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Persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany

Before 1933, homosexual acts were illegal in Germany under Paragraph 175 of the German Criminal Code. The law was not consistently enforced, however, and a thriving gay culture existed in major German cities. After the Nazi takeover in 1933, the first homosexual movement's infrastructure of clubs, organizations, and publications was shut down. After the Röhm purge in 1934, persecuting homosexuals became a priority of the Nazi police state. A 1935 revision of Paragraph 175 made it easier to bring criminal charges for homosexual acts, leading to a large increase in arrests and convictions. Persecution peaked in the years prior to World War II and was extended to areas annexed by Germany, including Austria, the Czech lands, and Alsace–Lorraine.

Memorial in Nollendorfplatz, Berlin. Text in triangle:
Text below: "The 'pink triangle' was the sign with which the National Socialists marked homosexuals in the concentration camps in a defamatory way. From January 1933 almost all homosexual locales distributed around Nollendorfplatz were closed by the National Socialists or misused by raids to create 'pink lists' (homosexual files)."

The Nazi regime considered the elimination of all manifestations of homosexuality in Germany one of its goals. Men were often arrested after denunciation, police raids, and through information uncovered during interrogations of other homosexuals. Those arrested were presumed guilty, and subjected to harsh interrogation and torture to elicit a confession. Between 1933 and 1945, an estimated 100,000 men were arrested as homosexuals; around 50,000 of these were sentenced by civilian courts, 6,400 to 7,000 by military courts [de], and an unknown number by special courts. Most of these men served time in regular prisons, and between 5,000 and 6,000 were imprisoned in concentration camps. The death rate of these prisoners has been estimated at 60 percent, a higher rate than those of other prisoner groups. A smaller number of men were sentenced to death or executed at Nazi euthanasia centers. Nazi Germany's persecution of homosexuals is considered to be the most severe episode in a long history of discrimination and violence targeting sexual minorities.

After the war, homosexuals were initially not counted as victims of Nazism because homosexuality continued to be illegal in Nazi Germany's successor states. Few victims came forward to discuss their experiences. The persecution came to wider public attention during the gay liberation movement of the 1970s, and the pink triangle was reappropriated as an LGBT symbol.

Background

 
Eldorado (pictured in 1932), the most famous gay establishment in Germany[1]

Germany was the home of the first homosexual movement.[2][3] The word homosexual was coined by a German-language writer; the first periodicals intended for a gay, lesbian, and transgender readership were published in Germany, and the world's first homosexual rights organization was founded in Berlin in 1897.[4] In the 1920s gay culture flourished in Germany's major cities, especially Berlin.[5] Political compromises allowed many homosexuals to live freely in their private lives and in dedicated subcultural spaces, provided they did not significantly infringe on the public sphere.[6] One theory holds the Nazis' rise to power was fueled by a conservative backlash against perceived immorality, but according to historian Laurie Marhoefer, this was not a significant factor.[7][8]

Paragraph 175 of the German penal code, which was passed after the unification of Germany in 1871, criminalized sexual acts between males. The German supreme court ruled that a conviction required proof the men had had penetrative sex, typically anal but sometimes oral sex; other sexual activities were not punishable.[9][10] The Rechtsstaat limited the enforcement of the law because men were not arrested or indicted without concrete evidence.[11] As a consequence, conviction rates were low[12] and a significant number of those convicted were sentenced to pay a fine rather than serve a jail sentence. Terms exceeding one year were rare.[13]

In 1928 the Nazi Party responded negatively to a questionnaire about their view of Paragraph 175, saying: "Anyone who even thinks of homosexual love is our enemy."[14] Nazi politicians regularly railed against homosexuality, saying it was a Jewish conspiracy to undermine the German people.[15] In 1931 and 1932 the Social Democrats publicized the homosexuality of Ernst Röhm, a prominent Nazi politician, in an attempt to discredit the Nazis.[16] The Röhm scandal fueled the long-lasting but false idea the Nazi Party was dominated by homosexuals, a recurring theme in 1930s left-wing propaganda.[17][18] The Nazi Party temporarily tolerated a few known homosexuals, including Röhm, but never adopted such tolerance as a general principle or changed its views on homosexuality.[19][20] There is no evidence that homosexuals were over-represented in the Nazi Party.[21]

History

Nazi takeover and initial crackdown (1933)

 
Raid on the Institute for Sex Research, 6 May 1933

In mid-1932 a crackdown on homosexual subcultures in Prussia began after Chancellor Franz von Papen deposed the Prussian government. Some homosexual bars and clubs in Berlin had to shut down after police raids.[22] In January 1933 the Nazi Party took power;[17] immediately, their real and perceived enemies were the subject of a violent crackdown. On 23 February of that year the Prussian Ministry of the Interior ordered Berlin police to shut down any remaining establishments catering to "persons who indulge in unnatural sexual practices".[23] This order was extended to other parts of Germany. In Cologne, almost all gay bars were forced to close. In Hanover all had closed by the end of the year. In Hamburg police targeted both prostitutes and homosexual spaces, including the main train station, public toilets, and gay bars, leading to a more-than-sixfold increase in indictments under Paragraph 175 by 1934.[23] The anti-homosexual crackdown was intended to please the Nazis' conservative backers, who had put them into power, as well as socially conservative voters.[24][25] Both the Vatican and Protestant churches praised the crackdown.[26][27] For example, in October 1933 Clemens August Graf von Galen, the Bishop of Münster, wrote approvingly of the Nazis' efforts to "eradicate" the "open propaganda for godlessness and immorality".[28]

In March 1933 the Nazi authorities began to confiscate printed material on homosexual topics. Any LGBT-related magazines that had survived earlier censorship were closed down and copies were burned. Their publishers were targeted; Adolf Brand's house was raided five times and police stole all of his photographs, 6,000 magazine issues, and many books. Friedrich Radszuweit's company was subjected to similar raids. During the Nazi takeover, German–Jewish homosexual-rights campaigner Magnus Hirschfeld was abroad on a lecture tour for the World League for Sexual Reform. On 6 May the Nazis' paramilitary wing, the SA, raided his Institute for Sex Research in coordination with German students. The institute's library of more than 12,000 books was publicly burned on 10 May on the Opernplatz; and its offices, together with those of The World League for Sexual Reform, were destroyed.[29][30]

On 8 June the law-reform organization Scientific-Humanitarian Committee voted to dissolve itself. In 1933, many homosexual organizations attempted to destroy membership lists and other information the Nazis could use to target dissidents. Former activists made agreements to keep quiet to protect others.[31] Some homosexuals, including Thomas and Klaus Mann, went into exile.[32] The Swiss city Basel in particular was a destination for homosexuals fleeing Nazi Germany.[33] Other homosexuals of a more right-wing inclination, including Hans Blüher, who initially welcomed the Nazi takeover, remained in Germany.[32] Some joined the SA, mistakenly believing that Röhm would protect them.[26]

The most-visible members of the LGBT community, including prostitutes, transvestites, and activist leaders, were targeted, and high-profile locations were shut down. The average homosexual's daily life, however, did not change, and some gay bars in Hamburg and smaller cities remained open. Some men were able to adapt to the closures by meeting with gay friends in primarily heterosexual establishments. Most homosexuals were not yet afraid of the Gestapo.[34] They believed they could keep a low profile until the end of the Nazi regime, seen as coming soon.[10] During the initial years of Nazi rule, the number of men sentenced to prison under Paragraph 175 increased, from 464 in 1932 to 575 in 1933 and 635 in 1934.[35] There was no systematic persecution of individual homosexual behavior, and until 1935, convictions remained below the high of 1,107 convictions set in 1925.[36]

Röhm purge and expanding persecution (1934–1935)

