Saturday, July 18, 2026

THE AFTERLIFE OF IMAGES

Few questions possess greater capacity to animate the political imagination than those concerning the ownership of land, for territory has seldom been understood merely as an economic commodity capable of valuation according to the arithmetic of the marketplace. It is memory rendered geographical, ancestry translated into landscape and civilisation sedimented into stone, so that discussions concerning foreign acquisition invariably awaken deeper meditations upon sovereignty, belonging and historical continuity. Greece has wrestled with these questions throughout the modern era, while Australians periodically rediscover comparable anxieties whenever overseas investors purchase agricultural holdings, strategic infrastructure or residential property. Such controversies belong naturally within democratic societyies, where competing understandings of the public interest contend through legislation, public debate and electoral choice. A different set of questions arises, however, when the language of economics yields imperceptibly to the language of ethnicity, and when the purchaser ceases to be an investor participating in the ordinary operation of the market and instead becomes the embodiment of an entire people.
                                                  
Recent posters circulated by the Democritus Workers League invite reflection upon precisely such a transition. Their subject matter lies comfortably within the bounds of legitimate political discourse. Attention is drawn here, therefore, neither to the legitimacy of those concerns nor to the motives of those responsible for the posters, which remain known only to themselves, but to the symbolic vocabulary through which those concerns are expressed. Images possess genealogies every bit as intricate as texts. They preserve visual memories accumulated across generations, often surviving the historical circumstances that first endowed them with meaning.
The first poster announces itself beneath the emphatic declaration Under New Ownership. Dominating the composition stands the Parthenon, rendered unstable, its pediment fractured and its columns inclined sufficiently to suggest that the monument itself has begun to yield before an invisible force. Beneath this iconic structure appears a quotation attributed to Kathimerini, asserting that “Israeli and other funds are massively buying up beaches, neighbourhoods and villages, turning their residents into migrants in their own land,” while, almost unnoticed at the base of the composition, a discarded Greek flag lies abandoned upon the ground, completing visually the narrative already advanced in words. The companion poster presents an equally arresting image. Across the outline of Cyprus, stamped with the single word Sold, an enormous arm clothed unmistakably in the Israeli flag extends across the island beneath the question: Is Cyprus the New Israeli Colony?
Read independently, each poster expresses apprehension concerning foreign investment. Viewed together, however, they construct a broader narrative in which commercial transactions undergo a subtle transmutation into collective historical agency. Individual purchasers disappear from view. Distinctions separating governments from private citizens, corporations from investment funds and isolated transactions from coordinated intention gradually dissolve until the viewer confronts a singular protagonist whose economic activity assumes the appearance of national purpose. The argument consequently ceases to concern property in any conventional sense, referencing instead patrimony, identity and civilisational continuity, articulated through an iconography whose emotional resonance extends well beyond its literal content.
The Parthenon occupies the symbolic centre of that visual grammar. No informed observer imagines that the monument itself could ever become the object of commercial exchange. Protected by Greek law, preserved under international convention and recognised throughout the world as part of humanity's common inheritance, it exists altogether beyond the marketplace invoked by the accompanying quotation. Its appearance therefore cannot plausibly be descriptive. It can only be symbolic. The image invites the viewer to collapse the distinction between private real estate and Greece itself until the acquisition of beaches and apartment blocks acquires the emotional significance of purchasing Hellenic civilisation. As George Mosse observed, monuments gradually cease to function merely as architecture and become repositories of collective memory through which nations imagine themselves. Few monuments perform that function more completely than the Parthenon.
The quotation attributed to Kathimerini performs a subtler rhetorical function. By borrowing the authority of an established newspaper, the poster presents its visual argument with the appearance of documentary objectivity. The viewer is encouraged to receive the accompanying symbolism as the natural illustration of an independently verified reality rather than as an interpretation of it. The leaning Parthenon and discarded flag therefore appear less as rhetorical devices than as the inevitable visual consequences of facts already established elsewhere.
The second poster employs a different symbolic strategy, although it arrives at a remarkably similar destination. The visual burden of explaining economic change no longer falls upon a national monument. Instead, it is assumed by a single outstretched arm clothed unmistakably in the Israeli flag, reaching across Cyprus with an assurance that renders invisible every intermediary ordinarily associated with the purchase of land. Conveyancers, real estate agents and private investors disappear. In their place stands Israel itself. The Star of David, functioning simultaneously as the contemporary emblem of the State of Israel and one of Judaism's oldest religious symbols, assumes responsibility for representing an entire economic process. The distinction between state, nation, religion and private enterprise is thereby compressed into a single image.
