US Congress Approves Funding for Greek Shipyards

Greek shipyards
US financing will provide a major boost for the future of shipbuilding in Greece. Credit: Elefsis Shipyards

The US Congress approved last week a $125 million financing plan for the Greek shipyards at Elefsis, south of Athens in a major boost for the future of shipbuilding in Greece.

The US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), America’s development bank, will provide the loan to ONEX company which owns the Elefsis shipyards.

The shipyards are attempting to be restructured through bankruptcy law after they couldn’t sustain themselves, falling 423.3 million euros ($462.16 million) into debt.

The history of the shipyard dates back to 1962, when its construction started and its operation commenced in October 1969. It is located in Elefsis Bay approximately 10 nautical miles from the anchorage of Piraeus, Greece’s biggest port.

It covers an area of 250 thousand square meters offering construction, repair and modification facilities.

Greece remains the top shipping nation in the world, as Greek shipowners with 5,514 ships currently control approximately 21 percent of the global fleet, in terms of capacity, the Union of Greek Shipowners (USG) recently announced.

While Greek shipping tycoons rule the world’s waves, shipbuilding in the country lagged for years, with ships being bought elsewhere to build the fleet, seeing Elefsis fall into decline.

Funding will upgrade Greek shipyards

The funding, which was approved by Congress, will be used to restore and upgrade the shipyards, increasing the service capacity to up to 200 ships per year and getting Greece back into the sector.

When fully operational, ONEX Elefsis Shipyards, owned by businessman Panos Xenokostas, plans to become the largest shipyard in the country that will serve the Greek Navy and commercial fleets.

In another major development last week, ONEX announced an agreement for the expansion of cooperation with Italian shipbuilding company Fincantieri which is the largest shipbuilder in Europe.

According to a statement by ONEX the agreement provides significant competitive advantages and benefits to the Greek shipbuilding and defense industries, as well as the Hellenic Navy.

The new partnership includes a new world-class ship production line, including the construction of corvettes, and advanced surface ships, especially frigates.

“It offers the HN modern, cross-functional, and high-tech solutions to significantly upgrade its operational capabilities in the Eastern Mediterranean,” the statement said.

Already Onex, have signed a memorandum for the production and maintenance of two corvettes, with an option for a third.

The project is expected to open 2,500 new jobs in the shipbuilding sector. A collaboration with multiplier-effect benefits for the Greek economy and defense will be launched.

“We are utilizing a unique feature of the Italian defense industry, where a network of small and medium-sized companies collaborates with global ones: this is exactly what we want to apply in Greece to make Elefsis Shipyards a point of reference,” Fincantieri CEO Pierroberto Folgiero commented.

‘I am a Berliner’: Kennedy’s Historic Speech 60 Years Ago on this Day

I am a Berliner Kennedy
JFK delivered his famous speech in Berlin on June 26, 1963. Public Domain

“I am a Berliner” (“Ich bin ein Berliner“) is one of the best-known speeches of the Cold War; it was given by US President John F. Kennedy on June 26, 1963, in West Berlin.

This speech became an enduring symbol of American support for West Germany during a critical time in history.

Twenty-two months earlier, East Germany had erected the Berlin Wall to prevent mass emigration to West Berlin.

The speech was aimed as much at the Soviet Union as it was at West Berliners.

Another phrase in the speech was also spoken in German, “Lasst sie nach Berlin kommen” (“Let them come to Berlin”), addressed at those who claimed “we can work with the Communists”, a remark at which Nikita Khrushchev scoffed only days later.

The speech is considered one of Kennedy’s finest, delivered at the height of the Cold War and the New Frontier. It was a great morale boost for West Berliners, who lived in an enclave deep inside East Germany and feared a possible East German occupation.

Speaking to an audience of 120,000 on the steps of Rathaus Schöneberg, Kennedy said,

Two thousand years ago, the proudest boast was civis romanus sum [“I am a Roman citizen”]. Today, in the world of freedom, the proudest boast is “Ich bin ein Berliner!”… All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin, and therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words “Ich bin ein Berliner!”

Kennedy used the phrase twice in his speech, including at the end, pronouncing the sentence with his Boston accent and reading from his note “ish bin ein Bearleener”, which he had written out using English orthography to approximate the German pronunciation

Significance of Kennedy’s “I am a Berliner”

By declaring “Ich bin ein Berliner”, Kennedy expressed his solidarity with the people of West Berlin, emphasizing that the United States stood firmly with them in the face of Soviet aggression and attempts to isolate West Berlin.

The speech also reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to NATO allies. It was delivered against the backdrop of the Cold War, a period of intense geopolitical rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union.

By openly declaring support for West Berlin, Kennedy reiterated the U.S. commitment to its NATO allies and demonstrated that America would not tolerate further Soviet expansion.

I am a Berliner Kennedy
Tens of thousands of Berliners turned out for President Kennedy’s address at the Rudolph Wilde Platz, West Berlin. Public Domain

It was also a symbol of freedom and resistance. Kennedy’s speech aimed to inspire the people of West Berlin and reinforce their resilience and determination to maintain their freedom. His words resonated with the city’s inhabitants, who had endured the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, an oppressive symbol of the division between East and West.

By affirming that the citizens of West Berlin were not alone, Kennedy bolstered their spirits and sent a message of hope and defiance to those living under Soviet control.

The speech garnered significant international attention and played a crucial role in shaping global perceptions of the Cold War. It showcased American leadership and the moral authority of the United States in standing up for freedom and democracy.

Kennedy’s words reverberated beyond Berlin, inspiring people around the world who were living under oppressive regimes.

The original manuscript of the speech is stored with the National Archives and Records Administration.

