A front-line civil servant opens up about the people she serves and the quiet wave of foreign retirees settling in the country
There are public servants who process paperwork, and there are public servants who understand that paperwork is rarely just paperwork. Maria R. belongs firmly in the second category. A manager at a KEP, the Citizens’ Service Centres that act as the main gateway between Greek public administration and the public, she has spent twenty-four years at the front counter in Attica, building her entire professional life around a single conviction: that the person standing across the desk deserves the same quality of attention whether they are registering a birth, mourning a loss, or trying to figure out, in a language that is not their own, what document they need and where to find it. She agreed to share her experience on condition of anonymity but what she has to say speaks for itself.
By Maria R., KEP manager in Attica
I came to this work in September 2002, selected as part of the founding team that opened our municipality’s first KEP. I had no idea then that I would still be here twenty-four years later, still at the front desk, still handling cases directly. I stay current (new legislation, new digital platforms, new competencies) because the work demands it. But what no training prepares you for is the weight of what people bring through the door.
Citizens come to us at the hinge points of their lives. When they are about to start a job and need their paperwork in order. When they are planning a wedding. When a child has just been born and there are registrations to file. When someone they love has died and, in the middle of grief, they suddenly face a wall of administrative obligations they have no idea how to navigate. Some of them are lost not because they are careless but because the digital portals are not accessible to everyone: not everyone has the skills, the equipment, or the confidence to manage these processes alone. That is precisely why the front desk exists, and why we take the work seriously.
What I have come to understand over the years is that you cannot keep a professional distance from all of it. When someone sits across from you in genuine distress, looking for a solution, you get involved. You cannot help it. And sometimes what moves you most is not the distress but the composure. People carrying real losses who walk in with extraordinary dignity, who thank you quietly and leave. Those moments stay with you.
Foreign nationals make up a substantial part of the people we serve. Albanians, Romanians, Bulgarians, Georgians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Italians, French, Chinese — they come with questions about residence permits, citizenship procedures, benefit entitlements, criminal record certificates, birth registrations for their children. The work is the same regardless of where someone was born. Our job is to find the answer, or to find the person who has it, and we approach every case that way.
Every summer, diaspora Greeks pass through as well. People who have spent decades abroad and are already counting down to retirement, planning to come back, to reopen the family house, to give their children some contact with where they come from. There is something quietly moving about those conversations. They have carried Greece with them for a long time, and the return matters to them enormously.
What I notice now, and it has been building for several years, is a broader movement of people from across Europe who want to settle in Greece permanently after retirement. It is not a trickle. I see it in my own experience of the country — Europeans who have put down roots, who engage with local communities, who join volunteer efforts and cultural initiatives, who take the relationship with their adopted place seriously. They are not passing through. They are arriving.
This work has given me twenty-four years of proximity to people at their most human. That is not something you give up easily.
Editor’s note: Retirees planning to relocate to Greece generally begin the process at the Greek consulate in their country of residence, which advises on the required documentation. Once in Greece, the two most immediate steps are obtaining a Tax Identification Number (AFM) and a Social Security Number (AMKA). A KEP can assist with both.
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