The state rep with the Greek roots
By Doreen Leggett
Photo by Barry A. Donahue
Somewhere along the way, the family name changed spelling,
from "Atsales" as it showed on the register of Ellis Island to
"Atsalis" as it appears on the ballot today.
Demetrius Atsalis is talking about how his family could
have owned convenience stores as well known as Tedeschi,
Christy's or even Cumberland:
"You'd have a Charlie's at every corner," he says.
Atsalis, sitting on his front porch in Hyannis, is smiling,
and you can tell this is a family story that has been told
time and time again, growing more beloved in the telling.
His grandfather on his dad's side (Atsalis has Greek
heritage on both sides) was named Constantinos, "Charlie."
After being kicked out as the youngest son from his village in
Greece, he made his way to Lynn, Massachusetts.
The successful restaurateur and grocery storeowner was hit
hard by the Depression and moved with his wife, Katherine
(also Greek born), in 1934 to a place that had a strong Greek
contingent -- Hyannis.
There he started another grocery store, Charlie's Variety,
of course, leasing it from someone from Katherine's home
village, then moving it when he bought his own property.
And somewhere along the way, Atsalis says, the family name
changed spelling, from "Atsales" as it showed on the register
of Ellis Island to "Atsalis."
One reason the story flows so well is because if Atsalis
forgets a detail, he not only has his mother and father
nearby, but four of his five brothers and assorted other
relatives to fill in holes.
Atsalis ticks off where his brothers live -- one a half
mile down the road, one a quarter of a mile, another an
eighth. "The farthest one is out in Marstons Mills, that's
like driving to the country," he grins.
"The Greeks, the Mediterraneans, are really family
orientated," he says. "I've always stayed grounded."
Even now, when they eat at their parents' house, they take
the same childhood seats. "If the kids are sitting in them
they are booted out," he says of the next generation.
Having a solid family certainly helps politically. Atsalis,
now a state representative, counts on them in campaigns, when
they act as ambassadors.
One of his cousins was also responsible for introducing him
to his Swedish wife, Monika, who returned to the States after
they met, even though her parents said she'd forget him.
Demetrius enjoys telling that story too, perhaps as a balance
for the oft-repeated story of how his parents met.
His grandfather on his mom's side, Silas, came to the US
after World War I, went into the restaurant supply business,
and he and his wife, Aphrodite, bought a summer house in
Yarmouth.
That's how his mom Marina, who now runs Marjon Print and
Frame Shop, met his father, John. She was in the store with
her two sisters, and John was working. The sisters went to the
instant bake cake aisle, while Marina wanted to bake from
scratch.
But it wasn't her kitchen skills that won him over. "She
was the best looking of the bunch," Atsalis says.
Charlie Atsalis, who decided not to build up a chain of
markets, was a staunch Democrat. "He'd say he'd vote for a
piece of wood before a Republican," Atsalis says.
His mom's dad, however, said, "He'd vote for a monkey
before a Democrat."
"But I'm sure he would have voted for me," Democrat Atsalis
says.
He is family, after all. And so while Demetrius is a Cape
Cod native, born 42 years ago, given that family closeness you
could almost say that he arrived here from Greece, via Lynn,
in 1934.
All materials on this site copyright 2001-2006 by The
Cape Cod Voice, all rights reserved. Reproduction by
permission only.