|
Pleasures drive out pain and excessive
pain leads men to seek excessive pleasures... - Aristotle
The above was spoken by a Greek, and more
than twenty centuries later it is still the core truism of Greeks
everywhere. No characteristic is more typically Greek than the inherent
ability to balance pain and pleasure delicately and live life to the
fullest.
Ten million Greeks living on the mainland and on 1,400 Greek islands
suffer the daily realities of existence in a harsh meager land where
political problems simmer and where poverty and hardship are old
neighbors. But while the body may subsist on bread, cheese, and olives as
rural daily fare, the Greek soul is spiritually nourished by the
mystically dazzling landscape of endless blue skies, the clarity of a
strong white sun, and the warmth of rustic red earth.
These are the same elements that bore witness to the "Glory of Greece."
This included a brilliant span of 200 years from 500-300 B.C.E. when
Athens became the light-source of the western world and spawned a plethora
of literature, philosophy, mathematics, democracy as well as a
sophistication in style of living seldom equaled. While the rest of the
world was gnawing on roasted meat, the Greeks were savoring many varieties
of fruits and seafood, experimenting with cooked mixtures of meats and
vegetables, developing sauces and dressings (white sauce, mayonnaise,
marinades of oils and seasonings), blending seasonings, and even writing
cookbooks.
Because reminders of Greece's past greatness are everywhere visible in the
civilized world of today, the past and the present are one reality to the
Greek. It doesn't matter what subject is under discussion, Greeks will
have an opinion – and a word for it. It is the incredible blending of past
greatness, living the present to the fullest, and unflagging faith in the
future that makes simple survival the ultimate Greek pleasure. With bold
words and classic gestures, with intense curiosity and endless enthusiasm
together with an age-old ability to dramatize, the Greek brushes aside
pain and troubles, gently disdains time, and plunges fully into the
enjoyment of life.
Others may point to the closeness of Greek family life or to the stability
of the Greek Orthodox Church as central to Greek optimism and
self-confidence. But it is all of these factors and something more. It is
an ancient tradition that Greece is somehow more than a land or a people
but rather a special image that was nurtured by the ancient gods of Greece
and preserved for all eternity by an
omnipotent "god of Greece." That innate Greek faith is rooted firmly in
the belief that while other gods may be alive or dead, the "god of Greece"
will somehow forever intervene just when things seem hopeless. And a
glance at Greek history bears out this philosophy.
When the great Hellenistic age came to a crushing end with the Roman
Conquest of 197 C.E., Greek schools declined and Greek democracy
disappeared, yet Greek language and culture survived. The novelty of Greek
cuisine – varieties of wild animals, fruits, and seafood, the ingenious
uses of sauces and seasonings, recipes and utensils – was a revelation to
the Romans. They unabashedly adopted Greek foods, together with Greek art
and architecture, Greek philosophy and refinements. And they valued their
Greek chefs above all. While the Greeks helplessly watched as Athens gave
way to Rome as the center of the western world, they must have also
experienced some satisfaction in seeing that Hellenistic influence proved
stronger than armies.
The embers of Greek language and culture that flickered during the Roman
domination were fanned to a bright flame during the thousand years after
the fall of Rome. The period of the Byzantine Empire with its center in
Constantinople actually took its name from the ancient Greek community on
which it stood: Byzantium. Christianity was introduced by the Emperor
Constantine as the state religion of the Roman Empire around 325 C.E.,
much to the credit of the early Christian theologians who incorporated
many Greek ideas into Christianity that the latter flourished even though
Rome was later sacked by hostile pagan tribes.
Again, however, this Greek flowering of influence was abruptly cut off in
1204 C.E. as the Crusaders captured Constantinople and parceled it out to
Frankish knights. The new rulers crushed everything Greek. Latinization
was the goal, Greek ships and trade were turned over to the Venetians, and
strong attempts were made to impose Catholicism. It did indeed seem that
the Franks dominated every aspect of life, with one exception. Greek women
quietly saw to it that the children they bore never forgot that they were
Greek.
The continuing benevolence of the god of Greece was about to meet the
strongest test. On Tuesday, May 29, 1453, the Byzantine Empire was crushed
completely with the capture of Constantinople by the Turks. So deep is the
memory of that terrible day that even to the present, Greeks consider
Tuesday a bad-luck day and the entire month of May fraught with grim
symbolism. Yet historians see a positive aspect in that the mass dispersal
of thousands of Greeks throughout Europe (as a direct result of the
Turkish conquest) may have been responsible for the revival of learning
that led to the Renaissance.
The suppression and cruelty of the Ottoman domination lasted 400 years.
