Acropole Hotel

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Acropole Hotel
AcropoleHotelKhartoum Erdbeernaut02102015.jpg
General information
AddressZubeir Pascha Street
Town or cityKhartoum
CountrySudan
Website
acropolekhartoum.com
Staff of the Great Britain Club (1943)

The Acropole is the oldest existing hotel in Khartoum that has been in service without interruption.[1] It was founded in 1952 by Panagiotis Pagoulatos from Cephalonia, who had left Greece during WWII, and his wife Flora, who was from the community of the Greeks in Egypt, specifically from Alexandria.[2] Since there was a sizeable community of Greeks in Sudan at the time as well, the couple settled in the Anglo-Egyptian colony. The Washington Post writes:

"During the day, he was employed by the British government. After hours, he worked as a private accountant, soon amassing enough capital to open a night club just opposite the governor's palace".

"Love + Thanks" from Bob Geldof to the Acropole
Historical sticker on vintage suitcase

When the governor had the "Great Britain Bar" closed because of the noise, the couple took over a liquor dealership, opened a wine store, a confectionery shop, and then the Acropole, which soon expanded.[3] The confectionery shop closed in 1967, when it was damaged in an anti-government protest.[4] The same year he died and their three sons Thanasis, George, and Gerasimos ("Mike") took over the business:

With their mother’s guidance and their hard work, they managed to turn the hotel into an actual treasure of the city’s cultural and touristic life.[5]

Unlike many other Greek-Sudanese enterprises, the Acropole was spared from the policies of nationalisation following the 1969 coup d'état, since it was housed in a rented building. It suffered from the worsening economic crisis, but profited from the pro-Western swing after the failed 1971 coup d'état by parts of the Sudanese Communist Party.[6]

In 1983 again, the Acropole lost part of its business, when dictator Gaafar Nimeiry introduced the draconic "September Laws" under the label of Sharia and had all beverages dumped into the Blue Nile. Until then, the Acropole had been the distributor of Amstel beer in the country.[4]

The building that used to house the Acropole until 1988, photographed in 2018

Following the devastating 1984/85 famines in Darfur and Ethiopia, the Acropole became the base for many international non-governmental organisations, since it was the only hotel with reliable telephone, telex and fax lines. A framed letter from the Band Aid founder Bob Geldof on the wall of the hotel office gives evidence of his appreciation for the support by the Pagoulatos family and their staff, and Sudanese network.[7] They also scrounged up goods for Oxfam and Save the Children to get to the camps.[8] The author Edward Girardet described the hotel in 1985 as follows:

The management office (2016)

"From the outside the Acropole is totally unassuming: just another one of the drab, mustard-colored buildings that line the dusty, potholed streets in the heart of the Sudanese capital. Yet the Acropole's halls, rooms, and streetside balconies are spotlessly clean, simply but tastefully decorated in an airy, almost graceful 1930s Art Deco style."[9]

Gallery of historical photographs in the hotel restaurant (2015)

On 15 May 1988, the Acropole was shocked by tragedy, when a terrorist commando of the Abu Nidal group bombed the restaurant, killing a British couple with their two children, another Briton, and two Sudanese workers,[10] leaving 21 people injured.[11][12] According to The Economist, the attack on the soft target, which was well known for hosting many Westerners, was "in apparent revenge for the Israeli assassination in Tunisia of the PLO military leader Khalil al-Wazir."[13] Five members of the group were arrested and convicted. Their death-sentences were turned into prison-time, when the relatives of the Sudanese victims agreed to the payment of "blood money". In January 1991, shortly before the Gulf War started, the new regime of the Islamist leader Hassan Al Turabi released the five.[14]

The lobby (2016)

Nevertheless, the Pagoulatos brothers managed to restore the hotel in a building just opposite the ruins of the old one.[5] It has remained since then one of the most popular places for Western visitors, particularly journalists, archaeologists, and NGO workers. For this reason, the Acropole appears frequently in travel books.[15][16][17]

The Honorary Consulate of Greece at the Acropole

When notorious filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl's helicopter crashed in the Nuba mountains in early 2000 at the age of 97, the Pagoulatos brothers found her a Sudan Airways captain and plane to rescue her and the crew, and had an ambulance waiting at the airport.[8]

