Greek American Tribute to Greek Victims of Communism

Greek American Tribute to Greek Victims of Communism
For Immediate Release: August 8, 2010

Contact: Nikolaos Taneris, New York, Tel. (917) 699-9935

http://cyprusactionnetwork.org/greek_american_tribute_to_greek_victims_of_communism

NEW YORK—The Cyprus Action Network of America (CANA) proudly participated in the Greek American tribute to Greek Victims of Communism in Washington DC organized by Alex Aliferis. The Greek government as the widely respected Victims of Communism Memorial Center notes ignores the victims of Communism. In the sixty-six years since Communist forces attempted to tear territory away from the Greek heartland displacing over one million Greeks and killing thousands, Greece has faced countless incidents of Communist terrorism and hosts one of the most energetic Communist parties in Europe in its parliament. The Republic of Cyprus currently has a Communist president, who has shocked the world by opening diplomatic missions and accords with the human-rights-abusing Fidel Castro government (currently under sanction by the US government) Officials associated with the Cyprus Embassy in Washington DC have been sighted wearing Communist “hammer and sickle” emblems and apparel. Cypriot government funded organizations such as PSEKA and its affiliates, like the governments that fund them have also ignored the victims of Communism.

CANA remains committed to memorializing and remembering all Greek victims of human rights abusers, and urges all Greek-Americans who have been victimized by Communist forces to please contact Alex Aliferis, whose contact info follows in the Press Release below written by Lee Edwards PHD from the Victims of Communism Memorial Center in Washington DC:

http://www.victimsofcommunism.org/media/article.php?article=6091

Victims of Communism Memorial Center:
News Center
Greek American Tribute to Greek Victims of Communism
August 3, 2010
Lee Edwards, Ph.D.
Alex Aliferis organized the event to offer tribute. Aliferis’ family in 1944 was executed by Communists. “I came to the memorial to honor the over 100,000 Greeks murdered by Communists,” said Aliferis. In Greece , there are annual tributes to the victims of Communism at massacre sites like Meligalas , Greece . Since 2008, Aliferis makes a point to honor the Greek victims of Communism.
While former Communist countries like Bulgaria , Romania , Lithuania , Hungary , Poland , and others remember the victims of Communism, the Greek government ignores it.
“I want to make sure the victims of Communists in Greece are not forgotten,” said Aliferis. Alex Aliferis has formed the Greek Victims of Communism Foundation to document the crimes of Communists in Greece . Books and articles have been written in Greek and English documenting about murders, massacres, and abductions by Greek Communists. Nicholas Gage produced a film in 1981 called “Eleni” that documents the execution of his mother by Greek Communists. Actor John Malkovich played the role of Nicholas Gage who seeks the Communist murderer responsible for his mother’s death.
Lee Edwards, Chair of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, attended the tribute with Alex Aliferis, Chair of the Greek Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, Nikolaos Taneris of Cyprus Action Network of America, and Ioannis Ioannou of Astoria.
In Washington DC , the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, a non-profit organization was established by act of U.S. Congress. The memorial commemorates more than 100 million victims of communism, to honor those who resisted communist tyranny, to educate current and future generations about communism’s crimes against humanity and to pay tribute to those who helped win the Cold War. President Clinton signed H.R. 3000, which passed unanimously in Congress, on December 17, 1993. This American law created and built the current Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington D.C. which was dedicated on June 12, 2007 among others by President George Bush and the late Congressman Tom Lantos, and calls for the foundation of a museum in the future.
In the EU Parliament, August 23rd has been declared as a Remembrance Day of Victims of Nazism and Communism.
Greece was the first country to hand communism a defeat in wake of the Cold War, preserving democracy in its birthplace, and thus providing hope once again that totalitarian regimes cannot subjugate a free people.
More than 100,000 Greeks died as a result of the communist insurgency, including over 21,000 government security forces. Additionally, more than 1 million civilians were displaced due to the communist terror, and over 28,000 children were abducted and transported to communist countries. The July 19, 2010 tribute honored the Greek victims of communism who fought for freedom against tyranny.
For more information on the Victims of Communism Memorial go to www.victimsofcommunism.org.
We include, a short comprehensive recommended reading list of scholarly books on the subject, the Foundation encourages further scholarship on this subject, and all inquires for further study should be directed to Mr. Alex Aliferis, Email: greekvictimscommunism@yahoo.com
1. Black Book of Communism by Stephane Courtois
2. The Abducted Greek Children of the Communists by Dr. Nikki Karavasilis
3. The Calvary of Meligalas by Tassos Antonopoulos
4. ΜΑΤΩΜΕΝΕΣ ΜΝΗΜΕΣ 1940-45 ΚÏŒκκινη Τρομοκρατία, ΚατοχικÏŒς ἘμφÏλιος, ΚÏŒκκινη Ἀπελευθάρωση, “Λευκή” Τρομοκρατία στή Νοτιοδυτική ΠελοπÏŒννησο (Γαργαλιάνοι - Καλαμάτα - Μελιγαλάς - ΠÏλος - ΠÏργος) by Ioannis Bougas(in Greek about Communist Terror in Messenia-Peloponnesos)
5. Eleni by Nicholas Gage

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http://www.ashmolean.org/exhibitions/current/?timing=current&id=57

Heracles to Alexander The Great: Treasures From The Royal Capital of Macedon, A Hellenic Kingdom in the Age of Democracy

7th April 2011 to 29th August 2011
Medusa

In the first major archaeological exhibition in the new temporary exhibition galleries, the Ashmolean Museum will showcase over five hundred treasures made of gold, silver and bronze, recently found in the royal burial tombs and the palace of Aegae, the ancient capital of Macedon.

