As has been pointed out in the literature, putting ourselves in the other person's shoes is a particularly difficult process when trying to perceptually synthesise the external world, as "we are more likely to see/perceive what we know than to know what we see".
F.=Facilitator, P.=Participant
P. 1: And I, to continue the thought of the previous speaker, try to put myself in the shoes of these people. I understand their great effort to preserve their customs and traditions because it defines them. Otherwise they will be lost in a foreign state, in a foreign city. If they lose their religion, their language, their customs, who will they be? They themselves will not know who they are. I fully understand them. As for the fact whether they are good or bad, and among us "true" Greeks there are good and bad - so I can't label them as such. And I believe that only if we can accept each other as we are, try to understand each other, we will coexist.
F. 2: Let's not get into that.