42 THE QUEENS COURIER • BUZZ • FEBRUARY 11, 2021  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 BETHPAGE BEST OF THE BORO WINNERS  
 GIVE BACK TO THE QUEENS COMMUNITY 
 BY ROBIN KHATSERNOV 
 During a year that was devastating  
 to  small  businesses  throughout  Queens,  
 these 2021 Bethpage Best of the Boro  
 winners rose above their own challenges  
 to support healthcare workers and others  
 in  need:  Kalamaki  GR,  winner  for  Best  
 Greek  Restaurant,  and  Amorelli  Realty,  
 winner for Best Realty. 
 We spoke to the two business owners  
 about their charity efforts. 
 BESTOF.QNS.COM • WINNERS GUIDE • BETHPAGE BEST OF THE BORO 2021 79 
 KALAMAKI GR SHARES  
 A TASTE OF GREECE 
 Ari Konstantinidis felt the financial impact  
 of the pandemic on his business right  
 away. Konstantinidis owns Kalamaki GR, a  
 Flushing-based Greek restaurant lauded for  
 its authentic Grecian specialties. 
 “Our business went down almost 50,  
 60 percent,” he shared. “I didn’t want to let  
 anybody go, and I didn’t. Most of my employees  
 have been with me since day one.’” 
 Although he came very close to shutting  
 the restaurant down, he managed to keep it  
 open thanks to takeout and delivery services. 
 In March of 2020, right before the  
 lockdown had begun, Konstantinidis  
 took to social media to promote a community  
 service project he had long been  
 conjuring up. 
 “We did an Instagram post saying,  
 ‘if you’re aware of any family that needs  
 assistance, we want to feed one family a  
 day’,” he recalled. 
 With the help of the pastor and congregants  
 at  St.  Demitrious  Orthodox  
 Church in Jamaica, Konstantinidis found  
 dozens of families in the area that were in  
 need of freshly cooked meals. 
 Just as he began delivering the food in  
 early April, the state imposed pandemic restrictions. 
  Konstantinidis’ revenue shrunk  
 significantly and he was barely making  
 rent. Still, the altruistic restaurateur was determined  
 to see his vision through. 
 “For about 40 days, every day, we provided  
 a full meal for four,” he shared. “We  
 went to a lot of families. There were a lot  
 of tears in their eyes. Especially to see the  
 kids, so excited to have a nice hot meal, it  
 really steals your heart.” 
 As the pandemic raged on, the owner  
 realized  there  was  another  group  that  
 needed his support: the first responders  
 working tirelessly on the frontlines.  
 He  got  the  inspiration  when  a  group  of  
 visibly drained healthcare workers came  
 into his restaurant one evening for a bite. 
 “One doctor and a couple of nurses  
 who worked at New York Presbyterian  
 Hospital approached us and said, ‘Listen,  
 we’d like to buy food from you.’,” Konstantinidis  
 shared. “And I said, ‘you’re not  
 buying food from me for first responders  
 of COVID, I will give you the food.’” 
 Over the course of three Sundays in  
 May, Konstantinidis, his wife and his employees  
 delivered  freshly-made  gyros  to  
 first responders at New York Presbyterian  
 Hospital in Flushing, bringing 100 tasty  
 sandwiches per day. Each time, nurses  
 greeted  them  with  smiles,  relieved  to  
 briefly escape their grueling shifts and excited  
 to try the most raved-about Greek  
 fare in town. 
 “They  were  extremely  thankful,”  he  
 shared. “It was very rewarding and fulfilling.” 
 The restaurant owner hopes to make  
 it past tough times so he can continue  
 sharing his culinary gifts with customers  
 and those in need. He recognizes that his  
 charity efforts have been made possible  
 by his loyal patrons. 
 “I  couldn’t  be  more  thankful  to  the  
 community here,” he said. “They have really  
 supported us big time. They still support  
 us to this day.” 
 Kalamaki GR 
 2906 172nd St, Flushing   
 kalamakigr.com 
 AMORELLI REALTY  
 REIMAGINES  
 COMMUNITY SERVICE 
 Like so many small business owners,  
 Paul  Halvatzis  faced  unprecedented  setbacks  
 after the pandemic hit last March.  