After the 1933 revolution, Hitler began to see Röhm as a threat to his power and the SA as a liability due to their random acts of violence, which detracted from the Nazis' desired image as the party of law and order.[37] On 30 June 1934 Röhm and several other SA leaders were suddenly arrested and executed. This event was later justified in Nazi propaganda, mainly by the alleged corruption and scheming with foreign powers, but also citing Röhm's homosexuality and the fact one of the victims of the purge, Edmund Heines, had allegedly been arrested while in bed with another man.[38] Heinrich Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich, leaders of the SS (a rival of Röhm's SA), supported the purge to assert their control over the Nazi police state.[39] Eventually Himmler, who is described by historian Nikolaus Wachsmann as "one of the most obsessive homophobes" in the Nazi government,[12] became commander of the SS, the Gestapo, and the concentration camp system, making him the second-most-powerful man in Nazi Germany.[40] The purge ended the sense of safety many German homosexuals still felt. Some homosexual Nazis ceased participating in the party[39] while others, themselves former perpetrators of violence against Nazi opponents, became victims.[41]

 
Gestapo Radio Telegram for a list of suspected homosexuals for the Chief of Police in Dortmund, 24 October 1934

Anti-gay repression began immediately after the purge, initially focusing on alleged homosexual cliques in the party and state bureaucracy.[42][39] In October 1934 Heydrich ordered the police of all large cities to make a list of homosexuals.[43] A separate Gestapo department, the Special Commission for Homosexuality in Berlin, was set up.[43] In late 1934 the Gestapo targeted Berlin and Munich, raiding gay bars and making mass arrests of homosexual men; most of those arrested were not involved in politics.[42] Many men accused of homosexuality would admit to acts that were not punishable under Paragraph 175, expecting to be released;[10] instead, they were mistreated and incarcerated in Columbia-Haus, Lichtenburg, or Dachau concentration camp. By early 1935, 80 percent of the prisoners held in protective custody in the concentration camps were there for alleged homosexuality. To convict these men, it was decided to change the criminal code.[42]

Almost exactly a year after Röhm was killed,[35] Paragraph 175 was amended. The changes were demanded, especially by prosecutors and other legal professionals.[10] The new version of the law punished all sexual acts, defined broadly; "objectively when a general sense of shame is harmed and subjectively when there exists the lustful intention to excite either of the two men or a third party".[43] In theory, it became a crime to look at another man with desire.[42][44] Men were convicted for mutual masturbation or simply embracing each other,[43] and in a few cases when no physical contact had occurred.[45] Under the new law, typically all participants were viewed as equally guilty, whereas under the previous law, the "active" and "passive" participants were differentiated.[45] The new law made it much easier to arrest and convict homosexual men,[35][43] leading to a large increase in convictions.[46] Under a new section 175a, the law also introduced harsher penalties for male prostitution, sex with a man younger than 21, or sex with a student or employee.[43] The change in the law was not publicized for fear of spreading knowledge of homosexuality. Most Germans were unaware the law had changed and many of those arrested under the new law had no knowledge they were committing a crime.[45][47] The law was also applied retroactively.[47]

Peak of persecution (1936–1939)

 
Number of convictions under Paragraph 175 over time

From 1936 to 1939, German police focused on homosexuality as a top priority.[48] In 1936 the Special Commission for Homosexuality in Berlin became the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion, working with Gestapo Special Bureau II S.[43][49] The new office organized conferences and issued directives to increase the effectiveness of anti-homosexual persecution.[49] During the first years of Nazi rule, regional differences in the prosecution of homosexuals reflected pre-Nazi trends in policing but in 1936, the police launched a nationwide campaign against homosexual meeting places. This campaign was less effective in rural than urban areas, which saw a greater number of prosecutions.[41][50][51] If the Gestapo believed there were not enough charges for homosexuality being brought in a certain area, they would send in a special unit to train and encourage local criminal police.[52] In March 1937, Himmler ordered police departments to make lists of suspected homosexuals and oblige them to register changes of address, and to monitor suspected homosexual meeting places, hotels, and personal ads in newspapers.[53]

The assigning of responsibility for carrying out the anti-homosexuality campaign to police and courts, which were not given any additional personnel or resources, caused serious operational difficulties. Besides the significant increase in the number of criminal cases to be prosecuted, cases of homosexuality demanded more time and attention because of the difficulty of proving private conduct.[54] Because of the difficulty in identifying homosexuals, some police departments resorted to calling in entire classes of teenage boys and asking them about their sexual experiences. In this manner, it was possible to increase the number of charges of homosexuality brought; by 1939, such youthful relationships were the basis of 23.9 percent of charges. Himmler approved of such methods, arguing that without them, homosexuality would spread unchecked in all-male Nazi institutions.[52]

Between 1937 and 1939 nearly 95,000 men were arrested for homosexuality – more than 600 per week – representing a major investment from the Nazi police state.[55] From 1936 to 1939, nearly 30,000 men were convicted under Paragraph 175. Unlike in the past, these men were virtually guaranteed to receive a jail sentence.[13] The length of sentences increased; many men were sentenced to years in jail.[49][50] Prosecutors, judges, and others involved in the cases increasingly cited Nazi ideology to justify harsh punishment, adopting the regime's rhetoric of "stamping out the plague of homosexuality".[13][50] The use of concentration camp imprisonment increased; after 1937, those considered to have seduced others into homosexuality were confined to concentration camps.[56]

World War II

 
Kurt Wilcke (1908–1944) was imprisoned for his homosexuality in Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp [de]. Later transferred to a penal battalion, he died during the Battle of Narva.

From 1939 to 1940, the number of men sentenced in civil courts under Paragraph 175 fell from 7,614 to 3,773. More men were subject to military jurisdiction[13] and, with the onset of war, homosexuality was no longer the top priority of the security police.[57] In anticipation of the outbreak of war, at the end of August 1939, Heydrich ordered the Gestapo to transfer most homosexual cases to the Kriminalpolizei (criminal police or Kripo) to free up resources for the persecution of opposition groups.[58] It is unknown how many Paragraph 175 cases were handled by the special courts.[59]

An estimated 6,400 to 7,000 men were convicted by the military courts in Nazi Germany [de] under Paragraph 175.[59][60] The military considered homosexuals to be predators who disrupted morale and unit cohesion.[61] Prior to the war, homosexuals were offered re-education and if this failed, they could be dismissed and incarcerated in a concentration camp for the duration of their compulsory military service.[62] Under the manpower requirements of war, it was felt necessary to recruit all available men;[61] it was also a concern that rejecting homosexuals from military service could open a loophole for draft evaders.[63] Men considered sex offenders, including homosexuals, rapists, and child molesters, could serve in the German military assuming they were willing to bear arms and remain celibate during their military service. Known homosexuals and some former concentration camp prisoners were conscripted.[64] Even castrated homosexual men could be drafted.[63]

Military courts were generally more lenient than civilian courts with cases involving consensual sex but harsher in cases falling under 175a.[65] Although military courts followed the 1935 version of Paragraph 175, they generally issued a conviction only when there was attempted or actual contact with another man's genitals. More than 90 percent of those convicted were reintegrated into the military.[66] Although innate homosexuals were considered dangerous to the military, the German military assumed that most cases of homosexuality were situational. Younger men, often seen as the victims of homosexual seducers, and one-time offenders were shown leniency.[67] On average, soldiers convicted of homosexuality were sentenced to one-year prison sentences but served only a fraction of this before being paroled to the front. The length of time served decreased because of the increasing manpower shortage.[68] In 1943 Himmler, who believed that the military was not hard enough on homosexuality, demanded a classification system that would see "incorrigible" homosexual offenders sent to concentration camps. The military attempted to ensure as many men as possible were retained under military jurisdiction to preserve vital manpower but cooperated with the Gestapo to rid itself of a few men who were seen as a threat to the military.[69] Beginning in 1944 some homosexual concentration camp prisoners were forcibly enlisted in the army, which continued until a week before the unconditional surrender of Germany.[70] These men were typically recruited into penal battalions, especially the Dirlewanger Brigade.[71]

