/opinion/sunday/douthat-sympathy-for-the-radical-left.html?hp).

 

School Celebration, and Stocking Up for Possible Emergencies or Shortages

On Friday, I spent more money at the supermarket than I ever had before.  And two nights before, I paid less attention to an elementary school performance than I ever had before.  It was like this:  all the elementary children, their teachers, and their parents in the schoolyard, most arriving late, on a hot evening in the sun.  There is no auditorium or gym at our school, although it's only about a decade old--so there were too many people for too few seats, and no stage.  For the last two years, we'd had a temporary wooden stage to raise the children high enough to be seen, but for some reason (perhaps related to a new principal) that was missing this year.  So once the performance began, anyone who wanted to watch the children dance, sing, or recite information about the different regions and cities of Greece needed to stand up.  The center aisle was full of standing parents, further obscuring the view of the children (and no one noticed that the sun was sinking into the Mediterranean, spectacular view that we had, since we see that every day).  Probably at least half of the parents were conversing, which is typical of Greek school functions, award ceremonies, weddings, and baptisms--so typical that I doubt anyone considers it rude.  I valiantly strove to watch and listen, walking over to the far side of the crowd for a vantage point and dutifully recording my daughter's part in the evening (proud that she said her piece better than the boy next to her with two native Greeks for parents, though of course I wouldn't say so to them and told her it didn't matter if he messed up a bit). 

I watched a while longer, but then, an hour or so into it, I gave up, sat down, and whispered with a bilingual Greek friend.  She drew from her purse  some lists of emergency supplies which she'd collected from both American and Greek sites in preparation for the uncertain times ahead of us here in Greece--the possibility of extreme inflation, shortages, and power outages:  matches, canned foods, gas burners, batteries, pastas, beans, olives, etc.  We compared lists, since I was certainly at least as paranoid (or eager to be prepared:  time will tell), and I made some adjustments to mine.  We discussed the accuracy of the NPR report about Greece's major electric company running out of money due to unpaid bills, so that it couldn't buy enough natural gas to get the country through the summer without extensive blackouts.  Apparently the company denies it, but considering all the blackouts we've endured in previous years, I expect that we'll have more this year.  The New York Times writes that Greeks dread the future.  Yep, me too.

 

Greek Generosity, Beauty, and Uncertainty

I feel a weight of sadness and worry.  But, whatever happens, I don't think there's any danger that people as fortunate as us will go hungry:  we have many friends here, and Crete is an island full of not only natural beauty, but good produce, and great hospitality and generosity.  We still haven't finished the bags of apricots and potatoes that neighbors gave us.  Even if the government runs out of money and can't pay public workers, including university professors such as D, we will have plenty to eat.  And we can share our beans and pasta with those who have fresh produce.  The jovial party after the school performance made it clear that Greeks will continue to be generous:  parents had brought plenty of juice, soft drinks, raki, cheese pies, cakes, cookies, popcorn, and potato chips to satisfy the crowd that surged toward the refreshment tables even before all the treats could be brought to them.  There are other concrete reasons for hope, too:  the pharmacists are accepting public health insurance again--starting Thursday night, just in time for me to refill my prescriptions for allergy medicines without (again) paying cash.  In spite of problems, the beaches are often clean and lovely, with gorgeous clear waters, and they are free.  The Greek national soccer team even beat Russia to qualify for the Euro 2012 quarterfinals, adding a much-needed positive note to the national consciousness.

D has been in Athens this weekend for another celebration, a baptism--a function as big, expensive, and important as a wedding, and as much a time for reunion--and to vote.  (So far, weddings and baptisms, school celebrations and exams, continue.)  Like many Greeks, D chose not to move his voter registration out of his hometown (or village, in many cases); this makes voting day a time of reunion for so many of the Greeks who deeply value ties to family, old friends, and former homes.  This afternoon, all remained relatively calm.  But people ask, what will you do this summer?  We reply that we don't know yet.  We'll have some preliminary election results shortly, but neither they nor the final outcome of this election will immediately clarify Greece's future.