Brunch to Support St George Monastery in Springwood

Source: kogarahgreekorthodox.org.au

Our Philoptohos has organised a Brunch to raise money for St George Monastery in Springwood.

The Brunch will be held in our Parish Hall on Sunday 23rd of February immediately following the Divine Liturgy. The entry donation is $20.00. We will have plenty of food, tea, coffee and soft drinks.

We will have a raffle and a small auction.

Our support is needed more this year than in the past, especially after the devastating and destructive fires that burnt through the Monastery buildings and brought about the loss of life to some of the animals.

If you wish to support this initiative of our Parish, please contact Fr Sophrony or one of the Ladies of the Philoptohos.

Police attacker Arthur Aggelidis has jail sentence reduced because of parole bungle

A knife-wielding man who attacked a police officer in his car when on parole after being jailed for stabbing a body-building Russian doctor in the eye has had his jail sentence reduced because Corrections Victoria bungled his release.

The Court of Appeal president Justice Chris Maxwell and Justices Phillip Priest and Paul Coghlan said the attack by Arthur Aggelidis on the police officer “was both entirely predictable and almost certainly preventable”.

Aggelidis, 32, of Reservoir, had appealed against his conviction and sentence after a County Court jury found him guilty in October 2012 of one count of reckless conduct endangering life and he was jailed for four years with a non-parole period of two years and nine months.

Police had been searching for Aggelidis after being contacted by his mother, who was concerned for his welfare. She had spoken to him on the phone and he was crying over his father’s death and talking about self-harm.

Aggelidis, who suffers from an extreme psychiatric condition, ran away from police when a dog squad unit approached him about 2am on May 21, 2011.

He later walked to the driver’s side of a police car and lunged at an officer with a knife. The knife grazed the officer’s face but he was able to drive off.

Aggelidis had been on parole at the time after being jailed in October 2008 for intentionally causing serious injury to Edward Dib on April 28, 2007.

The pair had been fighting when Aggelidis stabbed Dr Dib, who gained his medical degree from St Petersburg in 2000, in the left eye.

Dr Dib, a bodybuilder who took steroids, was in a coma for some time, lost his left eye, suffered substantial paralysis to the right side of his body and had a speech impediment.

Aggelidis was released on parole on April 27, 2012 – 24 days before he attacked the police officer.

“The crucial feature, in my view, is that the appellant’s (Aggelidis’) relapse into mental illness – and into offending behaviour – can be traced directly to the inexplicable failure of the correctional authorities, at the time of his release on parole, to make the necessary arrangements for his transition back into the community,” Justice Maxwell said in the Court of Appeal judgment.

“This was his third parole release since July 24, 2009. On each previous occasion, he had breached his parole and was returned to custody.

“Defence counsel told the (sentencing) judge that, on both of the earlier occasions when the appellant was released on parole – in July 2009 and May 2010 – he had been given no form of identification and no medication.

“Counsel explained that, without identification, he was unable to obtain a prescription for medication. Without medication, and without support services, he quickly relapsed – and re-offended – and his parole was cancelled.

“Exactly the same thing occurred – for the third time – when the appellant was released on April 27, 2011. No provision had been made for appropriate accommodation; he did not have a referral to an area mental health service; there had been no pre-release visit from Centrelink; and he was not given personal identification documents, which he needed in order to obtain assistance and treatment.

“Counsel for the appellant maintained that his release in such circumstances triggered an involuntary relapse into severe mental illness, which substantially diminished his personal culpability for this offending, and the relevance of both specific and general deterrence.

“Given what had occurred on the two previous releases on parole, this relapse was both entirely predictable and almost certainly preventable.

“Both the appellant and the community were entitled to expect that the authorities would take all reasonable steps to ensure that, following his release, he was in a position to maintain stability in his mental health. That he was unable to do so meant that this offending was, in an important sense, involuntary. It also had the consequence that a brave policemen was unnecessarily exposed to grave danger.”

