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My Christmas Day Walk Through Heraklion (Photo Essay)

Photo essay of a Christmas Day walk through Heraklion, capturing empty squares, relocated markets, and small oddities.

Christmas Day in Heraklion begins, as many things here do, with a small logistical realization that immediately sets the tone: almost no buses are running. Apart from the airport–PAGNI Hospital route, public transport has decided that Christmas is not the day for effort. Which meant that Phil drove me into town, dropped me off, and promised to come back later — a quiet agreement that already placed the day somewhere between intention and improvisation.

The city itself was operating in fragments. Bakeries were open and busy, doing exactly what they always do, only more so. Flower shops were open too, because grief and affection do not take holidays. Cafés were open because caffeine never negotiates.

A busy café on 25th of August Street. Outside heaters on, tables full, conversations uninterrupted. If anything worked flawlessly on Christmas Day, it was coffee.

The kebab taverna was closed, and food delivery did not exist at all — which felt mildly ironic on the one day when people traditionally eat meat in abundance, as if Heraklion were gently reminding everyone that Christmas, here, still expects participation.

Plateia Eleftherias on Christmas Day. Recently renovated, newly lit, carefully rearranged — and almost empty.

I passed through Plateia Eleftherias first. This square used to host one of the city’s most beautiful Christmas markets, full of light, noise, and people lingering for no particular reason. Now there was nothing there. The cafés around it were open, but the square itself felt strangely hollow. It had been renovated recently: new benches, the statue of the Unknown Soldier moved to a different position, and new lighting installed. The lights are solar and look both boring and slightly cheap, placed under eucalyptus trees where sunlight may or may not reach them. It depends on the day, the angle, and possibly luck. The whole arrangement felt like an improvement on paper rather than in practice.

Cafés open on Plateia Eleftherias, Christmas Day. The tables are occupied, conversations are flowing, coffee is being served — and yet the square itself feels detached from the life around it, as if activity has retreated to the edges and left the center behind.

So I kept walking, assuming that Christmas had not vanished, only relocated.

I noticed a provisional stage set up—clearly intended for concerts, theatre, or other festive programming, though not necessarily happening at that moment. There was also a nativity scene. I took photos. Christmas, it seemed, was present, but scattered, like a conversation happening across several streets instead of one square.

The provisional stage on Plateia Eleftherias. Set up for concerts, theatre, and “Christmas in the city,” it stands ready, as if the celebration were scheduled for later — or for someone else.
The nativity scene, a step away. Modest, familiar, and carefully placed beside the tree, it feels less like a spectacle and more like a reminder that Christmas here endures even when the square itself seems to pause.

The Christmas stalls eventually appeared on Dikeosinis Street, not on the 25th of August Street but parallel to it, which answered the earlier question of where the market had gone. This, apparently, was it now.

One of the Christmas stalls on Dikeosinis Street. Jewelry, small crafts, and ornaments — carefully arranged and very pretty, even if most homes were already decorated by the time Christmas Day arrived.
More stalls along Dikeosinis Street. Red, green, gold — familiar colors, familiar objects, quietly waiting for passersby who may or may not stop.

Most of the stalls sold jewelry, small handmade items, and Christmas decorations — slightly late, since by Christmas Day most people have already decorated or given up entirely. One stall sold chestnuts, Christmassy lollipops, and corn. Corn, in December. I did not ask where it came from. Another stall sold toys alongside religious icons, the sacred and the commercial sharing a table without tension or commentary.

Dikeosinis Street, Christmas market — snacks edition. Chestnuts, Christmassy lollipops, popcorn, and corn on the cob. Corn, in December. I did not ask questions. Christmas here has its own supply chains.

Nearby, four Special Forces police officers were stationed beside the market. They were armed, calm, and mostly observant — not performative, not intrusive. At one point, one of them stepped out of formation to interact briefly with a passing family. It was not an official exchange. No directions were being given. They clearly knew each other. A quick greeting, a few words, a shared familiarity, and then he returned to his place. It was a small moment, but it mattered — a reminder that uniforms do not erase local life.

Dikeosinis Street on Christmas Day. Pedestrians moving at an unhurried pace, a few police officers standing nearby, everything calm. One of them briefly greets a passing family — not official business, just recognition.

I regretted not having cash with me to buy them coffee. I had left the house in a hurry, and that minor omission stayed with me longer than it should have.

A little further on, I noticed two tiny dogs wearing Christmas outfits. I asked the owner if I could take a photo. She was delighted. One of the dogs was visibly afraid of me, which I later realized was because I smelled like my dog, Mojito. Dog logic is precise and unforgiving.

Lions’ Square on Christmas Day. The Morosini Fountain seems to be running, but it isn’t. The water has been added with a hose. The fountain itself has not worked for three years. The cafés stay open, people linger anyway, and Heraklion continues — functional, improvised, and oddly calm.

The bougatsa places offered their own quiet commentary. One was completely full — no empty tables, people waiting, no hesitation. Krikor, the famous one, founded in 1922, had empty tables. It was odd and telling. History does not always win on Christmas Day. Proximity, habit, or timing often do.

The oversized Christmas ornaments on 25th of August Street. Built for photos, pauses, and children pulling parents gently to a stop. Christmas here still understands scale.

On the 25th of August Street, I noticed newly installed benches where you can charge your phone and connect to public Wi-Fi. People were actually using them. I wondered why similar benches had not been installed on nearby streets that had also been recently renovated. Heraklion, it seems, modernizes selectively, like a city that prefers gestures to consistency.

The wishing Christmas tree. Covered in handwritten notes, hopes, and small promises left behind by people who stopped long enough to write something down — proof that even on a quiet holiday, someone always asks for more than decorations.

There were not many people on the streets overall. Most Cretans had clearly chosen to stay home. Still, on Dikeosinis Street, a singer was performing—one voice, carrying in an otherwise modest space. I recorded a video.

When I was done, Phil was waiting for me in the parking lot across from the Archaeological Museum of Heraklion, which was closed for Christmas, as expected. We went straight home.

An orange tree on Christmas Day. December in Heraklion still comes with oranges on the branches and clouds overhead — winter, but never quite what northern Christmas postcards promise.

Later, Phil went out to buy bread from Kritikos Fournos and came back with a panettone. That was Christmas Day. Quiet, uneven, full of minor contradictions — and very much Heraklion.

Categories: Crete
Mihaela Lica Butler: A former military journalist, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/mihaelalicabutler">Mihaela Lica-Butler</a> owns and is a senior partner at Pamil Visions PR and editor at Argophilia Travel News. Her credentials speak for themselves: she is a cited authority on search engine optimization and public relations issues, and her work and expertise were featured on BBC News, Reuters, Yahoo! Small Business Adviser, Hospitality Net, Travel Daily News, The Epoch Times, SitePoint, Search Engine Journal, and many others. Her books are available on <a href="https://amzn.to/2YWQZ35">Amazon</a>
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