The accompanying question, Is Cyprus the New Israeli Colony?, completes that symbolic transformation. The language of colonisation performs a significant rhetorical function, for colonies are established by states rather than private citizens. The image invites the viewer to understand ordinary market activity through the moral vocabulary of dispossession, occupation and imperial ambition. It is an extraordinarily powerful visual move because it substitutes intention for complexity. Rather than asking whether individual investors have entered a particular market for a multiplicity of reasons, the poster proposes a singular historical narrative in which acquisition itself appears directed towards the establishment of a colony. Even the typography contributes to this symbolic economy. Although the accompanying text is written in English, its angular letterforms evoke the Hebrew script, establishing an association with Jewish identity before the words themselves have been fully read.
Roland Barthes, in his Mythologies, argued that myth rarely invents falsehood. Its greater achievement consists in emptying history of complexity until ideology assumes the appearance of common sense. A multitude of unrelated events is distilled into a narrative so intuitively persuasive that its constructed nature almost disappears from view. His insight also draws attention to what the posters choose to omit. Foreign investment in Greece and Cyprus has long involved a multiplicity of actors, each provoking differing degrees of public debate. Yet this broader phenomenon is visually condensed into a single national symbol. Such selectivity does not diminish the legitimacy of questioning Israeli investment. It does, however, invite reflection upon why one particular state has become the visual metonym through which a far more complex economic reality is rendered intelligible.
Images endure. The cultural historian Aby Warburg devoted much of his life’s work to tracing what he described as the Nachleben, the afterlife of images, whereby visual motifs survive across centuries because they preserve emotional formulae capable of being adapted to successive historical circumstances. Images remember even when those who reproduce them have forgotten what they once signified.
Viewed through Warburg’s lens, these posters disclose a visual genealogy extending well beyond contemporary disputes concerning property ownership. The grasping hand stretching across a national map, the suggestion that countries may be subdued through wealth rather than force, the transformation of economic activity into collective national behaviour and the implication that an ancient civilisation stands upon the threshold of purchase all belong to an iconographic repertoire that European audiences have encountered before. Their persuasive force derives precisely from that familiarity, for they awaken visual memories whose origins may have faded from conscious recollection while continuing to shape the ways in which contemporary audiences interpret political reality.
In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt observed that one of the defining characteristics of modern antisemitism lay in its capacity to transform Jews from individuals into abstractions. They ceased to appear as neighbours, merchants, professionals or citizens participating in the ordinary plurality of society and instead became symbols representing finance, capitalism and hidden power. Individual lives disappeared beneath the fiction of a singular historical actor pursuing a unified purpose. Her insight extends well beyond the historical circumstances that produced it, constituting a warning about the ease with which political discourse may substitute symbolic categories for living human beings.
Whether consciously or otherwise, the visual logic of these posters risks inviting precisely such a substitution. Israelis cease to appear as individual investors participating, alongside countless others, within ordinary legal markets. Their place is occupied by Israel itself, represented as a singular economic protagonist whose actions assume the appearance of collective historical intention. The transition occurs through imagery rather than explicit assertion, visual rhetoric proving more enduring than verbal argument precisely because it operates beneath the threshold of conscious analysis.
History demonstrates where such symbolic habits have previously led. Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, European antisemitic imagery repeatedly associated Jews with commerce, finance and property acquisition, presenting economic activity as evidence of collective ambition rather than individual enterprise. The grasping hand extending across maps, the suggestion that nations might be conquered through wealth rather than armies, and the portrayal of invisible economic power formed a recurring visual vocabulary, finding some of its most notorious expressions in the propaganda of the Third Reich. To recognise that these motifs possess an identifiable history is emphatically different from asserting that the Democritus Workers League occupies the same ideological universe, nor does it warrant attributing antisemitic motives to those responsible for these posters. Images nevertheless possess histories independent of intention, and those histories remain open to examination irrespective of the motives of those who reproduce them.
Once an image enters the public sphere it acquires meanings extending beyond those originally invested in it, particularly where long-established symbolic traditions remain capable of shaping contemporary perception. It is therefore entirely legitimate to ask whether imagery of this kind, whatever its purpose, risks reproducing visual conventions whose historical associations many observers could scarcely be expected to overlook.
That question assumes particular significance within Australia, whose multicultural settlement depends upon an enduring distinction between governments and peoples, public policy and inherited identity. Criticism of the policies of the State of Israel belongs fully within democratic discourse, just as criticism of any other State does. Equally indispensable is the discipline of resisting imagery that encourages entire peoples to become symbols of abstract historical forces. Democracies flourish when arguments remain directed towards identifiable policies and discernible actors rather than inherited identities.
Ultimately, the significance of these posters lies less in the proposition they advance than in the visual language through which that proposition is expressed. Political disagreements come and go. Images endure. They preserve older associations and carry historical memories into new controversies. The iconography deployed here has a history. It is a history humanity has good reason to remember.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday 18 July 2026

