2008 Greek Independence Day Parade – Part 3

Posted April 12, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Parades

Here starts my third post on last Sunday’s Greek Parade on Manhattan’s 5th Avenue. There was a pretty large contingent from Marathon Bank. I remember Marathon. However, I don’t know if the bank is named after the battle, the athletic event, or the location.

More Greeks in costume. This was a nice group.

There was a protest by the people of Pontos (or Pontus). It’s now a part of Turkey and is located on the Black Sea.

More protestors. Their sign reads “The 4 genocides by Turks: Armenians, Kurds, Pontians and Cypriots.”

More Pontos protestors. The sign reads “The Greek-speaking people in Pontos have their own language, culture and history of 3000 years! They deserve rights, too!”

The next float was pretty generically named: the Hellenic Communities of Brooklyn and Staten Island. I guess that’s to differentiate themselves from the big Greek community is Astoria (part of Queens).

Just some of my neighbors. The guy at the right was one of a bunch of bluish characters.

The GOYA of Brooklyn. (Greek Orthodox Youth Association)

The Constantine and Helen Society marchers.

A bunch of kids from the Constantine and Helen Cathedral School.

The next group called themselves St. Nicholas at Ground Zero.

A sort of not-necessarily-Greek-specific group: the Park Ridge Marching Band.

Perhaps the strangest named group of the day: Youth of Kimisis Theotokou of Brooklyn. Brooklyn? How many Youth of Kimisis Theotokou are there around? (Probably hundreds, but this was the only one of that group that I saw in the parade.)

The next group of kids was from the Hellenic Classical Charter School. The little girl in the center (the one with the big, big smile) isn’t looking at me, but at the guys whose heads are painted like the Greek flag. C’mon kid, it’s NYC and they’re way too many of those guys wandering the streets for it to be that unusual. Okay, maybe most of them don’t have the Greek flag…

The next group was the Kaloidis Parochial School of Holy Cross Greek Orthodox Church. Their first major task in education is getting kids to learn the name of the school.

Another school group. This time it was the Three Heirarchs Parochial School. They did have their priest with ’em. Maybe I’ve got the name wrong…should it be “patriarchs”?

The below group of hoplites was called “The Greek Warriors”. They did a pretty good little show.

Next was a very long-named float: Holy Trinity St. Nicolas Church of Staten Island.
When I’ve zoomed in on the pictures, they seemed to be saints.

The next float was the Federation of Sterea Hellas. Well, “Hellas” is Greece/Greek. Beyond that…well, it’s a Federation that quotes their version of Nathan Hale, I guess. “Freedom or Death” is one heck of a slogan.

The last picture in today’s post is the St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Church of Albany’s float. I always get a kick out of the use of their native language in their floats. Other than their identity and a slogan about believing in their youth, they aren’t making any concessions to non-Greeks. I actually like that.

These posts just go on and on, don’t they?  What can I say?  I enjoyed the parade and don’t want to forget it.  More to come.

-H

2008 Greek Independence Day Parade – Part 2

Posted April 11, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Parades

This is the second of several posts on last Sunday’s Greek Independence Parade.  Where were we….oh, yeah:  marchers in costume!  As I said, it’s one of the really nice parts of the NYC parades and I do enjoy the Greek native costume.

The next group was a little odd, but not really.  It’s the Olympic Dancers from Pittsburgh, PA.  The only thing that’s odd is the name.  The Olympics have been trademarked like crazy and I understand that they are really big on protecting it, but “Olympic” goes way, way back.  I don’t really know if they protect the name as much as the interlocking rings symbol.

Here’s a closer picture of the Olympic Dancers. They were dancing, but my picture doesn’t quite do it justice.

One of the interesting things about the Greek Parade is all of the Greek Schools that are represented. The next is St. Basil’s Academy.  (And all of the schools had one or more priests walking with the group.)

More fraternity action…or in this case, I guess, it would be sorority action. This float was the Association of Hellenic Societies.

And the Greek Parade also had a lot of bank floats. The below is Atlantic Bank. I don’t know their link to the Greeks, but I imagine there is a distinct one.

Another school marching group. They identified themselves as “The Cathedral School”.

And the next group called themselves “The Cathedral After School”. Well, they did come after The Cathedral School, but I’m sure they’re just identifying the time they meet. (But I like to think that they should have transposed it and called it “After The Cathedral School”, but I’m just a guy struggling with the new WordPress editor so my judgement is a bit clouded.)

Continuing in the scholastic vein, next came AHEPA – the American-Hellenic Educational Progressive Association. That is not a particularly euphonious name so I presume it was chosen to match up with the acronym, which isn’t a bad ‘un.

Yet more AHEPAtarians! AHEPAites? AHEPAtonians?

Followed by the Daughters of Penelope. Now, I like that name and the historical/mythological reference.

Right next to me was a raucous group of young men with…paint job faces. They attracted the attention of the Aktina TV reporter who came by for a quick interview.

After they finished the interview, the reporter and cameraman stood about 15 feet away for at least five minutes, probably more. They were just oblivious to the crowd watching the parade…and mostly to the parade. I don’t know if they were discussing what to do next or whatever, but I kept waiting for them to move on. In the meantime, the Boy Scouts came by.

Well, that’s fine; but what about the Pan-Arcadian Federation, you ask? Where were they? Right behind the scouts.

They were followed by a pretty nice group from St. Demetrios Church of Jamaica. This is New York. “Jamaica” is a neighborhood in eastern Queens, not the island nation.

Cathedral High School, which I presume is the same thing as “The Cathedral School” had a marching band.

