kalabaka - meteora
29 May 2002


16th Century
monasteries perched atop the towering peaks of Meteora.
Kalabaka, known in Byzantine times as Stagi,
is a small town which is the starting point for a visit to Meteora. The
Meteora is a group of precipitous towering rocks in the center of the plain of
Thessaly. This unique geological phenomenon was created by a series of
upheavals in the earth’s crust millions of years ago. The untrodden rocky
peaks of the Meteora, totally isolated from the rest of the world, were a
refuge for hermits from as early as the 11th Century. The Skete of Stagi
called Our Lady of Doupiani, formed by the independent ascetics, built the
first Byzantine monasteries of the Eastern Orthodox Church of Meteora in
the 14th Century. Before long, the Meteora had developed into a major
center for monasticism, second only to Mt. Athos itself. Six monasteries are
still in use today. In olden days one reached the inaccessible peaks in a basket
drawn up by the monks operating a windlass. Today a good road leads to the
monasteries with their wonderful wall paintings, exquisite icons of the
Cretan school of icon painting, and religious artistic treasures. During
winters these establishments are cut off from the rest of the world,
enveloped in mist, wind, and snow.
The difference between the Eastern
Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church is a fine line based more on
liturgy and administrative structure rather than anything else. The Orthodox Church, rejecting the
Roman Catholic Church in 1054, was originally divided into four patriarchates
(Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem). The Orthodox Church,
as its name suggests, conforms more faithfully to the established
doctrines that were formulated in the early years during the universalization and standardizing of Christianity.
We visited Varlaam monastery and the
convent of St. Stephen, the only convent at Meteora. The convent’s church
was built in the 18th Century and houses the skull of the saint. Talk
about feminism! The convent won an award for 'best religious establishment'
in Meteora; the nuns, busy little plump young ladies with glowing faces
dressed in their black habits, scuttled around the church and shops. They
travel extensively in Greece and Europe collecting funding for their
establishment, look after a very pretty rose garden in their spare time
and keep the monastery commercially viable by tending to the smooth flow
of tourists flocking to their souvenir shops.
Varlaam monastery was a more somber and grim
affair, following the concept of a life deprived of material and sensual
pleasures more obsessively. Founded in 1517 by the brothers Theophanes and
Nektarios Apsaradas from Ioannina, it is named after the ascetic Varlaam
who first established a monastery at the site in the mid-14th Century. The
monastery was later renovated in 1780. The katholikon, dedicated to all
saints, is adorned with wall paintings dating back to 1548 by the well
known Post-Byzantine iconographer Frangos Katelanos. The concentration of
colour and form presses down inside with visual stories of the
life of Jesus and his apostles. Silent niches with stands for bibles
circle the two apses on the sides. The monks spend long hours here
chanting verses from the bible. The monastery houses an important
collection of valuable codices (manuscript volumes of the scriptures and
Classic texts), reliquaries (containers in which relics are kept and
displayed for veneration), intricately carved wooden crosses, rich robes
of the religious heads of the monastery, gold embroidered epitaphs and
other ecclesiastical treasures.
Meteora is a place quite unlike any other
in this whole world. Surreal in every sense. As I stood on a small landing
on the side of one of the mountains to take a photograph of the landscape, I
felt I was in a breathtakingly beautiful yet totally unreal world. Like
inside one of Salvador Dali’s paintings. Huge black monolithic mountains
rose in all directions, the emerald green plains far down below, the wind
tearing at me, and perched on these ominous yet beauteous gigantic bare
fingers of rock, red stoned places of monasticism where man desperately
tried to cut himself from the pleasures of this world in his quest to be
one with god.
Supper over, we grouped together and went
out into town. These towns are minuscule by the
way, consisting of just a single lane cutting through a handful of shops.
But it was fun... As always.
thermopylae
30 May 2002

The statue of
Leonidas at the Pass of Thermopylae commemorating the heroic resistance of
the Spartans to the Persian invasion.
On our way back to Athens we drove through the pass of Thermopylae
which separates Mt. Kallidromo from the sea. One
kilometer long and in antiquity 5-20 meters broad (now broadened at some
places up to three miles wide by silt from a nearby river) the pass was
the scene of many battles down the centuries, the most famous being the
heroic resistance of the Spartans against the invading Persians in 480 BC.
Xerxes, the Persian king had brought his
enormous army through northern Greece, but the Greeks were already waiting for him
at Thermopylae. Three hundred Spartan warriors had marched north under
their general Leonidas. En route Leonidas had picked up additional men so
that by the time he reached his destination his full strength was some
7,000. The Greek forces resisted bravely, but were betrayed by a Greek
traitor who showed the Persians a way through the mountains, enabling them
to strike at the Greeks from the rear. Responding swiftly, Leonidas sent
back the main body of the Greek army back to safety, but kept his own 300
men and a picked group of 700 allies, determined to hold the pass. He
attacked and was killed almost instantly. The Greeks fought on leaderless
to their death. The dead of Thermopylae were buried in a great
commemorative mound which still stands at the site. A statue of Leonidas
on the battlefield pays homage to the heroism of the Spartans.
last night; athens

Athens by night.
Modern Athens at first sight had appeared
tacky; crowded, hot and dusty. Yet, as we entered the city on our way back
from Kalabaka, having known, understood and loved Greece for the last
eight days, the city seemed to tug at our heartstrings. There was a
connection. Athens was beautiful; even in its tackiness. The old white
buildings, the traffic, and its redeeming splendid monuments of past
centuries. Never was the saying, home is where the heart is, more
appropriate.
At night we went out for a dinner and
show of Greek folk dancing. It was quite mesmerizing. The claps, our shouts of
‘opa’ (a kind of cheer), the wine, music and vigorous yet elegant dance
performances. We all hung around till late, eventually winding our way
through the brightly lit plaka, the main residential and tourist district
of Athens inhabited since prehistoric times, back to our hotel to say our
final good byes.
The twins, Christine and Charlotte, both
teachers from New Jersey; Carl, who was funny, clever, patient, and kind; Cynthia, the Mexican who’d been a
soldier in Germany; Margot, so full of panache and genuine warmth; Laurie,
the cop with Santa Monica police and who reminded me so much of my sister;
Denise and her mom from Canada; and Rosemary, a friend at first sight, and
her husband Paul from Australia. So many very wonderful people. Though I doubt we’d ever
meet again after this trip they will all remain forever in my heart...
My flight was at 4 in the morning. Till 2
I sat in the balcony overlooking the temple of Zeus, all lit, right in
front of me. The traffic buzzed beneath, lights agleam. The ruins silent,
deep in thought, talking to me. My pilgrimage was over. My homage full
circle. To thought, freedom, and creativity. To be the best one can be. And a
layer of contentment fell within. I was complete.
Note: My camera got
damaged whilst travelling through Greece and Italy. I have thus instead used Photos © Editions D. Haitalis
for my Greece web pages.
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