In the midst of apartment buildings and city streets in the suburb of Acharnes, Magda Kontogianni tends to her herd of goats and sheep with quiet determination.
She is likely the last active female livestock farmer in the greater Athens area, maintaining a way of life that has nearly vanished under urban sprawl and modern convenience.
Her animal pen is just steps from her home and a short walk from Dekeleias Avenue.
Alongside her brother Giannis, Ms. Kontogianni lives and works year-round in what she considers a calling rather than a job.
“We celebrate Christmas and Easter right here in the stable,” she said. “Friends come over, we eat and drink. This is our life.”
She names each of her animals based on their personality or origin, such as her ram Taxiarchis from Lesbos or her goat Paraskevi, born on July 26.
Her days follow a steady rhythm: waking at dawn, feeding, milking, herding, and above all, caring for the animals she sees as family.
Ms. Kontogianni once tried leaving this life, working at a supermarket butcher counter. “I enjoyed the contact with people and my coworkers, but I felt empty.
I missed my animals. I missed my garden,” she said. “This is what I learned from my ancestors. This is where I breathe deeply.”
Now back to her traditional life, she is a vocal advocate for preserving it. She laments the lack of education and incentives for young people to enter farming or livestock production.
“We talk about unemployment in Greece, but no one touches the primary sector. There are no training programs, no school greenhouses, no educational farms,” she said.
“Kids come to my place and are thrilled by the animals. If that love were nurtured, maybe their lives would take a different path.”
Her work is often lonely, physically demanding, and largely unrecognized. But for Ms. Kontogianni, it brings unmatched peace.
“This is a way of life that centers me. It gives me responsibility, it pushes me to grow as a person,” she said. “I may not stay up late or go out at night, but I wake up every morning to care for creatures that depend on me.”
The hardest part, she says, is when an animal falls ill, with the waiting and worry. The best part is birth. “Watching new life come into the world never stops moving me.”
As she continues in a profession facing extinction in urban Greece, Magda Kontogianni is more than a farmer; she is a symbol of quiet resilience. Her life offers a rare and steady contrast in a society often prioritizing speed over tradition and experiencing a disconnect from the land and animals.