Sunday, November 15, 2020

Upcoming meeting Nov. 21 and presentation by author John DeDakis


Our next writers' group Zoom meeting will take place Sat. Nov, 21, 2020 from 1-4 pm and will be moderated by Andie Petrides and Diane Helentjaris. 


Meeting Schedule:

1pm - Share your 2-page essays and poems.

2pm - Critique session. Writing exercise. 

3pm - Presentation by author John DeDakis on his latest novel FAKE.


John DeDakis





In his latest novel FAKE, DeDakis, a former White House correspondent and former CNN Senior Copy Editor, offers a real-life look behind the scenes at the ethical struggles of a female journalist




When popular Lady Rose Gannon dies suddenly during an interview with White House correspondent Lark Chadwick, Lark is thrust into the midst of a media-bashing frenzy. Lark, still reeling from the death of her photographer boyfriend, finds herself covering a grieving president struggling with his pain while trying to defuse a looming nuclear war.  




 Click the link for this Zoom online presentation:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwF3pxumSxI&feature=youtu.be



Special thanks to Dr. Diane Helentjaris for moderating the presentation, and Anthony Apostolides, II for assisting in the Zoom presentation and the video.



 

Friday, November 6, 2020

Presentation by Dr. Panagiotou at our Oct. 17, 2020 Writers' Group meeting

 

Our HWGW Zoom Meeting took place on October 17, 2020 from 1-4pm and included:

1pm - Sharing our poems and 2-page essays. Writing exercise.
2pm - Critique session
3pm - Presentation by Dr. Panagiotou on his new book:

The Path to Oikonomia with Jesus Christ as Our Lighthouse:




Thanks to Dr. Panagiotou, Andie Petrides as Moderator, Diane Helentjaris for her help, and Anthony Apostolides II for recording the presentation.

The Presentation by Dr. Panagiotou has been recorded and is now available on Youtube:



Thursday, October 22, 2020

Andie Petrides's Presentation Now Available

Dear Members and Friends,

 

The September 19, 2020 Zoom Meeting included:

1pm - Share your poems and read your 2-page essays.

2pm - Critique Session

3pm - Presentation by Andie Petrides "The Power of Words - From Inspiration to Delivery." 



The Power of Words - From Inspiration to Delivery


Speaking is an essential skill for authors presenting their works to the public. Andie Petrides, a member of Toastmasters since 2010, will share her public speaking skills. Fluent in English, French, Greek, and Arabic, Ms. Petrides holds a Master’s Degree in International Business. She lives part of the year in Jordan with her family.

Click here to see the recorded presentation:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2wYiYdlLEY&feature=youtu.be



Thanks given to Andie Petrides, Patty Apostolides as Moderator, and Anthony Apostolides II for recording the video.

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Dear members and friends, The cool days of Fall are fast approaching, as we say goodbye to the hot summer days. There's nothing like a cool breeze on your skin as you walk outside and see the falling leaves blanketing the landscape with brilliant colors. If you have written a poem about Fall, feel free to share it with us (or at the meeting).

Our next writers' group Zoom meeting will take place Saturday Oct. 17 from 1- 4pm.  We have simplified the process of attending the Zoom meeting and removed the forms that you had to fill out in the past. Just click on the link below, and it will take you directly to the meeting.

Tentative schedule
1pm - Share your poetry and 2 page essay - suggested topic for the essay - write about a famous person in history without saying their name. We will guess who it is.Also, if we have time, we'll do a writing exercise. 

2pm - Critique session - please submit your manuscripts (from 6 to 15 pages) no later than Oct. 10 to me. (note: we will allow a five minute break just before the presentation for you to stand up and move around - to alleviate any backaches!)

3pm - Presentation by Dr. John G. Panagiotou on his new book The Path to Oikonomia with Jesus Christ as our Lighthouse.Please tell your friends about it. I'm reading his book (in English) and it's very well written, filled with much wisdom and advice. For example, he explains what "oikonomia" means in English, first breaking it down to its simplest form "oikos."


Here is more information about Dr. Panagiotou and his book: https://pemptousia.com/2020/09/the-path-to-oikonomia-with-jesus-christ-as-our-lighthouse-by-john-g-panagiotou/

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Next Writers' Group Meeting and Presentation Sep 19, 2020

Please note: due to the Covid-19, the Hellenic Writers' Group of Washington, DC is continuing to conduct its meetings and presentations on Zoom.