Justice Maxwell said a lower sentence was called for and Aggelidis was re-sentenced to three years’ jail with a non-parole period of 18 months.

Politicians roll in for Melbourne’s Greek festival

Source: TheAge

haw080214.001.003.jpg  Melbourne Lonsdale  street Greek Festival Prime Minister Tony Abbott with greek dancers Picture Wayne HawkinsPrime Minister Tony Abbott with greek dancers at the Antipodes Festival on Lonsdale Street. Photo: Wayne Hawkins

Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Opposition Leader Bill Shorten, and Premier Denis Napthine joined thousands of Greek Australians at the Lonsdale Street Festival on Saturday night.

The three, with State Opposition leader Daniel Andrews and Lord Mayor Robert Doyle, addressed the crowds enjoying the festivities on a very hot summer’s evening.

The Festival, Melbourne’s largest Greek-themed street party, is being held in Lonsdale Street on both Saturday and Sunday. The main attraction is Greek singer Kostas Makedonas – a star in his native country – who will perform some of his biggest hits alongside the Orchestra Emmetron and fellow Greek singer Eirini Toumpaki.

The Festival continues on Sunday between 1pm and 11pm between Russell and Swanston Street.

My Kitchen Rules twins Helena and Vikki reveal tragic secret

Cooking for their late father - My Kitchen Rules' competitors, twins Helena and Vikki with their mum Sophie Mour...

Cooking for their late father – My Kitchen Rules’ competitors, twins Helena and Vikki with their mum Sophie Moursellas. Picture: Tricia Watkinson. Source: News Limited

THEY’RE young, fun and obsessed with super-bright lippy, but MKR’s outgoing twins Helena and Vikki Moursellas, 25, have revealed a family tragedy which inspires their efforts in the competition.

The sisters are cooking their trademark “Greek with a modern twist” in honour of their late father.

“He passed away when we were 12-years-old,” Vikki said. “We’ve got heart disease in our family, so he suffered from a heart attack and passed away suddenly.

“Our mum has been absolutely amazing. She’s been a very strong lady. She made sure that she took us on lots of holidays as kids. Made sure that we knew everything was going to be OK.”

Helena and Vicki on their competitors:

Annie and Jason, NSW, cheesemakers: (Vikki) We love Annie and Jason. Traditional, country bumpkins. They’ve got beautiful hearts.
Chloe and Kelly, WA, well-travelled friends: (Helena) One word, fake.
Paul and Blair, QLD, surfer dads: (Vikki) We got very, very close to them, the older brothers we’ve never had.
Deb and Rick, SA, married 38 years: (Helena) They were our MKR parents.
Andrew and Emilia, ACT, newly dating: (Vikki): We felt so bad for them. They are really nice. He might come across as awkward but they’re great, humble people.

Although they were young when he died, Helena said the pair have good memories of their father, and like to think he would be impressed by their efforts in My Kitchen Rules.

“Dad would be very proud of us,” she said. “He’s always in our heads. Throughout the show it was something that kept us going. There were times when it was pretty hard. He has definitely pushed us through.”

Helena (the brunette one) and Vikki (the blonde one) have burst into MKR’s fifth season brimming with confidence and catchphrases, such as “We got this” and the less-catchy, “t-winning”.

Tragic family secret revealed ... Helena and Vikki Moursellas at the launch of the 2014 season of Channel 7's My Kitchen Rule...

Tragic family secret revealed … Helena and Vikki Moursellas at the launch of the 2014 season of Channel 7’s My Kitchen Rules. Source: News Limited

Vikki in particular has quickly become known for her not-so-savvy comments, suggesting they each have “half a brain”. Or, put differently,”We’re one brain, and two people.”

“I’ve said some silly things, but that’s all right, it’s entertaining,” Vikki said. “I never regret anything I said. Obviously … I’m like, `oops’ but I’m just being me, and I say funny, silly things.”