Annexed territories

The persecution of homosexuals was extended to the annexed territories but not to the rest of German-occupied Europe;[72] the Nazis were mostly uninterested in punishing homosexuals who were not considered ethnically German.[73] Criminal prosecutions of men for homosexuality in Austria almost doubled under Nazi rule.[74] Both regular and special courts applied draconian punishments, including the death penalty.[75] German law was applied in the Sudetenland after its annexation in late 1938 and, in the case of homosexuals, applied retroactively.[76][77] German law was imposed in Alsace–Lorraine in January 1942; homosexuals there soon faced a harsh legal crackdown, including retroactive application of the law.[76]

In the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, German law applied to ethnic Germans and the old Austrian criminal code, which imposed lower penalties for male homosexuality, applied to non-Germans.[78] Czech men were not deported to concentration camps solely because of conviction for homosexuality, but sometimes they were deported in combination with other reasons, such as anti-Nazi activity.[79] Although prosecutions increased dramatically during the German occupation,[80] the police focused their efforts on breaking up male prostitution rings rather than homosexual relationships between Czechs.[81] In 1945 Edvard Beneš, president of Czechoslovakia, offered an amnesty to those convicted for homosexuality during the occupation, although the law remained in effect.[82]

Nazi views of homosexuality

The Nazis were influenced by earlier ideas conflating homosexuality, child molestation, and the "seduction of youth".[42] Before the Nazis' rise to power, there was a widespread belief among Germans that homosexuality is not inborn but instead could be acquired and spread.[83] The Nazis were particularly concerned that their all-male organizations such as the Hitler Youth, SS, and SA must not be seen as hotbeds of homosexual "recruitment."[36] Based on the theories of Karl Bonhoeffer and Emil Kraepelin,[84] the Nazis believed homosexuals seduced young men and infected them with homosexuality, permanently changing their sexual orientation. Rhetoric described homosexuality as a contagious disease[85] but not in the medical sense. Rather, homosexuality was a disease of the Volkskörper (national body), a metaphor for the desired national or racial community (Volksgemeinschaft).[86]

The Nazis, especially Himmler, held conspiratorial beliefs about homosexuals, believing they were more loyal to each other than to the Nazi Party and Germany.[87][88] After the Röhm purge, he told Gestapo personnel they had narrowly avoided the capture of the state by homosexuals.[42] In 1937 a headline in the SS magazine Das Schwarze Korps declared homosexuals "enemies of the state", explaining they must be eradicated because "... they form a state within a state, a secret organization that runs counter to the interests of the people."[42][87] The newspaper argued only two percent of those who engaged in homosexual acts were committed homosexuals and the rest could be turned away from homosexuality.[57] Forty thousand homosexuals were considered capable of "poisoning" two million men if left to roam free.[56] Homosexual men were also considered to be shirking their duty to repopulate the German nation after World War I and create sons who could be drafted into the military to fight Hitler's planned wars of aggression.[89] On 18 February 1937 Himmler gave a speech about homosexuality in Bad Tölz that was based on the 1927 book Eroticism and Race by Herwig Hartner, which claimed homosexuality was a Jewish plot against Germany.[87][90] According to Himmler, homosexuality could lead to the end of Germany and cause depopulation by reducing the number of men who were available for reproduction.[91][92][93]

The Nazis distinguished between congenital homosexuals who would require permanent imprisonment and others who had engaged in homosexuality but were thought to be curable with a short stay in a concentration camp or psychiatric treatment. Distinguishing between these categories was a difficulty that preoccupied the Nazis, especially after many cases of homosexuality surfaced in the supposedly racially pure SS. Succumbing to a homosexual act once, especially when drunk, was not necessarily considered evidence of homosexual inclination.[94][86] The Göring Institute offered treatment to homosexuals referred by the Hitler Youth and other Nazi organizations; by 1938 it claimed to have changed the sexual orientation in 341 of 510 patients and by 1944, it claimed to have eliminated homosexuality in more than 500 men. The institute intervened to reduce sentences in some cases.[95] The converse of the Nazis' persecution of homosexuality was their encouragement of heterosexual relations, including extramarital sex, for racially desirable people.[96]

After 1934, homophobia became a regular theme in Nazi propaganda;[39] most Germans came into contact with this homophobic propaganda.[97] Although one of the Nazi regime's goals was to eliminate all manifestations of homosexuality in Germany,[98] there was never a Nazi policy of exterminating all homosexuals in the way the Final Solution targeted Jews.[98][99]

Methods

Identification and arrest

Homosexuals were more difficult to round up than other groups the Nazis targeted.[100] Police were given detailed instructions on spotting homosexuals; they were instructed to look for flamboyant men, those who avoided women or were seen walking arm-in-arm with other men, and anyone who rented a double room at a hotel. Hairdressers, bathhouse attendants, hotel receptionists, railway station porters, and others were asked to report suspicious behavior. Complicating the Nazis' efforts, many homosexual men did not fit these stereotypes and many effeminate men were not homosexual.[55]

According to one estimate, denunciations resulted in 35 percent of arrests of homosexuals.[101] Men were denounced by neighbors, relatives, coworkers, students, employees, or even ex-boyfriends seeking to settle grievances, passers-by who overheard suspicious conversation, and Hitler Youth and other Nazi supporters who voluntarily acted as the morality police. State employees working in youth welfare and rail stations, Nazi functionaries in the German Labor Front (DAF), the SA, the SS, and the Hitler Youth brought cases to the attention of the authorities.[102] A disproportionate number of denunciations concerned child abuse or "youth seduction" because there was an injured party to complain.[103] Some men were falsely denounced as homosexual by other Germans.[104] The snowball method involved arresting one man, interrogating him, and searching his belongings to find additional suspects;[42] this method accounted for thirty percent of arrests.[101] Some men were observed before their arrests or temporarily released in hopes they would lead the police to additional suspects. Some were shown photograph albums of other suspected homosexuals; male prostitutes were often willing to identify other homosexuals this way.[105] Another ten percent of victims were arrested in police raids, which were often conducted in parks, public toilets, and areas frequented by male prostitutes.[101][102] In Hamburg the police watched restaurants that served a mixed heterosexual and homosexual clientele as well as the most-trafficked public toilets.[50] Entrapment was also used to ensnare homosexuals.[89]

Charges of homosexuality were sometimes deployed against people who were not guilty.[89][106] Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels commented; "When Himmler wants to get rid of someone, he just throws §175 at him."[89] About 250 Catholic clergy were charged with same-sex activity [de] in the mid-1930s. Many of the charges, which included sexual abuse of minors and consensual homosexual sex, were true but others were probably invented. The trials were of limited efficacy in their intended purpose of discrediting the Catholic Church.[89][107][108] Catholic authorities alternated between reprimanding the guilty and covering up the scandal.[109]

Regional and class-based targeting

 
Regional differences in convictions under Paragraph 175 in Germany, 1930s. Hamburg is the highest.

