
Though I don’t consider myself superstitious, permit me a moment to say ftou, ftou, ftou,
representing the Greek superstition of spitting three times to chase
the devil and misfortune away whenever you talk about bad things. Such
as failing to properly thank a Greek god for sparing you from contracting more than a bad cold after flying from London to Athens to Mykonos.
On that segue here are some of the basic Greek superstitions, for which I wish to credit the assistance of
two websites, The Embassy of Greece and Susie Atsaides.
two websites, The Embassy of Greece and Susie Atsaides.
Without question the biggie is the Evil Eye. In fact, many other Greek
superstitions are designed to deal with risks presented by the Evil
Eye. It can strike at any time, and is taken very seriously. Educated,
level-headed people believe in it, as does the Greek Orthodox Church
(calling it Vaskania), and those with the “gift” for casting it away from those put upon by the Evil Eye are revered.
The process of casting away involves techniques passed down in secret
from generation to generation and involves prayers coupled with a lot of
yawning by healer and victim. In these modern days, I’ve seen healers
perform the process over cell phones, or respond without any sort of
contact with the victim beyond an SMS or email plea for help.
In a nutshell, the Evil Eye can be put on you, your children, your livestock or your fruit trees by anyone who looks at them with envy and praises them. Envy is the big villain in this.
In a nutshell, the Evil Eye can be put on you, your children, your livestock or your fruit trees by anyone who looks at them with envy and praises them. Envy is the big villain in this.
The number one defense against the Evil Eye is the little blue eyes ormati sold
virtually everywhere in Greece. Greeks drape them around their necks,
wrists, rearview mirrors and in myriads of places in their offices and
homes. It is the universal protector. All of which is attributed to the
color blue that is said to reflect away evil. I guess that means the
eyes now offered for sale in other, “more fashionable” colors leave you
open to being much more than just a fashion victim.
Some Greeks go so far as to say to be aware of blue-eyed people offering
compliments, for that could be particularly dangerous. I wonder if
that would deter a Greek from the flattery of a Paul Newman look-alike
or the baby blues of a modern day Grace Kelly? Some how I think they’d
simply opt for an extra mati or two and take the risk.:)
Garlic also works to ward off the Evil Eye. Some carry a clove with
them at all times, in their pocket or—as I’ve seen suggested—in their
bra. Garlic, along with onions, is also said to have great healing
power if you’re feeling ill—perhaps over losing your shot at Paul and/or
Grace to a whiff of your garlic stash.
If you want the evil eye protective quality of the garlic, without the scent, when someone gives you a compliment, mutter skorda(garlic)
under your breath and spit on yourself three times. If you want real
protection ask the person who gave you the compliment to spit on you
too, though that may lead to an immediate reassessment of the person’s
original opinion. A word of caution: some say if a compliment is given
to a child in your presence you should spit on the child. I suggest
asking the parents before attempting that kindness.
Another common practice for warding off the Evil Eye is a thorny-spiked
cactus close to the front entrance to your home. Be particularly
careful is one if nearby should you choose to spit on someone else’s
kid.
Some superstitions offer a conundrum. Bat bones are considered very
lucky, but killing a bat (to presumably get the bones) is said to be
very bad luck.
Crows, on the other hand are just bad luck period, as omens of bad news, misfortune, and death. Guess Poe got it right.:)
Crows, on the other hand are just bad luck period, as omens of bad news, misfortune, and death. Guess Poe got it right.:)
If a Greek ever asks you for a knife, never hand it directly Put it on
the table and let the other pick it up. Otherwise, superstition holds
you two will soon be in a fight.
Another sure fight starter is if two people say the same thing at the same time. Such as “I love NOT DEAD YET.” The
only way to avoid an imminent fight is for each to instantly touch
whatever red they can find around them (like the cover of A Vine in the Blood, The Fear Artist or any of Michael Stanley’s covers) and say piase kokkino(touch red).
And never leave your shoes soles up; it’s very bad luck and even an omen
of death. But don’t fear if it should happen to you some day. Just
say skorda (remember, it means garlic) and spit three times for good measure and you’ll be fine.
I understand the skorda whisper technique also works to ward off
the bad omen of seeing a priest and black cat on the same day. Some say
it whenever they see just the priest.
If you sneeze, that means someone is talking about you and there is a
way to figure out whom that is. Frankly, all I’m interested in knowing
at such moments is who has a tissue or Claritin.
Greeks also believe money attracts money, so superstition requires you
to never completely empty a purse, pocket, wallet or bank account. I
suspect that one’s being sorely tested these days.
But the superstition that I find most telling about the Greek attitude
toward life is how they treat Friday the 13th. Why ruin an otherwise
perfectly good weekend with worries about a Friday of bad luck? So, they
stick in the middle of the workweek. To Greeks, Tuesday the 13th is the
bad luck day…possibly settling on a Tuesday for much for the same
reason the US uses it as its election day—to keep the bad news away from
spoiling a weekend.
Which brings me to the final superstition I want to talk about
today. Salt. Greeks sprinkle salt in a new house to chase away any
lurking evil. But that’s not the use of salt I find most
intriguing. It is believed that you can get rid of “unwanted human
presence” by sprinkling salt behind them. I think Americans should bear
up arms of salt to cast behind any politician who dares to ....
That’s all folks. Ftou, ftou, ftou.
Jeff—Saturday
I met a Native American in Montana who kept garlic to rub on his hands when hooking his fish bait. He could reel them in alright.
ReplyDeleteI knew an American in Manhattan who believed garlic worn around the neck attracted potential hook ups at a singles bar.
DeleteBlue is an interesting colour; no food is blue, no rotting food is blue, flies don't like landing on blue. Medical uniforms, operating theatres, the inside of stables are ....blue. But why do they call it 'the blues'.
ReplyDeleteI join Wendall, Caro, in loving your comment. About all I can honestly say in reply to your question is that things can only get better.
DeleteI love this. I want a blue eye and am considering having Cyd Redondo add a Ziplock full of salt to her Balenciaga bag of tricks! xx
ReplyDeleteSee above. :)
DeleteWe have many of the same superstitions in Romania, although we don't have the blue eye amulet (we believe wearing the colour red can protect you from being 'deochiat' - which literally means 'eyed off'.
ReplyDeleteAha, Marina, another red v. blue face off conflict.
DeleteI love this! We've got all kinds of 'warding off evil' stones and salt and garlic 'work' here too...!
ReplyDeleteI take that to mean our respective civilizations developed quite a few common traits and practices over their many thousands of years of shared existence.
Delete