WILL WILL WIN MY KITCHEN RULES? TELL US BELOW

Helena and Vikki grew up in Adelaide, with no other siblings. Mum Sophie says they were outgoing from a young age.

“It was hard being a mother and father to my daughters since my husband passed away, but I was lucky because I had a lot of help from my mother and father bringing them up,” she said. “Their father Nick loved food, cooking and entertaining and was very good at all three. Nick would be so proud of the girls.”

On MKR, close friends Chloe and Kelly expressed their distaste for the tart served by Andrew and Emelia. Courtesy: My Kitchen Rules, Seven Network

The sisters moved to Melbourne a couple of years ago, where Vikki studied graphic design and Helena attended Melbourne Radio School.

“We just felt like Adelaide was too small for us, not many opportunities (there) for us,” Helena said.

“We want to try everything,” Vikki said. “Travel the world, try different types of … what’s the word? Different types of jobs and stuff.”

The girls are well-travelled, although they don’t drop it into every conversation like WA competitors Chloe and Kelly, who have described Helena and Vikki as “not the sharpest tools in the shed”. Helena reckons the two teams share a love-hate relationship.

“More on the hate side, as bad as that sounds,” she said. “We just clashed all the time. We’re actually very similar, we love to travel, we love food, and in conversations, we just tried outdoing each other.

“Throughout the competition it got more and more feisty, we wanted to beat them more than anyone else.”

MKR, hosted by celeb chefs Pete Evans and Manu Fieldel, has been a consistent ratings winner for Channel 7 since it premiered in 2010. Last year’s final – which saw Dan and Steph declared the winners – was watched by over two million people.

Russell Crowe’s new movie “The Water Diviner” is a script written by Greek screenwriter Andrew Anastasios

Russell Crowe will direct The Water Diviner

Russell-Crowe-directorial-debut

While he’s currently starring on screen in Zack Snyder’s “Man of Steel,” Russell Crowe will soon be going behind the camera for his directorial debut.

Over the years, the Oscar-winning actor has considered a number of projects for his first time at the helm, including the WWII pic “The Long Green Shore,” a Bill Hicks biopic, the James Ellroy adaptation “77” and the surfing drama “Bra Boys.” However, it now seems that “The Water Diviner,” scripted by Australian television writing duo Andrew Knight and Andrew Anastasios, will be the one for which Crowe will make his debut as a director, according to Deadline.

“The Water Diviner” will take the Australian actor back to his country’s roots. The film is set in 1919 and centers on an Australian father traveling to Turkey in order to find his two sons, who have gone missing after the battle of Gallipoli. It also appears that Crowe will not only be directing, but looking to star in the drama, presumably in the role of the father.

After “Man of Steel,” we won’t be seeing Crowe until next year when he stars in Akiva Goldsman’s “Winter’s Tale” and in the title role of Darren Aronofsky’s “Noah.”

“The Water Diviner” is expected to begin shooting in Australia and Turkey later this year. Hopscotch Features’ Troy Lum and Andrew Mason and Fear of God Films’ Keith Rodger will produce. To read more on the project, head over to the screenwriters’ official website by clicking HERE.

What are your thoughts on Russell Crowe set to make his directorial debut with “The Water Diviner”?

Russell Crowe and Ryan Corr on THE WATER DIVINER.

Russell Crowe with Ryan Corr on the set of The Water Diviner. Photo: Mark Rogers

This is a not a war story, says Russell Crowe. It’s a story about fathers and sons. He is on set, in the middle of shooting his directing debut, The Water Diviner, a tale of loss and discovery, of lives affected by the battle of Gallipoli.

Yet – apart from flashbacks – most of it takes place in 1919, in the aftermath of World War I. Crowe talks about Peter Weir’s film Gallipoli, and how it ends with a freeze-frame of a soldier caught in the moment of death. ”This is what happens afterwards, in a funny sort of way,” he says. ”To the people back home, the father and mother of the kid that got shot.”