      THE HELLENIC WRITERS' GROUP OF WASHINGTON DC 

Our next meeting is Sept, 19, 2020 from 1- 4pm. From 1-3pm, the group will have its normal schedule of sharing poetry and 2 page essays, followed by critiquing manuscripts. From 3pm, Andie Petrides, member of the group and member of Toastmasters, will speak about her life and her experience in speaking. 



                        THE POWER OF WORDS- 

                 FROM INSPIRATION TO DELIVERY




 

Speaking is an essential skill for authors presenting their works to the public. Andie Petrides, a member of Toastmasters since 2010, will share her public speaking skills. Fluent in English, French, Greek, and Arabic, Ms. Petrides holds a Master’s Degree in International Business. She lives part of the year in Jordan with her family.



Click the link to register for this Zoom online presentation at 3pm:

https://forms.gle/ptNtEaYsAJg7xEg38

 


Monday, July 13, 2020

Dear members and friends, 

our Hellenic Writers' Group is having their meeting on Saturday, July 18, 2020 from 1:30pm to 3pm. This will be followed by a presentation at 3pm by Dr. Mary Pittas-Herschbach from the University of Maryland. She will present on the famous Greek author Nikos Kazantzakis and his theatrical works. It is free and will be in English. You will need to register for this free event. Once you register, you will receive an email confirmation with the instructions. 

If you only want to attend the presentation, then once you're registered, you can sign into Zoom at 3pm. Please be on time. If you have any questions on using Zoom, please contact Anthony: apostolideseventmanagement@gmail.com. Thank you!



Hellenic Writers’ Group of Washington DC
Invites you to a web presentation




DR. MARY PITTAS-HERSCHBACH

Mary Pittas-Herschbach received her Ph.D. from the University of Maryland, having completed a comparative study on classical theatre in fifth century Greece and the classicizing drama of seventeenth century France. At the University of Maryland,  Dr. Pittas developed and coordinated the modern Greek program offered through the Department of Classics, until her retirement in 2011. She also created and taught courses on the influence of the classics on modern Greek literature, theatre, and film, and led a study abroad course on location in Greece from 2003-2013.


The Theatrical Nikos Kazantzakis



Saturday, July 18, 2020 


                                                3PM                    

Click the link to register for this Zoom online presentation:

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Zoom Meeting May 2, 2020

Our HWGW meeting took place May 2, 2020 through Zoom. It was a success and we were able to record it. Nine members attended, and we even had a member from Jordan show up. The writing exercises were well written and provided quite a variety of experiences from each writer. This was followed by a craft-of-writing lesson.

Our next writing exercise will again be two pages, essay or poem, and the topic will be to "write about an experience with Greece as a theme." Our next monthly meeting will take place June 6 at 2pm through Zoom.

HWGW will continue to meet monthly using Zoom until further notice.

Note: The Critique session wlll take place on May 23 at 2pm.

Monday, March 23, 2020

Cancellation of group meetings due to COVID-19


Unfortunately, the Hellenic Writer's Group of Washington DC has had to cancel its scheduled meeting and presentation on March 28, 2020 at the Hellenic Center in Bethesda, MD due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

The speaker, Dr. Mary Pittas-Herscbach who was to give a presentation on works by the Greek novelist Nikos Kazantzakis, will give the talk at a later date.


The COVID-19 virus has reached Montgomery County, MD where hundreds have been exposed to it.
As a result of the COVID-19, the Hellenic Center is closed.

Because there is no vaccine or therapeutic drug at this time for the virus, the only way to fight the disease is through prevention - like staying at home and washing hands.

All upcoming HWGW meetings (April, May, June) will be cancelled until further notice.

Stay Safe!

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Marina Theodosiu-Hall Presentation on Poet Kiki Dimoula

Marina Theodosiu-Hall's Presentation on Kiki Dimoula at the Hellenic Center, Dec. 14, 2019



Introduction and Marina Hall's Bio by Patty Apostolides, Director of the Hellenic Writers' Group


Marina Theodosiu-Hall was born in Athens Greece.
She graduated from the Franco-Hellenic Ursuline academy in Neo Psychico Athens, then left for the United States having obtained a full scholarship to study abroad.
This was followed with studies in French literature and philosophy at the Sorbonne Paris France, with Cornelius Castoriadis as mentor and lecturer.