 

Saturday, July 11, 2026

RESTORATION RETICENCE

 


I suspect this will not be a universally popular view, particularly among those for whom every newly inserted block of Pentelic marble upon the Acropolis constitutes an act of national healing, but the recent images of the restored western pediment of the Parthenon have left many with a distinct sense of disquiet. The restoration itself is beyond criticism. Its workmanship is extraordinary, its scholarship meticulous and its engineering remarkable. Unease arises from something altogether more elusive, namely the relationship between restoration and memory, and the possibility that in seeking to preserve a monument we may simultaneously be altering the meaning centuries have attached to it. Such concerns are not unique to the Parthenon. Every restoration involves a choice, every choice privileges one version of the past over another and every intervention, however scrupulous, inevitably reveals as much about those undertaking it as it does about the object being restored.
No monument demonstrates this dilemma more acutely than the Parthenon. The image recognised throughout the world is not the brilliantly coloured temple that dominated the Acropolis in the fifth century BC but the ruin, the fractured silhouette familiar from schoolbooks, postcards, travel posters and countless representations of Greece itself. Broken pediments, absent sculptures and shattered columns have become so familiar that they are now inseparable from the monument's identity. For generations, visitors have encountered the Parthenon as a visible dialogue between creation and destruction, permanence and loss rather than as an intact edifice. Looking upon the restored pediment, one is thus justified in wondering not whether the work has been executed successfully but which Parthenon is now being preserved. Is it the monument erected under Pericles, the shattered structure left after Morosini's bombardment in 1687, the romantic ruin immortalised by generations of philhellenes, or the already heavily restored version familiar to us over the past century, itself containing modern interventions, relocated fragments and even sections incorporating concrete where suitable blocks of Pentelic marble could not be found? The question may appear academic, yet it lies at the heart of every discussion concerning the future of the monument.
Complicating matters further is the uncomfortable reality that the Parthenon has never possessed a single, fixed identity. Long before modern conservators arrived upon the Acropolis, successive generations had already appropriated, reinterpreted and transformed the building according to their own needs. The Athenians of Pericles understood it as a monument to the power of their city, although even this apparently straightforward proposition becomes less certain upon closer inspection. Contemporary presentations of the Parthenon routinely celebrate it as the supreme expression of democracy, civic virtue and enlightened government, yet the circumstances surrounding its construction suggest a considerably more ambiguous story. Established as a defensive alliance against Persia, the Delian League maintained a treasury funded by contributions from member states and housed upon the sacred island of Delos. Following the transfer of that treasury to Athens in 454 BC, resources contributed by allied cities for defence were misappropriated for Athenian purposes. Plutarch preserves the controversy generated by the subsequent building programme and records Pericles' defence of the expenditure. Whatever judgement one reaches regarding his justification, the conclusion remains difficult to avoid. Conceived at the moment Athens transformed leadership into domination and alliance into empire, the Parthenon stands today as perhaps the most beautiful monument ever financed through the appropriation of somebody else's money. Modern narratives seldom dwell upon this awkward detail. Schoolchildren encounter the structure as the embodiment of democratic ideals while the imperial realities that facilitated its construction recede discreetly into the background. Selective memory therefore begins not centuries after the monument's creation but at its very origin.
Any attempt to present the Parthenon as a straightforward symbol of classical antiquity encounters an even greater obstacle in the form of its Byzantine life. According to a remarkable tradition preserved in a sixth century inscription from the deme of Icaria and discussed by the scholar Paul Stevenson, Apollo was asked to reveal the future of his sanctuary and responded by proclaiming that the building would belong to the Virgin Mary. Whether authentic prophecy or pious invention matters less than the underlying assumption, namely that Christians did not perceive themselves as abolishing the sacredness of the Parthenon but rather inheriting it. Conversion into the Church of the Parthenos Maria followed during the sixth century and for almost a thousand years the building functioned as one of the most important churches in the Byzantine world. Pilgrims travelled there from across the empire, with even Emperor Basil II journeying to Athens following his final victory over the Bulgarians specifically to worship at the shrine. Byzantine frescoes adorned its interior and monks and travellers carved inscriptions upon its walls. The Panagia Atheniotissa became renowned throughout the Christian East. Measured simply in terms of duration, the Parthenon served as a Christian church for considerably longer than it functioned as a pagan temple. Throughout the overwhelming majority of the building's existence, those who approached it did so as worshippers rather than admirers of classical civilisation.