Elon Musk Says He Will Train for Cage Fight Against Mark Zuckerberg

Elon Musk Zuckerberg cage fight
Elon Musk is up for a cage match in Las Vegas with Zuckerberg. Credits: Flickr/ CC BY 2.0.

Elon Musk said on Saturday he will start training if the mixed martial arts cage fight he has provoked with fellow billionaire media mogul Mark Zuckerberg is to take place.

Twitter owner Musk tweeted on Tuesday he was up for a cage match in Las Vegas with Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook parent Meta (META.O), who has trained in jiu-jitsu.

“I haven’t started training yet. So if this does happen, I will,” Musk said in a talk on Twitter with Ashlee Vance, the author of a book on Musk and the space race.

The match “might actually happen” said Musk while attending a birthday party in Europe according to Reuters, adding it was possible that it could go badly if Zuckerberg takes the match seriously.

What started as a banter is now turning into a plans for a full-blown physical fight. Dana White, the president of Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), has confirmed that tech moguls Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk are ‘dead serious’ about their upcoming ‘cage fight’.

According to White, he had personal conversations with both Zuckerberg and Musk, and they are fully committed to stepping into the ring.

Musk and Zuckerberg agree to cage fight

Musk and Zuckerberg had apparently agreed last week to hold a cage fight in Nevada to settle their rivalry.

In an exchange, Musk said “I’m up for a cage match if he is” in response to a Twitter thread mocking Zuckerberg’s recent penchant for jiu-jitsu, which he had been posting on Instagram.

Zuckerberg replied through Instagram including a screenshot of Musk’s tweet with the caption: “Send Me Location.” As Meta owner, Zuckerberg also owns Instagram and Facebook.

Musk then replied to Zuckerberg’s response with: “Vegas Octagon.” The Octagon is the competition mat and fenced-in area used for Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) bouts.

Musk, who turns 52 later this month, also tweeted: “I have this great move that I call “The Walrus”, where I just lie on top of my opponent & do nothing.”

He also tweeted: “I almost never work out, except for picking up my kids & throwing them in the air.”

Meanwhile, 39-year-old Zuckerberg has already been training in mixed martial arts (MMA) and has recently won jiu-jitsu tournaments.

Credit: Facebook/Mark Zuckerberg

In May he competed in a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) tournament for the first time and actually won two medals – one gold and one silver.

“Competed in my first jiu-jitsu tournament and won some medals for the Guerrilla Jiu-Jitsu team,” the tech billionaire said in -what else- a Facebook post.

Twitter has a field day on the Musk-Zuckerberg fight

As expected, Twitter is enjoying this. Check out the meme fest thanks to the Musk vs Zuck:

Mitsotakis Wins by a Landslide in Greek Elections

Mitsotakis Greece elections
Mitsotakis triumphs in the general elections according to the exit poll. Credit: New Democracy.

Center-right New Democracy (ND) party of Kyriakos Mitsotakis is the clear winner of the Greek general elections held on Sunday.

With almost all votes counted, ND gets 40.55 percent, followed by SYRIZA at 17.84 percent. PASOK is at 11.85 percent with the Communist Party follows at 7.69 percent.

 

According to the results, ND will get 158 seats and an absolute majority in the 300-strong Greek Parliament.

Greece is facing a new historic chapter, and New Democracy has been given a strong mandate to proceed with major reforms faster, Mitsotakis said on Sunday evening, with the majority of votes counted in the repeat elections.

“Today we will briefly enjoy our victory but as of tomorrow, we are rolling our sleeves up and getting to work,” Mitsotakis said in a brief message at party headquarters.

“This freely given support only increases my responsibility to respond to peoples’ hopes. I personally feel an even stronger obligation to serve the country with all my abilities,” Mitsotakis added.

The electoral law under which Sunday’s poll took place grants the winner as many as 50 bonus seats in Greece’s 300-member parliament.

Mitsotakis, who excluded the possibility of trying to form a coalition government after his victory in May, says he needs at least 158 seats to rule comfortably and be able to push through “ambitious” reforms.

Mitsotakis thrashes opposition in the repeat Greek elections

Sunday’s vote was a humiliating defeat for SYRIZA, which lost more than 30 MPs. “This result is negative for democracy and society,” Tsipras said, referring to far-right parties winning votes. For Syriza, he said, a “great and creative historic circle had closed.”

“We have to look upon that with pride,” he said.

Three fringe parties of the extreme right and one of the extreme left are the newcomers in Greek politics.

The surprise according to the results is a new extreme right-wing formation called The Spartans which gets between 4.64 and 12 seats in the new Parliament.

The grouping was catapulted from relative obscurity after support from Ilias Kasiadiaris, the frontman of the now-banned Golden Dawn far-right party. His own party was barred from the elections and he endorsed the Spartans from jail.

Greek Solution, a nationalist, pro-Russia party formed by former journalist and TV salesman Kyriakos Velopoulos, gets between 4.44 percent and 12 seats.

Niki, or Victory party gets 3.69 percent and 10 seats.

Plefsi Eleftherias, or Passage to Freedom, gets 3.11 percent and 8 seats. Its leader Zoe Konstantopoulou was the parliament speaker under SYRIZA.

MeRA25 anti-austerity party of Tsipras’s former maverick finance minister Yanis Varoufakis, gets below the 3 percent threshold to be represented in Parliament.

The fact that MeRA25 did not manage to enter Parliament after this electoral contest “is the lesser of two evils,” said party leader Yanis Varoufakis in his statement on Sunday evening after the party failed to cross the 3% threshold.

What is most important is “tonight’s lament of the Left, as we failed to transform ten years’ worth of resistance to disastrous memorandum policies, and we also failed to prevent the transformation of people’s wrath into a far-right movement.”