Active policing tactics were mainly limited to the larger cities; in rural areas, the police relied on denunciation.[89] The difference in policing strategy, and likely over-representation and greater visibility of homosexuals in urban areas, led to vastly different conviction rates in different parts of Germany. Convictions in Bavaria and Mecklenburg were below the national average while in Rhine Province, Hamburg, and Berlin, they exceeded the average. Within states, urban areas had more cases than rural areas. Because of the reliance on denunciation in rural areas, a disproportionate number of cases involved child abuse or "youth seduction".[103]

Young and working-class men, who may have been less able to evade the authorities, were over-represented among those who were arrested and prosecuted.[110][111] Half of the suspects were working-class men and another third came from the lower middle class.[111] In Austria, where working-class homosexuals were traditional targets of criminalization, arrests were extended to the middle class but more egregious behavior was required for a higher-class man to be punished for homosexuality.[65] The first homosexuals to be targeted by the Nazis, prior to the Röhm purge, were also Jewish and left-wing political activists.[41] A considerable number of those persecuted for homosexuality were also targeted for other reasons, for example being Romani, disabled, a sex worker, accused of other criminal offenses, a political opponent of the Nazis, or a deserter.[112][113]

Interrogation and trial

After arresting a man, he was presumed to be guilty, especially if there was a history of homosexual acts or a previous conviction.[114] Police would tell his family the reason for his arrest.[101] With a conviction, the victim could expect a complete life breakdown, often including loss of home and job, expulsion from professional organizations, and revocation of awards and doctorates.[49] Harsh interrogations were aimed at forcing the victim to confess to the acts the police believed him guilty of. Austere cells of temporary detention facilities were sufficient to obtain confessions in some cases. Other suspects would crumple in the face of "screams, curses, threats, and endless questions", and some were beaten. Some men were held for weeks with nothing to do but await interrogation, and suffered mental breakdowns. Some men were sent to concentration camps under protective custody to encourage them to confess or to incarcerate them when there was not enough evidence to obtain a conviction. The police would tell suspects they would get a lighter punishment if they confessed, and indefinite detention in a concentration camp if they did not.[102]

Both the Gestapo and the Kripo targeted homosexuals, a rivalry that may have encouraged the latter to adopt the more-brutal tactics of the former.[115] Torture was regularly used to extract confessions and the use of "enhanced interrogation" (verschärfte Vernehmung) was explicitly approved of by Josef Meisinger, head of the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion.[52] After 1936, cases were processed more quickly and the accused rarely had a legal defense. Most had already confessed, guaranteeing a guilty verdict. An unknown number of men who were found unfit to stand trial were confined to psychiatric hospitals.[50]

Prisons

 
Arnold Bastian (1908–1945) was arrested in 1944 for his homosexuality and died in prison in 1945.

Most men who were persecuted for homosexuality were convicted in the civil legal system and imprisoned.[12] In Germany, it had long been the practice to isolate homosexual prisoners in individual cells but because of the vast increase in arrests, this proved to be impractical. In addition, the economic exploitation of prisoner labor meant many prisoners were held in labor camps and housed in barracks. While some officials built tiny, one-man cells to keep homosexual prisoners isolated, other officials distributed homosexuals among the general prison population and encouraged "brutal homophobia" to isolate homosexuals. Homosexual prisoners did not have to wear a badge but could be identified by red underlining on their name tags.[116]

Before 1933 prison sex had been common but its prevention and punishment became much more important under Nazi rule. Any prisoner who tried to initiate a same-sex relationship, even if it did not result in any physical contact, could expect harsh punishment. The wardens relied on informers among the inmates to deter same-sex activity. Despite facing discrimination, however, homosexual prisoners were much better off in the prisons than in concentration camps.[117]

Castration

 
Friedrich-Paul von Groszheim (1908–2006) was spared from a concentration camp after agreeing to castration under pressure in 1938.

In June 1935 the Sterilization Law [de] was amended to allow individual convicted criminals to be "voluntarily" sterilized to eliminate their "degenerate sex drive".[105][118] During the Nazi era, the regime considered extending the policy of involuntary castration that was previously applied to child molesters and other sex offenders to homosexuals but such a law was never passed.[119] In 1943 Gestapo chief Ernst Kaltenbrunner advocated for a law for involuntary castration of homosexuals and sex offenders but withdrew this request because he believed the Gestapo could ensure castrations were carried out where it desired.[120][121]

Although the fiction of voluntary castration was maintained, some homosexuals were subject to severe pressure and coercion to agree to castration. There was no age limit; some boys as young as 16 were castrated. Those who agreed to castration were exempted from being transferred to a concentration camp after completing their legal sentence, a threat which was leveraged to encourage men to "volunteer" for the procedure.[122] An estimated 400 to 800 men were castrated in this manner.[60]

Concentration camps

 
5 September 1940 Gestapo order for the detention of Hans Retzlaff (1901–1940) an "incorrigible homosexual" in Sachsenhausen

Unlike the legal punishment system, prisoners in concentration camps were held in indefinite detention at the mercy of the SS and Gestapo.[123] The use of concentration camp detention for homosexuals began in 1934 and 1935; it was initially seen as a temporary re-education measure.[56] In May 1935, the Prussian police detained 513 accused homosexuals in protective custody.[55] Himmler did not consider a time-limited prison sentence was sufficient to eliminate homosexuality.[124] After 1939, it was a policy to send men who were convicted of multiple homosexual acts to a concentration camp after they served their prison sentences.[123] On 12 July 1940 the Reich Security Main Office formalized this policy, decreeing "in future, all homosexuals who seduced more than one partner shall be taken into preventive custody by the police after their release from prison".[56] According to research in some parts of Germany, non-aggravated homosexuality, as a rule, was not punished with concentration camp imprisonment, which was mostly reserved for those who were considered "youth seducers", or had been convicted of male prostitution or child molestation. In other cases, men who were convicted with homosexuality combined with other criminal offenses or political opposition could be transferred to a concentration camp.[125]

Historian Clayton J. Whisnant states homosexual concentration camp prisoners "experienced some of the worst conditions that humans have ever been forced to endure".[126] In the prewar camps, Jewish and homosexual prisoners ranked at the bottom of the prisoner hierarchy, and homosexual Jews fared the worst.[127] Along with Jews, homosexuals were often assigned to segregated labor details and had to perform especially dirty and backbreaking work, and endured worse conditions than the rest of the camp.[56][128][129] Homosexual prisoners rarely benefited from solidarity from other prisoners, even Jews, because of widespread homophobia.[128][130] Surviving the camps often required either building social networks with other prisoners or being promoted to a position of authority. Homosexuals were disadvantaged in both of these aspects; some younger, more attractive men could obtain advantages from a sexual relationship with a kapo (prison functionary) or SS guard.[131] After 1942, conditions improved because of the need for forced labor, and some homosexual prisoners were promoted because of the influx of non-German prisoners who were ineligible for kapo positions.[132]

About 5,000 to 6,000 homosexual men were imprisoned in the concentration camps.[133] Sociologist Rüdiger Lautmann examined 2,542 known cases of homosexual concentration camp prisoners and determined their death rate was 60 percent, compared with 42 percent of political prisoners and 35 percent of Jehovah's Witnesses.[56] Assuming a death rate of between 53 and 60 percent, at least 3,100 to 3,600 men died in the camps.[134] SS guards murdered homosexual prisoners out of cruelty or during sadistic games, disguising the deaths as natural causes.[135] At camps like Mauthausen and Flossenbürg, it was standard practice to work homosexual prisoners to death. In mid-1942 almost all the homosexual prisoners at Sachsenhausen (at least two hundred) were executed. Many homosexual prisoners at Ravensbrück died at the same time.[56][123] The chances of survival depended on which camp the men were incarcerated in; Neuengamme was considered less harsh for homosexual prisoners than Buchenwald, Dachau, or Sachsenhausen.[136]

Initially, homosexuals were differentiated from other prisoners with a badge bearing capital letter "A" that was used at Lichtenberg. The standardized Nazi concentration camp badges that included a pink triangle for homosexual prisoners were adopted in 1938.[56] Homosexual prisoners were a preferred target of Nazi human experimentation during the last years of Nazi rule. The best-known experiments involving homosexual men were attempts by endocrinologist Carl Vaernet to change prisoners' sexual orientations by implanting a pellet that released testosterone. Most of the victims, non-consenting prisoners at Buchenwald, died shortly thereafter.[132][137] Homosexual and Jewish prisoners were also given experimental treatments for typhus at Buchenwald, for phosphorus burns at Sachsenhausen, and were used for testing opiates and Pervitin.[132] Some homosexual prisoners were castrated.[138]

