Message 54 of 253

Lesbians Pick Fight with Gay Women

ATHENS: A Greek court has been asked to draw the line between the natives of the Aegean Sea island of Lesbos and the world's gay women.

Three islanders from Lesbos - home of the ancient poet Sappho, who praised love between women - have taken a gay rights group to court forusing the word lesbian in its name.

One of the plaintiffs said yesterday that the name of the association, the Homosexual and Lesbian Community of Greece, "insults the identity" of the people of Lesbos, who are also known as Lesbians.

"My sister can't say she is a Lesbian," Dimitris Lambrou said. "Our geographical designation has been usurped by certain ladies who have no connection whatsoever with Lesbos."

He said the residents of Lesbos were suffering "psychological and moral rape".

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The three plaintiffs, who are seeking to have the group barred from using "lesbian" in its name, filed a lawsuit on April10. The other two plaintiffs are women.

Lesbos, which is also called Mytilene, after its capital, is famed as the birthplace of Sappho. The island, and particularly the lyric poet's reputed home town of Eressos, is a favoured holiday destination for gay women.

"This is not an aggressive act against gay women," Mr Lambrou said. "Let them visit Lesbos and get married and whatever they like. We just want (the group) to remove the word lesbian from their title."

Me:
But the best line which had me reeling in stitches is this:

Mr Lambrou said the word lesbian had been linked with gay women only in the past few decades. "But we have been Lesbians for thousands of years."

and from NRO this gem :)

Lawyers in Gay, Michigan will be watching the case with interest.
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3 months ago
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3 months ago

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Just deleting the duplicate....

Although the entire thread is a duplicate.....
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3 months ago
Here is my 2 cents: after all these years, now they say they feel raped and psychological damage. There are people in the world with the last name "Gay" does this mean they are a homosexual? It has been the isle of Lesbo's for 1000 years or more, and for the last 200 years known as Lesbo. When does the madness stop. Because you live there doesn't mean you are a lesbian. People are too critical and need to get over it. Why don't they change the name if they don't like it, i think that the majority has that right to do so. I am going to follow this just to see what becomes of it. Interesting people don't have better things to do that live there but complain, the isle was named for a woman who was thought of being bisexual.
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3 months ago
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3 months ago

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I had a feeling that one day something like this would happen... when I lived in Greece - the island was referred to as Mytilene (the "capital" town of the island). Also, see my comments for the group's picture of the island.

Got the following from Wikipedia.org...

