Sacred Greece: An Interview With Phil Cousineau

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Phil Cousineau first discovered the sacred Greece over half a century ago.

At the time, he was a little boy living in Detroit, who would love getting lost reading the myths and fables of Ancient Greece.

Over fifty years later, Phil is a world-renowned teacher, scholar, documentary filmmaker, and author, but his passion for the sacredness of Greece has remained intact. That’s why Phil loves to travel to Greece with seekers who are looking to explore this beautiful country.

greece - phil cousineau

This year, Phil’s life-changing tour The Heart of Ancient Greece: An Odyssey with Phil Cousineau will run from September 24 to October 4, 2018. As always, this will be a journey full of visits to sacred sites, culture, fine cuisine, storytelling and engaging conversation. The trip will focus more specifically on the myths, heroes, gods and goddesses, and sacred sites of the Classical World.

As the trip approaches, we caught up with Phil to hear what makes Greece such an appealing destination for him, and to ask him why he thinks everyone should make a sacred trip to Greece at least once in their life.

(NOTE: The interview has been edited for clarity and length)

SEJ: What is it that particularly appeals to you about Greece as a destination?

Phil: I have been fascinated by Greece since reading the classics out loud, especially Homer, as a boy growing up in Detroit in a house full of books. Ever since it has been in the forefront of my imaginative life because of work in mythology and history. It is the crucible of Western Civilization, as is often said, but also indispensable if anyone wants to understand the history of theatre, poetry, mythology, even sports. On the personal level, I find it one of the last affordable sites in Europe, offering the healthiest food in the world.

SEJ: What place or site are you most excited about taking participants to visit on this Greece Odyssey?

Phil: Besides the usual sites in Athens, I plan to take the group to Eleusis, a rarely visited site near the capital that was a famous goddess pilgrimage site. I will lead the group to Delphi where we will visit the site of the famous oracle on one of the most dramatic mountains in the country, then down to Olympia, where the athletic spirit began and has been restored.

Eleusis

SEJ: One of the focal points of this journey will be the role of the Goddess. Why is the Goddess something you are focusing on and what will participants be taking away with them in respect to knowledge of the Goddess?

Phil: If you read the Greek myths, the goddesses were as powerful and omnipresent as the gods. To only visit the sites of the gods and male heroes is to see only half of Greece.

SEJ: Your book The Olympic Odyssey: Rekindling the True Spirit of the Great Games explores the spiritual dimension of the Olympics, and in Olympia, you will be leading a discussion on this topic. What fascinates you about this connection between sport and spirituality?

Phil: For millennia people around the world, not only Greece, have played in the deepest sense of the word, and competed, not for bloodlust, but for the ancient Greek belief in arête, excellence. This aspect is mostly forgotten in modern play and modern sport where the emphasis is on winning at all costs. The Modern Olympics has been a first step in trying to revive the true spirit, the spirituality, underneath all athletic competition.

SEJ: What can participants expect from this journey to Greece that they wouldn’t find elsewhere? 

Phil: Everything is different. We will enjoy local speakers, but also write in our journals, sketch, and every evening have what I call a Long Conversation where we actually discuss in depth what we’ve encountered during the day.

sacred greece

SEJ: Is there anything else you’d like to share with readers about this journey?

Phil: Yes, I encourage people on my journeys to bring a gift or two or three to hand out to someone special that you meet along the way. Our way of saying thank you to the Greeks, who are known for coining the word xenophobia, the suspicion of strangers, but also coined its opposite, xenophilia, the love or affection of strangers.

Book your next trip now

Interested in a life-changing tour with Phil?  Mythic Crete with Phil Cousineau and Georgios Spiradakis
A Ten-Day Tour to the Legendary Island of Light will run from April 9 – 18, 2019. As always, this will be a journey full of visits to sacred sites, culture, fine cuisine, storytelling and engaging conversation.