Death penalty

 
Wilhelm Zimek (1919–1942), persecuted for desertion and homosexuality, executed at Wolfenbüttel Prison [de]

In a 1937 speech Himmler argued SS men who had served sentences for homosexuality should be transferred to a concentration camp and "shot while trying to escape".[123][139][a] This policy was never implemented,[123] although a few death sentences against SS men for homosexual acts were pronounced between 1937 and 1940.[141] In a speech on 18 August 1941 Hitler argued homosexuality in the Hitler Youth should be punished by death.[142] After learning of Hitler's remark, Himmler drafted a decree mandating the death penalty to any member of the SS or police who were found guilty of engaging in a homosexual act. Hitler, who was worried the decree might encourage left-wing propaganda that homosexuality was especially prevalent in Germany, signed the decree on 15 November 1941 on the condition there was no publicity.[142] After the decree, only a few death sentences were pronounced.[99][143] Himmler often commuted the sentence, especially if he thought the accused was not a committed homosexual. Many of those whose sentences were commuted were sent to serve in the Dirlewanger Brigade, where most were killed.[99] After late 1943, because of military losses, it was policy to send SS men who were convicted of homosexuality into the army.[144]

The 1933 law on habitual criminals allowed for execution after the third conviction.[145] On 4 September 1941 a new law allowed the execution of dangerous sex offenders and habitual criminals when "the protection of the Volksgemeinschaft or the need for just atonement require it".[146] This law enabled authorities to pronounce death sentences against homosexuals and is known to have been employed in four cases in Austria.[146][147] In 1943 Wilhelm Keitel authorized the death penalty for German soldiers who were convicted of homosexuality in "particularly serious cases".[148][149] Only a few such executions are known to have occurred, mostly in conjunction with other charges – especially desertion.[148] Some homosexuals were executed at Nazi euthanasia centers such as Bernburg and Meseritz-Obrawalde. It is difficult to estimate the number of homosexual men who were directly killed during the Nazi era.[134]

Continued existence

Historian Alexander Zinn [de] estimates about one quarter of German homosexual men were investigated during the Nazi era, and that up to one tenth of those were imprisoned. According to Zinn, this rate is evidence of indifference among the general German population towards homosexuality; denunciation of consensual homosexual relations was less common.[103] Zinn said that while all homosexuals in Nazi Germany suffered from the indirect effects of criminalization, their lives cannot be reduced to fear of arrest, and they retained a limited degree of personal freedom.[150] Even before 1933, many homosexual men married women, and the Nazis' rise to power provided an added incentive, although such marriages were usually unhappy. Homosexual desires did not go away; some men sought homosexual contact outside of marriage, risking denunciation by an unhappy wife. Some men organized lavender marriages with lesbians they had known before 1933.[151] Although nearly all homosexuals tried to avoid the attention of the authorities,[101] men continued to find sexual partners at Kreuzberg bathhouses and Münzstrasse [de] movie theaters, and by cruising in places such as Alexanderplatz and the Friedrichstrasse in Berlin. Many suffered from disrupted relationships, loneliness, or loss of self-esteem.[152] A significant number of homosexual and bisexual men, including 25 percent of those persecuted in Hamburg, committed suicide.[112][134]

According to historian Manfred Herzer [de], homosexual men and women who avoided persecution "belonged to the willing subjects and beneficiaries of the Nazi state just like other German men and women".[152] The likelihood of being persecuted was lower for those who suppressed their sex lives or served the higher goals of Nazism.[153] Some German homosexuals joined the Nazi Party or fought for Germany during World War II.[152] War and armed service provided an opportunity for sexual encounters with other men, both civilians and members of the armed services. There were also opportunities for non-consensual sex with other soldiers, subordinates, people from occupied countries, and prisoners. Both types of sex might be practiced by men who did not identify as homosexual. During the last years of the war, there were increased opportunities for sexual encounters in bombed-out cities.[154]

Himmler ordered culturally prominent German homosexuals to be ignored and required his permission to be obtained before they were arrested.[65][155] For example, writer Erich Ebermayer continued living with his male partner during the Nazi dictatorship; other homosexual couples, and the bisexual actor Gustaf Gründgens, were left alone.[65]

Aftermath

Nazi Germany's persecution of homosexuals is considered to be the most-severe episode in a longer history of discrimination and violence against homosexuals; never before or since have so many homosexuals been sentenced to prison in such a short period, even disregarding concentration camp imprisonment.[156][157] An estimated 100,000 men were arrested and of these, half spent time in prison.[158] Post-war attitudes towards homosexuality were influenced by Nazi propaganda associating homosexuality with criminality and medical illness.[158] Because the various Allied countries considered homosexuality a crime, those prisoners who had not finished serving their sentence under Paragraph 175 had to do so, but those who had never been convicted or who had already served the full time were released.[159] Arrest and incarceration of men for consensual homosexual acts continued to be commonplace in West Germany and Austria through the 1960s;[160][161] between 1945 and 1969, West Germany convicted about 50,000 men; the same number of men as the Nazis had convicted during their twelve-year rule.[162]

The 1935 version of Paragraph 175 – one of the few Nazi-era laws that remained in force and unaltered in West Germany[163] – was upheld by the Federal Constitutional Court in 1957[164] and remained in force until 1969, when homosexuality was partially decriminalized.[165] In 1962 historian Hans-Joachim Schoeps commented; "For the homosexuals the Third Reich has not yet ended."[166][167] Although not entirely accurate, this statement captured the view of many West German homosexuals.[166] In East Germany, homosexuality was rarely prosecuted after 1957 and was decriminalized in 1968;[161] the number of convictions there was much lower.[162] The decriminalization did not result in widespread social acceptance, and Paragraph 175 was not repealed until 1994.[60]

Recognition as victims of National Socialism

Homosexual concentration camp prisoners were not recognized as victims of National Socialism.[168][133] Just as there was a hierarchy among prisoners in the concentration camps, there was a hierarchy among survivors.[133] Reparations and state pensions available to other groups were refused to gay men, who were still classified as criminals. Political prisoners and persecuted Jews could be disqualified from victim status if they were discovered to be homosexual.[169] In the 1950s Rudolf Klimmer unsuccessfully petitioned the East German government to recognize homosexuals as victims of Nazism and offer them compensation in line with that for other victims.[170] In West Germany in the 1970s activists made similar demands, but these were rejected.[171]

In 1985 the Nazi persecution of homosexuals was officially recognized for the first time in a speech [de] by West German president Richard von Weizsäcker.[60][172] In 2002, Germany annulled the Nazi-era judgements under Paragraph 175,[173] and in 2017, victims were offered compensation.[174] The 2017 annulment of judgements and compensation extended to men who were convicted after 1945, making this the only case in which the German state offered reparations for acts not considered "typical Nazi injustice" that would not be possible in a democratic state.[175]

Legacy

Before 1970, there were hardly any references to the persecution of homosexuals. This changed in the aftermath of the Stonewall riots and the partial decriminalization of homosexuality in Germany that triggered the era of gay liberation.[176] The memory of the Nazi persecution of homosexuals came to the attention of the LGBT community in the 1970s as large-scale LGBT rights movements developed.[177] The awareness of homosexuals as a separate category of Nazi victims began in the United States and was later adopted by German homosexual activists.[178] The term "Homocaust" came into use shortly after "Holocaust"; activists claimed there had been 250,000 deaths but historical research soon refuted this number.[179] Martin Sherman's 1979 play Bent brought additional attention of the Nazi persecution of homosexuals in English-speaking countries.[180] The pink triangle became one of the most-prominent symbols of gay liberation in the United States.[181][176] Activists use the symbol to connect Nazi persecution to present-day discrimination and violence against LGBT people, and to mobilize opposition against it.[182]

