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The Traveller Next Door:
My Friend Carol -
Expert on Turkey and Greece
Author:
Susanne Pacher
My friend
Carol, a wonderful and unique woman in her early 50s, is a high
school math teacher, a gifted painter, a very decent piano player,
and what else - a world traveller. I only really met her about a
year ago or so, but once I found out all the places that she'd been
to I knew I had to do an interview with her.
Carol has been travelling since the 1970s, and she has forged some
amazing connections with 2 countries: Turkey and Greece. She lived
in Turkey for close to 8 years and has made life-long friends in
what she calls her "second country". And she's also developed some
close ties with people in a special little village in Greece. Here's
her story:
1. Please tell us a bit about your travel experience in general.
What places have you visited?
It started with my first trip to London, England, to visit my uncle
when I was 16. That trip changed my life and opened the world up to
me. I basically led a sheltered life in Scarborough (a suburb of
Toronto) and really had known nothing else. The trip to London gave
me this travel bug that has never left. I backpacked Europe the
summers of 1972 and 1973, that’s when you could do “Europe on 5 $ a
day”. Greece was the cheapest – we managed on 2$ a day!
The next summer I went out east to P.E. I. and the next summer out
west to Victoria.
After university in 1976 I took a few years off to travel. My sister
joined me for the first year. We started in Paris, visited our dad
in Communist Czecholosovakia, hit the beaches of Yugoslavia –
Makarska, and then on to Greece. After Greece we flew to Israel to
work in a Kibbutz. I had to see what was going on in that country
that was so much in the news. I stayed 8 months and then went to be
an au-pair girl in Paris for 11 months. Back to Greece followed by a
great trip to Turkey, Jordan and Syria in July 1978 and then back to
real life in Toronto.
I always made shorter trips back to Greece once I became a
highschool teacher. And to the States to visit friends I had met on
my travels. A wedding on top of the World Trade Center, a friend in
Memphis besides the memory of Elvis, and a friend in San Francisco
where I fell in love with the Golden Gate Bridge and another in
Manhattan.
I quit my full-time highschool teaching job after 4 years and went
on a trip to Tokyo, Hong Kong and Thailand. The timing was close –
we were in Tiannanmen Square one month before the massacre of May
1989.
From 1989 to 1999 I worked as high school teacher in Istanbul,
Turkey, coming home twice for one year and once for half a year. My
love affair with Turkey began. Before I came back to Canada for good
in 1999, I had the pleasure of visiting Australia, a great country
with the friendliest people.
2. You have a very special connection to a village in Greece called
Parga. Please tell us about your first encounter with the village of
Parga.
The first time I went to Parga was in 1976. I had been working at
the O’Keefe Center [a famous concert venue and theatre in Toronto]
and an usher there had told me about this wonderful village in
Greece he used to go to in the summers. He produced a postcard with
a beautiful beach and uttered the word “Parga” as if it were magic.
He couldn’t speak much English so I didn’t even know where it was
located in Greece.
In September 1976 on my big trip with my sister, having just come
from Yugoslavia, we were staying on Corfu. Corfu seemed too touristy
to us, so we wanted to visit another place in Greece. My idea was
Crete. It seemed far but on the way to Israel. We couldn’t decide so
I just opened a map of Greece and my eye went directly to “Parga” (a
tiny village in the northwest of Greece, so small it is sometimes
not even on the map). Parga!!!!! Then I remembered that magical word
uttered by the usher. “Let’s go”, I said, and fortunately it was
close to Corfu. The travel agent was surprised we were asking
directions on how to get there. It wasn’t too popular with foreign
tourists yet. And she added, “the young men are beautiful”. Well,
that did it! We left that day.
A ferry trip 2 hours to Igomenitsa, and a 2 hour bus ride south. We
arrived in the evening and we found a room for the night and walked
along the waterfront of the village. It was beautiful – 2 small
islands in the port with a church, a castle on one side on the hill,
and mountains behind.
We ate “brizola” (pork chops) and than sat at the café “Parga Bar”,
discussing our plans which included not talking to any young men for
a week because we were tired of the men in Yugoslavia who came on
too strong. At that moment one of the most beautiful men I had ever
seen walked up to us with his friend who spoke English and asked if
he could sit down. My sister said “No”, I said “Yes”. I was
mesmerized. They both had rooms to rent, one above a disco, and one
just in the building beside us. One for a $1 a night and one for $2
a night. We picked the second one not above the disco. Lefteri
looked like a Greek god or like a young Marlon Brando. He had a
friend, Camille, a Canadian woman who was in Parga for the 3rd time.
He brought her to the table and we became instant friends.
To make a long story short, we stayed for a month in Parga, having
the time of our lives. It was a small unspoiled fishing village
then, only 3 people spoke English and there were very few tourists
in September. And the young men were beautiful!
Lefteri, Camille, and many of the young men who are now in their
late 40s and 50s, my sister and I are still friends who reminisce of
the good old days of the summers of 1976 to 1979.
3. Since your first time in Parga, your relationship with this
village and its people has evolved. Please tell us a little about
the human connections.