These extraordinary new discoveries will go on display for the first time outside Greece. They re-write the history of early Greece and tell the story of the royal court and the kings and queens who governed Macedon, from the descendents of Heracles to the ruling dynasty of Alexander the Great.

“This exhibition is the most important Greek cultural event in many years. From the astounding finds made by the late Professor Manolis Andronikos in the ‘70s to the recent discoveries of the past twenty years, this is groundbreaking work that tells the story of life in the ancient kingdom of Macedon, northern Greece. The artistry, skill and foresight with which these objects were made represent a truly sophisticated dynasty about whom there is much more to learn,” Dr Angeliki Kottaridi, Director of the 17th Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities.

The royal city of Aegae – modern-day Vergina – was the first capital of Macedon and the seat of power of the Temenid kings, named after Temenus, a descendent of Heracles. They ruled from the mid-7th to the 4th century BC, and gave to Greece two of its most famous heroes, King Philip II (382-336 BC) and his son Alexander the Great (356-323 BC). Aegae remained relatively unknown until 30 years ago when excavations uncovered the unlooted tombs of Philip II and his grandson Alexander IV. Recent work at the site has continued to unearth a startling wealth of objects – from beautifully intricate gold jewellery, silverware and pottery, to sculpture, mosaic floors and architectural remains.

The exhibition will be an international first with presentations directly connected with central figures of the Temenid court. In the first of three major themes that will bring this ancient society to life is the world of the king and his companions at war and hunting; the king as ruler and high-priest, and the royal funeral. In this section, arms and armour, golden wreaths, life-sized marble sculpture, and painted battle-scenes illustrate the lives of Macedon’s most famous kings, among them Philip II and Alexander IV, father and son of Alexander the Great respectively.

The most recent excavations have concentrated on the tombs of the royal women, and the exhibition’s next section shows their important role at the court. Jewellery, fashion, and objects used for grooming, as well as sacred objects, such as clay heads of divine and demonic figures, underline the leading role of these powerful women as queens, princesses and high-priestesses, offering a vivid portrayal of the female world in the palace from around 1000 to 300 BC. A centrepiece of the show will be the assemblage of five women: four dating to the Early Iron Age (1000-700 BC) and one, the ‘Lady of Aegae’, to around 500 BC. The ‘Lady of Aegae’, a queen and high-priestess, was found in an undisturbed tomb, bedecked with funerary goods and dressed, head-to-toe, in spectacular gold jewellery which had been sewn into her clothes.

Life in the palace – its architecture and the symposion (banquet) – is the exhibition’s concluding theme. Silverware, ceramics, and architectural fragments from the palace itself give a tantalising glimpse of life in the royal capital of this ancient kingdom. The gallery will highlight the development of the ‘symposion’ – a key expression of the contemporary social and political world, and the rich architecture of the palace built in the reign of Philip II.

‘The Macedonians lived under the same political system uninterruptedly for some five hundred years. Nowadays we admire the ancient Greeks for their invention of democracy, but even among the Athenians it lasted much less long. Macedon’s system was monarchy, the most stable form of government in Greek history. It persisted from about 650 to 167 BC and only stopped because the Romans abolished it.’ Robin Lane Fox, Ancient Historian, University of Oxford.

“It is a tremendous honour for the Ashmolean to be the first place where people can see the latest discoveries from Aegae,” Dr Christopher Brown, Director, Ashmolean Museum.

Dates: 7 April-29 August 2011
Tickets: Book Online now (£8 / 6 concessions)
Catalogue: £25

The exhibition has been organised by the Ashmolean Museum and the Museum of the Royal Tombs at Aegae in collaboration with the Hellenic Ministry of Culture And Tourism.

The Royal Tombs and Museum of Aegae
The excavation of the tombs and palace of Aegae was the life’s work of archaeologist Professor Manolis Andronicos who worked there for more than 30 years after the Second World War. Following an early visit to the site as a student before the war, he recognised the extraordinary importance of the archaeology at Vergina and returned in 1952 to begin a systematic excavation of the ancient city. Between 1959-74, with a team from the University of Thessaloniki, he worked on the royal palace of Philip II. From 1976 they uncovered the graves beneath the great tumulus of Vergina, the most remarkable of which was the tomb of Philip II – one of the most important archaeological discoveries of the 20th century. During the 1980s Andronicos excavated the theatre where Philip II was assassinated; the sanctuary of Eukleia; and further tombs beneath the tumuli, discovering in 1988, with his student Dr. Angeliki Kottaridi, the famous ‘Lady of Aegae’. Since then, Kottaridi has continued Andronicos’s work to excavate the tombs and protect the site. In 1993 a shelter was built over the necropolis and in November 1997, the Museum of Aegae was opened, dedicated to the memory of Andronicos. It has become the single most popular visitor attraction of northern Greece, and in 1996 it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Support of the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism
The protection of the Royal Tombs at Aegae is one the primary projects of the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism. On the discovery of the Royal Tombs a program was immediately launched to preserve the magnificent murals adorning them with the generous support of the European Union. At the same time, a conservation laboratory was set up at the site to save and restore the extremely important portable objects they contained. For the preservation of the Royal Tombs themselves a subterranean structure was built in 1993 to encase and protect the ancient monuments by maintaining a constant temperature and humidity, both indispensable for the preservation of the wall paintings. Externally the structure has the appearance of an earth mound; inside it are the treasures found in the Royal Tombs, which have been on exhibition since November 1997.