The practice of laying memorial wreaths in concentration camps in memory of homosexual victims began in the 1970s.[60][172] Permanent memorials were added to several concentration camps, including Mauthausen (1984), Sachsenhausen (1992), Dachau (1995), and Buchenwald (2002).[133][172] This memorialization encountered strong resistance from established survivor associations.[133] Memorials have also been constructed in several German cities, such as Frankfurt (1994), Cologne (1995), Berlin (2008), and Lübeck [de] (2016). Memorials to Nazi persecution of homosexuals have also been constructed in Amsterdam, Bologna, Turin, Barcelona, San Francisco, New York, Montevideo, Sydney, and Tel Aviv [he].[183][184] Hundreds of Stolpersteine have been installed to commemorate individual victims of the Nazis' anti-homosexual persecution.[112] In the United States there was less emphasis on memorialization[185] and more explicit comparisons between the Jewish Holocaust and persecution of homosexuals. German gay activists tended to see a close parallel to the Nazi persecution of communists and socialists.[186]

Sources attesting to the Nazi persecution of homosexuals are scarce.[187] Most homosexuals, especially those who avoided arrest, never spoke about their experiences.[187][188] The Nazis destroyed a great number of records, including the archive of the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion. Remaining sources are mainly in the form of police and court records.[187] In 1972 concentration camp survivor Josef Kohout published his memoir, The Men With the Pink Triangle, which is one of few accounts from a pink-triangle prisoner.[189] The first historical research appeared at the end of the 1970s.[190]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ A euphemism for the premeditated murder of concentration camp prisoners.[140]

Citations

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  3. ^ Marhoefer 2015, p. 214.
  4. ^ Whisnant 2016, pp. 4, 17.
  5. ^ Giles 2010, p. 385.
  6. ^ Marhoefer 2015, pp. 202–203.
  7. ^ Whisnant 2016, p. 200.
  8. ^ Marhoefer 2015, p. 176.
  9. ^ Giles 2001, p. 240.
  10. ^ a b c d Giles 2010, p. 387.
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  12. ^ a b c Wachsmann 2015, p. 144.
  13. ^ a b c d Wachsmann 2015, p. 146.
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  15. ^ Marhoefer 2015, p. 152.
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  17. ^ a b Whisnant 2016, p. 208.
  18. ^ Marhoefer 2015, p. 154.
  19. ^ Hancock 1998, p. 635.
  20. ^ Knoll 2017, p. 227.
  21. ^ Marhoefer 2015, p. 155.
  22. ^ Whisnant 2016, p. 201.
  23. ^ a b Whisnant 2016, p. 209.
  24. ^ Giles 2010, pp. 386–387.
  25. ^ Marhoefer 2015, p. 193.
  26. ^ a b Giles 2010, p. 386.
  27. ^ Herzog 2011, p. 71.
  28. ^ Marhoefer 2015, pp. 175–176.
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  30. ^ Marhoefer 2015, pp. 174–175.
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  32. ^ a b Whisnant 2016, p. 211.
  33. ^ Herzog 2011, p. 81.
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  39. ^ a b c d Whisnant 2016, p. 214.
  40. ^ Herzog 2011, p. 73.
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  42. ^ a b c d e f g h Zinn 2020b, p. 7.
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  47. ^ a b Murphy 2017, p. 122.
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  52. ^ a b c Zinn 2020b, p. 11.
  53. ^ Zinn 2018, p. 31.
  54. ^ Zinn 2020b, pp. 8, 10.
  55. ^ a b c Giles 2010, p. 392.
  56. ^ a b c d e f g h Zinn 2020b, p. 12.
  57. ^ a b Longerich 2011, p. 238.
  58. ^ Longerich 2011, p. 472.
  59. ^ a b Grau 2014, p. 44.
  60. ^ a b c d e Schwartz 2021, p. 383.
  61. ^ a b Crouthamel 2018, p. 434.
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  63. ^ a b Schlagdenhauffen 2018, pp. 14–15.
  64. ^ Snyder 2007, pp. 24, 110.
  65. ^ a b c d Schwartz 2021, p. 388.
  66. ^ Snyder 2007, pp. 106, 127.
  67. ^ Crouthamel 2018, p. 435.
  68. ^ Snyder 2007, pp. 54–55.
  69. ^ Snyder 2007, pp. 107–109.
  70. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, p. 15.
  71. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, p. 32.
  72. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, p. 8.
  73. ^ Whisnant 2016, p. 228.
  74. ^ Kirchknopf 2018, p. 48.
  75. ^ Kirchknopf 2018, p. 44.
  76. ^ a b Schlagdenhauffen 2018, p. 12.
  77. ^ Seidl 2018, p. 54.
  78. ^ Seidl 2018, pp. 54–56.
  79. ^ Seidl 2018, pp. 57–58.
  80. ^ Seidl 2018, pp. 54–55.
  81. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, p. 11.
  82. ^ Seidl 2018, p. 55.
  83. ^ Vendrell 2020, p. 4.
  84. ^ Snyder 2007, p. 105.
  85. ^ Giles 2010, pp. 390–391.
  86. ^ a b Whisnant 2016, p. 227.
  87. ^ a b c Giles 2010, p. 390.
  88. ^ Snyder 2007, pp. 105–106.
  89. ^ a b c d e f Giles 2010, p. 389.
  90. ^ Longerich 2011, p. 232.
  91. ^ Longerich 2011, pp. 232–233.
  92. ^ Giles 2010, pp. 389–390.
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  95. ^ Whisnant 2016, p. 236.
  96. ^ Herzog 2011, p. 72.
  97. ^ Micheler 2002, p. 116.
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  106. ^ Wünschmann 2015, p. 141.
  107. ^ Schwartz 2014, pp. 13–14.
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  109. ^ Schwartz 2014, p. 14.
  110. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, pp. 24–25.
  111. ^ a b Schwartz 2021, pp. 388–389.
  112. ^ a b c Bollmann 2014, p. 129.
  113. ^ Hájková, Anna (4 March 2019). "Queer History and the Holocaust". On History. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
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  115. ^ Longerich 2011, p. 227.
  116. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 147–148.
  117. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 148–149.
  118. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 146–147.
  119. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 143–144, 146.
  120. ^ Murphy 2017, p. 120.
  121. ^ Giles 2001, pp. 248–249.
  122. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 147.
  123. ^ a b c d e Giles 2010, p. 393.
  124. ^ Zinn 2020b, pp. 11–12.
  125. ^ Zinn 2020b, pp. 12–13.
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  128. ^ a b Wünschmann 2015, p. 143.
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  134. ^ a b c Lorenz 2018, p. 11.
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  137. ^ Weindling 2015, pp. 183–184.
  138. ^ Weindling 2015, p. 30.
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  141. ^ Lorenz 2018, p. 15.
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  144. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, p. 33.
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  146. ^ a b Scheck 2020, p. 422.
  147. ^ Lorenz 2018, p. 13.
  148. ^ a b Storkmann 2021, p. 28.
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  152. ^ a b c Whisnant 2016, p. 232.
  153. ^ Schwartz 2021, p. 389.
  154. ^ Whisnant 2016, p. 239.
  155. ^ Murphy 2017, p. 116.
  156. ^ Zinn 2020b, p. 13.
  157. ^ Murphy 2017, p. 123.
  158. ^ a b Whisnant 2016, p. 240.
  159. ^ Newsome 2022, pp. 59–60.
  160. ^ Jensen 2002, pp. 321–322.
  161. ^ a b Whisnant 2016, p. 242.
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  163. ^ Whisnant 2016, p. 250.
  164. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, p. 35.
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  166. ^ a b Grau 2014, p. 48.
  167. ^ Schwartz 2021, p. 377.
  168. ^ Zinn 2020b, p. 6.
  169. ^ Schlagdenhauffen 2018, pp. 34–35.
  170. ^ Jensen 2002, pp. 323–324.
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  173. ^ Braun 2021, p. 91.
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  175. ^ Braun 2021, p. 78.
  176. ^ a b Lautmann 2020, p. 175.
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  178. ^ Lautmann 2020, p. 177.
  179. ^ Lautmann 2020, pp. 175, 177.
  180. ^ Seifert 2003, pp. 94, 108.
  181. ^ Seifert 2003, p. 94.
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  184. ^ Orangias et al. 2018, pp. 707–709.
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  190. ^ Grau 2014, p. 43.

