Thursday, 28 July 2016

A Savage Vision ( Diaries part 14)

During my first winter in Crete I became friendly with an elderly English couple who were regular customers at the taverna by the lake where I was still working part time. they told me they came every winter for about six months and stayed in Hania. Each year they drove to Crete from Britain, travelling through France and Italy, stopping at little villages on the way. I hoped that I would be so active at their age. Mollie was in her mid seventies, short, petite, with her hair up in an untidy bun. Ron was over eighty, tall, and suffered from arthritis which made walking any distance rather painful for him.
They invited me to visit them in Hania and I accepted.
Winter is very different in Crete to the summer, the day I went to visit Mollie and Ron it was stormy, the waves crashing over the harbour walls and flooding the tavernas and shops along the waterside. Fortunately, most of them were closed for the winter. The few still open were battening down the hatches and battling to keep the water and flying debris out.
Some local lads were racing around the edge of the harbour in their cars trying to beat the waves. I heard later that there was at least one tragedy every year when a car would get swept away into the sea…

The house that Mollie and Ron were renting was just off the Venetian harbour; it was old and narrow and built into the old city walls. After sharing a delicious lunch of asparagus soup and olive bread in their tiny living room, prepared by Mollie in their even tinier kitchen, we decided to go for a drive in their car to the mountain villages behind Hania. They wanted to show me a particular war memorial that they had found on their previous explorations.

It is a very unusual statue,” Mollie told me, “but I suggest that you don’t show it to any German friends you have.”
I wondered what on earth she could mean. We drove through many small villages including Therisso, the site of the Cretan uprising in 1905, and former home of Eleftharios Venezelos, the Cretan politician who became prime minister, and brought about the unification of Crete with Greece in 1913.
Driving up into the mountains above Hania we passed slopes covered with a carpet of fermenting oranges.
The EEC won’t take the oranges,” said Ron, “I was reading it in the paper. They are the wrong size, or shape, or something equally stupid. So the farmers are dumping them in the mountains.”
Probably the wrong colour.” quipped Mollie
Or they want them square.” I added “What a waste.”

As we approached the village of Panagia that we had been heading for I could see, in the distance, what appeared to be a very pleasing statue of three, or four, Cretan men dancing.
“It looks like a lovely statue,” I remarked.
Just wait till we get closer.” said Mollie, as she parked the car. “You might change your mind.” We walked over to the statue.
When I could see it clearly, I gasped. “I’ve never seen anything like it!” I exclaimed. It was indeed a beautifully sculpted piece of work, perfect in every detail. The Cretans were depicted in full traditional dress. The shock came when I realized on what they were dancing. It was the body of a dead German soldier, complete in every detail. His throat had been cut, his skin flayed, and his entrails showing. The muscles and skin were portrayed in minute detail.

I can see why you wouldn’t want to bring any Germans friends here.” I said, shaken, my eyes still fixed on the statue. “It’s a marvelous piece of work, but the subject matter is a bit grim.”
It must have been done by someone with very strong feelings.” Ron pondered aloud, “Of course, some of these villages were all but wiped out during the war.”
“Perhaps this was an area where a lot of the people were massacred.”
It’s terrible to think what the Cretans have suffered at the hands of different invaders,” Said Mollie “The Venetians and the Turks and the Germans and who knows who else before that.”

We left the little village with mixed emotions, such beautiful work but such a savage vision.

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