Greeks in the Czech Republic

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There is a small community of Greeks in the Czech Republic. The Greek presence in the Czech Republic is dated to the 20th century. Roughly 12,000 Greek citizens who fled from the 1946-1949 Greek Civil War were admitted to Czechoslovakia.[1]

Migration history

The admission of Greeks to Czechoslovakia was facilitated by members of the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) living in exile in Bucharest, Romania. Though they initially expected that they would soon return to Greece, due to the development of the political situation they could predict no definite end to their stay in Czechoslovakia. As a result, many eventually naturalised as Czechoslovak citizens and generally assimilated, often intermarrying with local Czechs or the small but significant minority of Sudeten Germans allowed to remain in Czechoslovakia following its liberation from Nazi German occupation.[2] In many cases, these Greek refugees were resettled in houses which had formerly been owned by Sudeten Germans and were left unoccupied following the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia.[3] Most were concentrated in or around the towns of Brno (Brünn in German), Ostrava, Opava, and Krnov (Jägendorf in German) in southern Silesia, where Greek farming expertise helped revive agricultural production on lands formerly worked by ethnic Germans. About 5,200 of the migrants consisted of unaccompanied children.[4] The migrants were ethnically heterogeneous, consisting not just of Greeks (mainly Greek Macedonians and Pontic Greeks) and Slav-Macedonians, but Aromanians, Sephardi Jews, and a few Turkish-speaking Asia Minor Greeks.[5]

Beginning in 1975, shortly after the overthrow of the Colonels' dictatorship and a programme of political liberalisation in Greece which led to the legalisation of the KKE, several thousand young Greeks, including those born in Czechoslovakia, emigrated to Greece.[6] Older Greeks followed them some years later, after an arrangement was made between the Greek and Czechoslovak governments for them to receive their pensions in Greece.[7] By 1991, there were just 3,443 people in Czechoslovakia who declared Greek ethnicity; almost all of those were in the Czech portion of the country, with just 65 in the Slovak portion.[8] However, many of those who did emigrate to (mainly northern) Greece continued to retain strong links with the Czech Republic, with a few even using their dual Greek-Czech national identitities and contacts to help establish trade links between the two countries.

Language

In their early days in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, ethnic Greek Macedonian and Slav Macedonian migrants used Greek as their natural lingua franca; however in orphanages which housed unaccompanied child migrants, it was not uncommon for ethnic Greek children to become receptively bilingual in the Macedonian language spoken by their playmates.[9] In later years, locally born members of the community showed increasing language shift towards Czech, and tended to have a somewhat weaker command of Greek. However, this may also have been a natural consequence of several factors, including: intermarriage with Czechs and Sudeten Germans, the communist Czechoslovak education system's emphasis on Russian as a second language at the expense of providing for minority-language education, and even the fact many ethnic Greek Macedonians residing in Czechoslovakia were actually of Pontic Greek descent and so somewhat more comfortable with the Pontic Greek dialect rather than the Standard (Demotic) Greek used by the majority of Greek speakers. Although a poor command of Modern Greek was previously often evident among the grandchildren of Greek refugees born in the 1980s and later,[10] those from families who returned to Greece from the mid-70s have now been fully re-assimilated into Greek society and the Modern Greek education system. In fact, their multi-lingual background has enabled ethnic Greeks from Czechoslovakia (and elsewhere in the former Soviet Bloc) to develop and exploit a marked facility in foreign language learning and communication.

Notable people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 6
  2. ^ Králová 2009, p. 337
  3. ^ Zissaki-Healy 2004, p. 27
  4. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 8
  5. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 10
  6. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 15
  7. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 16
  8. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 17
  9. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 26
  10. ^ Sloboda 2003, p. 20

References

  • Sloboda, Marián (2003), "Language maintenance and shifts in a Greek community in a heterolinguistic environment: the Greeks in the Czech Republic" (PDF), Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora, 29 (1): 5–33, ISSN 0364-2976
  • Zissaki-Healy, Tassula (2004), "The World We Live In: Children of the storm", The New Presence (3): 27–28, ISSN 1211-8303
  • Králová, Kateřina (2009), "Otázka loajality řecké emigrace v Československu v letech 1948 až 1968/Loyalty of the Greek Emigrants in Czechoslovakia between 1948 and 1968", Slavonic Review, 95 (3): 337–350, ISSN 0037-6922

Further reading

  • Hradečný, Pavel (2000), Řecká komunita v Československu, její vznik a počáteční vývoj (1948-1954)/The Greek community in Czechoslovakia: its emergence and initial development (1948-1954), Prague: Institute of Contemporary History, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
  • Botu, Antula; Konečný, Milan (2005), Řečtí uprchlíci : kronika řeckého lidu v Čechách, na Moravě a ve Slezsku 1948-1989/Greek community: chronicle of the Greeks in the Czech Republic, Moravia, and Silesia, 1948-1989, Prague: Řecká obec Praha, ISBN 978-80-239-5462-3
  • Hlavatý, Ivan (2009), "Kuchyně a strava řecké menšiny v České republice jako faktor etnické identity/Cuisine and Food of the Greek Minority in the Czech Republic as a Factor of Ethnic Identity", Národopisná revue, 19 (3): 168–176, ISSN 0862-8351