Varoufakis thanked all supporters, and promised that the party will work tirelessly “for the reconstruction of the pluralistic, ecological, unifying and selfless Left.”

A party needs to gain more than 3 percent to achieve parliamentary representation.

Mitsotakis called for a stable government for the next four years from the polling station in Kifissia, where he voted on Sunday.

“Citizens and democracy are the focus today, it is a day of joy and responsibility. We are voting for the second time in just a few weeks so the country can have a stable and efficient government with a four-year horizon,” he said.

The Guardian reports that Mitsotakis’ triumph is a testimony to the desire of voters to see Greece continue on a path of “normalcy” after the debt-stricken country’s brush with bankruptcy and decade-long rollercoaster crisis of bailouts and austerity.

21,634 voting centers throughout the country opened at 7 a.m. local time and closed at 7 p.m. ND won May 21 vote with a 20-point lead over main opposition SYRIZA, a margin Greece has not seen since the 1970s. But it fell short of the majority needed to rule alone due to a proportional voting system in place for that poll.

Extreme Right Makes Gains in Greek Elections

Extreme Right Greek elections
The Greek Parliament is bracing for new MPs with extreme-right, ultra-nationalist views. Credit: AMNA

Three fringe parties of the extreme right and one of the extreme left are the newcomers in Greek politics after Sunday’s elections.

The big surprise is a new extreme right-wing formation called The Spartans which got 4.64 percent and gained 12 seats in the new Parliament.

The grouping was catapulted from relative obscurity after support from Ilias Kasiadiaris, the frontman of the now-banned Golden Dawn far-right party. His own party was barred from the elections and he endorsed the Spartans from jail.

The Spartans represent all the ideals and values of Hellenism, said leader Vassilis Stigas in statements on Sunday evening. The 59-year-old was a helicopter engineer and served as an army aviation officer.

Spartans have arrived “to unite, not divide,” he said, adding that “a national party, a national voice will again be in Parliament, after a long time.”

Stigas also thanked Kasiadiaris for his support.

Kasidiaris hails success of the extreme right in the Greek elections

The Golden Dawn strongman hailed the success of The Spartans by posting a photo from outside his cell celebrating and wearing a tee shirt with the logo of the party.

“Today is a day of triumph for the Greeks who have been fighting for the Fatherland and at the same time an unprecedented defeat of the power system. The state failed to ban the original request of hundreds of thousands of Greeks for a strong National opposition. The first step towards the establishment of a strong National faction in the country’s political life has already been taken,” Kasidiaris said.

In October 2020, he was convicted of directing a criminal organization and sentenced to 13 years in prison.

Pro-Russia, anti-immigration parties in Greek Parliament

Greek Solution, a nationalist, pro-Russia party formed by former journalist and TV salesman Kyriakos Velopoulos, got 4.47 percent of the vote and will be presented in Parliament with 12 MPs.

Velopoulos slammed pollsters in his statement at the end of election day on Sunday, blaming them for misleading viewers that his party would not make it into Parliament even though results pointed to the opposite.

Extreme Right Greek elections
Velopoulos cast his vote on Sunday. Credit: AMNA

He emphasizes action against illegal immigration, including the installation of an electric fence on the Greece–Turkey border and detaining illegal immigrants on uninhabited islands as they await deportation.

The party also advocates for shutting down NGOs operating in Greece, describing them as “trafficking companies”. Velopoulos has expressed admiration for Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and the governance of his Fidesz party in Hungary, particularly the country’s economic and migration policies

Niki, or Victory party which emphasizes Orthodox Christian traditions got 3.71 percent and 10 MPs.

Founded by educator Dimitris Natsios in 2019 its positions are defined as the triptych “Faith, Nation, Family”.

Extreme Right Greek elections
Dimitris Natsios leader of Niki party. Credit: AMNA

Niki will mount “a real opposition in the upcoming Parliament’, said Natsios in his statement late on Sunday.

The party, he said, is “not just fighting for those who honored us with their votes, but for the entire Greek people, not only for our voters, and definitely for the silent majority that abstained from voting.”

With respect “for the vote of our fellow citizens and in fear of the Lord, we shall march fighting for the victory of Hellenism, the victory of human dignity, and the victory of the common people,” Natsios underlined.

Niki advocates the radical restructuring of education, the change of the regime for the acquisition of Greek citizenship by immigrants and refugees, the separation of state-parties, the taking of measures to solve the demographic problem as well as the economic and moral reward of multiple children and the support of the traditional family.

It maintains a neutral attitude towards third countries, favoring Orthodoxy as a unifying element of the Balkan peoples. It disagrees with Greece’s support for Ukraine regarding Russia’s invasion, instead preferring neutrality.

On the left of the political spectrum, the newcomer is Plefsi Eleftherias, or Passage to Freedom, which got 3.17 percent and 8 MPs. Its leader Zoe Konstantopoulou, a leftist firebrand, was the parliament speaker under SYRIZA.

Zoe Konstantopoulou. Credit: AMNA

Konstantopoulou promised that her party’s level of political opposition in the upcoming new Parliament “will be unequaled by any other party or any other deputy,” and that although her party only has 8 deputies, she will personally “count for 100 deputies” and the rest of her deputies “as 20 each.”

Voters have decided that there should be a woman leading a party in Parliament, “the only female party leader in Parliament,” she stressed.

Searching for the Lost Biblical City of Bethsaida

Bethsaida
The gate of what some archaeologists believe may be the biblical city of Bethsaida, at Et-Tell, north of the Sea of Galilee. Credit: Chmee2 /CC BY 3.0

Israeli archaeologists recently found two areas which might have been part of the ancient city of Bethsaida, which was mentioned prominently in the Bible. A Byzantine church may be the missing link needed to establish one of them as the city where two apostles were born.

