Tuesday, 31 December 2019

Festive Photographs



We welcome in the ‘holidays’
With lists of tasks to do
Cleaning out rooms, shelves and cupboards,
 Polishing silver items too.
              
              

 








A party to mark my 10 years of spa
And the same goes for being retired
Making cheesecake and dumpling
Lest we feel sweet deprived!
                        










Petros sings the Kalenda
We enjoy a Reveillant
Christmas  Day at Giannitsa
With Thracian food, wine and song.

          
                        







                                 
 Sadly friends have fires near their homes
In Santa Barbara and in Oz,
Others holiday in Amsterdam and New York
 In their quest to find Santa Claus
We’ll be at home, by the hearth
To see out the last decade day
With good food and good company
We’ll take in Hogmanay.
 
                      








        

May the new year bring us all good health
And a 2020 perception that’s rational
Brexit may well come and go as
I hope to become a Greek national!


                                           
            Mr Mao joins us in wishing you all a very Happy New Year!


Monday, 16 December 2019

My Quest for Greek Citizenship and Christmas Greetings.



As I mentioned in previous posts in February, I applied for Greek citizenship which requires me to demonstrate my knowledge of Greek geography, history culture, political system, etc. by oral interview before a 3- or 4-member panel. So here I thought I would outline the processes I went through trying to commit to memory the contents of the 88-page e-book we would be examined on. The disadvantage of having a mature brain - which often forgets why one finds oneself in a particular part of the house – was offset by having enough time to tackle the project – 9 to 10 months in all as it worked out.
A typical page follows – this bust depicts Homer, the greatest epic poet who wrote the Iliad and Ulysses, focusing on the Sack of Troy in 1184 B.C. along with my hand-written notes.

                     

                          








First step was to read the entire book to get a general overview – quite daunting to see the amount of information to be covered and in some detail as well. This gave me the feel of the content which I then broke into chunks beyond the obvious chapter organization. So, sub-topics were grouped or even re-grouped – as in the case of the geographic departments which were learned along with the political districts in that they differ in about 3 issues only,   so learning that contrast reduced possible confusion.
 Each section was read and a hand-written summary written with the highlighted or salient input selected. Simultaneously a record of difficult lexes or useful phrases was kept, again organized in sections.
Years ago as I was studying Camus’ La Peste, I remember my vocabulary list being pretty gruesome: suppurate, pus, boils, etc. Here the list tended towards the cultural: linear B script, clay tablets, sculpture; the political: voting procedure, constitutional contents, organizations under the aegis of NATO; the polemic: declare war, occupation, prolonged
siege, population decimation - history does not sit easy on Greece!
The sculptures which remain exude great majesty, but this artist/archaeologist impression of the gigantic statue of Athina that dominated her temple on the Acropolis is awesome in the fullest sense!
                 
               
 









On the second round of familiarization, I began to embellish areas which needed clarification: What’s the difference between the roles of the President of the Democracy and the President of the Government? -  as well as those areas of interest: What did the two Nobel Prize winners in Literature (Seferis and Elitis) write, where were they from, etc.?  In this way things and people come more alive, gaining that third dimension makes them more memorable. I guess a degree of personalistion was happening there too.
There were times when I felt my mind would explode with all the information being crammed into it. To try and avoid overload, I alternated topics, so I would review the names of mountain ranges, mountains, rivers and lakes, then move on to my paired History grouping of Ancient Times and the Byzantine Era. 
Plato, on considering what knowledge meant, tried to explain how we can forget or confuse already learned items. One explanation he provided was that the brain was like a huge aviary and learned items were birds within it. So, remembering was catching the right bird, confusion was catching the wrong bird, while forgetting was not finding the bird being searched for. It took a lot of review and rehearsal to get to the level of reasonably efficient retrieval, and I did get strange looks on the local bus as I muttered to myself the names of the cabinet ministers and their relevant ministries!
In this process of learning, my mental archive was like a series of windows representing each large topic area. To begin with these were pretty cloudy - echoing the sad state of the actual house windows which were severely neglected during my study phase! However, with continual rereading and rehearsal, these began to gradually become more clear and memorable to the point where I could visualize my written page and the ‘hook words ‘which operated as links from sub-topic to sub-topic or from section to section. So from the fall of Constantinople, we moved on to the Greek Uprising   against Turkish Occupation.
 I wanted to reach the stage where I could quickly pick and choose different items of information from different topics without any hesitation – or wrong birds! And, of course, as a ‘polluted learner’ I could not go through the process without simultaneously analyzing it!
What I learned is that despite educators regularly denouncing the process of ‘learning by heart’ as non-creative, I found it to be otherwise.  The term learning ‘parrot fashion’ suggests learning to produce without there being any understanding. However, my experience tells me that learning is a much more complex process than that – in fact, being able to retrieve efficiently demands clarity and understanding of input. The bird has to be put into our mind’s hard disc, classified, contrasted with the already known birds, and  made familiar to be readily distinguished and identified as the bird relevant to  the question, the given stimulus, the need to be remembered, etc.
Our history section ended with WW2 and I was intrigued to find this quote from Winston Churchill who confers a great compliment: From now on we will not say that the Greeks fight like heroes, but that heroes fight like Greeks!
One final quote from Churchill came to my attention, comparing the contributions made to mankind by the Ancient Greeks and the Scots. Another great compliment paid to both nations – a status that our up-coming political incumbent seems reluctant to accept that Scotland possesses!                 
                             

 However, despite all that and since it is the season to be jolly, let me end my post with both of us sending you our very best wishes for the Christmas festivities – enjoy the season with health and happiness.
I have just put up the tree - and as for presents underneath, there is the reclining Prunella – our Christmas cat! Ho ho ho!