A man beats a drum while behind him women dressed in white slowly advance, holding torches and singing hymns to Zeus.
At the foot of Mount Olympus, home of the Greek Gods, these scenes are repeated during the four-day-long Prometheia Festival at the start of every summer.
For more than thirty years, hundreds of people who worship ancient Greek deities have been coming to the area to revive ceremonies whose roots stretch back to antiquity.
The events are organised by the association “Prometheus, the Fire Bringer”, named after the Titan deity who, according to Greek mythology, defied Zeus, the king of the gods, by stealing the sacred fire from Mount Olympus to bring it to humankind.
“Our aim is to highlight certain aspects of Greece’s cultural and historical heritage,” Georgia Altintasiotou, the association’s president, told AFP.
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The Promitheia Festival honours ancient Greek Gods. © Sakis Mitrolidis, AFP
Several participants, many of whom are polytheists, adopt names inspired by figures from antiquity and take part in processions, torchlight runs and symbolic ceremonies near the archaeological site of Dion.
“It’s an effort to return to our roots,” explained Semeli Travlou, a writer and founding member of the association.
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“We have been artificially and systematically cut off from the literature, education and thought of ancient Greece, from our ancestral gods and from our Greek vision of the divine,” she said. “We have renounced our past.”
Most members of the association change their first names following a ceremony and subsequently address one another using names inspired by antiquity.
“My official name is Triantafyllos, but here I’ve taken the name Hermodoros (“gift of the god Hermes”),” said Triantafyllos Athanassoulas, 48, who took part in a torchlight procession.
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A reenactor dressed as an ancient Greek plays a lyre. © Sakis Mitrolidis, AFP
Participants also gather on the nearby banks of the River Enipeas to pay homage to nature and invoke the Nymphs and the Nereids, divine creatures from Greek mythology.
“The gods of ancient Greece are energies that exist within us. I’m not trying to convert anyone,” said Symeon Charizanos, a 53-year-old office worker.
“I’m trying to preserve the values and virtues of my ancestors, such as excellence, boldness, a fighting spirit, courage and truth,” he added.
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The festival is named after a god who defied Zeus © Sakis Mitrolidis / AFP
The festivities conclude with theatrical performances, dances and celebrations inspired by antiquity, held in the forests alongside the mountain.
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(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
