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The nothingness of 'I am Hellene'

The viral YouTube clip 'I am Hellene' is causing a stir in the online world. Here Protesilaos Stavrou gives his opinion as to why the content "disturbs" him

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8 May 2012

This morning I received the following video in my email. I must confess that watching it had a profound effect on me. I felt emptiness to the very core of my entire existence. It purports to show how proud modern Greeks are about their selves, in what I consider, a very disturbing way.
First some introductory remarks and then a few comments on the video itself.

 

Being raised as a Greek and having studied Greek history and literature, I have a lot to say about the country's interior, especially as far as culture and national identity are concerned. Stripping away all the superficialities of the economic crisis, the nation suffers from a crisis of identity, central in its recent history, ever since the establishment of the modern Greek state.

 

The Greeks never experienced the fertilizing wave of the Enlightenment, as did other European nations a few centuries ago; and have yet to answer the central questions concerning the very essence of being "Greek". As the philosopher Cornelius Castoriades accurately pointed out some decades ago, modern Greeks have not yet managed to choose between the democratic and open society of ancient Athens, and the theocratic, totalitarian rule of the Byzantine era.

By the way the Byzantine Empire, which is often depicted as a Greek state, especially by Greeks themselves, never was a "Greek" empire, litanies to the opposite notwithstanding. The machinery of crime and oppression of the Byzantine rule, used fire and steel to obliterate anything that resembled ancient Greece.

The Academy of Athens, founded by Plato, was shut down, by Justinian who is known for his "achievements" as the "Great". Even the word "Hellene" ("Greek"), which the lady in the video so proudly pronounces, was forbidden and the people identified themselves as "Romans", from the time of Theodosius ("the Great") 4th century AD, up until the late 18th, early 19th century. These two vastly diverse world-views are irreconcilable, yet the average Greek suffers from the schizophrenia of somehow adhering to both.
Though I am fully conscious that in touching upon these issues I risk being seen as an "anth-Hellene" - "anti-Greek", by those anxious to obfuscate and conceal the fact of our cultural problem, I just cannot remain silent. I uphold that we must at some point stand up to reality and criticize ourselves, before pointing our finger to foreigners. Now allow me to comment upon the video itself.

First of all this is a really amateur imitation of an advertisement from the beer "Canadian", which alone is enough to prove the cheap fabric of the entire message. Yet this is only the beginning of the problem. The video wishes to present, in a vastly distasteful manner, how we the great Greeks are superior to all the rest. "My country is a democracy, it actually invented the concept" "and if I owe you any money, it's because I invented the idea of the free market". We are the best because we invented this, that and the other. We even invented "the west" and if you are actually criticizing "us" it is just because we invented criticism in the first place!
It is one thing to innocuously accept that ancient Greeks were the first to elaborate on many aspects of what we today as "Westerners" consider part of our culture; but it is a fundamentally different thing to argue that everything henceforth should be attributed to "us the Greeks".

Such kind of perverse mode of thinking plagues the modern Greeks for quite some time now. It is those arguments locals use when they expound on the superiority of Hellenism, stemming from the achievements of antiquity; unconsciously perhaps to justify their current nothingness. The discussion usually runs along the lines of "by the time we were inventing democracy they were still living in caves".
For the sober non-Greeks it is crystal clear that this mode of thinking is inherently flawed and fallacious, let alone its vanity. Even if it were true it still provides no justification whatsoever for any mistakes currently committed, nor does it allow space for complacency.

But many Greeks do not treat this as a source of major concern since they fail to realize that while we "the great Greeks" have not made a single step forward since antiquity, but have instead made strides backwards; the "cave-dwellers", the "barbarians" have already been to the moon and beyond. Then there is this "nice" touristic marketing touch of the beautiful country with the thousands of islands. So what? Is it the only beautiful country on earth? And even if it were, why should that make you proud about it? Did you also invent the islands, the beaches, the sunshine? Or did you also come up with the very concept of "tourism"?
Finally, I would like to draw your attention to this ultimate sign of naivety (or illiteracy?) coming at the very end.

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Comments

Congratulations on writing this article. In my opinion, this is the the best opinion piece to have appeared on Neos Kosmos. The video which you have criticised is nothing more than a testament to the cultural backwardness that defines one particular layer of greeks of the diaspora. It is both pointless and embarrassing. If it's of any consolation, it seems that the majority of Greeks residing in Greece have long since overcome these delusions of grandeur, which only appear to hold sway amongst certain greeks of the diaspora.
Dear Sir. You call yourself a Greek. I know that I am a Hellene. Sadly, your piece proves the lack of depth of your understanding
Right On!

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