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Showing posts with label greece. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greece. Show all posts

December 20, 2008

The Kallikantzaroi: Underground Carbo-Loaders

While Christmas elves seem to have the potential for mischievousness, they’re not even in the same league as the Greek holiday goblins known as the Kallikantzaroi.

John Tomkinson (author of Haunted Greece) writes that the Kallikantzaroi live underground most of the year, carbo-loading on worms, snakes, and frogs. The legendary Greek goblins then hold their annual above-ground rampage between December 25th and January 6th. Tomkinson writes:
The Kallikantzaroi cause mischief, they intimidate people, urinate in flowerbeds, spoil food, tip things over and break furniture.”
Heck, forget the elves, even the Green Goblin looks like a wuss when matched up against those kind of Yule-tide shenanigans. In this Der Spiegel article, the director of the Hellenic Folklore Research Centre says that the Kallikantzaroi are still popular throughout Greece today, but people are not as frightened of them as they once were.

This is partially because there are ways to keep the Kallikantzaroi at bay— burning an old shoe is one technique. (Actually, they might work on more groups than the Kallikantzaroi.) In fact, Greek police might want to try that shoe trick out; tear gas and riot sticks certainly haven’t quelled the mayhem that’s been taking place in Greece over the last two weeks.

August 20, 2008

A Farinaceous Holiday

Der Spiegel had a story on the flour wars that take place in the Greek village of Galaxidi.

The day is known as "Clean Monday" (or Καθαρή Δευτέρα), though that is a bit misleading, given that villagers throw over a ton of colored flour at each other.

According to the article, "Preparations for the war -- also known as alevromoutzouromata or 'people throw flour at each other' -- are intense. Locals dye bag upon bag of flour with food coloring and paint their faces with charcoal.... And revellers, at least those who know what they are in for, bust out goggles to protect their eyes from the flying starch....

"The flour fight dates back to the very beginning of the 19th century... Villagers began celebrating Carnival in defiance of the Ottoman occupiers, painting their faces with ash and dancing in decorous circles, one for women, one for men. Now the fun is co-ed and the flour throwing non-discriminating."