The prominence of the Parthenon within the Christian imagination subsequently created difficulties for the architects of the modern Greek state, whose understandable desire to establish an unmediated connection between contemporary Greece and classical antiquity sat uneasily beside a monument that had served as one of the most important churches of the Byzantine world. Accordingly, Byzantine frescoes that survived well into the nineteenth century disappeared beneath the enthusiasm of archaeologists intent upon revealing an exclusively classical structure, while Byzantine, Frankish and Ottoman additions were progressively removed in order to produce a monument more closely aligned with contemporary national aspirations and European expectations. The great Frankish tower that had dominated the Acropolis for centuries was demolished. The Ottoman mosque disappeared, its minaret was dismantled. Layer after layer of accumulated history was removed in order to reveal a monument that conformed more closely to a particular idea of Greece. Standing behind this transformation was an assumption that continues to shape perceptions of the monument today, namely that classical antiquity constitutes Greece's most legitimate inheritance and that subsequent centuries are meaningful primarily insofar as they lead back towards it. Such an interpretation proved immensely attractive to Western philhellenism. It also required a remarkable degree of historical editing.
The difficulty is that the Parthenon stubbornly refuses to conform to any single narrative. A structure financed through the appropriation of the Delian League treasury became one of the holiest churches of the Byzantine world, a Catholic church and a mosque. One occasion, it was even repurposed for purposes profane. According to Plutarch, when Demetrius Poliorcetes regained control of Athens in 304 BC, he took up residence within the Opisthodomos and installed his mistresses there, provoking the comic poet Philippides to complain that he had transformed the Acropolis into an inn and brought courtesans to the virgin goddess. Far from possessing a singular identity waiting patiently to be rediscovered, the Parthenon accumulated meanings, absorbed contradictions and survived every attempt to define it permanently.
The latest restoration therefore cannot be viewed in isolation from the longer history of the monument's modern reinvention. Long before fresh marble found its place upon the western pediment, the Parthenon had already been subjected to a far more radical process of reconstruction. Presented as acts of recovery, the interventions of the nineteenth century were equally acts of selection, privileging one period of the monument's existence while relegating others to the margins. Looking at the restored pediment today, one cannot help also to observe that the same assumptions continue to exert their influence. Rather than bringing the observer closer to the monument that inhabits the collective memory, the restoration may occasionally create a sense of distance from it. The eye drifts unexpectedly towards Nashville, Tennessee, where a full scale replica has stood for more than a century, or towards the reproductions that continue to appear in places far removed from Attica such as Lanzhou, China. The comparison is of course absurd and yet strangely difficult to avoid. Recover enough of the original form and the monument begins to resemble its copies. Pursue completeness too vigorously and familiarity can, for some observers, give way to estrangement.
Lost in this pursuit of classical purity there is a possibility that the awkward reality of the Parthenon's many lives may receive less attention. The Parthenon became significant precisely because it never remained what anyone wished it to be. Its scars, absences and contradictions constitute a visible record of conquest, devotion, adaptation, destruction and survival. The ruin itself has become part of the monument. Every missing sculpture, every shattered column and every visible wound reminds the observer that history is cumulative rather than selective and that identity is forged through accretion rather than recovery. Having spent two centuries stripping away those elements deemed inconsistent with an idealised vision of Classical Greece, today's restoration provides an opportunity to reflect upon how future interventions might continue to balance careful conservation with the preservation of the monument's layered historical memory. The workmanship deserves admiration and the scholarship commands respect. At the same time, awareness of this broader historical context ensures that each new restoration is understood as another chapter in the Parthenon's long and evolving story rather than the recovery of a single definitive past. In that sense, the monument invites us to remain attentive to the ways in which every generation, however well intentioned, inevitably leaves its own imprint upon history.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday 11 July 2026

