You have to go to the market, we were told on our first days on Crete. These markets take place in all larger towns, in Ierapetra every Saturday morning. A street is closed and transformed into a colorful bazaar. You can buy everything: fruit, vegetables, cheese, honey, pickled olives, herbs, almonds, nuts, raisins, lentils, yellow peas. And even a bag of living snails. There are new and used clothes, shoes and dishwashing brushes, slippers and paintbrushes, pots and thermometers, glasses and picture frames, tools of all kinds, radios, coloring books, clothespins. And the prices: 1,50 Euros for twelve batteries, sweaters two Euros, jackets five or six.
Fruits and vegetables are also very cheap. For example, at the stand of Elena and her husband Michalis. Elena was born in Germany and has been living on Crete again for some time. Her parents came to Germany as foreign workers in 1958. Elena and Michalis sell the products they grow on their own land near Ierapetra: Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, broccoli, eggplant, spring onions, lettuce - whatever is ripe. There are also fruits depending on the season, such as pomegranates, figs, apricots, melons. "All week long we are at the markets in the Lasithi region,” the eastern part of Crete, says Elena. The markets are always busy, and it's really fun to shop there.
Elena knows life in Germany and life in Greece. For many people it is not easy here, she says. Wages are significantly lower than in Germany, and the cost of living is quite high. Food often costs more in the supermarkets than in Germany, and many Greeks have financial problems. Also for this reason, the region's weekly markets with their low prices are very important.
Kontakt:
Michael Meinert
Tel. +49 175 515 53 59
michael.meinert@textbuero-meinert.de
Fotos: Falls nicht anders angegeben
Iris Heymann-Meinert
Michael Meinert