Monday, January 22, 2007

Zeus the some-mighty


An attention-grabber in the Star today, buried deep within the A section:

Modern pagans pay homage to Zeus

ATHENS–A clutch of modern pagans honoured Zeus at a 1,800-year-old temple in the heart of Athens yesterday, in the first known ceremony of its kind held there since the ancient Greek religion was outlawed by the Roman empire in the late 4th century.

Watched by curious onlookers, some 20 worshippers gathered next to the ruins of the temple for a celebration organized by Ellinais, a year-old Athens-based group that is campaigning to revive old religious practices from the era when Greece was a fount of education and philosophy.

The group ignored a ban by the culture ministry, which declared the site off limits to any kind of organized activity to protect the monument. But participants did not try to enter the temple itself, which is closed to everyone, and no officials sought to stop the ritual.

Dressed in ancient costumes, worshippers standing near the temple's imposing Corinthian columns recited hymns calling on the Olympian Zeus, "King of the gods and the mover of things," to bring peace to the world.

"Mover of things"? You'd think, given all the trouble they'd gone to to worship Zeus, they would come up with some powers not shared with, say, a three-year-old. It gets worse:

Our message is world peace and an ecological way of life in which everyone has the right to education," said Kostas Stathopoulos, one of three "high priests" overseeing the event, which celebrated the nuptials of Zeus and Hera, the goddess of love and marriage.
There you go: world peace, the ecology, and the right to an education. Personally, I'm waiting for Zeus' thoughts on eliminating third-world debt and the many uses for hemp.

After all this time, would a little awe have been too much to ask for?

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