Ditch the chocolate eggs and daffodils – Easter tradition in Greece means firecrackers, processions and flying clay pots

Breathing the incense-scented air and listening to the priest’s plaintive chant, we sat in darkness, lit only by the glimmer of the “eternal flame” – ferried over from Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre earlier that day.

At midnight, the black-clad priest brandished the lantern aloft: “Xristos anesti!” “Christ has risen!” he cried. As if on cue, bells pealed wildly and firecrackers fizzed through the darkened streets of Palekastro in east Crete.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Silence about my race kept my family apart. Could a rescue dog bring us together?

I craved unconditional love. Then I met Jasper, a nervous greyhound with…

British man captured in Ukraine reportedly pictured beaten and handcuffed

Diplomats working to find Aiden Aslin, who was forced to surrender to…

Plans to decriminalise licence fee non-payment shelved after mixed response

Government remains concerned criminal sanctions are unfair and will keep issue under…

University staff voice concerns at being asked to test students for Covid

Fears over pressure to volunteer and insufficient PPE for mass testing of…