Nikos Stavroulakis, an artist, scholar, and prominent activist promoting Jewish life and heritage in Greece, has died.
Stavroulakis died Friday, May 19 in Chania, on the island of Crete. He was in his mid-80s.
“The world of Greek Jewry owes Nikos so much,” Marcia Haddad Ikonomopoulos, museum director of the Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue and Museum in New York, wrote in a post on Facebook. “He will be dearly missed.”
Born to a Jewish mother and a Greek Orthodox father from Crete, Stavroulakis was educated in England, the United States, and Israel. He co-founded the Jewish Museum in Athens in 1977 and served as its director until 1993. He then moved to Chania and became the driving force behind the restoration of the Etz Hayyim synagogue there.
Built as a church in the 15th century and converted into a synagogue in the 1600s, the synagogue stood ruined after World War II following the destruction fo the local Jewish community. The World Monuments Fund placed Etz Hayyim on its watch list of most endangered heritage sites in 1996, and Stavroulakis spearheaded the efforts to revive it.
After the synagogue was rededicated in 1999, it reopened as a “place of prayer, recollection, and reconciliation,” with an eclectic and pluralistic congregation that as Stavroulakis put it, “accommodates Jews of every variety of self-identity as well as non-Jews.”
Stavroulakis’ books included a guidebook to Jewish Greece, a history of Jews in Salonika and a Greek Jewish cookbook.
“He was a philosopher, museumologist, artist, writer, storyteller–and the finest chef in the Mediterranean region,” said Krystof Czyzewski, director of the Borderland Foundation in Poland. (JTA)