CRETE Magazines Oct. 2014 | Page 4

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE PAA Donates Medical Supplies to Hospitals and Medical Facilities in Crete D earMembers, The Philanthropic Committee of the PAA, chaired by Evangeline Alpogianis, along with the PSK (World Council of Cretans), whose new president is our very own Emmanuel Velivasakis, have agreed to donate the $20,000 cost of shipping a container of medical supplies badly needed by the hospitals in Crete. The supplies come from the extensive inventory held by the IOCC, the International John Sargetis PAA President Orthodox Christian Charities, an arm of the [email protected] Greek Orthodox Church. The value of the supplies is well over a half million dollars. Before my strong recommendation to the committee to support this donation I carefully investigated whether there was a real need. I had questions and doubts because it’s hard for me to believe that in 2014, the state of the medical system in Greece has so deteriorated to the point that patients have to bring their own supplies to the hospital—if they can even get in the hospital in the first place to be examined and treated. It’s not my place or that of the PAA to say who is at fault for the crisis. If there is a real need the PAA is here to help, regardless how the situation was created. A major reason why the PAA was formed 85 years ago, as stated in our Constitution, was to provide philanthropic aid. The PAA has a separate IRS tax exempt trust specifically for philanthropic aid. I can also assure you the medical supplies placed in the container are first class, in date and actually needed by the hospitals. The IOCC has contacts in all the hospitals in Crete who provide them with a list of the needed medical supplies. The container is delivered to a center depository in Crete from where they 4 KPHTH | OCTOBER 2014 are distributed to area hospitals according to their need. In a recent newspaper article Alexandros Sakellariou, a sociologist at Panteion University in Athens, stated: “The most serious problem is not the doctors, who are highly qualified, but the lack of funding for materials that hospitals and doctors need.” Certainly we have philanthropic needs here in the United States and the committee has worked diligently to fulfill them. However the need in Crete is immediate and real. Let’s help our brothers, sisters and friends there. From everything I have heard they honestly appreciate and are thankful for the container sent to them during the John Manos administration and will be grateful for what we are sending now. As PAA members we can feel proud to be able to help in this way. K Fraternally, John S. Sargetis )Aɕͥ