Greek-Rooted & Cultivated in Diaspora

NOTE: In 2026 it feels risky to celebrate immigrant stories. But I have learned from my immigrant roots and my immigrant neighbors that deeply rooted resilience grows from our journeys, and celebrating that is necessary in hard times.

“Give me a word, any word, and I’ll show you how the root of that word is Greek.”

As the daughter of Greek immigrants, I laughed until I cried at the veracity of this challenge repeated multiple times in the original 2002 movie, My Big Fat Greek Weddingwhich takes a comedic look at a passionate, chaotic, and endearing Greek immigrant family in America.  Even now, I hear my dad’s voice in those words.  When I told him I work with my immigrant and refugee neighbors on the Global Diaspora team, he asked, “Do you know what the word dia-spora means? It comes from the Greek—” 

Dia—meaning acrossspora—meaning scatter—it’s where we get spores. It’s connected to scattering seeds across the earth—an agricultural concept.

Being Greek

What does it mean to be Greek when you are cultivated in diaspora? DNA tests say I’m 90% Greek.  My distinguishing tastebuds were nurtured by the culinary prowess of my people and my dad’s expert training. But on a spectrum of Greekness, my language skills are bleak.  My connection to the local Greek community is questionable.  Culturally, I don’t wave the Greek flag or own a traditional Greek outfit to wear on Heritage Day at the office.  Sometimes Greek Orthodox chant is a chilling reminder that I don’t belong—that I’m not Greek enough to be a part of that group.

The Greek Orthodox Church was the place where local Greek immigrants could cultivate language, culture, faith, and community.  Immigrants could proudly teach their kids the tenants of faith while also sending them to Greek dance for cultural experiences and Greek school for language learning.  

In the chaos of Greek immigrant family life, somehow, I missed those dance classes.  For a myriad of reasons, I failed miserably at language learning.  I worried more about what to wear to church than what the ancient Orthodox services were actually about.  Without these core elements, belonging to the community withered. Proud of their cultural heritage and wanting the best for their children, I felt the longing my parents had for me to learn Greek.  That unfulfilled longing translated into language shame.  And shame is not a motivating force for belonging.

Transforming Language Shame

I buried my language shame and it lay dormant in me as a regular reminder of what I was lacking. Until, my mom encouraged me to study Spanish in college. I discovered that I excelled at it.  I loved learning grammar so much that I went on to study linguistics.  Through the study of other languages and cultures, God began to cultivate in me His love for all people.  

I take seriously Jesus’ value for all the nations… (Mt. 28:19)

In the Greek, all the nations—όλα τα έθνη—translates into every ethnic group.  God cares about people flourishing within every ethnolinguistic group scattered around the globe.

Embracing Philoxenia

Philoxenia—a Greek word that means a friend to the stranger.  It embodies the ancient Greek tradition of welcoming guests with warmth, kindness and generosity.

I didn’t have to go far to discover a myriad of ethnic groups living in diaspora. After earning my bachelor’s degree in Spanish for Bilingual Education and then teaching English as a Second Language, my husband and I bought our first home in an Arabic-speaking community in Michigan.  We embarked on learning spoken Lebanese Arabic in our neighborhood.  Our three kids grew up with Arabic-speaking neighbors from Yemen, Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Palestine.  My Arabic language skills got me through delightful tea times with neighbors—definitely more graciously than my Greek.  My growing passion for sweet Middle Eastern mint tea set my culinary standards even higher.

Over the years, I’ve taught English to Arabic speakers, Spanish to English speakers, linguistics to all ages, and I’ve learned to compassionately coach others through language learning processes on the far side of the sea. My love for languages and engaging the people who speak them are intertwined at the roots. These combined passions germinated into a master’s degree in Language Learning & Linguistics. The language shame I had buried deep down began to sprout up with expanded and invigorated dignity. 

After 17 years in Michigan, we uprooted from our beloved Arabic-speaking diaspora community.  Now, my family lives in a community where I interact with neighbors who speak up to 35 different languages at our local Immigrant and Refugee Center in Colorado.  I connect with other Orthodox Christians through shared holidays and the splendor of Orthodox worship chanted in Tigrinya, Arabic, Amharic, Macedonian and Greek. 

A Beautiful Belonging in the Body of Christ

Recently, I sat down with a young Kinyarwanda-speaking teen in my community to talk about her immigrant church experience and the struggles she faces living in two cultures. I explained that, often times, an immigrant church tries so hard to do it all—to be a center for:

language,

cultural identity,

faith, and community.

But sometimes, kids who are cultivated in diaspora don’t learn their heritage language like those who immigrated, but they can still grow in faith and community connections.  As I tenderly explained these things to my young friend, I found myself welling up with tears.  Was I talking about her little brother who struggles with understanding the Bible in Kinyarwanda? Or was I feeling the deep-seeded shame of my own lack of heritage language skills? Though we come from different language groups, faith expressions, and continents, we share a beautiful belonging in the Body of Christ.

The Spectrum of Greek-ness  

Where am I on the spectrum of Greekness?  I eagerly embrace the invitations of spontaneous Greek dancing in the living room—in sweats, among cousins.  I am teaching my kids the deeply rooted values of:

good food,

good company,

and good conversations,

as my parents taught me.  I embrace my fierce passion for life and feel held back if I can’t talk with my hands.  I love language. I love learning.  I am passionate about human flourishing and pray fervently that all ethnolinguistic groups would have access to Good News in the languages they value most.