Saturday, June 27, 2026

MONOCULTURE: GREEK-AUSTRALIANS AND HANSON


 When Pauline Hanson recently declared that Australia must become “monocultural,” describing multiculturalism as a failed policy and asserting that Australians should live under “one cultural umbrella,” she touched a nerve that extends well beyond the fortunes of One Nation.  Her remarks’ significance lies not merely in what they reveal about immigration policy or cultural identity. Rather, they illuminate a broader transformation occurring within Australian public life: a growing tendency to understand society through increasingly rigid categories of belonging and exclusion.

 
The appeal of Hanson's message rests upon concerns that many Australians genuinely hold. Rising housing costs, pressure on infrastructure, economic insecurity and declining trust in political institutions have left many convinced that governments have lost control of events. Large scale immigration has become a focal point through which these anxieties are expressed.
 
Yet it does not follow that the solution lies in abandoning multiculturalism, nor in imagining that a country such as Australia can somehow be reduced to a single cultural identity. Australia has never possessed a monocultural reality. Even before post-war migration transformed the nation, it was a society shaped by regional, religious, class and ethnic differences. The remarkable achievement of modern Australia has been its ability to develop a civic framework capable of accommodating diversity while maintaining social cohesion. The question facing Australians is not whether diversity exists. It is whether that diversity will continue to be managed through democratic institutions, civic participation and mutual accommodation, or whether it will increasingly be interpreted through competing narratives of exclusion.
 
The growing attraction of One Nation, the tendency of sections of the activist left to interpret public life through rigid moral categories, the decline of the political centre and the erosion of trust in institutions are often analysed as separate phenomena. Viewed collectively, however, they suggest a profound transformation in how Australians understand politics, citizenship and one another. They are manifestations of a common disposition: declining faith in compromise and a growing attraction to worldviews that divide society into categories of virtue and culpability, belonging and exclusion. The vocabulary may differ, but the antagonisms remain strikingly familiar.
 
