ΠΗΓΗ: New York Times
By KOSTAS TSAPOGAS
Published: February 14, 2013
LIKE many Greeks caught in the maelstrom of the economic crisis, my wife and I live a day-to-day existence.
Since the newspaper
where I worked for 23 years (my wife for 17) went out of circulation in
December of 2011, we have both been unemployed. Neither of us have
received a paycheck in 18 months, as our newspaper stopped paying us
five months before it closed. With unemployment for journalists at over
30 percent, and the official unemployment rate at 26 percent, our
prospects for this year are, shall we say, not terribly favorable.
Our story is
typical of many in Greece, though some are much worse off and some have
it better. But like an overwhelming number of Greeks who are struggling
just to get enough food, to keep their homes warm and to maintain a
semblance of normalcy, we are fighting to keep our dignity intact and
avoid the depression that is enveloping our country.
We have been lucky
in some ways. Our son, like many young people, has left Greece and found
work as a software engineer in Scotland, and we are watching as the
country loses a generation of highly skilled university graduates. Our
parents, though elderly, are healthy and manage to survive on their
pension, which has been cut by almost 50 percent in the last two years.
They have offered to share what little they have with us — something
common in Greece, where traditional family ties often offset ineffective
social welfare programs.
In the past 18
months, we have tried to find work in journalism. With a group of former
colleagues, we tried to create a start-up digital newspaper. After
months of hard — and unpaid — work, our primary investor pulled out just
a few days before we were supposed to go online, unwilling to take the
risk in such a fragile economy.
We have
continuously explored other avenues to find work. My wife has taken up
baking to help keep us afloat. We are exploring the possibility of
exporting Greek agricultural products.
In an economy where
home sales are almost nonexistent, we managed to sell our small country
home. Even though we got less than 20 percent of its previous value, we
feel lucky because it allows us to survive for a few more months.
We also managed to
get a court order that prevents the banks from foreclosing on our
mortgage, so our home in Athens is safe until 2015. We are luckier than
the people who are forced to live in their cars — their only property
after they lost their jobs and the banks took their houses or their
landlords refused to extend them any more credit. They park at a
different spot every few days and usually rely on the kindness of
strangers for bath and toilet facilities, or relieve themselves at
public or private gardens, including, occasionally, our own.
We know we are
lucky to have a garden. This January, pruning the trees proved to be
psychologically beneficial. This time, though, the pruning went a bit
deeper, and I found myself hacking at the laurel tree my grandfather
planted when I was born, 57 years ago.
Up to now, we were
lucky to escape the wood-cutting, wood-burning craze. With the price of
heating fuel almost doubling since last year, central heating is mostly
turned off. Fireplaces and stoves are pressed into service, even in
high-rise condominiums.
Hence the sting in
my eyes every evening when many of our neighbors return to their cold
homes and Athens is shrouded in a cloud of wood smoke. Government
warnings that pollution has exceeded dangerous levels are dismissed with
a shrug, or as another ploy to force people to use the heavily taxed
heating fuel whose consumption has fallen by as much as 70 percent.
Meanwhile, the Forestry Protection Services are fighting a losing battle
to prevent deforestation at a scale unseen since the Nazi occupation.
We are certainly
luckier than the people flooding the city’s 191 soup kitchens run by the
Greek Orthodox Church. Luckier that the nouveau-poor, like the
middle-aged man dressed in an Armani suit, a bit threadbare at the
elbows and shiny at the seat of the pants, who tries to look
inconspicuous waiting in line at the Koumoundourou Square soup kitchen
for his daily meal. Luckier than the very respectable woman who walks
six kilometers every day to stand in line for two containers of food and
then goes back home pretending to cook, not wanting to tell her sick
husband that they can’t afford it.
My wife and I
sometimes ask ourselves if we are in a state of denial. But we believe
that the biggest danger comes from succumbing to depression, and we both
struggled to get out of bed during the holidays. But since then we’ve
gotten up every day and tried to find some way to get ourselves back on
track. We’d be happy to start over, but where to start?
Any new venture
requires money, and we have only enough to survive, and credit is
impossible to obtain. When we go to bed at night, we realize we have
made it through another day. Seven nights, and we’ve made another week.
Like the cloud of smoke hovering over the winter sky in Athens, we want
desperately to believe the situation is not permanent.
But we can’t be sure. We do know the smoke will dissipate, at the very least, come spring.
Kostas Tsapogas is a former foreign editor of Eleftherotypia.
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