Gregorios was born in the Cypriot village of Marathovounos in the Famagusta District on 28 October 1928. He was the ninth and last child of the builder Theocharis and his wife Maria Hadjitofi. At the age of three, his father died and so he was brought up by his mother and eight older siblings. He recalled in an interview with Hellenic TV in the UK that his father wanted to call him Varanava (Barabbas) (Greek; Βαράββα) however, later decided to call him Gregorios after his brother who died in Asia-Minor. On his 13th birthday (October 28, 1941) he heard on the only radio of the village that Greece had joined the war by refusing to allow Axis troops to enter its territory.[5] His mother died in 1961, one year after Cyprus gained independence from Britain.[6]
In Famagusta & Education
He went to Varosha, Famagusta aged 18 and he worked as a shoemaker in his brother-in-law's shop. At the age of 20, he decided to attend a secondary school; he enrolled in 1949 at the Higher Commercial School of the town of Lefkoniko which, at that time, had only five classes. He was accepted into the second-year class. In 1951, he transferred to the Pancyprian Gymnasium in Nicosia. He graduated from the Pancyprian Gymnasium in 1954 and went to Athens to study at the Theological School.
He stated during his life that he never even thought that he would become a bishop, he said that one lady at church once said to him that the Archbishop of Thyateira and Great Britain Athenagoras Kokkinakis (Archbishop 1963–1979), wanted to make him bishop which later became a reality in 1970. On 12 December 1970, he was elected by the Sacred and Holy Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate as the titular Bishop of Tropaeon, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain. He was ordained by Archbishop of Thyateira Athenagoras Kokkinakis on Palm Sunday (11 April 1971) at All Saints Cathedral, Camden Town[8]