Sources

Books

Chapters

  • Braun, Kathrin (2021). "Justice at Last: The Persecution of Homosexual Men and the Politics of Amends". Biopolitics and Historic Justice: Coming to Terms with the Injuries of Normality. transcript Verlag [de]. pp. 77–98. doi:10.1515/9783839445501-004. ISBN 978-3-8394-4550-1.
  • Bollmann, Ulf (2014). "Gemeinsam gegen das Vergessen – Stolpersteine für homosexuelle NS-Opfer" [Together against oblivion – Stolpersteine for homosexual Nazi victims]. Homosexuelle im Nationalsozialismus: Neue Forschungsperspektiven zu Lebenssituationen von lesbischen, schwulen, bi-, trans- und intersexuellen Menschen 1933 bis 1945 [Homosexuals Under National Socialism: New Research Perspectives on the Life Circumstances of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual, and Intersexual Persons from 1933 to 1945] (in German). De Gruyter. pp. 129–134. doi:10.1524/9783486857504.129. ISBN 978-3-486-85750-4.
  • Giles, Geoffrey J. (2001). "The Institutionalization of Homosexual Panic in the Third Reich". Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany. Princeton University Press. pp. 233–255. ISBN 978-0-691-18835-5.
  • Giles, Geoffrey J. (2010). "The Persecution of Gay Men and Lesbians During the Third Reich". The Routledge History of the Holocaust. Routledge. pp. 385–396. ISBN 978-0-203-83744-3.
  • Grau, Günter (2014). "Die Verfolgung der Homosexualität im Nationalsozialismus: Anmerkungen zum Forschungsstand" [The persecution of homosexuality under National Socialism: Commentary on the state of research]. In Schwartz, Michael (ed.). Homosexuelle im Nationalsozialismus: Neue Forschungsperspektiven zu Lebenssituationen von lesbischen, schwulen, bi-, trans- und intersexuellen Menschen 1933 bis 1945 [Homosexuals Under National Socialism: New Research Perspectives on the Life Circumstances of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual, and Intersexual Persons from 1933 to 1945] (in German). De Gruyter. pp. 43–52. doi:10.1524/9783486857504.43. ISBN 978-3-486-85750-4.
  • Kirchknopf, Johann K. (2018). "The Anschluss – Also a sexual annexation?". . Council of Europe. pp. 39–52. ISBN 978-92-871-8464-1. Archived from the original on 17 February 2022.
  • Knoll, Albert (2017). ""Es muß alles versucht werden, um dieses widernatürliche Laster auszurotten": Homosexuelle Häftlinge in den frühen Konzentrationslagern" ["Everything must be tried to eradicate this unnatural vice": Homosexual prisoners in the early concentration camps]. ... der schrankenlosesten Willkür ausgeliefert: Häftlinge der frühen Konzentrationslager 1933–1936/37 [... at the mercy of the most unrestrained arbitrariness: prisoners of the early concentration camps 1933–1936/37] (in German). Campus Verlag. pp. 221–246. ISBN 978-3-593-50702-6.
  • Lautmann, Rüdiger (2020). "Engführungen des Erinnerns an die NS-Homosexuellenrepression und an die Shoah". Ko-Erinnerung: Grenzen, Herausforderungen und Perspektiven des neueren Shoah-Gedenkens [Commemoration: Limits, Challenges, and Possibilities in Contemporary Shoah Remembrance] (in German). De Gruyter. pp. 175–192. ISBN 978-3-11-062270-6.
  • Murphy, Melanie (2017). "Homosexuality and the Law in the Third Reich". Nazi Law – From Nuremberg to Nuremberg. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 110–124. ISBN 978-1-350-00726-0.
  • Schlagdenhauffen, Régis (2018). "Queer life in Europe during the Second World War" and "Punishing homosexual men and women under the Third Reich". . Council of Europe. pp. 7–20, 21–38. ISBN 978-92-871-8464-1. Archived from the original on 17 February 2022.
  • Schwartz, Michael (2014). "Verfolgte Homosexuelle – oder Lebenssituationen von LSBT*QI*?" [Persecution of homosexuals – or life circumstances of LGBT*QI*?]. Homosexuelle im Nationalsozialismus: Neue Forschungsperspektiven zu Lebenssituationen von lesbischen, schwulen, bi-, trans- und intersexuellen Menschen 1933 bis 1945 [Homosexuals Under National Socialism: New Research Perspectives on the Life Circumstances of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual, and Intersexual Persons from 1933 to 1945] (in German). De Gruyter. pp. 11–18. doi:10.1524/9783486857504.11. ISBN 978-3-486-85750-4.
  • Seidl, Jan (2018). "Legal Imbroglio in the Protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia". . Council of Europe. pp. 53–62. ISBN 978-92-871-8464-1. Archived from the original on 17 February 2022.
  • Zinn, Alexander (2020a). "'Gegen das Sittengesetz': Staatliche Homosexuellenverfolgung in Deutschland 1933–1969" ["Against the Moral Law": State persecution of homosexuals in Germany 1933–1969]. Homosexuelle in Deutschland 1933–1969 [Homosexuals in Germany 1933–1969]. V&R unipress. pp. 15–48. ISBN 978-3-8471-1169-6.

Journal articles

  • Crouthamel, Jason (2018). "Homosexuality and Comradeship: Destabilizing the Hegemonic Masculine Ideal in Nazi Germany". Central European History. 51 (3): 419–439. doi:10.1017/S0008938918000602. ISSN 0008-9389.
  • Hancock, Eleanor (1998). "'Only the Real, the True, the Masculine Held Its Value': Ernst Röhm, Masculinity, and Male Homosexuality". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 8 (4): 616–641. ISSN 1043-4070. JSTOR 3840412. PMID 11620476.
  • Jensen, Erik N. (2002). "The Pink Triangle and Political Consciousness: Gays, Lesbians, and the Memory of Nazi Persecution". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 11 (1/2): 319–349. doi:10.1353/sex.2002.0008. ISSN 1043-4070. JSTOR 3704560.
  • Orangias, Joseph; Simms, Jeannie; French, Sloane (2018). "The Cultural Functions and Social Potential of Queer Monuments: A Preliminary Inventory and Analysis". Journal of Homosexuality. 65 (6): 705–726. doi:10.1080/00918369.2017.1364106. PMID 28777713.
  • Micheler, Stefan (2002). "Homophobic Propaganda and the Denunciation of Same-Sex-Desiring Men under National Socialism". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 11 (1): 105–130. doi:10.1353/sex.2002.0011. ISSN 1535-3605.
  • Scheck, Raffael (2020). "The Danger of "Moral Sabotage": Western Prisoners of War on Trial for Homosexual Relations in Nazi Germany". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 29 (3): 418–446. doi:10.7560/JHS29305.
  • Schwartz, Michael (2021). "Homosexuelle im modernen Deutschland: Eine Langzeitperspektive auf historische Transformationen" [Homosexuals in Modern Germany: A Long-Term Perspective on Historical Transformations]. Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte (in German). 69 (3): 377–414. doi:10.1515/vfzg-2021-0028.
  • Seifert, Dorthe (2003). "Between Silence and License: The Representation of the National Socialist Persecution of Homosexuality in Anglo-American Fiction and Film". History & Memory. 15 (2): 94–129. doi:10.1353/ham.2003.0012. ISSN 1527-1994.
  • Westermann, Edward B. (2018). "'Shot While Trying to Escape': Procedural Legality and State-Sanctioned Killing in Nazi Germany". Dapim: Studies on the Holocaust. 32 (2): 93–111. doi:10.1080/23256249.2018.1459277.
  • Zinn, Alexander (2020b). "'Das sind Staatsfeinde' Die NS-Homosexuellenverfolgung 1933–1945" ["They are enemies of the state": The Nazi persecution of homosexuals 1933–1945] (PDF). Bulletin des Fritz Bauer Instituts (in German): 6–13. ISSN 1868-4211. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.