There was a period of collaboration with Kimon Friar in translating works of Yiannis Ritsos and Odysseas Elytis, as well as with professor Thanasis Maskaleris,
 director of the newly established Kazantzakis chair at San Francisco State University. 

She did many years of research and text evaluation regarding the Pre-Socratic thinkers, with special focus on Heraclitus and the sense of time. She participated in a study paralleling the past in juxtaposition to the present. Part of this study is contained in the paper: "The Diachronic Singularity of the Greek Character” (Athens, International Congress of Philosophy, 2013).

She is the founder and member of the philosophical forum ”Anti-thesis,” in Maryland since 1993.

Her free time is devoted to writing poems, which have been occasionally presented and recited at the Federal Poets Society in the Washington area, and different venues in Greece.








Marina Theodosiu Hall speaking about the Greek Poet Kiki Dimoula





Marina Theodosiu Hall answering questions





Audience at the presentation


The Presentation by Marina Hall:

The Aesthetic and Symbolic Aspects in the poetry of Kiki Dimoula

Dear friends thank you for being here despite your busy holiday schedule these days. I especially want to thank Patty Apostolides for inviting me to give this presentation about the great Greek poet Kiki Dimoula, a subject very dear to my heart. Although the task to speak about her is enormous, I will just skim the surface today.
I usually give this presentation in Greek but since I was kindly asked to give it in English due to the majority in the audience being English speakers, I translated it as best as I could.  I want to ask how many of you are familiar with K. Dimoula’s poetry? I must tell you that whenever I tell my friend Youlika Masry, a poet and translator that I will speak about Dimoula, she tells me: proceed at your own risk.
 Let me then start with a small introduction, a general overview I should say.
We all have wondered at times, why poetry? Why read it, why embrace it, and why elevate some poets higher than others? A probable answer could be that: 1. It rescues the past, 2. It expands the present forward and back, 3. It attempts to say what cannot always be said, and last but not least, it is the bulwark of memory. It cannot save you, but it can console you at times. And for those aware of its diminishment in our time, it remains, endures, hangs on, and fills the void. It has most certainly also been part of philosophy diachronically. I should mention that Socrates wrote poetry before he drank the hemlock(in Phaedon). 
As most of you know, poetry has always been present in Greece through the ages. Starting with Homer in ancient times, we have ΑρχίλοχοςΤυρταίοςΞενοφάνηςΣτησίχοροςΠίνδαρος and  the supreme Σαπφώ. Continuing to the Hellenistic period, AσκληπιάδηςΚαλλίμαχος, the Byzantine period and so on and so forth. Nowhere in the world has there been such an abundance and magnitude of poetic talent as in Greece. I can go on and on, with the giants: Palamas, Solomos, Anagnostakis, Elytis, Seferis, Cavafis. Two of those are Nobel Prize recipients. Even the most revered German poet Hoderlin praises the Hellenic poetic spirit in his own work.
So why so many? Is it a coincidence? The answer could be, because the Greek persona is never too far from his or her sentiments. And those sentiments which are composed by «Πόνος και Πάθος» equal = Ποίηση. Pain and Passion is equal to = poetry. And because as I have mentioned in my philosophy lecture «Η Διαχρονική Μοναδικότητα του Ελληνα» (Philosophy symposium, Athens 2013), the Greek persona has an innate tendency for disobedience (έμφυτη τάση προςανυπακοή), and that characteristic can be the source of boundless creativity(εστίαδημιουργικότητας) when channeled correctly. 
Which brings us to Kiki Dimoula (Kiki,diminutive of Vasiliki), arguably Greece’s best poet in the last decade and before. I'm not going into great detail about her bio (you can find that on Google), but I can just say that she was born in Athens, lives in the Kypseli precinct (my old stomping grounds) and believe it or not, used to work at the National Bank of Greece. She eventually stopped working to devote herself to raising her children, while in the meantime establishing her poetic talent. She was deeply influenced by her husband Athos(himself a poet) and Costas Karyotakis.
She is a full member of the Academy of Athens, a recipient of the European prize of Literature as well as numerous other prizes for lifetime achievements, and is the first living poet whose work is published by the famous French Publishing House, Gallimard. A lot of her work has been translated into English and many other languages as well. Frankly, I admire and pity the translator who tackles the challenge. Not an easy task for sure. 
If I had to characterize the style of her verses, which are not rhymed, I would say that it belongs to the surrealist genre even though one cannot really place her in a specific category, or an established school. She would rebel belonging to anything anyway.
Some people write poetry to escape the burdens of life, some people read for the same reason. Kiki Dimoula defines what that burden is.
Regarding the subject of her poems, it deals mainly with the concept of loss, distance, longing, memory, and the futility of our everyday existence. The absence of something undefined, and a deep sense of regret. I will enumerate some in Greek: Υπαρξιακή αγωνία, απουσία, απώλεια χρόνου, φθορά και μοναξιά. And here one can see the paradoxical nature of her verses in that it is exactly that feeling of absence which fills the void and enlivens her poems. The simplest ideas, the barest of thoughts can convey the richest and most vividly complex descriptions. She transforms the everyday banality to something important (let me read to you an example). The aesthetic and symbolic aspects come into full view here. She philosophizes aphoristically and sometimes irreverently. Thoughts full of metaphors, symbols, imagery. She has it all.
Her aim is not to appease but to unsettle, infuriate and sometimes scandalize (another poem). Dimoula uses the verse as a weapon which slashes like a knife through the alphabet. But just as easily she can pacify, but always with a touch of irony. Her pessimism, full of satirical overtones, contains a symbolism which captivates the lucky reader who can weather the storm. I remember a friend telling me that during a visit with her, Dimoula expressed her disappointment when she was told that she was understood by most.
If I chose to make some comparisons of her poetry with some corresponding representatives in art theatre and music, I would have her paired with Dali or Magritte in painting, Samuel Beckett and Ionesco for theatre and prose, and as for music, a mother’s simple lullaby would do nicely…
As spiritual sisters I have to go with the Russian poets Ana Ahmatova, Marina Tsvetaeva and our Emily Dickinson. Dickinson being much more cryptic in her loneliness.
So these are some thoughts and personal views which I wanted to share with you about Kiki Dimoula. I will continue to pursue the task of deciphering her verses by plunging my mind and heart into her special world, hoping her poems will continue to entice us and future generations for a long time. 
Everything has been changing around us but we, as human beings are still the same, with the same problems, the same anxieties as our past generations, and that is why the poetry of Kiki Dimoula is so contemporary and yet, eternal.
 I will close with what the poet and author Joseph Brodsky said: “The poet does not seek recognition, only understanding”.
Thank you for listening. 

