Greek Americans
mourn
Community hopes for miracle as exact number of victims
remains unknown
Michael
Tarous and his fiancee Amy King were crew members on the fated
flight out of Boston that hit the World Trade Center. Michael
was the son of a Greek American from Clearwater, Florida.
By Dimitris Kapranos
Kathimerini
New York police have cordoned off the entire area around the
ruins of the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, keeping away
even the grief-stricken relatives of the missing. A few meters
from the red and white tape reading "No admittance,
police," a group of Greek Americans stare at the ruins,
holding lit candles.
They are mourning their friends and relatives, but also the
loss of the Church of Aghios Nikolaos which has endured since
1916 and was just in the shadow of the Twin Towers, only to be
crushed beneath them.
New York's Greek Americans comprise one of the liveliest -
and oldest - communities in what is one of the world's largest
cities. Many residents of Astoria, an area that recalls Athens,
used to go to work in Manhattan every day.
Between 90-100 of the city's street vendor licenses are
issued in Greek names. Nearly all of Manhattan's hot dog vendors
speak Greek and listen to Greek songs on their headphones.
"I'm very much afraid that some of the debris from the
explosion hit the hot dog vendors," said Venetia Kyritsi, a
journalist at the Greek language newspaper Proini.
No one knows exactly how many Greek Americans were in the
towers last Tuesday, nor how many worked in the offices on the
110 floors. The companies themselves no longer have the
information, which was all lost along with the computers and
data banks.
No one is sure about anyone. Only the names of those whose
bodies have been recognized have been recorded. Friends and
relatives mourn and hope, even though several days have past.
Initially there were reports of approximately 200 missing
Greek Americans, a number that was reduced as the days passed.
Andrew Athens, president of the World Council of Hellenes (SAE)
believes it possible that the total will be nearer 20-40 Greek
Americans.
"There shouldn't be more," he said in a break from
his repeated calls to the authorities.
"You can't keep calling (Mayor Rudolph) Guiliani's
office to ask him how many Greeks are dead. We're talking about
5,500 people killed here. You can't ask for their ethnic
origins. When people are allowed to approach the area, of course
the first people to be allowed in will be the relatives of the
missing," he said.
Elizabeth Tzoumaka, editor in chief of Proini, has not slept
for three days.
"Look, whatever they tell you now will be inaccurate.
There is no specific center where Greek Americans report their
missing. We don't know how many dead or missing there are.
Imagine that just one company, Fitzgerald Security Services,
which was on floors 101-105, had 1,000 staff members, 700 of
whom are missing! No one records the missing. The relatives are
holding up photographs and doing the rounds of the hospitals and
first-aid centers that have been set up. Only now have the Greek
community organizations begun to act, and I can understand why.
It was a great shock and took us all by surprise. Now there is
some attempt to gather that information, but people are not very
willing. Someone who is looking for a missing relative is too
busy searching to worry about statistics," she said.
Asked whether it was true, as some "experts" in
Greece were saying, that Greek Americans were getting their
information from Greek satellite channels, she said:
"What do you mean? Greek Americans have been phoning in
constantly to our newspaper asking us to comment on the rubbish
being broadcast by some Greek journalists and politicians on
Greek channels. If you ask me, they are justified. You can't
imagine the garbage we've had to listen to. People, most people,
that is, rant away without having any feeling for other people's
pain," she said.
Worse than Pearl Harbor
Andrew Athens has been on the phone from SAE's Chicago office
to officials in Washington, trying to get information.
"The situation is very bad. Our lives have changed for
ever. And life in Europe, of course. Tomorrow nothing will be
the same. This was a more serious disaster for the US than Pearl
Harbor, where 2,500 people died. Here the number is at least
twice that. At least (in Pearl Harbor) they were soldiers. Here
we are talking about innocent people, unsuspecting citizens,
ordinary people!" he said.
"You know, a month after Pearl Harbor, I joined the US
Army and fought in Africa and Europe.
"From what I understand, we are at war again. At war
with the terrorists. If you want my opinion, we won't see any
strikes soon," he said.
