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The
Byodo-In Temple, Oahu, Hawaii.
The History Of Long Yang Club Honolulu
About
4 attempts were made before LYC Honolulu was started. The founder
of the Hawaiian chapter is a retired Haole from Alaska, John
W. who has settled in Honolulu.
Since then, the group attracted other people to manage it. When
John W. left, Rob Chong, took the helm. He formed a team with
other organizers to manage LYC Honolulu.
Rob has previously been a key organizer of LYC Minnesota before
he returned to his native Hawaii.
The
History of Long Yang
Long Yang was a handsome youth who lived in ancient
China. His name has come to be synonymous with male-male
emotional and sexual relationships. Long means dragon, a
mythological creature representing power and elegance
(usually used by the emperor as a symbol of imperial
authority) and Yang which means strength or brightness
and is the male component in the dichotomy of yin and
yang. The name Long Yang, in other words, carries a very
good image of strength and male virility.
In the historical record that has preserved his story
he is known as Lord Long Yang (Long Yang jun), since he
was companion to the king and so in polite court society
he was addressed in an honorific way. But in fact we
don’t know anything about his background or whether he
was officially awarded a royal title. He might have come
from a prominent family whose parents had brought him to
the attention of the king as a way of improving their
son’s chances for success in government. Or he may have
been a working boy, laboring on the palace grounds or
assisting the various servants of the royal court.
The writing that introduces Lord Long Yang is the
Janguoce, translated as the Records of the Warring
States. This period of Chinese history is called the
Warring States ( janguo shiqi 481-221 BCE), when many
small kingdoms spread across the north China plain
contended with each other for territory and wealth. It
was a time when the ways of conducting warfare were
changing, from the individual combat of aristocrats to
the use of large armies of conscripted foot soldiers.
Often through diplomatic means but equally often through
military adventure, the numerous kingdoms lived in a
world of intrigue and uncertainty.
Eventually China would become known for a complex
bureaucracy and for very detailed record keeping, but in
the days of the Warring States period nothing was
uniform, not even the written language, so the
historical records we have are somewhat fragmentary.
Still, the story of Long Yang has been known in China
and commented on by scholars for the past two thousand
years.
Long Yang became a favorite of King Anxi who reigned
for thirty-three years from 276 to 243 BCE. Long Yang
was probably between the ages of fourteen or fifteen
when the king fell in love with him. We know from later
periods of Chinese history that boys might be as young
as eleven or twelve, but usually no older than nineteen
or twenty when they were selected to be a companion to
the ruler, with many instances of fourteen and fifteen
year olds recorded.
Assuming Long Yang was selected at
about age fifteen sometime in the latter years of King Anxi’s reign, we can calculate he might have been born
around the year 260 BCE. We’re on slightly firmer ground
by guessing that Long Yang must have been the most
important of the king’s favorites since an incident
involving him was selected for inclusion in the
historical records.
Anxi was ruler of the Wei kingdom which lasted for
220 years, from 445 to 225 BCE. In each kingdom the head
of the royal family, as king, held ultimate authority,
which included the power to select anyone he so desired
to be his sexual companion. Most kings had a number of
sexual favorites, females and young boys, who lived in
the palace compounds and attended upon the king whenever
summoned. The scholars and government officials who
worked with the king on affairs of state regularly
cautioned their king, they did so throughout China’s
early recorded history, to be circumspect about the
degree of attention and time given to these favorites.
The king should always remember, he was advised, that
his main duties lie in governing the kingdom and so he
ought to limit the time he spent with his favorites
enjoying his personal erotic pleasures.
The king’s advisors certainly didn’t care if the
sexual partner of the ruler was male or female as long
as the sexual pleasures of the bedchamber did not
interfere with the responsibilities of being the ranking
official over the government. Their thinking followed
then what continues to be the general rule about
personal sexual conduct within most Asian societies
today: you can do what you wish in private, as long as
your responsibilities toward family and society are
properly met.