The areas have both Byzantine as well as Roman ruins from the eras through which the city flourished.

What the researchers call “Area A” at El-Araj has the remains of the southern, western, and northern walls of the Byzantine-era Church of the Apostles. Also in that same area are the remains from the Roman period of the city.

A small fishing village emerged at some point between the first century BC and the first century AD at the confluence of the Jordan River and the Sea of Galilee, prompting its settlers to name the place Bethsaida, or “house of hunting,” (fishing).

Bethsaida
Students digging at the site of El-Araj, Israel, under the direction of archaeologist R. Steven Notley of Nyack College. Students are sitting on stones that are part of first-century houses. Credit: Facebook/R. Steven Notley

According to the historical record as written by the famed Roman/Jewish historian Josephus Flavius, the tetrarch Herod Philip gave the settlement the status of a polis, naming it Julias, in the year 30 or 31 AD. It was renamed Julias in honor of Julia Augusta of Rome’s royal family.

At about that time, tradition has it that two of Jesus Christ’s apostles, the brothers Andrew and Peter, lived there, as well as the apostle Philip. However, some time beginning in the third century, the historical record shows nothing at all regarding Bethsaida/Julias up until the fifth century.

The archaeological record shows that in the fifth century the Byzantines built a church in the town over what they believed to have been the home of the apostles. Somehow however, incredibly, the town was once again completely lost to the historical record after that point.

Nevertheless, that status may be changing, according to archaeologist R. Steven Notley of Nyack College in New York.

Roman bath
A mud brick from a Roman bath found at El- Araj, the purported site of the Biblical city of Bethsaida in Israel. Credit: Facebook/R.Steven Notley

“Bethsaida is the last missing city of the Gospels,” he told interviewers from the Israeli newspaper Haaretz during a recent visit to the country. He and Mordechai Aviam of the Kinneret Academic College of the Galilee are both confident that they have found Bethsaida at El-Araj.

A place called “Et-Tell,” located just two km (1.25 miles) away, which was excavated for more than thirty years by another archaeologist, Rami Arav of the University of Nebraska at Omaha, may also be the long-lost Bethsaida.

Byzantine column
A Byzantine column unearthed at the Church of the Apostles at El-Araj, the purported site of the Biblical city of Bethsaida. Credit: Facebook/R. Steven Notley

Notley and Aviam excavated the El-Araj site in July. Unfortunately, some pits they had excavated in previous years there remain full of water from a sudden flooding of the Sea of Galilee.

Research teams from Kinneret College at that time excavated lakeside homes from the Roman period of the area; the fifth-century Byzantine church previously identified at the site was also the subject of this year’s dig, as students tried to get down to the level of its floor.

Aviam stated at the time that he was hoping to find an inscription in the church, which may even include the name of the bishop or benefactors who were behind the Byzantine church’s construction. Such information could be the missing link needed to certify that this indeed was the biblical city.

Byzantine Church
The interior of the Byzantine Church of the Apostles in El-Araj. Credit: Facebook/R. Steven Notley

Both Aviam and Notley are placing a great degree of trust in the age-old tradition that the area where the church was founded was indeed the home of the apostles Peter, Andrew, and Philip.

The modern-day excavations of this area actually began with the construction of an Ottoman manse called Beit Habek (“House of the Bey”) in the 19th century during the period of Ottoman rule in the area.

It was known at the time to have been built by Abdul al-Rahman Baasha al-Yusuf, the local bey, on top of ancient ruins. The marshy, mosquito-infested land around that part of the lake was, at that time, farmed by local Jews.

In making his own digs at the site in 1930, the German priest Rudolf de Haas discovered an ancient mosaic two meters (six feet) below the level of the foundations of Beit Habek.

Church of the Apostles
A roof tile from the Byzantine Church of the Apostles, El-Araj. Credit: Facebook/ R. Steven Notley

Unfortunately, the mansion and the surrounding area was shelled as a result of fighting between the Syrians and Israelis in 1955.

Notley explains that “What de Haas saw were the mosaic floors likely belonging to the Byzantine church (even though he mistakenly called them ‘Roman mosaics’).”

When he and Aviam began excavating this area back in 2016, they unearthed ornate gilded glass tesserae, which are typical of the glittering tiles used in Byzantine mosaics.

After the stunning discovery of the mosaic tiles, they subsequently found the walls of the church, which were recorded in the writings of a saint from the 8th century, Willibald (also called Willibrord).

Pilgrimage writings describe Bethsaida, point to El-Araj

Willibald wrote the “Hodoeporicon,” an itinerary of his pilgrimage to the Holy Land. He tells of walking from Capernaum (Kfar Nahum) to Chorazin (Kursi) via the Church of the Apostles in Bethsaida.

Dr. Achia Kohn-Tavor, a member of the Kinneret Institute for Galilean Archaeology, states definitely that “We have hard evidence,” establishing El-Araj as the site of the Biblical city. All Byzantine basilicas were oriented east-west, which is true of the one fond at the site, and the archaeologists have also found the bases of some of the church pillars, as well as what is left of its arcade and nave.

“The only part missing today is the east wall,” Kohn-Tavor declares, adding that the church had been average in size—approximately 15 meters (49 feet) wide. He and the other researchers have even found pieces of masonry with engraved crosses, some made of white marble that was imported from the Greek city of Marmara in Asia Minor of what is today Turkey.

Kohn-Tavor believes that there were other marble fixtures in the building, but unfortunately much of it may have been removed at a later time, even, tragically, burned to make lime.

Notley maintains that he is quite confident it is indeed the Church of the Apostles, based partly on Willibald’s writings as well as the fact that there is no other such major structure in the area.

Mud may make the difference in determining true identity of Bethsaida

In contrast, the other prospective site for Bethsaida, Et-Tell, is an Iron Age city which also may have been the capital of the biblical kingdom of Geshur. Notley and Aviam state that no Roman layer of ruins or later church have been found there.

The mud that even as we speak is sitting in the archeologists’ square digging holes in El-Araj from the latest flooding of the Sea of Galilee is the clue to their belief that this indeed is Bethsaida rather than the stony remains of Et-Tell.

In El-Araj, the site of the fishing village, there is a Roman layer of ruins going back to the first to third centuries AD. Above that is a layer of silt that measures an incredible two meters in depth.

On top of that are the remains of the Byzantine culture, with its church dating from the fifth to eighth centuries AD.

This begs the vital question of what is contained in that two meters of mud between the Roman ruins and the Byzantine ruins above.

The Roman ruins show beyond a doubt that a small polis, or city, had indeed been established there. The silt layer above it shows that from the third century, the water level in the lake sometimes rose, and the site was inundated, as was the case in 2020, with the same type of mud that is plaguing the archeologists at the site today.

Gap in historical record aligns with flooding event along shore of Galilee

Aviam explains the striations clearly show that “It was abandoned for 200 years, then it was resettled in the fifth century, until being abandoned once and for all in the eighth century.”

As noted previously, there are no historical records from the third to the fifth century regarding Bethsaida, and the Byzantine era saw the construction of the great church in the fifth century. Archeologists believe this clearly shows that the gap in the historical record is borne out by the geological record.

Indicating that the site was indeed a polis, the Roman layer below the Galilean mud includes the remains of a bathhouse, which was part of any decent-sized Roman settlement. That is the only large public building found at El-Araj thus far; however, archaeologists have unearthed private homes from that same Roman period.

In three separate areas where they dug around the site, they found not only pottery and coins but glassware and even fragments of beautifully-painted frescoes, according to Haaretz.

Only a small part of the fascinating site has been explored up until now, since researchers are focusing their efforts on finding the floor of the church. Other areas will be addressed as time and budgets allow.

“Not easy to have a better candidate”

The other site at Et-Tell may indeed have been, according to Arav, the capital of Geshur. However, Aviam argues that it was already in decline during the Roman period. Importantly, Et-Tell is not located along the shore, as any fishing village would have to be, but perched on a hill.

The Et-Tell site, like many areas of the Holy Land, does have Hellenistic-era remains, but of course, those were from 200 to 300 years earlier than the Roman ruins. By that time, the city there apparently went into decline.

Naturally, that would be diametrically opposed to being upgraded into a polis.

Notley adds in shoring up his theory that the Et-Tell site is “too far from the lake,” that fishing from Et-Tell would have to mean that the lake at that time was a few meters higher, and that would drown every settlement in Galilee.

Asked why the Israeli government recognized Et-Tell as Bethsaida, Aviam notes that when that was done in the 1990s, it was the only candidate for the distinction.

Arav, he added, was the one who “sold” the authorities on that being the actual city, and he was the one who challenged others to locate another, more likely site. Many believe that that is exactly what has now been done.

“It’s not easy to have a better candidate,” Aviam tells interviewers with a laugh. The scientific papers on the dig will be published soon.

Although Aviam and his team have not unearthed the rest of the polis, that may happen, and sooner rather than later.

As to the reason behind the Israeli government’s websites continuing to state that Et-Tell was the real Bethsaida when the issue is still being investigated, the Aviam excavation is just a few years old, so the government must wrap its head around the possibility that they need to change their statements and go with the newly-excavated site.

The Israeli Antiquities Authority has stated for the record that the issue does need to be revisited in the coming years, as the new excavations bring increasingly more evidence to light.

Why NASA Names Its Spacecraft After the Ancient Greek Gods

NASA Greek Gods
NASA’s Space Launch System rocket carrying the Orion spacecraft launches on the Artemis I flight test, Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2022. Credit: Keegan Barber & NASA, Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Throughout its 64-year history, NASA has named several of its spacecraft and missions after ancient Greek gods and mythological figures. But what is the connection between NASA and ancient Greek mythology?

From the Apollo program, which ran between 1961 and 1972, to the ongoing Artemis program, which began in 2017, NASA has a tendency to name its most important endeavors after Greek mythological figures.

NASA’s spaceflight missions named after Greek Gods

Dr. Abe Silverstein was the person largely responsible for naming NASA’s early missions. Silverstein was an engineer who had also worked at NASA’s predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA).

Silverstein became the Director of Space Flight Programs at NASA and was responsible for planning and directing the United States’ first spaceflight missions.

Silverstein named two missions after the Greek gods: Mercury and Apollo. Mercury was the Roman name for the Greek god Hermes. In mythology, Hermes was a messenger god and protector of travelers and thieves.

Apollo was one of the most beloved deities by the ancient Greeks. He was a son of Zeus and Leto and was associated with archery, poetry, music, and dance. Apollo was also closely associated with the Sun, which is perhaps why his name was seen as suitable for a space mission.

Silverstein was inspired by Greek mythology one evening in 1960. Whilst reading a book on the subject, he came across a picture of Apollo. Silverstein said that the image of “Apollo riding his chariot across the sun was appropriate to the grand scale of the proposed program.”

NASA also named a mission that took place between Mercury and Apollo according to a mythological theme. The name of Project Gemini, which ran between 1961 and 1966, was inspired by the myth of the Dioscuri.