Marina Thedosiu-Hall
December 2019

Some favorites and two complete poems.

Σπάνιο Δώρο(Εφηβεία της Λήθης
Σε ετοιμότητα(Ανω Τελεία)
Ευλόγισον την παρουσία σου(Τα Εύρετρα)
Πρόσεχε(Μεταφερθήκαμε παραπλεύρως)
Πληθυντικός αριθμός(το λίγο του κόσμου)

1   Ασυμβίβαστα

Ολα τα ποιήματα μου για την ανοιξη
ατελείωτα μένουν
Φταίει που πάντα βιάζεται η άνοιξη
φταίει που πάντα αργεί η διάθεση μου.

Γιαυτό αναγκάζομαι
κάθε σχεδόν ποιήμα μου για την άνοιξη
με μια εποχή φθινοπώρου
ν’αποτελειώνω 


             Η Γλυκύτατη αβεβαιότης



Τρισάγια κάθε τόσο
για να δοθεί η υπηκοότητα του νεκρού
στον κεκοιμημένον δούλον σου.

Υψιστε, τι εννοείς
αλλο νεκρός και αλλο δούλος.
Κι απο πότε επιτρέπεται
να κοιμούνται ετσι βαθιά
ατιμώρητοι οι δούλοι. 

Τον κεκοιμημένο δούλο σου.
Θεέ μου, αν απελευθερώνει ο θάνατος
οπως μας το υπόσχεται παρήγορη
η γλυκύτατη αβεβαιότης, εσυ
γιατι τον θές ντε και καλά δουλέμπορο

Τον κεκοιμημένον.
Περι ύπνου πρόκειται Κύριε
Μα του κολλάει ύπνος του νεκρού
ετσι εύκολα νυστάζει η απώλεια της ζωής
Εδω εμείς, δούλοι του απάνω κόσμου ακόμα
κι ομως ποιός κλείνει μάτι
αν δεν τον νανουρίσει οπως ξέρει
μόνο η γιαγια του η βεβαιότης
με τη γλυκιά της ρόδινη αφύπνιση.





Information about Kiki Dimoula and her poems: