ep--An Epiphany To Remember

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Kollyvas
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ep--An Epiphany To Remember

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An Epipany to remember
His All Holiness Bartholomew, the spiritual leader of the Orthodox Church, visits Tarpon Springs to mark its 100th Epiphany celebration. (St. Petersburg Times)

[Times photo: Carrie Pratt 2005]
From 2005: Catherine Velardocchia, 14, the dove bearer, holds the dove before the tossing of the cross during the Epiphany celebration while Archbishop Demetrios speaks to the crowd at Spring Bayou on Thursday morning.

Epiphany: 1906-2006 An Epipany to remember
His All Holiness Bartholomew, the spiritual leader of the Orthodox Church, visits Tarpon Springs to mark its 100th Epiphany celebration.
By ROBIN STEIN
Published January 3, 2006



Full coverage

TARPON SPRINGS - Here at the end of a beaten brick road, beneath a canopy of live oaks and date palms, is Spring Bayou, the center of the annual Orthodox Christian rite that has earned this small seaside town the name "Epiphany City."

Year after year, tens of thousands of visitors descend upon Tarpon Springs for Epiphany, a multiday festival of Greek folk culture and Orthodox ceremonies in honor of the baptism of Jesus Christ and the revelation of the Holy Trinity.

On the morning of Jan. 6, onlookers from Tampa, Atlanta, Ontario and New York all funnel into the narrow streets circling the bayou to cheer dozens of young Greek men who dive into the brackish waters in search of an anointed wooden cross.

Also known as the Twelfth Night and the Feast of the Holy Theophany, Epiphany is celebrated by the 250-million members of the Orthodox Church all over the world.

Robed priests lead processions in the fishing villages of Corfu, Kalymnos, Greece, and Botany Bay in Sydney, Australia, blessing seas, lakes and rivers and sprinkling droplets of holy water to cleanse and give hope to their parishioners. There, too, young Orthodox men retrieve crosses symbolizing Jesus' baptism in the Jordan River.

But nowhere in the world, perhaps, does the ancient ritual take on the pageantry or scale that it does here. The event often doubles Tarpon Springs' population of 23,000.

This year, more than 80,000 people are expected to attend as the city marks its centennial Epiphany with a celebration of unprecedented pomp and spiritual significance.

Among the expected guests are cultural and political leaders from around the United States, Europe, Asia, and, most notably, the worldwide spiritual leader of the Orthodox Church, His All Holiness Bartholomew.

For more than a year, community leaders have been preparing for the patriarch's first trip from Istanbul to Florida.

"We're excited and humbled that His All Holiness Bartholomew will be commemorating this milestone anniversary with us," said William Planes, chairman of the 2006 Patriarchal Epiphany Visitation committee. "His presence makes this year's celebration a true landmark event."

"That's who I'm nervous to meet," said Dunedin High School senior Christos Argeras, who will be one of the 56 young men diving for the cross this year. "I don't know what I will say, but I think it will be an honor to meet him."

As he prepares for his third and final dive, Argeras, 18, said his approach has changed.

"I used to practice when I first did it," Argeras said.

Now, he said it doesn't matter who catches the cross.

"We believe God gave it to him for a reason," he says of the cross and the young man who retrieves it.

"I let them know it's a liturgy, not a sporting event," said Aleck Alissandratos, 47, who has been mentoring the yearly crop of 16- to 18-year-old divers for nearly two decades.

"It changed my life as an 18-year-old," said Alissandratos, who retrieved the cross in 1977. "My sons will be doing it in a few years."

The Alissandratos family has been in Tarpon Springs since Aleck's grandfather came to town just after the turn of the last century. It is one of the many families in the area that have watched generation after generation of fathers and sons, uncles and cousins dive for the Epiphany cross since Tarpon Springs hosted its first celebration in 1906.

A decade after the incorporation of the city of Tarpon Springs, the rich sponge beds along the Gulf Coast drew a wave of Greek sponge divers and merchants. They built ships, docks and packinghouses along the Anclote River, creating what looked like a Mediterranean village and transforming what had been a vacation spot for wealthy industrialists into the sponging capital of the world.

Within a few years the immigrants from Greece founded St. Nicholas Orthodox Church, named for the patron saint of mariners and modeled after St. Sophia Cathedral in Constantinople.

One hundred years later, there is a SunTrust Bank in the building that was once occupied by the ship chandlery founded by Alissandratos' grandfather. The area has grown and diversified, and few still make a living from the sponge trade.

Still, Tarpon Springs remains home to one of the nation's most vibrant and concentrated Greek-American communities. St. Nicholas Orthodox Church is now a cathedral and host to one of the world's largest Epiphany celebrations.

Before day breaks this Friday, the normally quiet banks of Spring Bayou will be swarmed by Greeks and non-Greeks, Christians and non-Christians alike, all staking out a good view.

Around noon, when the procession from the cathedral arrives, the divers will scramble into a flotilla of wooden dinghies, brace for the toss and plunge into the shallow bayou. Scouring the rocky surface, one will come upon the coveted cross and emerge for a special blessing, this year, from the ecumenical patriarch himself.

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Tessa
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Post by Tessa »

I live just outside of Tarpon Springs, "the Sponge Capital of the World". And my oldest goes to St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Parochial School. The preparations for the EP are intense, Friday is going to be a zoo down there. I also heard the First Lady is coming only to add to the chaos. I know one lady from my store who's son is diving this year. Tomorrow (Thursday) the Celebration of Youth takes place with the Patriarch at a big resort and my daughter is going. We parents are not allowed in but I am going to hang around down there so I will let you know how it goes.

In Christ,
Tessa

Господе Исусе Христа, Синe Божји, Помилуј ме грешну!

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Dove Bearers Collect Fond Memories

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Dove bearers collect fond memories
Kaliope Hatzileris hopes her role in this year's Epiphany celebration, as well as the bird, goes off as expected. (St. Petersburg Times)

By THERESA BLACKWELL, Times Staff Writer
Published January 4, 2006


TARPON SPRINGS - As Epiphany dove bearers, they all have a few things in common: devotion to their Greek heritage and religion, their role in the Epiphany celebration, a blessing and a prayer.

Stephanie Lelekis Sullivan, 51, will soon retire after 30 years as a special education teacher for Pinellas County. She has had a good life, a husband, family and friends, she says.

But in 1974, she was still just a girl of 19, and a dove bearer.

"I remember it vividly," she said. "My year was the year the dove landed on the bishop's crown. That was just awesome."

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew will lead the Epiphany celebration

Archbishop Iakovos told her he had prayed to the Holy Spirit for help with a problem. When Sullivan released the dove, which symbolizes the Holy Spirit, it landed on his mitre. The archbishop said he knew then that his problem would be resolved because the Holy Spirit had answered him by landing on his head.

Sullivan had her own prayer: that a friend at school named Sean would make it through a tough part of his life. She named the dove Sean, after her friend.

"I never did keep up with him," she said. "But I'm sure he did okay."

This year's dove bearer, Kaliope Hatzileris, 16, also has a prayer. She hopes the blessing she receives will keep her family healthy and safe this year, especially her cousin Demetrios Hatzileris, 20.

"He is here right now for a two-week break," she said. "Then he goes back to serve another six months in Afghanistan."

Known as "Popi" to distinguish her from her maternal grandmother, Kaliope Ikonomou, Kaliope Hatzileris is a sophomore honors student at Tarpon Springs High School and the daughter of Eftyhia and Kominos Hatzileris of Palm Harbor.

Epiphany is a family affair this year; her brother, Demetrios Hatzileris, 17, is one of the 56 boys diving for the cross.

Kaliope said this year's dove is dedicated to the memory of the late Father Tryphon Theophilopoulos, the priest at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral who died in 2004. Father Tryphon, she said, "encouraged me to join the choir and kept me in it."

Her selection as dove bearer was announced at the Christmas morning service at the church.

"It's a big honor this year, being the 100th anniversary," Kaliope said.

She's a little nervous about the 80,000 people expected at this year's celebration, but two former dove bearers, Catherine Velardocchia, who released the bird in 2005, and Kaliope Mott, 2004 dove bearer, will be there to help her.

Kaliope Hatzileris is mostly nervous about one thing: "That I don't squish the dove."

It has happened, as choir director JoAnna Papadakos Hill knows from personal experience. When she released it in 1993, her dove could still fly, but it took a while for the bird to recover from being held too tightly.

It's one of the things she warns dove bearers to be careful of.

"I think probably the most difficult thing is keeping the bird calm," said Hill, now 42. "They are very well-trained birds, but it's a little animal and needs to be reassured."

Each year, Hill and the priest talk with the dove bearer to let her know what to expect. As choir members, the girls have experience participating in Epiphany celebrations by marching in the procession.

The dove bearer is selected each year by Hill, who has directed the choir since 1991, and Katie Faklis, who was the former choir director for 30 years.

The selection is a yearlong process.

"We start considering next year's candidates the day after the Epiphany," Hill said.

Hill said Popi has been in the choir since she was 8, is a devoted choir member, a member of the Greek Orthodox Youth of America and a participant in Levendia, the church's Greek folk dance group.

"She's a great kid, but they all are, so it's very hard to make this decision," Hill said. "If I could have them all do it together, I would."

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+bartholomew Welcomed

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HUNDREDS WELCOME ECUMENICAL PATRIARCH BARTHOLOMEW
Tarpon Springs, FL – Tense excitement exploded into a large roar of welcome and fluttering of Greek and Patriarchal Flags as the plane of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual leader of 250 million Orthodox Christians, touched down at Clearwater/St. Petersburg International Airport at 5:00 pm on Wednesday, January 4. (GOA)

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I
For Immediate Release
January 5, 2006

Contact:
Nikki Stephanopoulos
Cell: 917-903-1255

HUNDREDS WELCOME ECUMENICAL PATRIARCH BARTHOLOMEW
TO TARPON SPRINGS TO PRESIDE AT CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
OF EPIPHANY AND SAINT NICHOLAS CATHEDRAL

Tarpon Springs, FL – Tense excitement exploded into a large roar of welcome and fluttering of Greek and Patriarchal Flags as the plane of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual leader of 250 million Orthodox Christians, touched down at Clearwater/St. Petersburg International Airport at 5:00 pm on Wednesday, January 4.

Children dressed in traditional Greek costumes, Orthodox faithful young and old, hierarchs, clerics, city, state and local officials, and a multitude of media strained to be the first to see His All Holiness emerge from the airplane entrance and wave to the enthusiastic cheers of the crowd gathered to welcome their spiritual leader to Tarpon Springs. This is the first time an Ecumenical Patriarch has visited Tarpon Springs for festivities associated with the celebration of Epiphany.

In opening ceremonies at the airport, Archbishop Demetrios, Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in America, thanked those who had come to welcome the Patriarch, including the Patriarchal delegation, Orthodox hierarchs and clergy from throughout the United States and Europe, and local and state officials. He noted that since his enthronement, His All Holiness has pursued a vision of Orthodox unity, spiritual revival, Christian reconciliation, and a world united in peace and justice and in efforts to protect the environment. Also welcoming Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew were William Planes, chairman of the Epiphany events, Tarpon Springs Mayor Beverly Billiris, and United States Congressman Michael Bilirakis.

His All Holiness responded first in Greek, then English, to the warm welcome of all those gathered and thanked the distinguished guests in attendance and the committee for their extensive preparations for the events marking the centennial celebrations of Epiphany in Tarpon Springs and of the establishment of Saint Nicholas Cathedral. “We came here, beloved brothers and sisters,” said His All Holiness, “ to see your honest faces and to fulfill the joy of our spiritual, living communion with you. We rejoice when we here about all of the honorable and virtuous things that you, the Orthodox people of Greek descent accomplish, as people of order and obedience of the great United States of America.”

“We arrived here after a long flight, and you honorably and symbolically bestow upon us three keys: the key of the progressive State of Florida, the key of this blessed local County, and lastly, the key of the beautiful City of Tarpon Springs. Through this gesture you intimate that we are welcome and trustworthy guests of the State, the County, and the City, a generosity of spirit and kindness for which we are grateful. Your honest disposition greatly supports our Humility for the continuation of the ecumenical mission of our holiest Ecumenical Patriarchate.”

Before leaving the hall, His All Holiness thanked the members of the children’s choir which presented several songs and posed for a photo with the entire group. The entourage then left to go immediately to Saint Nicholas Cathedral in Tarpon Springs to offer a Doxology (hymns of praise) for their safe arrival. Once again a capacity crowd of faithful, many who had waited for hours, welcomed His All Holiness. In concluding his homily the Patriarch stated that, “We also came as brothers and sisters and children to bring the sympathy and spiritual support of the affectionate Mother Church to our afflicted brothers and sisters of New Orleans and other areas who were hurt by the recent catastrophic hurricanes, thus emphasizing our love for all and the sense of indissoluble unity in Christ with all.”

His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew will begin today’s schedule by delivering a message of peace and reconciliation on the major television networks at a press briefing at 10:00 am. Immediately following some 1,000 young people, ages 5-18 from throughout the area, are expected to attend a Patriarchal Celebration of Youth led by His All Holiness accompanied by Archbishop Demetrios of America and Metropolitan Alexios of Atlanta. This will be followed by a Patriarchal Epiphany Centennial Clergy-Laity Luncheon in the Edinburgh Hall of the Innisbrook Resort.

The Patriarchal Epiphany Liturgy will begin at Saint Nicholas Cathedral at 8:30 am on Friday, January 6, and will be followed by the Blessing of the Waters and the procession to Spring Bayou for the diving for the Cross.

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goa carries +barholomew on web

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Live Epiphany 2006 Celebrations Available on Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Website
Tarpon Springs, FL - The Centennial Epiphany and Blessing of the Water Celebrations in Tarpon Springs, FL will be broadcast LIVE on the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America website at www.goarch.org/liturgy.

For Immediate Release
January 4, 2006

Nikki Stephanopoulos - English Press Officer
Cell: 917-903-1255
Marissa P. Costidis Cell: 732-522-1637
Stavros Papagermanos - Greek Press Officer
Cell: 718-415-5850

LIVE EPIPHANY 2006 CELEBRATIONS AVAILABLE ON GREEK ORTHODOX ARCHDIOCESE OF AMERICA WEBSITE

Tarpon Springs, FL - The Centennial Epiphany and Blessing of the Water Celebrations in Tarpon Springs, FL will be broadcast LIVE on the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America website at www.goarch.org/liturgy. His All Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual leader of over 250 million Orthodox Christians, will preside over the event which is expected to attract thousands of Orthodox Christians and non-Orthodox Christians. His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios of America, His Eminence Metropolitan Alexios of Atlanta and other hierarchs and local clergy will also participate in the services and festivities of Epiphany.

The LIVE Internet broadcast will be available WORLDWIDE from 9:30 am to 1:30 pm ET beginning with the Patriarchal Divine Liturgy. Immediately following the Patriarchal Liturgy will be the Blessing of the Waters. Then, His All Holiness, hierarchs and clergy and the entire congregation will proceed out of the church and through the streets of Tarpons Springs to the Spring Bayou where thousands will have gathered for the diving for the Cross. His All Holiness will throw the Cross into the bayou, where some 50 young men, waiting in boats, will then dive into the waters as they vie to be the first to capture the coveted cross and the promise of happiness and success in the coming year. The Cross retriever will also receive a special blessing from His All Holiness and a prestigious trophy.

The LIVE Internet broadcast will be available so that all Orthodox Christians and others throughout the world can participate in this historic event. This production and Internet broadcast is being made available by the 2006 Patriarchal Visitation Committee. Technical services are being made available by Greek Orthodox Telecommunications and the Departments of Communications and Internet Ministries of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese.

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ep Tours Katrina Devastation

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Church Leaders Tour Areas Hit by Katrina
The spiritual leader of the world's 200 million Orthodox Christians visited the devastated Lower Ninth Ward and prayed for the victims Hurricane Katrina on Saturday. (AP)

Left, Archbishop Demetrios, The Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the spiritual leader of the worldwide Orthodox Church, center, and Roman Catholic Archbishop of New Orleans Alfred Hughes, right, tour the devastated area at the site of the break in the inner harbor navigational canal Saturday, Jan. 7, 2006, in the Lower Ninth Ward district of New Orleans. The men prayed for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
The spiritual leader of the world's 200 million Orthodox Christians visited the devastated Lower Ninth Ward and prayed for the victims Hurricane Katrina on Saturday.

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I placed a large bouquet of roses on the broken stones and concrete, then bent his head and prayed.

Reporters were kept at a distance, but Lt. Col. Murray Starkel, deputy district director for the Army Corps of Engineers, said the patriarch chanted prayers in Greek, then in English, "for the eternal memory of all the lives lost."

Thousands of homes were flooded in the neighborhood when Katrina, which passed through Aug. 29, smashed a wide gap through a levee along the Industrial Canal.

Bartholomew, accompanied by Roman Catholic Archbishop Alfred Hughes, stepped over a smashed fence and onto a green concrete slab to look at the devastated scene, including an overturned car.

Officials also showed Bartholomew scrapbooks of photographs of the flooded area when helicopters were hauling 7,000-pound sandbags to plug the breach.

Liturgy at Holy Trinity Cathedral, the Orthodox Christian church in New Orleans, was planned later in the day.

Last edited by Kollyvas on Mon 9 January 2006 3:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Live

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Teoctist, Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church, conducts a religious ceremony on Epiphany Day at the Patriarchal palace in Bucharest January 6, 2006. The Epiphany, seen in Romania as the culmination of the Christmas festive period. REUTERS/Bogdan Cri LIVE EPIPHANY 2006 CELEBRATIONS AVAILABLE TODAY ON GREEK ORTHODOX ARCHDIOCESE OF AMERICA WEBSITE
Tarpon Springs, FL - The Centennial Epiphany and Blessing of the Water Celebrations in Tarpon Springs, FL will be broadcast LIVE today on the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America website at www.goarch.org/liturgy.


For Immediate Release
January 6, 2006

Contacts:
Nikki Stephanopoulos - English Press Officer
Cell: 917-903-1255
Marissa P. Costidis Cell: 732-522-1637
Stavros Papagermanos - Greek Press Officer
Cell: 718-415-5850

LIVE EPIPHANY 2006 CELEBRATIONS AVAILABLE TODAY ON GREEK ORTHODOX ARCHDIOCESE OF AMERICA WEBSITE

Tarpon Springs, FL - The Centennial Epiphany and Blessing of the Water Celebrations in Tarpon Springs, FL will be broadcast LIVE today on the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America website at www.goarch.org/liturgy. His All Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual leader of over 250 million Orthodox Christians, will preside over the event which is expected to attract thousands of Orthodox Christians and non-Orthodox Christians. His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios of America, His Eminence Metropolitan Alexios of Atlanta and other hierarchs and local clergy will also participate in the services and festivities of Epiphany.

The LIVE Internet broadcast will be available WORLDWIDE from 9:30 am to 1:30 pm ET beginning with the Patriarchal Divine Liturgy. Immediately following the Patriarchal Liturgy will be the Blessing of the Waters. Then, His All Holiness, hierarchs and clergy and the entire congregation will proceed out of the church and through the streets of Tarpons Springs to the Spring Bayou where thousands will have gathered for the diving for the Cross. His All Holiness will throw the Cross into the bayou, where some 50 young men, waiting in boats, will then dive into the waters as they vie to be the first to capture the coveted cross and the promise of happiness and success in the coming year. The Cross retriever will also receive a special blessing from His All Holiness and a prestigious trophy.

The LIVE Internet broadcast will be available so that all Orthodox Christians and others throughout the world can participate in this historic event. This production and Internet broadcast is being made available by the 2006 Patriarchal Visitation Committee. Technical services are being made available by Greek Orthodox Telecommunications and the Departments of Communications and Internet Ministries of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese.

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