The King and Long Yang grew very fond of each other,
with Long Yang’s boyish charms captivating the king, who
nevertheless did manage to keep his country running
well. Indeed there were several major trading centers in
the Wei kingdom and commerce flourished. The Wei is also
considered to have been a pioneer in the use of
large-scale irrigation systems for agriculture. But the
king did spend a lot of time admiring Long Yang’s charms
and Long Yang, for his part, could sometimes turn
petulant and would sulk, because he knew that the lusty
king had a roving eye. Young Long Yang feared that
the same glance that had caught him and allowed him to
live in the royal palace, might someday fall on another
lad. A well-known incident took place between them that
illustrated both Long Yang’s pouting and the king’s
infatuation.
It is written in the Records of the Warring States,
in the section of the Records of Wei (weice) section
four, that one day the king of Wei and Lord Long Yang
were relaxing in a boat while fishing within the palace
grounds. Long Yang caught several fish but then began to
cry. The king was concerned and asked young Long Yang to
explain why he was upset. “Because I caught a fish.”
“But why does that make you cry?” the king asked.
Lord Long Yang hesitated to answer, but when again
pressed by the king he replied, “I am thinking of all
the fish your majesty may catch.” The king was puzzled,
so Long Yang explained by saying, “When I caught the
first fish I was extremely pleased. But afterward I
caught a larger fish, so I wanted to throw back the
first one.” Long Yang then recounted the privileges he
enjoyed by being a person in royal favor, receiving
deference where ever he went. He added, “But within the
four seas there are so many beauties. When they hear
that I have received your favor, surely they will lift
the hems of their robes so that they can hasten to you.
Then I will be like the first fish and will be thrown
back! How can I not weep?”
According to the records, at that point the king,
moved by Long Yang’s sad thoughts, issued an order
forbidding others from mentioning beauties and comparing
their charms in his presence.
This incident shows us that there was intense
competition among young people within the court to be
chosen by the king as his sexual partner. It also shows
that the role of sexual favorite was precarious and
could change overnight. Throughout Chinese history the
ruler’s sexual partners often did change rapidly, so
that the prestige enjoyed by a female (a concubine) or a
male (a courtier) with the ruler could be of very short
duration. It is equally true, though, that in some of
the recorded cases the ruler developed a life-long
attachment to one of his partners and continued to
reward them throughout their lives. A number of China’s
most powerful emperors, such as the very masculine
Emperor Wu of the Han dynasty (Han Wudi, r. 140-87 BCE)
and the refined Qianlong Emperor of the Qing dynasty (r.
1736-1795 CE) had male favorites (sometimes more than
one) with whom they formed lifelong relationships.
Many of the kings and emperors in China liked to
relax from affairs of state by spending time with their
boy companions on boats drifting about a scenic lake.
Poets have often tried to capture these moments of
tender love and quiet conversation between the powerful
but thoughtful ruler and his tender, younger lover. The
imagery of quietly drifting in a small boat while
carrying out a seduction became so common in China that
even today many Chinese gays refer to cruising as “going
fishing” (diao yu).
Long Yang’s fame as a symbol of boyish sexual charms
was celebrated several hundred years later by the gay
poet Ruan Ji (210-263 CE). Ruan Ji’s longtime intimate
friendship with the poet Ji Kang (223-262 CE) has long
been acknowledged in Chinese literary circles. Ruan was
some thirteen years younger than his lover and he wrote
often of longing to be with Ji Kang. Although they were
separated for extended periods of time, the bond between
them was strong and the saddened Ruan Ji died just a few
months after his beloved Ji Kang.
Among the common people in pre-modern China, a
reference to Long Yang was one of the ways of indicating
a person who appeared to be gay (one who appeared to be
interested in an emotional or sexual relationship with
another male). Today the name of this classical hero is
used by the Long Yang Clubs worldwide, where gay Asian
men and their friends are invited to socialize in an
atmosphere of respect and mutual admiration. The
international headquarters of the Long Yang Club
organization is in London, and branches exist in Europe
and Asia as well as in many cities in North America. The
Club was founded in 1983 and today boasts branches in at
least eleven countries and five continents. The Clubs
continue a tradition as old as China itself. A tradition
that is in truth as old as human history.
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