By ANNA BOUROZIKAS
There probably aren’t too many second generation Australians my age that haven’t grappled with the issue of cultural identity. What forms your self-identity most? Is it the family you grew up in? The country you were born and raised in? The country your parent’s came from, its culture and beliefs? How do your reconcile differences between the country you were born in and the one your parents came from? How important is language in all of this? Especially given, that many second generation Australians probably raise their children in English speaking households. How will the third generation see themselves?
These are questions I have wondered about since I became a parent and attempted to teach my children to speak Greek. I started primary school in Melbourne’s south-east in the mid 70s. Although I was born in Australia I was unable to speak English by the time I started school. My parents were Greek migrants and I was being raised in a Greek household.
Once I started primary school, I spent several years doing special English classes. There was nothing unusual about that. I grew up in an area where a large majority of the population had migrated from Greece post World War II. The majority of students at my high school were from a Greek background.
There were so many of us, classes could not be held on the Greek Easter Good Friday, when we all stayed home. I went to Greek school two nights a week. I participated in the Greek national day celebrations, performed in Greek plays.