Volos, Meteora and Ioannina
October 10-11, 2018
We have been astonishingly
busy. Wednesday morning began with an
introduction to the Romaniote Jews with a talk from Avi titled “The Historic
Trajectory of Greek Jewry until the Ottoman Conquest.” Jews from the Middle East came to Greece and
other parts of the eastern Mediterranean since the time of Alexander the Great,
some 2300 years ago, long before the second Temple times, and persisted in
substantial numbers until WW II. Their
practices were unique, and despite the lands in which they lived being
overwhelmed with Sephardic Jews after the expulsion from Spain in 1492, their
communities persevered. Thus, in this
area of the world, there were two separate Jewish communities during the
Ottoman times and up to the German occupation, Romaniote and Sephardic.
We drove to Volos where we
first visited the Holocaust Memorial monument in the center of town:
Remarkably, about 70% of
Volos’ Jews were saved by action of the local Greek Orthodox bishop and the
villagers in the 24 hard-to-reach small communities on the sides of Mt. Pelion,
above the city. The Volos Jewish community
had about 700 members pre-war, and currently only about 60 remain. Most of the survivors left for the USA and
Israel after the war.
The Volos synagogue is
very modest. We were met and had a
discussion with one of the leaders of the community who then showed us the
synagogue and meeting room:
In one corner of the
adjacent room is a memorial to the Holocaust victims from this town, including
an urn with some ashes from Auschwitz, which is where those who were deported
were sent and murdered:
There is a photo of the Chief
Rabbi pre-war which is remarkable for his dress, very much like that of a Greek
Orthodox priest:
Their Torah collection
includes both Sephardic and Ashkenazi samples:
We visited the Volos
Jewish cemetery where there is a gravestone to those lost in the Holocaust. We said kaddish there:
We then drove up and up
and up to visit one of the small hill towns.
It was quite easy to understand how the Germans had trouble searching
for and finding the Jews who were hiding in the mountains. We visited Makrinitsa:
We stayed overnight in
Volos, and arose early this morning to be at our introductory lecture for the day
at 8 AM. Avi gave a truly wonderful
explanation of the multiple ways identity is formed, with special attention to “Who
is a Greek” with reference to geography, language, religion, and other factors
which influence Greek and Greek Jewish identity. It was a great introduction to the day. We left for Meteora, in the mountains of
central Greece, six extraordinarily inaccessible mountain-top monasteries (two
of which are actually nunneries). On the
drive there we had a discussion of monastic life beginning with the hermits who
established the custom here, devolving into the Greek Orthodox ascetic
movement. Avi related this to the Essenes,
a Jewish Second Temple sect of ascetics who lived for 300 years from around 200
BCE to 100 CE before dying out. Meteora
is visually stunning. In the second
photo here you can see the monastery we visited:
We parked and climbed up
and up to the Varlaan Monastery where we first visited the Byzantine church in
the complex. Our guide gave a wonderful
explanation of the layout and decorative elements of a Byzantine Greek Orthodox
church. No photos were allowed; this is
from the web:
They still drop a hook
attached to a long cable down to the people below to bring up supplies:
After visiting the
monastery we climbed back down and went into town for lunch, after which we
drove to the city of Ioannina which had a large Romaniote Jewish population
prior to WW II. We met with a woman who
is a member of the current community which numbers only 34. At the peak population, the city was 1/3
Jewish, 1/3 Greek Orthodox, and 1/3 Muslim.
The synagogue is a pure
representation of Romaniote design, with the bima at one end of the room and
the aron kodesh at the other:
The seating is strange
with the congregants back-to-back:
The aron kodesh is
elaborate, with a curtain made from an old wedding dress with amazing gold
embroidery:
The torahs are mixed
Sephardic and Ashkenazic:
So, our day today started
after breakfast at 8:00 and finished as we checked into our hotel at 7:15. We were so tired that we skipped dinner, went
to a shop across the street for ice cream, and brought baklava back to the
hotel room. Up at 6:00 for an early
start tomorrow. More when I can.

Wow, they're making you work for your new learning! I feel like I'm learning, too--had no idea about Greek Jewry before the Sephardim arrived. The backwards seating puzzles me. But I can see the appeal of a monastery high on a rock--for about two days, maybe. :)
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