One Nation derives much of its appeal from the conviction that the concerns of ordinary Australians have been subordinated to the priorities of political, cultural and economic elites increasingly insulated from the consequences of their own decisions. Sections of the activist left are animated by an equally powerful conviction that entrenched structures of privilege continue to shape Australian society in ways that render conventional political remedies inadequate. While both identify genuine grievances, both have also contributed to a tendency to interpret political disagreement not as an inevitable feature of democratic life but as evidence of defective motives, suspect loyalties or moral deficiency. Under such circumstances, persuasion becomes increasingly difficult because opponents cease to be merely mistaken. They become enemies.
 
The resulting deterioration of civic culture is perhaps most evident in the declining credibility of the political centre. Across much of the democratic world, institutions that once possessed the capacity to mediate between competing interests appear increasingly incapable of commanding public confidence. Political parties struggle to inspire loyalty, public trust in government continues to erode, and social media rewards outrage while treating reflection as indecision and nuance as weakness. Consequently, citizens retreat into increasingly self-contained intellectual and cultural communities whose members consume different information, employ different vocabularies and often inhabit different conceptions of reality. Compromise, once regarded as an indispensable component of democratic life, is increasingly dismissed as evidence of moral cowardice or ideological surrender.
 
 
Greek-Australians should observe developments in Australia with particular unease, though not for the reasons usually advanced. Communal discourse remains fond of invoking the democratic inheritance of antiquity, as though the repeated evocation of Athens were sufficient proof of an enduring attachment to democratic culture. However the political tradition from which most migrants emerged was shaped less by the deliberative ethos of the Assembly than by a succession of internecine conflicts, rival legitimising narratives and ideological antagonisms that rendered compromise suspect and transformed political disagreement into hatred and destruction. Indeed, one of the enduring paradoxes of modern Greek history is that a people who celebrate democracy with almost liturgical devotion have repeatedly demonstrated a remarkable propensity to abandon the civic habits upon which democratic life ultimately depends.
 
That the modern Greek state emerged from civil conflict before independence had been secured is less paradoxical than it first appears. The tendency to divide political life into antagonistic camps accompanied the Greek state from its inception. The struggles of the War of Independence established patterns that would recur throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The rivalry between Trikoupis and Deligiannis entrenched a political culture in which allegiance to personalities often superseded allegiance to institutions.
 
The National Schism elevated these tendencies to a principle of political organization: a disagreement concerning foreign policy and the role of the monarchy evolved into a comprehensive rupture that penetrated families, communities and institutions with an intensity difficult to comprehend from the vantage point of the present. Venizelists and Royalists increasingly inhabited different political universes. The coups of Pangalos and Kondylis, the Metaxas dictatorship and constitutional instability formed part of the same political culture.
 
Neither occupation nor liberation resolved these antagonisms. The Civil War represented perhaps the most devastating manifestation of a tendency already deeply embedded within Greek political life, namely the inclination to regard political opponents as existential threats whose exclusion became a prerequisite for national redemption, rather than as rivals within a shared civic framework. The dictatorship of 1967 emerged from a society already burdened by decades of ideological polarisation, mutual suspicion and institutional fragility. Every generation imagined itself capable of avoiding the mistakes of its predecessors, only to discover that historical memory offers remarkably little protection against the recurrence of familiar patterns.
 
For all the ritual invocations of Pericles that accompany communal discourse, and despite the almost sacerdotal reverence with which the democratic achievements of antiquity are frequently recalled, the political inheritance carried to Australia by much of the migrant generation was not shaped by the deliberative culture of ancient Athens but rather the accumulated traumas of the abovementioned fraternal strife. Alongside the remarkable achievements of the Greek communities in this country, sits a parallel history of schisms, rival organisations, ecclesiastical disputes, contested elections and grievances ofgreat longevity. The Greek-Australian capacity for organisational proliferation has often been exceeded only by its talent for preserving antagonisms whose original causes have long since passed into obscurity.
 
As Vrasidas Karalis observed almost three decades ago, much of Greek-Australian communal discourse has remained trapped within grand narratives of continuity, nostalgia and cultural self-affirmation. The migrant experience was often understood through nostalgia for Greece and repeated assertions of Hellenic uniqueness rather than new symbols capable of expressing life in Australia. While not extremist in themselves, such habits encouraged an understanding of identity through belonging and exclusion rather than citizenship and participation.
 