And where you have Greeks, you can expect to find Macedonians. There were a lot of political references to Macedonia during the parade. Since the breakup of Yugoslavia, the name Macedonia was taken and used by others that the Greeks don’t accept as Macedonians. I don’t know the history of it, but I am well aware that there’s a fair amount of bad blood between the Macedonians and the “Macedonians”.

St. Demetrios Church was all over the place. Lots of separate marching groups in the parade. In this float is the mysterious message that their history is for everyone but it isn’t for sale. Kids, this is NYC and everything is for sale. But I don’t know what they are referring to.

Another academic group. In this case, the Hellenic Times Scholarship Fund. I presume the Hellenic Times is a local Greek newspaper.

For my final picture in today’s post, this is a taste of a large group of Ikarians. That is, folks associated in some way with the myth of Icarus.

Of course, the thing I find interesting is that Icarus died in the story.  They did name a small sea for him, but he did ignore his father’s wisdom and flew just a hair too close to the sun and paid the price.

-H

2008 Greek Independence Day Parade – Part 1

Posted April 10, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Parades

On Sunday, April 6 there was the annual Manhattan Greek Parade down Fifth Avenue (okay, up Fifth Avenue) starting in the 50s and going up to 80th Street or so. And Famous Ankles was there, as usual.

I do enjoy the parade. It was actually at last year’s parade that I found myself next to two adorable twin girls in Greek peasant costume. The sat next to my feet and being very young and very cute, attracted a lot of attention. My legs got photographed so much that I joked with people that my ankles were famous in Greece, and a few months later I named this blog in honor of that day.

Nothing quite so great happened this time though. But it was good parade. It was well attended.

Once the parade started, the dignitaries were in close proximity to the head of the parade. They would get to go to the end and then go into the reviewing stands, I presume. I think Mayor Bloomberg was somewhere in the crowd, but I didn’t spot him this time.

Excuse me Assemblyman Mike Gianaris, but you can pay a little more attention to your constituents.

Senator Chuck Schumer was there with his bullhorn. Most of these politicians just loooooovvvve their bullhorns.

Anthony Weiner had his bullhorn! He didn’t do his prototypical “run” where he goes and shakes hands and then “sees” people across the way and then dashes to them.

As usual, lots of kids in native costume.

The NYPD made its traditional show of strength.

I guess I was on the wrong side of the street if I wanted my ankles photographed again. Nah, I was on the right side. These kids were very photogenic, though.

A Greek military band, I think it was their Navy Air Force band, was in the parade. [Thank you Vassilis for the correction in your comment!]

The below is a Greek military honor guard that is one of the highlights of the parade. The key to their walking is their right foot. They would raise their leg on each alternate step and then slam down that foot.

Getting ready to slam that foot…

Yeah, those are poms on their shoes.

Honest, the NYC City Council is bigger than this!

Being Greeks, there had to be fraternities. I don’t know anything about the Kalavritan Fraternity of the Lavaron 1821, but they had a contingent. (No success in google, although it does have references to “Kalavrita” in Greece.)

More of the mysterious fraternity. This time “Kalavritan” is spelled “Kalavrytan”.

Speaking of “Kalavrita” and the like, there was a lone calvary man…(I don’t know if that qualifies as a pun.)

History and culture? Hey, the Greek-American Folklore Society has it covered.

The parade got delayed and this woman was near me for quite a while. I can’t tell whether she’s ready to bust out laughing at all the photographs being taken of her or because she can’t believe she’s wearing that costume.

Lots and lots of Greek flags. That’s one thing you learn in NYC parades: the USA has nothing on the prevelance of flag waving by other cultures. At these events, you discover that people absolutely love to wave their native flags. You can also see a bit of the crowd. This is a pretty well-attended parade.

More flags and natively costumed flag-bearers.

My last picture for today: more costumes. That’s something that I can never forget about the Greek parade. The native costumes are very important to the participants. Of course, every parade has it; just look at the Scots in the Tartan parade and their love o’ the kilt.

This was a really long parade and I can’t imagine it will take fewer than four posts to cover it all.

I’m still having trouble with the editor but I’ve found a way to speed stuff up a little.

-H

CBS Blackrock Building

Posted April 9, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Manhattan, Mid-town, Wanderings

I was wandering on 53rd Street and spotted the words “CBS” above a doorway.  I looked more closely and found that I was at the famed “Blackrock” building.

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The plaque reads:  CBS Building – The CBS Building (1961-1964 is one of the country’s great examples of modern architecture.  It was the last completed work designed by master architect Eero Saarinen, whose goal was to build “the simplest skyscraper in New York.”  Unlike the steel-cage office building typical at the time, the CBS Building was the first postwar reinforced concrete skyscraper.  Sheathed in Canadian black granite with gray-tinted vision glass, the 38-story tower, nicknamed Blackrock, rises 490 feet without setbacks.  Constructed as the headquarters of one of America’s legendary radio and television networks, the CBS Building was commissioned by William S. Palyey, founder and chairman of CBS.

The building is really located on Sixth Avenue.

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The side doors:

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The more interesting part of the building is its isolation from other buildings.  Most skyscrapers like this are abutted to other buildings.  But Blackrock has a open area with tables and the like in the back, and it is one block wide.

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-H

Morton Street in Greenwich Village

Posted April 8, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Greenwich Village, Wanderings

Just a few pictures of a really attractive street in NYC, Morton Street in Greenwich Village.

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I was wandering around Greenwich Village a little while ago and just really liked this street.  It’s very much what I like to find when I go through the West Village.

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I’m glad I caught it at this time, once the trees bud, it’ll look even better, but only in a close-up sense.  That is, it wouldn’t be something that I, amateur photog, could capture properly.

-H