Most of it, however, is set outside Australia. Crowe, who stars as well as directs, plays Connor, a man who lost three sons at Gallipoli and travels halfway across the world to reclaim their bodies. Much of the film is being shot in South Australia, including many of the Turkish scenes; the production travels to Turkey for four weeks in March. There is, Crowe is keen to point out, a strong emphasis on the Turkish perspective.

On set, Crowe looks about as busy as it’s possible for a person to be. The scenes being shot today, under a blazing sun in the red dust of the Flinders Ranges, involve a train ambush. Connor is travelling in the company of Turkish fighters; the train is ambushed by Greek troops.

Crowe is checking camera set-ups, watching rehearsals, poring over details on the monitors – everything from the angle of a falling body to the rhythm of gunfire – then leaving to play his part in the scene itself. And amid all this, he finds time to reflect on his directing debut.

The Water Diviner is written by Andrew Anastasios and Andrew Knight, and it grew out of a letter that Anastasios found in an archive, referring to a father’s visit to Turkey on just such a quest. Crowe had been looking for a script to direct, and immediately fell in love with this one.

The title of the film comes from Connor’s skill – it’s an intuitive job, Crowe says, but there’s no attempt to mystify this. There’s a line in the film, he adds wryly, in which Connor says that he’s dug a lot of wells that turned out be holes.

Casting the film, Crowe says, ”I’ve chosen actors from a like-minded tribe”. He is quick to enthuse about the performances of actors such as Steve Bastoni and Jacqueline McKenzie – ”I watched one of her scenes, and I had goosebumps and a tear in my eyes” – and to sing the praises of Turkish actors Yilmaz Erdogan and Cem Yilmaz, who have roles in the film.

He’s loving directing, he says, and looking forward to editing. ”Film is in my DNA, I did my first TV show at six, I’ve worked in front of the camera since I was a kid, and I’ve had access over my career to some of the greatest minds in the business.”

EROS fundraiser for Sydney Children’s Hospital, Randwick Intensive Care Unit

Greek heart always beats for charities

Greek heart always beats for charities

Photo

The Greek Australian community is well known for its passion and support for charity work and worthwhile social causes, in particular in the area of medical research, social justice and education.

Over the years various charity groups and fundraising initiatives from within the community have raised millions of dollars whicher were donates in such areas as medical research, and education.

It comes as no surprise then, that a new charity intiative from the Greek Community, aptly named EROS – charity from the heart, has been created with a view of raising funds for the intensive care unit of the Sydney Children’s Hospital, Randwick.

 The Intensive Care Unit faces daily challenges and resource demands in their efforts to care for sick and injured children, so additional funds are particularly crucial.

 EROS – charity from the heart would like to invite members of the Greek community to support their cause and help raise funds by attending their Valentine’s Day Greek Family Night.

 When: Friday, 14th February 2014

Time: 6:30pm

Where: Venus Reception Centre

20 Belgrave Street, Kogarah NSW

Photo

Tickets are only $70 Adults, $30 Children and FREE for children under 2 years of age

For booking and donation enquiries please contact: Connie on 0405 141 960

If you cannot make the event but would be interested in making a donation, or a contribution to the event’s raffle please call Connie on 0405 141 960 or email

Twins Helena and Vikki put heat on rivals Chloe and Kelly with stunning score on My Kitchen Rules

VICTORIA’S Helena and Vikki Moursellas have thrown down the gauntlet to bitchy Perth rivals Chloe James and Kelly Ramsay with a stunning performance on My Kitchen Rules tonight.

The identical twins scored a whopping 95 out of 100 – the equal highest score in My Kitchen Rules history – with their Mediterranean-inspired three-course menu.

The bubbly pair have coined their own catchphrase – “twinning”.

