General News
Meropi Kyriacou Honored as TNH Educator of the Year
NEW YORK – Meropi Kyriacou, the new Principal of The Cathedral School in Manhattan, was honored as The National Herald’s Educator of the Year.
ATHENS – As some citizens said they couldn’t understand how a fire that began 25 miles north of Greece’s capital reached northern suburbs and burned homes, rival political leaders blamed the government and wanted an inquiry.
Major opposition SYRIZA leader Stefanos Kasselakis, who since taking over the party in 2023 has been unable to make a dent in the lead of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis mocked the premier’s statement that, “We try to become better every year.”
That came in a ministerial meeting as Mitsotakis returned to Athens from Crete for a briefing on the fires that began in Varnavas and for three days raced toward the capital, requiring an army of firefighters and equipment to stop them.
“I didn’t believe it when I read it, but this explains why … the propaganda has been attempting to send a signal of ‘successful’ management (of the fires.) It is the new Mitsotakis narrative: We will say how much we succeeded so that they forget how much we failed,” Kasselakis said.
“This is the difference between the first and second four-year terms. After the wildfire in Northern Evia: A nationwide address, ‘my fellow citizens’ and lowered eyes,” said Kasselakis, referring to previous years’ fires..
“After the first-ever incursion by fire in history into the urban fabric of Athens (after it had first burned everything in its path for 40 kilometers): Arrogance, self-congratulation and an attempt to completely reverse the reality,” he said.
Mitsotakis, girding for criticism, had also defended the massive response to the fires that he said were worsened by the effects of climate change, a heat wave, drought and gale force winds at times.
Kasselakis ridiculed that, saying that Mitsotakis “will not allow any fire-stricken, homeless citizen who has lost their entire estate, to spoil his myth. The myth of Greece 2.0, which has become Greece Ground Zero.”
The SYRIZA leader said the result was: “Understaffing, lack of equipment, totally ineffective coordination. This is the Mitsotakis Civil Protection, which he might be proud of but not every citizen who loves and cares for his homeland.”
Kasselakis didn’t mention that when the then-named Radical Left SYRIZA was ruling under then-premier Alexis Tsipras – who quit in 2023 after losing twice to Mitsotakis, leading to new leadership – that wildfires in 2018 killed 104.
That toll was largely blamed on the Leftists not having a disaster plan, a shambolic response to the fires, not sending the Coast Guard or Navy to pluck survivors out of the sea at the village of Mati and leading to officials being prosecuted.
PASOK Socialist leader Nikos Androulakis called for an immediate debate in Parliament – which isn’t in session – and said, “The the time has come” for the Prime Minister to explain the “executive chaos” in his government.
In a letter to Parliament President Konstantinos Tasoulas – from the ruling New Democracy – Androulakis stated that, ‘For yet another year, our country found itself facing devastating fires that came within a few kilometers of the center of Athens, with a tragic outcome. One woman lost her life, tens of thousands of acres of burnt land, a huge ecological disaster and loss of property for hundreds of our fellow citizens.”
He said that his party had presented proposals to reorganize the forest firefighting system and a civil protection plan that he said the government wouldn’t even look at and as he called for the restoration of the burned areas that has been done before.
NEW YORK – Meropi Kyriacou, the new Principal of The Cathedral School in Manhattan, was honored as The National Herald’s Educator of the Year.
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American students heading for study abroad programs in Greece typically are aimed at Athens, but for 11 from Clark University in Worcester, Mass.
Studying abroad is more than just an academic experience – it’s an opportunity to immerse yourself in a new culture, meet new people, and live like a local.
Studying abroad is a life-changing experience for many students, but it’s not just about exploring new cultures, trying new foods, and visiting historical landmarks.