It is within this context that the attraction of One Nation among some Greek-Australians becomes particularly revealing. Another dynamic is also at work. Organised Greek-Australian life often devoted more attention to developments in Greece than to civic questions confronting Australia. Issues such as Cyprus, Macedonia and domestic Greek politics frequently dominated communal debate. The consequence was a politics of identification rather than participation. Successful integration can leave communities unexpectedly invested in the existence of newer outsiders, whose presence confirms that they themselves now belong. The former outsider becomes a gatekeeper and descendants of migrants espouse positions and rhetoric once levelled against their own people.
 
There is nothing uniquely Greek about this development, which reflects a broader human tendency to confuse belonging with exclusion and acceptance with hierarchy. It is difficult, however, to avoid the conclusion that a community whose own history contains so many examples of the consequences of factionalism, exclusion and political tribalism might reasonably have been expected to display greater resistance to such temptations.
 
Greeks are thus uniquely positioned to understand what occurs when civic culture deteriorates and political opponents cease recognising one another as legitimate participants in public life. This is why the contemporary fragmentation of Australian public life should concern Greek-Australians more than most. We do not approach these developments as detached observers but bring to them a historical memory replete with examples of what occurs when grievance eclipses persuasion, when political identity becomes tribal and when civic culture yields to factionalism.
 
The appropriate response is neither complacency nor hysteria. It is certainly not the abandonment of the institutions that have underpinned Australia's remarkable success as a multicultural democracy. These institutions and the civic culture sustaining them allowed Greek-Australians to establish schools, churches, organisations and businesses while preserving their language, traditions and distinctiveness.
 
For a community such as ours, whose historical experience contains so many examples of political absolutism, institutional failure and social division, the defence of those institutions is an expression of historical memory. Defending institutions does not require uncritical acceptance of their shortcomings. Reform, however, differs fundamentally from destruction and Greek-Australians should be particularly wary of movements that derive their energy from delegitimising opponents and dismantling institutions before considering what might replace them.
 
There is another reason why Greek-Australians should resist the temptations of political tribalism. The success of our community was not achieved through withdrawal or suspicion. Our story is one of engagement, of a community confident enough to share its language, traditions, faith and culture while learning from Australian society. We thrived in Australia because we turned outward rather than inward, contributing to broader society and, in turn, allowing ourselves to be shaped by it, without surrendering our distinctiveness. Periods marked by suspicion, exclusion and factionalism have rarely been periods of renewal. Communities flourish when they possess sufficient confidence to engage with the world around them. They decline when they become preoccupied with policing boundaries, preserving grievances and defining themselves primarily in opposition to others.
 
The challenge confronting Greek-Australians is both political and cultural. For generations, communal life has often oscillated between nostalgia for a homeland left behind and celebration of an inherited past. Both possess value, yet neither is sufficient as a foundation for civic participation in contemporary Australia. A mature Greek-Australian identity cannot be sustained solely through appeals to ancient glory, historical suffering, ethnic continuity and isoltation. It must also be capable of producing citizens who understand themselves as active participants in the common life of the country they inhabit. Communal confidence is measured by the ease with which it contributes to a shared civic culture without fearing the loss of itself.
 
The unfinished task of Greek-Australian public life is therefore not the preservation of identity for its own sake, but the cultivation of citizens capable of engaging critically without becoming tribal, pursuing reform without cultivating contempt for institutions and defending the democratic and multicultural framework that made our own success possible while remaining honest about its shortcomings. If Greek history teaches anything, it is that the abandonment of these habits rarely ends well. If our own Australian experience teaches anything, it is that openness has served us better than suspicion, engagement better than withdrawal and reform better than destruction. It would be a profound irony if a community whose success was built upon confidence, engagement and openness were now to embrace the very habits of exclusion, grievance and factionalism that have so frequently diminished both Greece and its diaspora communities.
 
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com

First published in NKEE on Saturday 27 June 2026