The twins’ score included two perfect 10s from judge Pete Evans and another perfect 10 from Manu Feildel.

Force to be reckoned with ... identical twins Helena and Vikki impressed the MKR judges with their Mediterranean-inspired thr...

Force to be reckoned with … identical twins Helena and Vikki impressed the MKR judges with their Mediterranean-inspired three-course menu.

The Victorian pair, who named their instant restaurant Didima (twins in Greek) plated up an entree of squid wraps with tomato salad; a main of hapuka with black olive sauce, veggie chips and roasted tomatoes; and a clementine and clove semolina cake with spiced mascarpone dessert.

The five other teams gave Helena and Vikki a total of 41 out of 50 for the meal. Deb and Rick led the way with 9 out of 10 with other teams, including Chloe and Kelly (through gritted teeth), giving them 8 out of 10.

In the zone ... twins Helena and Vikki cook up a storm on My Kitchen Rules.

In the zone … twins Helena and Vikki cook up a storm on My Kitchen Rules. Source: Supplied

More importantly, Evans and Feildel were mighty impressed. They both scored the entree 10 out of 10. Feildel was harsh on the main scoring 6 out of 10 but Evans disagreed and scored it 9 out of 10. The dessert was another winner, with 10 from Evans and 9 from Feildel.”Read between the lines Chloe and Kelly,” Helena said after the score was announced.

“It was pretty clear Chloe and Kelly didn’t think we had it in us, well we showed them,” Helena said later.

Close bond ... twin sisters Helena and Vikki have hailed their mother Sophie for her strength after the tragic loss of their ...

Close bond … twin sisters Helena and Vikki have hailed their mother Sophie for her strength after the tragic loss of their father. Source: News Limited

An unfazed Chloe fired back a zinger. “We learnt the girls can cook, and maybe they’re not as dumb as we think – no, they’re still dumb.”Chloe and Kelly will get their chance to prove that Kelly’s oft-quoted travels to “more than 40 countries” will help their cooking, with their instant restaurant performance scheduled to air on Tuesday night.

https://i0.wp.com/content5.video.news.com.au/NDM_-_news.com.au/13/545/2433008745_promo215131231.jpeg

Gourmet travellers from WA, Chloe and Kelly have already displayed villainess tendencies within the shows first episode. Courtesy: My Kitchen Rules, Seven Network

Chloe and Kelly were forced to eat humble pie from the start when the twins’ squid entree proved delicious.”I’m surprised it’s this good, but then again it’s Greek food” and “they cook it all the time, maybe they will stuff up the main,” the Perth pair said.

Modern flair ... Helena and Vikki have caused a buzz with their Greek dishes.

Modern flair … Helena and Vikki have caused a buzz with their Greek dishes. Source: Channel 7

Evans was more effusive. “Sensational dish ladies, absolutely blew me away, that is exactly what I am looking for in this competition,” Evans said.The only slip happened with Feildel’s main. The Frenchman got the pip.

“I loved the combination of flavours … but my fish is completely overcooked,” Feildel said. “On top of that I have a little stone of olive I have chewed on and it hurts.”

The clementine cake turned into an orange cake when the twins couldn’t find clementines at the supermarket. They also had to bake a second semolina cake when the first one failed to rise.

Monday night’s show saucy Deb – who has turned flirting with Manu into her trademark – and her long-suffering husband Rick strut their stuff in the kitchen and on Tuesday night the first elimination of the season occurs.

The Yarraville Club on Friday 28/03 & Sydney 8-10/05 with The Queen of Multi-Cultural Comedy, A Date with Effie

A Date with Effie

Fri 28 Mar

Here’s your chance to go on a date with the megastar herself

Australia’s Greek goddess of comedy will be at the Yarraville Club during Melbourne’s International Comedy Festival. Mary Coustas’ Logie-winning character Effie is back with her new show that says it all, A Date with Effie: Looking for love…and child support!.