And while the Greeks learned, among other things, to enjoy sipping Turkish
coffee, smoking the narghile (water-filtered smoking pipe), and
preparing meat on skewers, which they called souvlakia (from the
Turkish sis kebab), the Turks, who were previously a nomadic people, very
quickly developed a taste for Greek cookery Not surprising then, in the
manner of all conquerors, they also gave Turkish names to classic Greek
dishes.
It seems the Greek's hopeful confidence, that age-old faith in the god of
Greece, was to be renewed again. In their 400-year occupation, the Turks
made two fateful errors: first, they gave the Greeks concessions in trade,
shipping and administration, at once unwittingly creating Greek leadership
and a Greek navy; and second, they decided to place the Orthodox Church
leaders in charge of their communities. The Greek leadership and navy were
the seeds of the subsequent Turkish downfall, while the authority and
strength of the Church in small communities unified Greeks everywhere and
served to preserve their language and culture. While the rest of the
western world at that time became a blend of Roman and Turkish culture
with only echoes of Greek taste apparent, to the Greeks themselves their
vital roots remained strong.
When people are suppressed, their only daily concern is survival. They
have neither the time nor freedom to devote to the arts, literature,
philosophy, or the delicacies of the palate. Choice lands were cultivated
by the Turks and the Greeks were forced to retreat to barren rocky lands
and mountain areas, often surviving on cheese made from the milk of
mountain goats, wild herbs, olives, and whatever crops they could nudge
from the unwilling land. The Turks called the Greeks Rumis and it
is from this bitter time that Greeks still refer to the noble and creative
part of themselves as Hellene and any bursts of stubbornness or
selfishness as Romios.
Of necessity, then, Greek cuisine became an art of the past. It was so
successfully adapted, transformed, and renamed mostly by the Turks and
Italians that its Greek origins were all but forgotten. Yet one piece of
ancient writing remains: The Banquet of the Learned (Deipnosophists),
written in 200 C.E. by Athenaeus, a Greek philosopher living in Rome. His
detailed descriptions of foods eaten, their methods of preparation, and
even cooking utensils and cutlery as well as menus for dinners and
banquets are remarkable in their sophistication. It is from Athenaeus that
we learn of kakavia. A seafood stew introduced to Marseilles by
seafaring Greeks, kakavia later became world-renowned as
bouillabaisse. The book discusses sauces in loving detail: that emulsion
of eggs, lemon juice, and olive oil called mayonnaise; a thick white sauce
called bechamel; and even cruets of oil and vinegar to be set on the table
and used to dress fresh or cooked vegetables. The use of blends of curry
probably was introduced in Alexander's time after his conquest of northern
India, but Greek cooks were already long familiar with fragrant thyme and
oregano, mint and marjoram, and the Isle of Rhodes was noted for a
ginger-flavored bread.
There is more. The general acceptance of small nibbles of food with drinks
as "provocative to eating" not only added graciousness to dining but may
even be the ancient root of the Greeks' predilection never to drink
without the accompaniment of food.
Athenaeus further describes many stuffed,
baked vegetables and leaves, tiny meatballs called kefthedes, light
crusty breads and thin crispy pastries, polenta and dumplings, capers and
pine nuts, force-fed geese, herb-grilled fish and seafood, and unusual
combinations of meats cooked with vegetables. The flavored beverage was a
light drink of wine diluted with fresh water and sometimes flavored with
honey or spices. It is incredible to think that these commonly known
culinary cornerstones of today were part of daily fare even before 200 C.E.
The Greeks have been suppressed and forced to survive on meager rations
for so long that it was often Greek emigrants rather than native Greeks
who revived interest and pride in culinary pursuits. The first large wave
of Greek emigrants followed that fateful Tuesday in May 1453. But other
events in Greek history have spurred waves of emigrants, especially to
North America. In 1891 a combination of serious crop failures, especially
in Laconia and Arcadia, as well as fear of conscription in Turkish lands,
sent emigrants out of the country in waves that continued even after the
First World War. The combined shortages and suffering that the Greeks
endured during the Second World War and during the subsequent civil strife
once again sent them to seek a better, more peaceful life elsewhere.
Arguably, it is this recent memory of pain that motivates Greeks in North
America to take every advantage of the results of hard work, enterprise,
and education.
Greeks know and treasure their deep roots in the past. Against a backdrop
of painful history, their own pride and determination, together with the
help of the god of Greece, have kept alive and vital a culture, language,
and cuisine that have few equals. Despite an occasional fretful fingering
of the worry heads, the Greek has learned to find pleasures in day-to-day
living and to brush aside the painful events of the past with a hopeful
sigh to the future. It is a feat of survival and pride that Aristotle
himself would enjoy reading the many Athens newspapers of today, Greeks
from the Byzantine Empire would be at home in the worship and rituals of
the Greek Orthodox Church, and even Athenaeus would he happily familiar
with today's Greek table. |
|