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Saturday, April 27, 2024

Coola celebrates 100 fabulous years

A multilingual former florist described by her daughter as “captivatingly eccentric” will celebrate a major milestone tomorrow (June 14th).

Coola Velis will become Queensland’s newest centenarian when she turns 100 at the Carinity Wishart Gardens aged care community in Brisbane.

She was born Kuria Coola Flaskas on the small Greek island of Kythira, to her parents Chrisoula and Nicholas Flaskas, on June 14th, 1922. Two years later, political unrest in Greece saw Coola and her mother board a ship headed for Australia. On arrival, they were reunited with Nicholas, who had already emigrated to Australia and bought two cafés in the small rural Queensland towns of Toogoolawah and Esk.

As a youngster, Coola loved books – reading each night by torchlight under her bed covers. She amassed a vast collection of fashion magazines sourced by her father, and from an early age showed a talent for styling.

Coola Velis pictured in her younger years.

Coola was a talented singer and pianist who regularly performed to audiences in the town hall and aced her piano exams. She did this while dutifully working in The Rosary Café in Toogoolawah owned by her parents.

She was sent to Brisbane to attend Sommerville House for high school and studied Greek privately. After later returning to Toogoolawah, she took over bookkeeping duties for the family business and worked for the local Country Women’s Association, later serving as its President.

Following her father’s passing, Coola opened her own florist business in Brisbane. Given her natural flair for colour and design in fashion and fabric, her floristry shop was a successful enterprise.

Coola Flaskas and Basili Koutsouvelis on their wedding day in Brisbane in 1958.

Coola met the love of her life, Basili Koutsouvelis, and the couple married in 1958.

Her zest for fashion came to the fore when she custom made her uniquely stunning pale pink wedding gown.

Basil and Coola Koutsouvelis with their baby daughter, Avra, in the mid-1960s.

Following the birth of her daughter Avra in 1964, Coola worked in the meat hall of Coles supermarket in Queen Street, where she befriended the ladies that ran the box office at the nearby Her Majesty’s Theatre.

“Mum would get given lots of complimentary tickets to an endless number of great shows. She would stay up very late, working out seating lists for friends and acquaintances who couldn’t normally afford to go. We were always dressed exquisitely, and no one ever guessed she did it all on a shoestring budget,” her daughter, Avra says.

Coola later taught Modern Greek at an international language school and, aged in her 60s, enrolled at Griffith University to learn Japanese.

In her early-70s she flew to Greece, after six decades away from her homeland.

Coola remained an avid gardener until her 90s, followed political and social justice issues voraciously, and prided herself as an unofficial historian on Brisbane Greeks. These days she enjoys sharing pearls of wisdom in videos she makes with her daughter, which have around 18,000 views on Facebook.

Coola Velis with fellow Carinity Wishart Gardens resident Bessie Conomos, 101, who was also born on the small Greek island of Kythera.

“The videos are about living, spreading love, and accepting ourselves and each other just the way we are,” Avra says.

“Whenever I ask my Mum what she thinks is the reason she’s made it to 100 she says: ‘Because I love you Avra, and you love me. If I didn’t have you, I wouldn’t live a day’.”

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