0

A Date with Effie details

Yarraville Club

Address

135 Stephen St
Yarraville 3013

Price from $30.00 to $90.00

Date Fri 28 Mar

Open 7pm

A Date with Effie website

Yarraville Club details

Yarraville area guide

p

We are proud to annouce a night of multi-cutural laughs at The Yarraville Club on Friday 28 MARCH with The Queen of Multi-Cultural Comedy, EFFIE.

Actress Mary Coustas’ beloved character Effie has long been Australia’s most loveable boofhead. This ground-breaking national treasure has kept Australia entertained for two decades. From ‘Wogs out of Work’ and ‘Acropolis Now’ to ‘Greeks on the Roof’, this hair-gel-Goddess has succeeded in winning a Logie, made us think differently and kept us laughing – all at the same time. Have you ever fantasised about having a hot date with the Virgin Megastar herself? Who hasn’t? Here’s your chance to get up very close and personal to this cultural icon and have an unforgettable fun night. What have youse got to lose legends? Exactly!

With special guests + MC Matthew Hardy.

Ticketing Options
$35 Front Reserved Seating
$30 Raised Rear Seating
$90 VIP Dinner & Show Package*

*Call Rita Looke at The Yarraville Club (9689 6033) if you’re interested in the $90 Dinner & Show VIP Package.

Dinner Doors 7pm, Comedy Doors 8.30pm. Whole show finished by 11.15pm (latest). Followed by DJ Max Crawdaddy.

Ticket Options

Dinner & Show $90 (VIP) (Doors open at 7pm)
Reserved Seating $35 (Front Reserved Seating) (Doors open at 8:30pm)
General Admission $30 (Raised Rear Seating) (Doors open at 8:30pm)
On the Door $40 (if available)

.

In Melbourne: A Date with Effie, March 25, Yarraville Club, 135 Stephen St, Yarraville. Tickets: From $30, VIP $90 (dinner and show).
In Sydney: A Date with Effie, 8, 9, 10 May at 7.15 pm, The Factory Theatre, 105 Victoria Road, Marrickville. Tickets: $30

My Kitchen Rules 2014: Helena and Vikki, the “sassy twins” as they call themselves, ooze confidence

My Kitchen Rules: Group 1 contestants

Handle the heat: My Kitchen Rules 2014 entrants.

Manu Feildel, with Pete Evans, says the 2014 contestants are teaching the judges a trick or two.

Manu Feildel, with Pete Evans, says the 2014 contestants are teaching the judges a trick or two.

Does familiarity breed contempt or contentment? We might find out by the end of the fifth season of My Kitchen Rules, the one-time reality cooking show upstart that became a ratings powerhouse, crushing all before it last year. Based on the first three episodes – including a Monday-night debut that drew 1.67 million viewers nationally – the Seven Network hasn’t unduly tampered with the recipe for its hit series.

While there’s a zippy new energy to the editing of its direct rival, Nine’s The Block, My Kitchen Rules moves to the same rhythms, albeit with some spillover from its previous success. Judges Pete Evans and Manu Feildel are now greeted with reverence, except by feisty grandmother Deb, who has more tactile feelings for the dapper double act.

“I’d like to roll around in that hay with him,” she says, spying Evans and some hay bales.

Carving out the villain role ... Perth's Kelly Ramsay is only a mild take on last year's cast.Carving out the villain role … Perth’s Kelly Ramsay is only a mild take on last year’s cast.

Contestants for the show’s initial episodes, where they host revolving home dinners for the judges and each other, tend to utter reality cooking show platitudes like “food is my life”, but the truth is that it’s the social element that marshals our interest each year. These are amateurs – some ambitious, some skilled, some hopeless – and it’s the chance to venture into their private homes and personal menus that attracts the audience.

