They live in a beautiful country struggling with economic chaos, the result of decades of fiscal insanity and huge bureaucracy, the political left having bribed the public with the public's own money until all the money was gone.
- Bio | E-mail | Recent columns
-
Video: John Kass: Scenes of angry Athens protest
-
A suicide, an angry protest, and a nation in agony
-
Unrest in Athens
- Video: John Kass: On America and Greece, lessons to be learned
- Coffee
- Books
- Books and Magazines
-
See more topics »
-
Skoufa 64 str & Grivaion, 10680 Athens, Greece
Rocks are thrown by only a powerless few. A rock is a thing of anger in the hands of a stupid man. But there is something that stupid men can't hope to pick up: solutions.
And to find some I went to an amazing bookstore in Athens.
Free Thinking Zone.
"I'm really not trying to push books, I'm trying to push ideas," said Areti Georgili, who opened her bookstore several months ago as an experiment.
What ideas?
"Freedom," she said. "You're American. You've heard of this concept, 'freedom'? There is this thing there, called freedom?"
She smiled and I liked her immediately. She didn't have to tell me that irony is a Greek word.
There are bookstores all over the city, and I mean books on paper, with people browsing and reading and talking about ideas. I didn't want to think about all the bookstores that have vanished in Chicago.
But here, where the rock throwers make news, the booksellers are busy without making headlines. Walk along any street downtown and you'll see books sold on outdoor tables, books with no pictures, and of course the bookstores. Some are huge. And others are just right.
People flock to Areti's store to talk of ideas, of developing new and constructive ways to cope with the economic crisis. They don't waste time shrieking epithets at the Germans or the Turks, or blaming the immigrants who flood the country almost unchecked. These are goads used by cynical men to incite the mob.
Instead, at Free Thinking Zone, folks talk about challenging the corrupt bureaucracy and nepotism, to push for meritocracy.
The discussions are quite animated, but not frivolous, because what's happening here — and what could happen in America — isn't frivolous.
When I visited the bookstore the other day, I noticed titles by Friedrich Hayek and John Stuart Mill, Isaiah Berlin and Pyotr Kropotkin. On the wall outside her store is a small poster of Dionysios Solomos, who wrote the "Hymn to Liberty," which was used for the Greek National Anthem.
"But you're not here to talk of books alone," she said. "You're here to talk about freedom. Would you like some coffee?"
Yes. Greek coffee. Medium sweet.
She sent out a clerk for the coffee.