 His Astoria-based real estate firm Amorelli  
 Realty had its doors shuttered indefinitely  
 due to state lockdown orders. As  
 restaurants and stores all around closed,  
 tenants vacated.  
 Still, while business was far from  
 booming, the realtor and his team wanted  
 to support healthcare workers and  
 first responders who were facing an even  
 greater struggle. They looked to local hospital  
 Mount Sinai Queens, where medical  
 professionals were dealing with an overwhelming  
 influx of COVID patients. 
 “We said, ‘what can we really do?’,” he  
 recalled. “‘How about just sending over pizza  
 for everybody?’ We got them $500 worth  
 of pizza and they had a big pizza party!” 
 Amorelli  Realty  finally  opened  up  
 again after a long four months. As the  
 year neared its end and the season of  
 giving arrived, Halvatzis understood he  
 could  make  an  even  bigger  impact  by  
 supporting  Queens  families  who  were  
 struggling more than ever. 
 Nineteen years ago, he had started an  
 annual Thanksgiving drive with St. Andrew  
 Avellino Catholic Academy of Flushing  
 and local nonprofit organization Quality  
 Services for the Autism Community  
 (QSAC), delivering Thanksgiving meals to  
 underprivileged families across Queens.  
 Additionally, Halvatzis had begun an offshoot  
 initiative two years before called  
 “Hams for the Holidays”, in which he and  
 his partners at QSAC not only delivered  
 full meals to families for the December  
 holidays, but also gifts for their children. 
 This year, however, COVID restrictions  
 threatened to thwart both projects. 
 “In Astoria, the incidence of COVID  
 was off the charts, the highest in the city,”  
 he  said.  “Everyone  was  trying  to  avoid  
 unnecessary contact with each other. So  
 to distribute food or distributed gifts to  
 one hundred families, where they would  
 come pick it up, would expose a lot of  
 people to contact.” 
 But after a year that brought hardship  
 on so many, the benevolent business  
 owner was determined to spread holiday  
 cheer. 
 “I said to myself, ‘Okay, although we  
 want to avoid contact with people, I can  
 probably do this mostly emailing or on  
 the phone.’” 
 The realty owner was able to raise over  
 five  thousand dollars  in  donations  from  
 generous friends and business associates.  
 Observing  safety  protocols,  volunteers  
 from  QSAC  individually  delivered  turkeys  
 along with stuffing, cranberry sauce,  
 muffins, yams and gravy to 100 families  
 across Queens. 
 Whatever money was not used during  
 the November effort was put into “Hams  
 for the Holidays”, during which the team  
 brought holiday meals to 500 families as  
 well as new clothing, toys and books for  
 their children. 
 While Halvatzis organized most of the  
 drive remotely, he felt the impact of his  
 charitable actions firsthand when he delivered  
 dinners to two families in person. 
 “They were ecstatic on Thanksgiving,”  
 he shared, “You can imagine how they  
 were when I brought it for Christmas  
 too! The families with children who got  
 Christmas  gifts  were  overwhelmed  with  
 the generosity of my friends.” 
 Rather than letting the pandemic stop  
 his charity efforts, Halvatzis brought joy  
 to those who needed it most during a trying  
 time. 
 “It  was  a  tremendous,  really  exciting  
 feeling,” he said. “We turned something  
 that was technically a negative time into  
 a really positive, happy time.” 
 Amorelli Realty 
 36-1 30th Ave, Astoria 
 amorellirealty.com 
 Owners Ari and Debbie Konstantinidis and the Kalamaki GR team prepare to deliver  
 free meals to New York Presbyterian Hospital in Flushing. Photo Credit: Kalamaki GR 
 Amorelli Realty delivers pizza pies to Mount Sinai Queens. 
 Photo Credit: Amorelli Realty 
 Paul Halvatzas and members of QSAC  
 gather children’s gifts during their holiday  
 initiative. 
 Photo Credit: Amorelli Realty 
 
				
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