While it may feel like you’ve seen half the series already, thanks to extended promos during Seven’s Australian Open tennis coverage, there’s actually much to be determined. Most crucial is the question of using an archetypal villain, after it backfired last year when Jessie Khan and Biswa Kamila received death threats and racial abuse on social media for their entertainingly horrid tactics, before Ashlee Pham and Sophie Pau took over and riled a sizeable proportion of viewers with their dismissive insults.

Framing female teams with a South Asian and then Asian heritage as villains was worrying. Based on the first batch of six teams, there are rivalries, disdain and some preening arrogance, but no overt moustache-twisting villainy.

Perth friends Chloe and Kelly came the closest, mainly via their privileged sense of entitlement as opposed to overt aggression.

“Nothing but the best for us,” was their self-declared motto, and they reflect the ability of My Kitchen Rules to capture fault lines and divisions behind the myth of Australia egalitarianism. The two women both work in the boom state’s oil and gas industry, and Kelly judges other entrant’s food against versions of the dishes she has eaten overseas; the goat’s cheese croquettes from country NSW’s Annie and Jason didn’t compare to those she’d eaten in Spain.

“There’s not enough room in this competition for two young girl teams,” Chloe claimed, eyeing off Victorian twins Helena and Vikki (whose “two heads, one brain” equation might need refining). But no-one would ever expect to hear, “There’s not enough room in this competition for two young bloke teams”. Still, as of the first week there’s been some care taken in the editing to round out the profiles of the contestants.

Then again, My Kitchen Rules is a show that preys on self-doubt; a healthy ego and self-belief might be essential. Tuesday night, Canberra couple Andrew and Emilia were optimistic, with his wacky voices and her repeated use of “awesome”. They’d barely started cooking when the pair, who’d been together for all of three months, started cracking. The wacky voices were replaced by a staccato annoyance and exasperation took hold amid kitchen crises.

And I’d wager that of the three initial episodes, completed by Gold Coast friends Paul and Blair with their Bali-inspired cuisines, Andrew and Emilia’s failure generated the most feedback from horrified but rapt viewers.

It’s a fine line My Kitchen Rules has to tread, but for now they haven’t blundered. Jason’s dictum about medium-rare steak applies equally well to the show’s presentation of the participants: “It’s already been slaughtered once. It doesn’t need to be killed a second time around.”

‘Eastern’ Values Are Australian Values by Fotis Kapetopoulos

Source: Fotis Kapetopoulos

Australian and Greek troops at Crete during WWII.

Australian and Greek troops at Crete during WWII.

 

The ‘West’ was created through cultural and trade links with the great civilisations of the world. Our modern multiculturalism demands we teach children about them, writes Fotis Kapetopoulos

Kevin Donnelly, who joins Ken Wiltshire in Christopher Pyne’s education review, sees our National Curriculum as “too secular”. He wants Australia’s “Judeo-Christian” heritage to be strongly represented in what students learn, but “Judeo-Christian values” are an ideological rather than historical reality, the term itself appearing around the 1950s. The term also insufficiently recognises Eastern and Hellenic influences in Judaism and Christianity, and doesn’t account for the other great monotheist tradition — Islam.

The “Judeo-Christian values” touted by Donnelly are really a narrow band of very modern Catholic and Protestant ideas. Learning about the values that underscore and predate the modern Christian West would be exciting for school students. It would be worthwhile to teach the cultural links between the west and east from pre-Christian Hellenistic times, through to Eastern Christian Churches of Asia Minor, the Middle East and Ethiopia, to the European Middle Ages and Renaissance and so on.

The four pillars of the first human-centric and rational civilisations, Greece, Israel, China and India, all need serious investigation, especially as China and India reassert their importance on a global level.

I take pride in being part of a Hellenic, or western, tradition extending over 2,500 years, but I am sceptical of Christianity and for that matter most religions and their irrationality. Yet, in a democracy, like our Athenian predecessors, we respect different religions’ cultural, creative, literary, and philosophical traditions.

