Amalia visits Papou’s Greek Village of Lia
The second chapter of Amalia’s Greek odyssey, after Mykonos,
was a visit to the Greek village of Lia on the Albanian border, where her
grandfather, Nicholas Gage, was born. As
he wrote in the book “Eleni”, the village
was occupied by Communist guerrillas during the Greek civil war, and in June of
1948, when the guerrillas prepared to collect the children and
send them behind the Iron Curtain to re-education camps, Nick’s mother, Eleni
Gatzoyiannis, organized the escape of her 8-year-old son and three of his four
sisters, in the hope that they could eventually join their father in Worcester, MA.
After the escape, Eleni Gatzoyiannis was arrested,
imprisoned in the basement of her own house along with 30 other prisoners,
tortured and eventually executed by a firing squad. Many prisoners were buried in the yard of the
house, which the guerrillas had taken over for their headquarters. After the
war ended and the Communists were driven back over the border, the empty house
fell into ruin. In 2002 Eleni Gage,
Nick’s daughter, spent a year in the village rebuilding her grandmother’s
house, a saga she recorded in her travel memoir “North of Ithaka.”
The photos above show three generations: Nick, daughter
Eleni Gage Baltodano, and granddaughter
Amalia Baltodano, posing on the terrace of the Eleni Gatzoyiannis house, which
has been decorated and furnished just as it was during Amalia’s great
grandmother’s lifetime, including traditional clothes of the period.
The plaque over the door lists three dates: 1856 when the
original two-room house was built by an ancestor of Nick’s father, Christos
Gatzoyiannis, (a coin with that date was buried under the cornerstone), 1924, when
Christos expanded the house by adding on a large room and hallway, and 2002,
when Eleni Gage rebuilt her grandmother’s house with the help of Albanian
workers, using the same stones that had fallen into the foundation.
http://arollingcrone.blogspot.com/2014/06/amalia-visits-papous-greek-village-of.html
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