The Dioscuri were the half-twin brothers, Castor and Pollux. Both twins were sons of Leda, but the father of Pollux was Zeus. Castor’s father was a mortal king of Sparta. When Castor died, his demigod brother begged Zeus to also grant immortality to his brother, so Zeus transformed them into the constellation Gemini.

The Apollo 15 Service Module as viewed from the Apollo Lunar Module.
The Apollo 15 Service Module as viewed from the Apollo Lunar Module. Credit: NASA, Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Artemis Program

NASA has continued its tradition of naming its missions and spaceships after Greek mythological figures.

NASA’s latest mission to once again land humans on the moon has been named after the goddess Artemis. In mythology, Artemis was closely associated with the moon and her twin brother was the god Apollo.

The name Artemis is therefore a nod to the mission’s objective of establishing a long-term human presence on the moon and to the earlier Apollo missions.

In November, NASA successfully launched the Artemis 1 moon rocket. The spaceship itself was called Orion, which, in Greek mythology, was a huge, supernaturally strong hunter. Orion’s parents were the god Poseidon and the gorgon Euryale.

Artemis 1
NASA Launches Its Flight To The Moon and Mars Credit NASA, Kim Shiflett via Wikimedia Commons

Vangelis, Mythodea, and the Mars Odyssey

In 1993, the renowned Greek composer Vangelis performed at the Herodes Atticus Theater in Athens, Greece. It was the first and last time the general public would hear Mythodea, his new orchestral symphony, until 2001.

However, in 2001, Sony Classical brought Mythodea to the attention of NASA, who adopted Vangelis’ musical vision as the official soundtrack for their Mars Odyssey mission. The audio CD for Mythodea was scheduled for release on the same day the Odyssey spacecraft reached the orbit of Mars.

Vangelis commented, “I made up the name Mythodea from the words myth and ode. And I felt in it a kind of shared or common path with NASA’s current exploration of the planet.”

The Mars Odyssey mission itself was named after the epic work of Homer. In Homer’s tale, Odysseus, a hero of the Trojan War, overcomes impossible odds to return home.  Similarly, Mars, like many of the planets in the solar system, is named after the Greco-Roman gods. Mars was the Roman name for Ares, the Greek god of war.

It is perhaps fitting that NASA continues to name its space missions after the ancient Greek gods. The ancient Greeks looked to the sky with great curiosity. Astronomers like Aratus and Apollonius made some of the world’s first discoveries about outer space.

However, the ancient Greeks also captured something less tangible but just as important in their mythology. Before NASA sent anyone to the moon, the Greeks and Romans named the planets after their gods. In this way, they recognized the majesty, wonder, and occasional terror the universe can conjure in the human imagination.

Travel to Greece’s Majestic Evia Island

Chiliadou beach, Evia , Greece is nominated for the best european film location
Travel to Greece’s Majestic Evia Island. credit: Discover Greece / Trip Advisor

Evia island is one of the most beautiful islands in Greece; yet, it is not advertised nearly as often as its more glamorous siblings in the Aegean.

Evia, or Euboea, is the second largest island in Greece after Crete. Along with Lefkada in the Ionian, it is one of the two islands connected to the mainland by a bridge.

There are many elements of Evia that would remind one of Crete. Tall mountains, lots of greenery, traditional villages, sandy beaches, and a hopping night life in its bars all along the seashore.

One can visit Evia without having to spend hours on a boat, but if you want to enjoy the feeling of sailing to Evia, you can take the ferry from the Athens suburb of Rafina and arrive within an hour.

Chalkida, or Chalkis, is Evia’s main city, and it is connected to the mainland by two bridges, an older one and a newer one. The easy drive from Athens makes it a Greek vacationer’s favorite.

Beautiful beaches

When you travel to a Greek island, the first thing, of course, is to enjoy the sea and sun, and Evia has plenty of places where that is possible.

The most famous—and probably most beautiful for many—is Chiliadou Beach. Crystal clear waters, sand and rocks, and idyllic surroundings make it an Evia favorite.

Reminding one of a beach in the Caribbean, Chiliadou is the perfect place to relax and enjoy the Greek summertime.

Located only a little over an hour from Chalkida in central Evia, Chiliadou Beach is a must.

The beach is about to become even more famous as Chiliadou will be featured in the upcoming movie Triangle of Sadness by award-winning Swedish director Ruben Östlund.

Filmed in both Greece and Sweden, the film stars a great philhellene and a regular visitor to the Greek islands, the American actor Woody Harrelson.

Agia Anna is another wonderful beach situated in northern Evia only less than a two hour-drive from Chalkida.

It features long stretches of golden sand, and its deep blue waters attract tons of tourists during the summer months.

A campsite which is quite popular among younger folks—since it offers a cheap vacation in a beautiful location—is located in the vicinity of the beach in the middle of a pine tree forest.

Rovies Beach is for those who like to swim for hours. Deep, cool, clear waters invite you to dive right in and enjoy yourself.

Rovies is the ideal choice for anyone interested in a pristine environment.

It is also ideal for those who seek peace and quiet. It is not easy to see from the road, but the friendly locals from the village of the same name will assist you.

A bit further away and about two hours from Chalkida is Agiocampos Beach. The longer drive is worth it, though, as the beach is a hidden treasure.

In the clear waters of Agiocampos, you can see the wide variety of fish swimming under the waves.

There is the added bonus of the village which is full of bars and restaurants—perfect for nightlife—surrounding the beach.

Finally, Mourteri Beach, which many consider to be the best on the entire island stretches nearly five km (3 miles) long and provides a mix of sand and stone on the beach.

Located 10 km (six miles) from Kymi, Evia’s port town, Mourteri’s waters are deep blue in color and neither too warm nor too cold.