A great work of art is a very human endeavour, even if the artist believes he or she has had a religious epiphany. As we pay homage to the European and British democratic and rational revolutions of the last 400 years, we should not forget that they revolted as a reaction to Christianity’s strictures on individual freedom, scientific enquiry, free expression and the rise of the secular state.

As part of a delegation I visited the ancient capital of China, Xi-An, where my hosts showed me steles dating back to pre-Christian times. They were written in Hebrew, Greek, Hindi and Mandarin, and demonstrate the links between West and East that predate Christianity and the modern European and British Empires.

Assessments of Hebrew, Greek, and Roman histories, arts, literatures and values requires a far deeper examination of Asia, Asia Minor, the Middle East and Africa. Australian students aware of their nation’s diverse western heritages will engage with the Middle East, Africa and Asia with a sense of intellectual dignity, historical perspective and respect. We can reutilise the established and ancient connections between east and west already found within Australia’s multiculturalism.

Paul Cartledge, the AG Leventis Professor of Greek Culture at Cambridge University, says the British public school system owes more to Sparta and Athens than to Christianity. The late Thomas McEvilley, the most distinguished historian of Greek and Indian philosophies, has written tomes on the transference and connectivity of ideas between Greek and Indian civilisations over thousands of years — way before any form of Anglo-Saxon identity was born.

It is certainly the case that, as the American teacher and humourist Leo Rosten said, “A conservative is one who admires radicals centuries after they’re dead.” Pyne, Donnelly and Wiltshire fit the bill: their review will anoint great ideas and people that were once radical.

How will they look at Magna Carta, that attack against royal decree and the beginning of the new West? What of the secular utilitarian philosophers and fathers of British liberalism, Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill? How will we examine at the great republican revolution against the British Empire and the birth of the United States of America, the apotheosis of Western values, under the stewardship of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington and others considered treacherous radicals by the Imperial British?

Then, of course, there’s the French Revolution and the western values of liberty, equality and fraternity. How will they fit the review’s narrow Christian view of the world? Or Hegel, Marx and Weber, fathers of social democracy and modern socialism in modern Europe?

Will we examine the settlement of British and non-British peoples on Australia? What of Jewish, Greek and Italian sailors on the first fleet? How will the early contributions of Afghans, Indians, Japanese and Chinese immigrants, and Pacific Islanders be assessed?

What of the Eureka Stockade, was it not a revolt premised on western values? Women’s vote and gender equality fit in the western tradition, but how do they fit in the worldview of Christian or other religious patriarchies? Will we revise our historical brutality towards Aborigines? The Aboriginal civil rights movement was centred on western values of rights and freedoms.

Pyne wants to re-energise Anzac Day, once a sombre reflection on the waste of life from a failed Imperial operation. Like John Howard, he wants to re-establish it as the first test of nationalism. Yet in World War II Australians fought for survival, democracy and nation. It was in WWII that Australians were bombed by the militarist regime of Japan in Darwin, and were abandoned in Singapore by the British. The Turks never attacked us.

But royalist conservatives like Pyne are more about kowtowing to the Brits than Australian patriotism. In WWII we did not fight for empire, we fought for Australia against the totalitarian regimes of Japanese in the Pacific and the Nazis in Greece and the Middle East. In Crete the Australian troops, abandoned by their generals, were taken into the Resistance as brothers, and in the minds of Greeks, defenders of universal freedoms and democracy. Our involvements in Afghanistan and Timor Leste can be accommodated as actions in support of liberty, freedom and equality. Possibly even our involvement in Iraq, although that is a polarising subject.

The education review will not be a process of reflection on western values, philosophy and politics, arts and literature, but a reinvention of a very limited right-wing Royalist Australian agenda. Maybe when we have a Chinese Australian Prime Minister with a Buddhist background, secular values, fluent in Mandarin, English and Bahasa, schooled in “Western” and “Asian” values, the issue of educational values will be less charged.