"President George Bush has got the funds he asked for
and the state is organizing itself on a new basis in order to
deal with this strange enemy on a day to day basis. Everything
will change.
"There will be an attempt to have the guilty parties
arrested and handed over. And I hope those who are harboring
them will hand them over," he added.
Mr. Athens believes that certain liberties will be
restricted. "These are tough measures but they are
necessary, since the attack came from within the country. And I
believe that Europe will follow suit as it is certain that the
terrorists were not only striking at the US.
"Who is to say that it isn't Europe's turn? Our lives
have changed! That is certain," he added.
Andrew Athens believes that even though Bush might not have
the necessary experience, he is surrounded by experienced
people, such as Colin Powell, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney.
"He listens to them and that's good," said Athens,
adding that in the face of danger, Americans were all with their
president.
St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church fell with the falling
giants
The terrorist attack against the Twin Towers of the World
Trade Center that killed an estimated 5,000 people also
destroyed the tiny St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, located
about 500 feet (150 meters) from ground zero, the center of the
catastrophe, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America said.
On Tuesday morning, soon after the attack, Father John Romas,
the church's pastor, attempted to go to into the area but was
turned back by police. On Wednesday he was permitted to visit
the site to view what was left of the church, the archdiocese
said in a news release on Friday. "It would break your
heart," Father Romas said of the devastation. "It's
one thing to see it on TV, and another thing to see it in
person. St. Nicholas is buried under debris. It is the worst
thing."
Father Romas said that, at the time of the first blast, one
parishioner, Vassilios Torazanos, 50, was working in the church
but rushed out of the building moments after the first jet,
American Flight 11, crashed into the South Tower at 8.48 a.m. He
left his car in the adjacent parking lot and ran all the way to
Brooklyn, about two miles over the East River. Normally about 45
to 50 faithful (capacity for St. Nicholas) attend Divine Liturgy
on Sundays, the statement said.
Father Romas said his parishioners plan to rebuild their
church and have established an account for anyone wanting to
donate. (St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, Atlantic Bank,
account number 09062602, 8010 5th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209).
He also said he is trying to locate temporary space in the area
to hold church services and plans to ask permission from city
officials to allow him to retrieve the church's holy relics:
those of St. Nicholas, St. Katherine and St. Sava. They were
kept in an ossuary on what had been the top floor of the
four-story building.
Greek immigrants, who were active in the area before
Manhattan became the heart of international economy, established
St. Nicholas Church in 1916 and purchased the structure for
$25,000. It was one of two old calendar parishes under the
archdiocese until 1993 when it switched to the Gregorian
calendar. Among the church's unique characteristics are its
small size and its icons, which were a gift from the last czar
of Russia, Nicholas II. Father Romas expressed hope he would be
able to salvage some of the icons.
The church also was open Wednesdays at midday, for people to
light a candle and pray during their lunch breaks, to attend a
Paraklisis the first Wednesday of the month, or just for
spiritual contemplation. The tiny church building was
constructed around 1832. It was originally a residence and later
housed a tavern before the founders of the parish purchased the
structure.
It measured 22 feet (6.7 meters) wide in front, 20 feet, 11
inches in the back, and about 56 feet (17 meters) long. It was
35 feet (10.5 meters) tall. On three sides it was surrounded by
a parking lot. Developers had offered millions of dollars to buy
the church but were never accepted. "The church next door,
a Catholic one, gave in to temptation. And so the Church of St.
Nicholas found itself in a huge parking lot," Father Romas
told Kathimerini.
The church has been known locally for several years for its
celebration of Epiphany. Parishioners would proceed to nearby
Battery Park at the south tip of Manhattan, where a diver would
jump into the icy water of New York Harbor to retrieve the
cross.
"All Greek sailors, and generally all
Greeks involved with the sea, have a duty to rebuild St.
Nicholas, said New Democracy Member of Parliament for Piraeus
Manolis Bedeniotis.
Send
Money to Atlantic Bank ( Brooklyn)
Account: 09-062602
Or to any Atlantic Bank by check.
Make check payable to:
Hellenic Orthodox Church <<St
NIcholas>>.inc