Even though it is very popular, the expansive beach allows for tons of privacy where one can get lost in his or her thoughts far removed from the rest of the world.

Limnionas Beach is another hotspot for travelers to Evia. It is quite popular with campers looking for free accommodations, and it is a pebbly beach with small, round stones.

The waters are so transparent, you can see the sea bed and marine life down below; snorkelers will have a blast exploring the rocks.

If you are more into summer comforts, Limnionas Beach provides sunbeds, umbrellas, and a couple of tavernas where you can enjoy some wonderful Greek seafood.

Naturally, given the length of the island, there are many more beaches to explore and enjoy. Around Chalkida alone there are eight beaches for all tastes. Maybe you can find your own favorite.

Evia island
Beach in Chalkida. Credit: Greek Reporter

Must do’s on Evia island

Most likely, the visitor to Evia will get there by land, crossing the narrow Evripus Channel that separates it from the mainland of Greece and reaching Chalkida.

Chalkida is the capital of the Evian regional unit and the island’s chief town. An important city-state in Ancient Greece, today it is a popular tourist spot, mostly for Greeks.

The most unique thing about Chalkida is the crazy tidal rips in the Evripus Channel. The water in the strait moves in a northerly direction for six hours at a time.

Visitors stand and watch this extraordinary natural phenomenon quite unlike anything else in the world.

There are other things to do aside from watch the channel waters, including visiting Arethousa, the new Archaeological Museum of Chalkida, which opened its doors in May.

If you are into partying, the nightlife in Chalkida is famous, and if you find yourself there in August, a time when almost all Greeks are on vacation, you may feel as if you’re on Mykonos.

After Chalkida, you can take a trip to Lichadonisia, the little cluster of islets that will have you thinking you’re in a secluded Caribbean paradise.

The islets do not belong to Evia, but they are about 20 minutes away northeast of Evia. You can take one of the three boats from Kavos that make daily trips to Lichadonisia.

These majestic islets are often compared to the Maldives and Seychelles. They are currently uninhabited and considered protected natural habitats.

They are comprised of seven isles and islets, namely Manolia (the largest), Strongyli, Mikri Strongyli, Steno, Vagia, Vorias and Limani.

Enjoy the thermal springs of Aidipsos, a place where luminaries from Winston Churchill and Eleftherios Venizelos to Aristotle Onassis enjoyed their healing powers.

Even earlier on, the ancient Greek hero Hercules used to bathe in the thermal waters there, according to Greek mythology.

The water from the springs travels over 2.5 km up from the depths of the Earth with temperatures between 34 to 82˚ Celcius, (93 to 180 degrees Fahrenheit).

The popular spas date back to more than 20,000 years. Once there, you can visit the well-preserved Venetian castle that was built in the 14th century.

There are two more Venetian fortresses worth visiting on Evia, both in the town of Karystos.

Evia island
Castello Rosso near Karystos. Credit: Jebulon/Wikipedia CC0

The first is the 13th-century castle of Bourtzi within Karystos town right on the seashore. The 11th century Castello Rosso also sits imposingly against the Ochi mountain range nearby.

Karystos is also a must-visit place on Evia island. A small coastal town on the southern shore of the island, it is where ferries from Athens’ coastal suburb of Rafina come and go all day long.

Karystos is alive with activity 24/7. In the morning you’ll witness locals and visitors alike shopping for groceries in their their swimsuits.

At night, traditional tavernas, restaurants, and waterfront bars and cafes brim with well-dressed throngs of people while, on weekends, mainlanders flock to Karystos and mingle with locals, providing for an authentic picture of the way Greeks enjoy the summertime.

Walk down the promenade and people-watch, explore the town’s alleys and little shops, and enjoy the laid-back vibe.

You must also spend some time in Eretria. This was of course an ancient city, but it was reestablished once again as a modern town following the Greek War of Independence.

Now a popular beachside resort, Eretria maintains its ties to the past. Excavations of ancient Eretria began in the 1890s and have been conducted since 1964 by the Greek Archaeological Service.

Today, it is the home of the Evia Ephorate of Antiquities and boasts an archaeological museum—the most significant in all of Evia—and an ancient theater dating back to the 5th century BC that hosts Ancient Greek tragedies and modern plays.

Evia island
The ancient theater of Eretria, dating back to the 5th century BC. Credit: Bdubosso/Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0

The most important site excavated there is the Temple of Apollo Daphnephoros. Artifacts found at this ancient site are displayed at both the Louvre and National Archaeological Museum in Athens.

However, numerous pieces have remained in place at Eretria, notably the terracotta centaur from Lefkandi dating back to the 10th century BC.

Evia island
Dimosari Ravine. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The Dimosari Ravine is a must-see for hikers. A beautiful gorge in the Ochi mountain range makes this one of the best trails in Greece. Start at the top of the gorge and pass by the impressive megalithic slate “dragon houses.”

The trail is 10 km (six miles) long and is more than rewarding. You will walk through small traditional villages and places with gorgeous flora.

Evia island
The “Dragon houses” of Ochi Mountain. Credit: Klaus Norbert/Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0

As you go descend mountain, you will end up at Kallianou Beach where you can reward yourself by dipping in the cool waters of the Aegean, carrying with you all the beautiful images along the way.

Ancient Evia

If you are a history buff, Evia island has a very long history dating back to early antiquity. Eretria was listed by Homer as one of the Greek city-states which sent ships to the Trojan War.

In ancient times, Chalcis (Chalkida) and Eretria were settled by Ionian Greeks from Attica, both city-states being important trade posts.

Their commercial influence was such that the Euboic scale of weights and measures was used among the Ionic cities and Athens until the end of the 7th century BC.

