Athens--Last Day
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Athens
We started the day at the
small but vibrant Jewish Museum of Athens.
We’ve been here before. The
thrust of the museum is more to explain Judaism to non-Jewish visitors than to
educate those who are Jewish. The
displays explain holidays, rituals, etc., with some historic content.
We had a lovely, long meeting
with the museum director, Zanet Battinon, who answered our questions about the
Athenian Jewish community and recent Jewish history in Athens with candor and
directness. She was lovely and extremely
well-spoken. We had lunch at a local
restaurant.
Nearby, and across the street
from each other, are two synagogues.
Yes, there are lots of jokes about this kind of thing. The reality here is that the old synagogue
was outgrown by the influx of Sephardic Jews, and the new synagogue, Beit
Shalom, was built across the street in 1935 to accommodate the increased
numbers. In the new synagogue we met
with one of the community leaders:
Outside, another of the community
leaders showed us a commemoration of the many Athenian “Righteous Gentiles” who
aided the city’s Jews during German occupation.
The Athens Chief of Police was of major help.
Among other stories, we heard of the island
of Zakynphos where the local Bishop, Chrysostomos, and the mayor, Loukas Karrer,
refused the German demand for a list of the island’s almost 300 Jews. Instead, they helped the Jews disperse and
hide, and submitted a “list” with only their two names on it. Ultimately, they saved every Jew on the island. Greece has many heroic stories of people who
put their lives at risk to help the Jewish communities.
The community’s rabbi,
Gabriel Negrin, joined us for a visit to the old synagogue. He grew up a member of the local Jewish
community, and was in his mid-20s when appointed to lead the congregation.
He’s personable, funny, and
clearly just the right person to lead them.
The community is vibrant, with a day school, and committed young
people. He and the man who showed us
Beit Shalom sang a Ladino tune for us, memorializing Beit Shemesh (click on the
arrow):
Some free time for shopping,
then a farewell dinner with laughter, toasts, and the recalling of wonderful
times over the past days together. It’s
been a wonderful dive into the history of Greece, and the place of Jews in that
history as well as Jewish Greece today.
This is written on Friday,
October 19. Our trip home was
uneventful, and now we’re back to dealing with almost three weeks of
accumulated mail and the angst of the daily news. Yet we glow with the celebration of the
Melton School, the great leadership of our wonderful teacher/guide Avi Ben-Hur,
and the renewing of old friendships and the development of new ones. Next year in Morocco?
ReplyDeleteAlways hate to see a "last day" post, it sounds to permanent. Also although we are ready to return to our usual life at the end of a trip, travel for all the 4 of us continues to mark the seasons.