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[PIO] World Poetry Day, 21 March

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World Poetry Day is celebrated every year on 21 March. It was inspired by the Greek poet Michael Mitras, who in the autumn of 1997 proposed to the Society of Authors that the celebration of poetry be adopted in Greece, as in other countries.

In 1999, the writer Vassilis Vassilikos, then Greece's ambassador to UNESCO, took the idea to the international organization.

UNESCO first adopted March 21 as World Poetry Day during its 30th General Conference in Paris in 1999, with the aim of supporting linguistic diversity through poetic expression and increasing the opportunity for endangered languages to be heard.

On the occasion of World Poetry Day, the following poem sent by the Cypriot poet, historian-researcher Nasa Patapiou, who has been awarded the First State Poetry Prize by the Ministry of Education, Sports and Youth and has been honoured with the Athens Academy Prize as a historian.

Elizabeth-Eloisia*

Or

Xanthi Xenierou Street

Elizabeth-Eloisia opened the window

and gazed at the Bosphorus.

From Extreme Carpasia

I looked at her and greeted her

and she winked at me.

She did not chew laurel

yet she seemed to prophesy.

"I will give birth," she said, "to a poet

in the city of dreams

and I will teach him to love his roots

the folk dances of Smyrna

all the legends

about the rune of Cyprus

and all that was written

about the heptathen.

But in the city of light

there in the distance I see

my desire

being conceived

the garment of redemption

being woven

for the unholy nation".

And she closed her eyes and inspiration

as a vision dictated

to flesh out the phrase

with the initials F. E.E.D.A.

And it was heard from the Seine

it reached the Black Sea

there in Odessa

and the Near East

and a black cloud sprang up

and covered the land of Pelops at first.

Elizabeth-Heloise

before she closed the window

overlooking the Bosphorus

she made the sign of the cross

and suddenly the doors opened

and the Holy Sepulchre appeared in full view.

He then looked towards the East

and showed me the vast blue of the sky

"Friendship Greek Boundary Alytus"

was written up there

in bright and bloody writing.

Then I turned back

and gazed at the abyss of centuries

and prayed

to the new light that was dawning before me...


*Poet's note: Elizabeth Mamaki (Loumaka or Santi) Chenier (1729-1808), of Cypriot origin, was one of the first Greek lamas. She is considered to be the inspirer of the establishment of the "Greek-speaking Hotel" in Paris in order to throw off the Ottoman yoke in Greece. The motto of the association of the members of the "Greek Language Hotel" was the initials F.E.D.A. (Friendship Hellenic Desmos Alytos). Note that the "Greek Language Hotel" was the forerunner of the Society of Friendship. Elizabeth Mamaki or Sadi Chenier was the mother of the poet Andreas Chenier, whom she imbued with the values of Hellenism. In the walled city of Nicosia a street is dedicated to this great female personality, but with her surname misused as Xanthi Xenierou (Chenier) Street.

(EL/NG/NZ/GS)
Contents of this article including associated images are belongs PIO
Views & opinions expressed are those of the author and/or PIO

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