Lake Ohrid Republic of Macedonia
9 April 2015
The Greek Orthodox Easter
Having just left
Greece with our usual reluctance and regret, and although we are now in another
Orthodox country, we already feel nostalgia for Greek Easters past.
The Greek Easter is
this weekend (9-13 April 2015) and, in the Orthodox church, it is much more
important than Christmas or any other religious festival.
Seven weeks ago, the
run-up to Lent began with 'Smokey Thursday' (Tsikno Pempti) which marked the beginning
of the last week of meat eating. Pork chops or kebabs (souvlaki) were cooked on griddles out in the street of every town
and village, to be given freely to passers-by.
Over the weekend at
the beginning of Lent there were carnivals (Apokries) in even the
smallest village. Then on the Monday, a public holiday known as 'Clean Monday'
(Kathari Deutera), kites were flown and, at the end of
the day, released to fly at will. From Clean Monday through Lent, the truly
Orthodox eschew (rather than chew) meat, eating only 'bloodless creatures'
(traditionally squid and octopus).
Today, the Holy
Thursday (Megali Pempti) before Easter, traditional Easter
bread (tsourekia or Christ bread) is baked and hard-boiled eggs are dyed
a deep red, to be cracked on Resurrection Night. (In Nafplio we saw an Orthodox
priest buying several trays of eggs, each holding about 4 dozen – from Lidl!)
Tomorrow is 'Big
Friday' (Megali Paraskevi), when women and children take flowers
to the church to decorate the Epitaphio,
the symbolic bier of Christ. In the evening, this is solemnly carried through
the village or town, perhaps to a local cemetery, and back. Members of the
congregation follow carrying candles and the Epitaphio is returned to
the church to await the Resurrection service late on Saturday.
On Easter Saturday (Megalo
Sabbato) a light from
an eternal flame in Jerusalem is flown to Athens and distributed to all the
Orthodox churches throughout Greece. At the Resurrection service, the church
lights are extinguished at midnight, then the priest appears with the flame and
the congregation cry: 'Christos Anesti'
or 'Christ is Risen'. The flame is passed from hand to hand, as each person's
candle is lit. Then the burning candles are carried home, where the head of the
household draws a cross from the sooty smoke of the candle on the lintel of the
front door.
In the early hours of
Sunday morning, the Lenten fast is broken with a supper of Magiritsa (soup made of eggs and the entrails of the animal to be
roasted) and the dyed eggs are cracked, sometimes in a competition round the
table, rather like 'conkers'. The red eggs (derived from pagan fertility rites)
symbolise the blood of Christ.
Easter Sunday (Pascha) is a time for the
extended family to roast a lamb or a kid or two, rotating them over open coals.
The lamb represents the sacrifice that Christ made for the salvation of his
people (probably derived from the Jewish Passover feast, when pork would not be
eaten). In some places, particularly in the Islands, an effigy of Judas
Iscariot is later burnt on the fire, like the British Guy Fawkes.
Easter is a great
time for the extended Greek family to get together, with most workers in the
city returning to their native village to eat and to dance. The traffic jams in
and out of Athens, stretching for miles, are shown on TV at each end of the
Easter weekend!
Strangers are welcome
at all these Easter celebrations, from Smokey Thursday through to sharing the
Pascal lamb.
So far in Macedonia
(absurdly named FYROM by a former Greek government), there is little scope for
celebration and little sign of it. This is but one result for this now small
land-locked country, of a history that is turbulent even by European standards.
But that, like the continuing
roasting of Greece by an international cabal of bankers and their acquiescent
Euro-group governments, is another story still in the writing.
Bonnes Routes
Barry and Margaret .JPG) | At the Carnival in the Peloponnese fishing port of Koroni | .JPG) | Pirates at the Carnival in the Peloponnese fishing port of Koroni | .JPG) | Breakdown at the Festival - but the dancing goes on. Just like Greece itself in a crisis | .JPG) | Margaret watches women and children dressing the Epitaphio with flowers in the mountain village of Aristomeni | .JPG) | Margaret watches Takis roasting the 'goat that shall be called lamb' at Camping Thines near Finikounda | .JPG) | Traditional Clean Monday play in the square in the small port of Methoni | .JPG) | Kites fill the sky on Clean Monday |
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