The buried seed of language shame from my youth has grown into a complex root system cultivated in diaspora. I find I belong best in diverse communities where everyone has a different food to share and language to express.  We welcome each other with our unique expressions of philoxenia. Those sweet spaces bring me joy. I not only crave sweet Middle Eastern tea, but I also regularly hunger for Eritrean hembasha bread and Rohingya-style spicy stir-fried noodles.  I can’t duplicate these dishes, I just wait for invitations to share them with neighbors—appreciating good food and good conversations around language, culture, and life shared in community.  It’s part of who I am.

My name is Georgia.  In Greek: Γεωργίαfrom the root—geo—meaning earth.  Georgia is one who cultivates the earth—a Sower of Seeds

I am Greek-rooted and flourishing in diaspora.  

Georgia and her husband have been serving with SIL Global for 27 years. They work with global Scripture Engagement strategies so that local language communities can flourish. Georgia currently serves as a Language & Culture Empowerment Specialist with Global Diaspora Services, and in her neighborhood. 

My Signature Blend

I weave stories in my field as a Language & Culture Empowerment Specialist—a learner, a teacher, and a seeker of hidden treasures in Diaspora spaces… 

How to consume my words: They pair well with a comfort beverage and a reflective space. They are crafted with wholesome, layered complexity, freshly selected thoughtfulness, signature & rhythmic repetitions, punctuated with a unique blend of precious perspective found in diverse and often marginalized corners of the globe and of human hearts.  Each ingredient is prayed through, wrestled with, & marinated in the life-giving words of Jesus. Not to say I always get it right.  I have definitely ruined a few recipes along the way—over seasoned, over cooked, too dry, too sappy.  

I am Greek-rooted, polysemic, and curiously linguistic… 

My Greek-rootedness has taught me to love nuance and embrace implicitly. I live among multilingual language learners, educators and linguists, but find joy in playing with and playing on words. I respect lists and laws but express myself in parables and poetry. In my mind I’m painting pictures worth about 1000+ words.  Polysemy is a fabulous Greek word that invites multiple possible meanings. It’s a blend of intentional wordplay to create open and personalized interpretations—to come away from my reflections with your own challenges, questions, thoughts and aspirations—to taste for yourself what is simmering.

I aspire to ethically sourced storytelling, marbled with brave, vulnerable introspection…

My relational connections are a profoundly significant part of my life. As a beloved friend, daughter, mother, teacher, mentor, wife, neighbor…I seek to honor the bold and distinct flavors others bring into my life. I prayerfully invite the people who have inspired my stories to get a taste of them first—and receive their feedback. In an effort to honor the impact of others and not to tell their stories without invitation, I write introspectively and share vulnerably.  

I am scattered…

I am privileged to have my hands in many pots filled with deliciously diverse delicacies. I embrace scattered as a defining characteristic of living in diaspora—from the Greek—those who are scattered from their homeland.  I find clarity and satisfaction when I simmer my curiosities, empathies, studies, & unique cultural experiences, and serve them in written form. My writing gathers the scattered parts into sense and meaning.

I am faith-based…

My faith has led to flourishing and compelled me on magnificent and tragic adventures I have lovingly and courageously followed my good, good Father into.  To express the deep things of the soul at a base level always contains elements of faith stirred in. I live and love in diverse contexts, and I love because God first loved me.

I am not thick-skinned… 

I am wired to be receptive and perceptive to linguistic patterns, human hearts, and cultural expressions. Attention to detail requires heightened sensitivities—noticing people and rhythms and hidden treasures that could easily get overlooked.

I flourish when I walk in my strengths of empathy and connectedness…

Like stillness and a steeping cup of tea—daily walks are a prayerful ritual for me to make sacred connections. Much of what I take in around me percolates and eventually spills out of these regular rhythms as I continue to figure out my blend of storytelling that truthfully reflects the joys and sorrows my heart has carried.  

Not all who wander are lost—but I probably am…

I’m gifted more with metaphors than with maps. I don’t stay in my lane, because I’m buzzing from flower to glorious flower. I’m often lost in thought or following rabbits down little trails while chewing on connected ideas. I go out of my way to collect rocks from the places I’ve traversed in solidarity with the people I’ve shared meals and stories with there. As I wander, I’m simultaneously pondering the moral of the children’s story of Stone Soup and wondering how my global rock collection connects to what it means to inherit the earth as Jesus said—maybe it’s one treasured stone at a time.  

I continually feed live, active cultures of chronic hope

I live in the brokenness of my body and the brokenness of this world while clinging to the promise that the fullness of life is available for all people. In this tension, resilience is activated, yielding a leaven of hope, ultimately rising to freshly baked bread—intended to be broken and shared in community.

I embrace health-nuttiness and a small spoon….

I don’t need to take up more space than I do. My sweet spot involves nutrient-dense, small portions of something deliciously inviting and often spontaneous—which is why I treasure the small spoon I carry with me. Chronically living with leukemia has freed me up to embrace both my health-nut tendencies and a lean budget, while seeking out culinary adventures among neighbors, and in community. It’s often over meals that neighbors become friends and community becomes family—when we share a part of ourselves. 

I serve generous portions… 

Through unsuccessfully aspiring to succinctness, I am learning not to let word counts be my definitive limitation. I am the only one with my unique perspective. So, I invite you to savor my signature blend of detail like a delicately and expertly prepared dish made for you to taste and share. I pray that it may satisfy the souls of those who choose to break bread with me. You are welcome.