I have always gone back to Parga for my holidays, unfortunately it
is too far and too expensive to go every year. In 1976 my sister
Elaine made friends with a teenager by the name of Christos, who was
at the disco every night, dancing up a storm and was one of the
three people who spoke English. He invited us to have coffee with
his mother, a remarkable mother, who extended her hospitality to us
(“ksenis”). Foreign women were not looked on favourably in the
village at the time, and probably even today, as it seemed we were
there to take the young men. I remember the first female tourists
who married and stayed to live in the village. That was 1976. Now
there are at least 40 of these marriages. (Maybe the local women’s
paranoia was justified).
Gia, Christos’ mother, became my Greek mother. Either she “adopted”
me or it was the other way around. How many hours I spent in her
tiny house with 2 rooms, the tiniest kitchen, and the most
magnificent view I have ever seen. She fed me, kept me company,
taught me Greek and slowly we communicated. She had a wonderful
husband Vagelis, who I had coffee with every morning down in the
village. And 7 children, mostly grown-up by then – 6 boys and 1
girl.
Christos and Lefteri came back to Toronto with us in 1978. Christos
had never slept in a bed until then. Lefteri went on to visit his
brother and sister in Chicago, Christos stayed with us for 4 months
and saw snow for the first time. He now lives with his wonderful
partner, Jo (from England) in Brussels with 3 beautiful children and
he still loves “patates” (French fries).
Lefteri still lives in the village with his wonderful young Greek
wife Marilena and 3 beautiful children. He used to run 2 discos and
the “bouzoukia” in the olive grove. He has had a restaurant now for
many years. Who knows where he learned to cook….
Many of the young men I used to know from the 1970s still live and
work in Parga. Most have families of their own. Some are still
single, many have their own businesses.
4. What is your favourite memory of your stays in Parga?
I have many favourite memories of my stays in Parga. I’ll mention 3.
One is always there and will always be there every time I go. I can
always count on it. It is the moon, especially when it is full. The
full moon rises at one side of the village, it makes its way across
over the beach and finally sets on the other side above the
monastery. There is nothing to match it. Everyone there knows I love
the full moon – “panselino” it is called in Greek.
My other favourite memory was a bar called “Stavlos”, run by Giorgo
and Angelo from Veria. Giorgo started it on a shoestring in 1978 –
the best bar ever! A bottle of Retsina (Greek wine) – 17 drachmas
(50 cents)! And ‘toast’, like a grilled cheese, for a dollar. And
usually you could make it yourself as Giorgo was too absorbed with
his girlfriend at the time. My sister and I were his first
customers, many hours were spent there watching the people walk by.
He seemed to be always open, even after the discos, at 4 am. A great
atmosphere! How many glasses we washed (we helped him out)….
Giorgo became my Greek brother and unfortunately he had to close
down after a few years due to rising rents. I followed him wherever
he worked – the islands of Paros, Santorini and Kos, and his
hometown of Veria near Thessalonika. He married a Danish woman who
has also become a very good friend of mine. They now live in Denmark
and have 2 beautiful children. I have been to visit them 3 times. I
love Denmark!
My 3rd memory is my connection with the Avloniti family, Christos,
his mother, his father and siblings. They made me feel a part of
their family. Vageli passed away 12 years ago and sadly Gia passed
away last year. Parga will never be the same without her and neither
will I. Finally though, after 5 years, I am going to see Christos,
Jo and the family this summer in Parga at the end of August.
5. You also spent a significant amount of time in Turkey. Please
tell us where and how did that come about?
The first time I visited Turkey was July of 1978. My travel
companions were two gay friends, one from Jordan and one from
Britain. We took various buses to Jordan from Athens and stopped in
Turkey and Syria on the way. What a trip! It was the year “Midnight
Express” came out, a movie that didn’t show Turkey in a favourable
light at all, and Turkey did not seem the most desirable country to
go to.
I knew nothing of Turkey, and imagined a country of “swarthy
mustached barbarians”, the typical stereotype. How wrong I was!
Back in Canada I eventually became a highschool math teacher. After
4 years I had enough and quit. I wanted to work in Greece for a
year, but there was a problem with work permits. A friend phoned me
in March of 1989 and told me he saw an ad in the Globe and Mail for
English and Math teachers in Istanbul. I applied because I figured
it was close to Greece. I was hired and off I went to Istanbul with
13 other Canadians to work in a private high school. Little did I
know that it was in the far suburbs of Istanbul.
We were given apartments by the sea, with a view of the Princes’
Islands. But we were isolated, no TV, no telephone, no English
newspapers in our suburb. Work was difficult: 38 students in each of
our 6 classes. And nothing to do at night.
I almost came home in March of 1990. But I started to be enamored
with Istanbul during that summer and decided to come back and work
in the center of the city. After one year back in Canada I did just
that and stayed until December of 1998.
About the
Author:
The whole
interview with photos is published at
Travel and Transitions - Interviews
Susanne Pacher is the publisher of a website called Travel and
Transitions (http://www.travelandtransitions.com).
Travel and Transitions deals with unconventional travel and is chock
full of advice, tips, real life travel experiences, interviews with
travellers and travel experts, insights and reflections,
cross-cultural issues, contests and many other features. You will
also find stories about life and the transitions that we face as we
go through our own personal life-long journeys.
Submit your own travel stories in our first travel story contest (http://www.travelandtransitions.com/contests.htm)
and have a chance to win an amazing adventure cruise on the Amazon
River.
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