Lesbos (Greek: transliterated Lesvos) is a Greek island located in the northeastern Aegean Sea. It has an area of 1,630 km² (630 square miles) with 320 kilometres (almost 200 miles) of coastline, making it the third largest Greek island and the largest of the numerous Greek islands scattered in the Aegean. Administratively, it forms part of the Lesbos Prefecture. Its population is approximately 90,000, a third of which lives in its capital, Mytilene, in the southeastern part of the island. The remaining population is distributed in small towns and villages. The largest are Kalloni, the Gera Villages, Plomari, Agiassos, Eresos and Molyvos (the ancient Mythymna). Mytilene was founded in the 11th century BC by the family Penthilidae, who arrived from Thessaly, and ruled the city-state until a popular revolt (590–580 BC) led by Pittacus of Mytilene ended their rule.
The word lesbian is derived from the poems of Sappho, born in Lesbos, which contain powerful emotional content directed toward other females and have frequently been interpreted as expressing homosexual love. Because of this association, Lesbos and especially the town of Eresos, her birthplace, are visited frequently by lesbian tourists.
Located off the coast of Anatolia, it is considered by geographers to be in Europe, Asia or both.
Geography
The island is mountainous with two large peaks, "Mt. Lepetymnos" (968 m (3,176 ft)) and "Mt. Olympus" (968 m (3,176 ft)), dominating its northern and central sections. The island’s volcanic origin is manifested in several hot springs.
The island is verdant, aptly named "Emerald Island", with a variety of flora that belies its size. Eleven million olive trees cover 40% of the island together with other fruit trees. Forests of mediterranean pines, chestnut trees and some oaks occupy 20%, and the remainder is scrub, grassland or urban. In the western part of the island is the world’s second largest petrified forest of Sequoia.
Its economy is essentially agricultural. Olive oil is the main source of income. Tourism in Mytilene, encouraged by its international airport and the coastal towns of Petra, Plomari, Molyvos and Eresos, contribute substantially to the economy of the island. Fishing and the manufacture of soap and ouzo, the Greek national liqueur, are the remaining sources of income.
Climate
The climate is mild Mediterranean. The mean annual temperature is 18 °C (64 °F)), and the mean annual rainfall is 750 mm (30 in). Its exceptional sunshine makes it one of the sunniest islands in the Aegean Sea. Snow and very low temperatures are rare.
Petrified Forest of Lesbos
Lesbos contains one of the few known petrified forests and has been declared a Protected Natural Monument. Fossilized plants have been found in many localities on the western part of the island. The fossilised forest formed during the Late Oligocene to Lower–Middle Miocene, by the intense volcanic activity in the area. Neogene volcanic rocks dominate the central and western part of the island, comprising andesites, dacites and rhyolites, ingnibrite, pyroclastics, tuffs and volcanic ash. The products of the volcanic activity covered the vegetation of the area and the fossilisation process took place during favourable conditions. The fossilized plants are silicified remnants of a sub-tropical forest that existed on the north-west part of the island 20-15 million years ago.
History
According to Classical Greek mythology, Lesbos was the patron god of the island. Macar was reputedly the first king whose many "daughters" bequeathed their names to some of the present larger towns. In Classical myth his "sister", Canace, was killed to have him made king. The place names with female origins are likely to be much earlier settlements named after local goddesses, who were replaced by gods. Homer refers to the island as "Macaros edos", the seat of Macar. Hittite records from the Late Bronze Age name the island Lazpas and must have considered its population significant enough to allow the residents to "borrow their gods" (presumably idols) to cure their king when the local gods were not forthcoming. It is believed that emigrants from mainland Greece, mainly from Thessaly, entered the island in the Late Bronze Age and bequeathed it with the Aeolic dialect of the Greek language, whose written form survives in the poems of Sappho, amongst others.
The abundant gray pottery ware found on the island and the worship of Cybele, the great mother-goddess of Anatolia, suggest the cultural continuity of the population from Neolithic times. When the Persian king Cyrus defeated Croesus (546 BC) the Ionic Greek cities of Anatolia and the adjacent islands became Persian subjects and remained such until the Persians were defeated by the Greeks at the Battle of Salamis (480 BC). The island was governed by an oligarchy in archaic times, followed by quasi-democracy in classical times. For a short period it was member of the Athenian confederacy, its apostasy from which is described in a stirring chapter of Thucydides's history of the Peloponnesian War. In Hellenistic times, the island belonged to various Macedonian kingdoms until 79 BC when it passed into Roman hands.
During the Middle Ages it belonged to the Byzantine Empire. In 803, the Byzantine Empress Irene was exiled to Lesbos, forced to spin to support herself, and died there. In 1355, it was granted to the Genoese Gateluzi for economic and political reasons. The island was conquered by the Ottoman Turks in 1462 and was known under the Turkish name of Midilli. It remained under turkish rule until 1912 when it was ceded to Greece. The cities of Mytilene and Mithymna have been bishoprics since the 5th century.
Important archaeological sites on the island are the Neolithic cave of Kagiani, probably a refuge for shepherds, the Neolithic settlement of Chalakies, and the extensive habitation of Thermi (3000–1000 BC). The largest habitation is found in Lisvori (2800–1900 BC) part of which is submerged in shallow coastal waters. There are also several archaic, classical Greek and Roman remains. Vitruvius called the ancient city of Mytilene "magnificent and of good taste". Remnants of its medieval history are three impressive castles.
Lesbos is the birthplace of several famous persons. In archaic times, Arion developed the type of poem called dithyramb, the progenitor of tragedy, Terpander invented the seven note musical scale for the lyre, followed by the lyric poet Alcaeus, and the most famous poetess Sappho. Phanias wrote history. The seminal artistic creativity of those times brings to mind the myth of Orpheus to whom Apollo gave a lyre and the Muses taught to play and sing. When Orpheus incurred the wrath of the god Dionysus he was dismembered by the Maenads and of his body parts his head and his lyre found their way to Lesbos where they have "remained" ever since. Pittacus was one of the Seven Sages of Greece. In classical times Hellanicus advanced historiography, Theophrastus, the father of botany, succeeded Aristotle as the head of the Lyceum. Aristotle and Epicurus lived there for some time, and it is there that Aristotle began systematic zoological investigations. In later times lived Theophanes, the historian of Pompey's campaigns, Longus wrote the famous novel Daphnis and Chloe, and much later the historian Doukas wrote the history of the early Ottoman Turks. In modern times the poet Odysseus Elytis, descendant of an old family of Lesbos received the Nobel Prize.
12 historic churches on the island were listed together on the 2008 World Monuments Fund's Watch List of the 100 Most Endangered Sites in the world. Exposure to the elements, outmoded conservation methods, and increased tourism are all threats to the structures. It is hoped that increased attention to their declining states will aid in their preservation.
In 2008, three residents brought a lawsuit against a large Greek gay and lesbian group, seeking to prevent them from using the term lesbian to refer to homosexual women. The lawsuit noted that some residents have begun referring to the island as Mytilene (the name of Lesbos's capital) to avoid confusion.
Lawsuit
Some inhabitants of Lesbos have filed a lawsuit challenging the use of the word 'lesbian' in the name of the Homosexual and Lesbian Community of Greece, and have stated that if their legal challenge is successful, they will attempt to raise their challenge to an international level.
Notable people from Lesbos
Terpander (7th century BC), poet and kitharode
Sappho (7th and 6th centuries BC), poet
Theophrastus (370–285 BC]]), philosopher and botanist
Theoctiste of Lesbos (9th century), hermit saint
Christopher of Mytilene (11th century), poet
Hayreddin Barbarossa (1470s–1546), Ottoman admiral
Georgios Jakobides (1853–1932), painter
Hüseyin Hilmi Pasha (1855–1922), Ottoman statesman
Theophilos Hatzimihail (c. 1870–1934), painter
Ahmed Djemal Pasha (1872-1922), Ottoman statesman
Tériade (1889-1983), art critic, patron, and publisher
Hermon di Giovanno (c. 1900–1968), painter
Odysseas Elytis (1922–1996), poet
Tzeli Hadjidimitriou (b. 1962), photographer and writer
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3 months ago