An added attraction is the OHM electronics shop next door, which is owned by the brother of Sheikh Musa Hilal, previously the leader of Darfur's notorious Janjaweed militia. Several journalists and members of human rights organizations have managed to interview Hilal in that shop.[8]

Paper-set

After the embassy of the Hellenic Republic was closed in September 2015,[18] Greece's new diplomatic representative as Honorary Consul became Gerasimos Pagoulatos, with the Honorary Consulate based at the Acropole Hotel.[19]

At the 2016 Venice Biennale of Architecture, George Pagoulatos was featured in the presentation of Sir David Chipperfield's design for a museum at the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Naga along with portrays of other people who are related to the archeological project, photographed by German photographer of the Berlin-based . The caption of the image read:

I have been getting up at 5:30 a.m. for the last 50 years. My wife looks after me very well, she is my right hand, my left hand – an inspiration to me. We both grew up in Sudan. She is of Italian origin and I belong to the Greek minority. We have been happily married for 43 years.

Some of the archeologists have come to our hotel for over 20 years. Having solved various problems together, we have developed strong bonds that go well beyond business relationships. We are like a family."[20]

References[]

  1. ^ Helsen, Marc (23 November 2010). Onder het zuiderkruis: Onder het Zuiderkruis (in Dutch). Lannoo Meulenhoff - Belgium. p. 83. ISBN 978-90-209-9361-5.
  2. ^ ΔEΛHΓIΩPΓHΣ, ΣΤ. (August 3, 2012). "Μια Ακρόπολη στην καρδιά του Σουδάν". Espresso (in Greek). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  3. ^ Jonathan, C. R (May 15, 1995). "BED, BREAKFAST -- AND MORE -- IN SUDAN". The Washington Post. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  4. ^ a b Shahine, Alaa (November 7, 2008). "Greek hotel a part of Khartoum modern history". Reuters. Khartoum, Sudan. Retrieved February 10, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Areti, Kotseli (July 21, 2012). "Greek "Acropole Hotel" in the Heart of Sudan". Greek Reporter World. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  6. ^ Chaldeos, Antonis (2017). The Greek community in Sudan (19th-21st cen.). Athens. p. 144. ISBN 978-618-82334-5-4.
  7. ^ Scroggins, Deborah (2011). Emma's War. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
  8. ^ a b c "Hotel Acropole Khartoum: A smile and a tea". Archived from the original on 2007-10-08. Retrieved 2007-06-02. Bidoun online magazine
  9. ^ Girardet, Edward (July 8, 1985). "From Khartoum to Cape Town/An African Journey: Meet the Pagoulatoses and their hotel, the place to stay in Khartoum". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  10. ^ Craig Harris, Lillian (July 2012). "THE ACROPOLE HOTEL, KHARTOUM" (PDF). Sudan Studies. 46: 23–36.
  11. ^ Bidwell, Robin Leonard (1998). Dictionary of Modern Arab History: An A to Z of Over 2,000 Entries from 1798 to the Present Day. Routledge. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-7103-0505-3.
  12. ^ Terrorist Group Profiles. DIANE Publishing. 1 August 1989. p. 8. ISBN 978-1-56806-864-0.
  13. ^ "Country Report: Sudan". The Economist Intelligence Unit: 50. 1990.
  14. ^ Petterson, Donald (2009). Inside Sudan: Political Islam, Conflict, And Catastrophe. Hachette.
  15. ^ Theroux, Paul (2004). Dark Star Safari: Overland from Cairo to Cape Town. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 56. ISBN 9780618446872. Acropole Hotel khartoum.
  16. ^ Luciani, Silvia (2013). A Journey through Sudan. Blue Grange. p. 33. ISBN 9781291585513.
  17. ^ Robbins, Mike (2014). Even The Dead Are Coming: A Memoir of Sudan. New York: Broad Books.
  18. ^ "Serious Endeavours to Reopen Greece Embassy in Khartoum". Sudan Vision. 28 February 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  19. ^ "Soudan". Hellenic Republic Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  20. ^ "Naga Museum in Sudan | David Chipperfield". MODERNi. 31 March 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2018.

External links[]

Coordinates: 15°36′18″N 32°31′46″E / 15.6050°N 32.5294°E / 15.6050; 32.5294

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