(Pandora Travel, Lisvori)
Quite a few
people coming to Mytilini in this time of crisis will be wondering why all cafes
are so crowded. Night and day the catering establishments around the harbour
are bursting with young people. I guess you could say that it’s Greek culture:
business deals are concluded and friendships are sealed in cafes. Their only
difference from their fathers and grandfathers is that the young people have
swapped the old dusty kafenions for bigger and more modern places. No crisis
can keep a Greek from having his coffee or another drink in the café.
To
whichever village on Lesvos you go, you’ll be surprised by the number of
kafenions in their centre. A few of them will have been closed for years, as
the Lesvorian villages have slowly emptied. The closed kafenions are a poignant
reminder of a time in which the agora was the lively centre of the village. Whilst
those village squares and main streets are no longer busy with people, they
remain the beating heart of the village and many a tourist will have a faint
heart driving through such a village, weaving around the tables of the still-open
kafenions, afraid of driving over the big toe of one of the customers.
The
mainly male customers (you will find the women seated on the front steps of
their houses) enjoy seeing tourists carefully winding their way through the
narrow streets of their villages. They are there to comment on whatever is
happening and every event leads to discussion. In the coffee shops friendships
are made, life is discussed, thanks are offered for a job welldone or sorrows
are expressed.
In
many villages modern cafes have not make an appearance because the young people
have moved to the big cities. That is why the elder men have to hang around in
kafenions that, who knows for how long, have not changed a bit. In a few
villages trendy bars have been established, just to please the tourists. For
example in Molyvos there is no old traditional kafenion anymore. Here the men have
to retreat to restaurants such as Alonia or Angelos where they still are
welcome to sip their coffee for hours and to comment on the world.
In
Molyvos virtually all the old kafenions have been lost: mostly all buildings
have been renewed and all vestiges gone forever. This is different in most
other villages, where you can still peep through dusty windows and discover the
interior of an old kafenion that should be put into a museum. I feel that they
all should be classified as monuments because of their historic interiors with
old pictures and artifacts hanging on the walls once freshly painted in awful
colours (I say awful, but I guess that once these poo-beige and turquoise-green
colours must have been à la mode).
Together
with the old kafenions, the national beverage ouzo – with coffee the most
consumed drink in a café - seem to be neglected: young people prefer to sip a
frappé (cold coffee) or to nurse a colourful cocktail all night long. In an
attempt to make it more fashionable an ouzo-festival
has been organized in three different locations on
the island: in the ouzo-strongholds of Plomari (July 6 & 7) and Mytilini
(July 13 & 14) and in the faraway port of Sigri (July 10). Music, an
exhibition of ouzo labels and snacks (ouzo should never be drunken without
food) are some of the fixtures of this travelling ‘happening’, along with a
slideshow of photos of the old kafenions of Lesvos, made by Tzeli
Hatzidimitriou, known for her beautiful book 39 Coffee Houses & a
Barber’s Shop,
a book that has secured at least the images of a lot of these disappearing
kafenions.
People may
ask what is the best ouzo, but there is only one answer: Lesvos ouzo. The question
of which of the many ouzos Lesvos produces is the best, I will not answer,
because that is according to your own taste. I can only refer to an ouzo
tasting, of which the criterion was personal taste: ouziotary. The
cherry-ouzo that will be presented during the ouzo festival, was not on that
menu but I am very curious about this odd combination.
There are
very few old kafenions that are lucky enough to get a new life. In Lisvori
(close to Polichnitos) one of the many kafenions (the coffee house from the
cover of 39 Coffee Houses & a Barber’s Shop) has been taken over to
use as a travel agency. A friend of mine has rented the shop, installed her
computer on the counter (kylikio), replaced the bottles of booze on
the shelves (teziakia) with books about Lesvos and hung some attractive
pictures between the old tools that should be in a museum: and now the office
was ready.
Not
only is the office special, so too is her concept: she organizes tailor-made excursions
and works with people on the island who mainly offer independent activities,
like kayaking, hiking, boat trips, horse riding or coaching with horses, herb
and orchid hikes and her own speciality: safaris. So if are you fed up with the
more commonly offered excursions, or you want to do something that nobody else offers
or you need special excursions for a group, you can ask Pandora Travel. When you visit Pandora
Travel, settling some business or participate in an excursion close to Lisvori,
you will not escape the tradition of the kafenion and will be received in a
beautiful old coffee house conveying all the authenticity and hospitality of
the island of Lesvos.
(With
thanks to Mary Staples)
© Smitaki
2013
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