Chalcis and Eretria were rival cities, with one of the earliest major military conflicts recorded in Greek history. The war between the two cities was known as the Lelantine War, in which many other Greek city-states also took part.

Evia island
Remains of the ancient city of Eritrea. Credit: Reda Rauchaia/Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 4.0

Athens viewed Evia as a strategic territory and important source of grain and cattle, and controlling the island meant Athens could prevent invasion and better protect its trade routes from piracy.

In 506 BC, Athens invaded Chalkis and settled 4,000 Attic Greeks on their lands. The island was then gradually reduced to an Athenian dependency.

In 446 BC, the islanders revolted, but the Athenians, led by Pericles, subdued the revolt and captured Histiaea in the northern part of the island for their own settlement.

In 410 BC, during the Peloponnesian War, the island succeeded in regaining its independence. However, it was overtaken by Philip II of Macedon after the Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC.

Indiana Jones in Search of the Antikythera Mechanism

Indiana Jones Antikythera Mechanism
Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones in search of a missing part of the Antikythera Mechanism. Credit: Lucasfilm

The Antikythera Mechanism takes center stage in the fifth installment of Indiana Jones, as Harrison Ford races against time to retrieve part of what many scientists consider to be humanity’s first computer.

Created by ancient Greek scientist Archimedes in the 3rd century BC, it is an incredibly intricate mechanism, which consists of a network of gears that computed and showed the movement of the stars through the heavens.

“Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” begins by taking the audience back in time to 1944, when the hero is trying to rescue part of the Antikythera Mechanism from the hands of a mad Nazi scientist played by Mads Mikkelsen.

25 years later in 1969, Jones is uneasy over the fact that the U.S. government has recruited former Nazis to help beat the Soviet Union in the competition to make it to space. His goddaughter Helena Shaw, the daughter of his World War II ally Basil Shaw, accompanies him on his journey for the Mechanism.

Meanwhile, Voller, now a NASA member and ex-Nazi involved with the moon-landing program, wishes to make the world into a better place as he sees fit.

Dial of Destiny is the first and only film in the series not directed by Steven Spielberg nor with a story written by George Lucas, with Spielberg and Lucas serving as executive producers instead.

It is also the first and only film in the series not to be distributed by Paramount, as Disney acquired the film rights for future sequels.

What was the Antikythera Mechanism Indiana Jones tries to recover?

The day the Antikythera Mechanism was discovered in 1901 is celebrated across the scientific world.

It was discovered inside an ancient shipwreck by Greek sponge divers on May 17, 1901. After numerous studies, it was estimated to have been constructed between 150 BC and 100 BC. A later study placed it at 205 BC, just seven years after the death of Archimedes.

The extraordinary object that has bedeviled historians and scientists ever since had been split into 82 fragments, making it a near impossibility for researchers to piece it back together.

The Antikythera Mechanism was a very accurate calendar. Furthermore, it was a predictive machine. It predicted the eclipses of the Sun god Helios and the Moon and mapped the movements and positions of the planets, major stars, and constellations.

Predicting the eclipses of the Sun and the Moon was terribly important. These two stars, like all other stars, were gods to the Greeks. Seeing the Sun or the Moon disappear from the sky was more than frightening.

The Story of ‘Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi’ Masterpiece

Delacroix painting Greece Missolonghi

Painted in 1826 by Eugène Delacroix, the leading French Romantic painter of the day, Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi is one of the most celebrated French paintings of the 19th century.

It was produced shortly after the event it commemorates. In 1825, during the Greek War of Independence from Ottoman occupation, Turkish troops besieged the city of Missolonghi.

The Greek population, already decimated by famine and epidemics, attempted a heroic liberation that ended in tragedy when the Turks killed most of the population of the city.

Delacroix, like many European artists and intellectuals, was a fervent supporter of the Greek cause. Most of the painting is dedicated to the figure of Greece herself, represented as a young woman wearing a traditional costume.

Delacroix painting Greece Missolonghi

Greece depicted in the painting as a woman

In the painting, Greece is depicted as a kneeling woman who occupies the major part of the painting. She is wearing a traditional Greek costume, her chest being bare, and she spreads her arms as a sign of sadness.

The hand of a dead victim can be seen protruding from the rubble beneath her feet. In the background, a dark-complexioned man wearing a yellow turban, who symbolizes the enemy, is planting a flag in the ground.

The Missolonghi exodus interested Delacroix not only for his sympathies with the Greeks but also because the poet Lord Byron, whom Delacroix greatly admired, had died there.

Delacroix borrows from Christianity for Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi

The painting also borrows elements from Christianity.

As French art critic Alain Daguerre de Hureaux said: “Greece adopts the attitude of praying in the early centuries of Christianity. The blue coat and white robe, traditionally attributed to the Immaculate Conception, reinforces this analogy to a secular figure of Mary here. The strength of the image is the sharp contrast between the traditional allegory which induces an idealization of the model, and processing of the scene without any concession to the ideal.”

One of the largest museums in France outside of Paris is located in the city of Bordeaux and is called the “Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux.” It was established in the year 1821 and houses a collection of fine art ranging from the 15th century to the 20th century.

Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi can be found in the North Wing of this museum along with various other works created by artists of both the Realism and Impressionist movements during the 19th century.

Delacroix in contrast to the Neoclassical perfectionism of his chief rival Ingres, Delacroix took for his inspiration the art of Rubens and painters of the Venetian Renaissance, with an attendant emphasis on colour and movement rather than clarity of outline and carefully modelled form.

In the words of Baudelaire, “Delacroix was passionately in love with passion, but coldly determined to express passion as clearly as possible.” Together with Ingres, Delacroix is considered one of the last old Masters of painting and is one of the few who was ever photographed.