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This article is about the persecution of homosexual men For lesbians see Lesbians in Nazi Germany Before 1933 homosexual acts were illegal in Germany under Paragraph 175 of the German Criminal Code The law was not consistently enforced however and a thriving gay culture existed in major German cities After the Nazi takeover in 1933 the first homosexual movement s infrastructure of clubs organizations and publications was shut down After the Rohm purge in 1934 persecuting homosexuals became a priority of the Nazi police state A 1935 revision of Paragraph 175 made it easier to bring criminal charges for homosexual acts leading to a large increase in arrests and convictions Persecution peaked in the years prior to World War II and was extended to areas annexed by Germany including Austria the Czech lands and Alsace Lorraine Memorial in Nollendorfplatz Berlin Text in triangle Struck DeadHushed Up dedicated to The homosexual victims of National Socialism Text below The pink triangle was the sign with which the National Socialists marked homosexuals in the concentration camps in a defamatory way From January 1933 almost all homosexual locales distributed around Nollendorfplatz were closed by the National Socialists or misused by raids to create pink lists homosexual files The Nazi regime considered the elimination of all manifestations of homosexuality in Germany one of its goals Men were often arrested after denunciation police raids and through information uncovered during interrogations of other homosexuals Those arrested were presumed guilty and subjected to harsh interrogation and torture to elicit a confession Between 1933 and 1945 an estimated 100 000 men were arrested as homosexuals around 50 000 of these were sentenced by civilian courts 6 400 to 7 000 by military courts de and an unknown number by special courts Most of these men served time in regular prisons and between 5 000 and 6 000 were imprisoned in concentration camps The death rate of these prisoners has been estimated at 60 percent a higher rate than those of other prisoner groups A smaller number of men were sentenced to death or executed at Nazi euthanasia centers Nazi Germany s persecution of homosexuals is considered to be the most severe episode in a long history of discrimination and violence targeting sexual minorities After the war homosexuals were initially not counted as victims of Nazism because homosexuality continued to be illegal in Nazi Germany s successor states Few victims came forward to discuss their experiences The persecution came to wider public attention during the gay liberation movement of the 1970s and the pink triangle was reappropriated as an LGBT symbol Contents 1 Background 2 History 2 1 Nazi takeover and initial crackdown 1933 2 2 Rohm purge and expanding persecution 1934 1935 2 3 Peak of persecution 1936 1939 2 4 World War II 2 5 Annexed territories 3 Nazi views of homosexuality 4 Methods 4 1 Identification and arrest 4 2 Regional and class based targeting 4 3 Interrogation and trial 4 4 Prisons 4 4 1 Castration 4 5 Concentration camps 4 6 Death penalty 5 Continued existence 6 Aftermath 6 1 Recognition as victims of National Socialism 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 9 3 1 Books 9 3 2 Chapters 9 3 3 Journal articlesBackground Edit Eldorado pictured in 1932 the most famous gay establishment in Germany 1 Germany was the home of the first homosexual movement 2 3 The word homosexual was coined by a German language writer the first periodicals intended for a gay lesbian and transgender readership were published in Germany and the world s first homosexual rights organization was founded in Berlin in 1897 4 In the 1920s gay culture flourished in Germany s major cities especially Berlin 5 Political compromises allowed many homosexuals to live freely in their private lives and in dedicated subcultural spaces provided they did not significantly infringe on the public sphere 6 One theory holds the Nazis rise to power was fueled by a conservative backlash against perceived immorality but according to historian Laurie Marhoefer this was not a significant factor 7 8 Paragraph 175 of the German penal code which was passed after the unification of Germany in 1871 criminalized sexual acts between males The German supreme court ruled that a conviction required proof the men had had penetrative sex typically anal but sometimes oral sex other sexual activities were not punishable 9 10 The Rechtsstaat limited the enforcement of the law because men were not arrested or indicted without concrete evidence 11 As a consequence conviction rates were low 12 and a significant number of those convicted were sentenced to pay a fine rather than serve a jail sentence Terms exceeding one year were rare 13 In 1928 the Nazi Party responded negatively to a questionnaire about their view of Paragraph 175 saying Anyone who even thinks of homosexual love is our enemy 14 Nazi politicians regularly railed against homosexuality saying it was a Jewish conspiracy to undermine the German people 15 In 1931 and 1932 the Social Democrats publicized the homosexuality of Ernst Rohm a prominent Nazi politician in an attempt to discredit the Nazis 16 The Rohm scandal fueled the long lasting but false idea the Nazi Party was dominated by homosexuals a recurring theme in 1930s left wing propaganda 17 18 The Nazi Party temporarily tolerated a few known homosexuals including Rohm but never adopted such tolerance as a general principle or changed its views on homosexuality 19 20 There is no evidence that homosexuals were over represented in the Nazi Party 21 History EditNazi takeover and initial crackdown 1933 Edit Raid on the Institute for Sex Research 6 May 1933 In mid 1932 a crackdown on homosexual subcultures in Prussia began after Chancellor Franz von Papen deposed the Prussian government Some homosexual bars and clubs in Berlin had to shut down after police raids 22 In January 1933 the Nazi Party took power 17 immediately their real and perceived enemies were the subject of a violent crackdown On 23 February of that year the Prussian Ministry of the Interior ordered Berlin police to shut down any remaining establishments catering to persons who indulge in unnatural sexual practices 23 This order was extended to other parts of Germany In Cologne almost all gay bars were forced to close In Hanover all had closed by the end of the year In Hamburg police targeted both prostitutes and homosexual spaces including the main train station public toilets and gay bars leading to a more than sixfold increase in indictments under Paragraph 175 by 1934 23 The anti homosexual crackdown was intended to please the Nazis conservative backers who had put them into power as well as socially conservative voters 24 25 Both the Vatican and Protestant churches praised the crackdown 26 27 For example in October 1933 Clemens August Graf von Galen the Bishop of Munster wrote approvingly of the Nazis efforts to eradicate the open propaganda for godlessness and immorality 28 In March 1933 the Nazi authorities began to confiscate printed material on homosexual topics Any LGBT related magazines that had survived earlier censorship were closed down and copies were burned Their publishers were targeted Adolf Brand s house was raided five times and police stole all of his photographs 6 000 magazine issues and many books Friedrich Radszuweit s company was subjected to similar raids During the Nazi takeover German Jewish homosexual rights campaigner Magnus Hirschfeld was abroad on a lecture tour for the World League for Sexual Reform On 6 May the Nazis paramilitary wing the SA raided his Institute for Sex Research in coordination with German students The institute s library of more than 12 000 books was publicly burned on 10 May on the Opernplatz and its offices together with those of The World League for Sexual Reform were destroyed 29 30 On 8 June the law reform organization Scientific Humanitarian Committee voted to dissolve itself In 1933 many homosexual organizations attempted to destroy membership lists and other information the Nazis could use to target dissidents Former activists made agreements to keep quiet to protect others 31 Some homosexuals including Thomas and Klaus Mann went into exile 32 The Swiss city Basel in particular was a destination for homosexuals fleeing Nazi Germany 33 Other homosexuals of a more right wing inclination including Hans Bluher who initially welcomed the Nazi takeover remained in Germany 32 Some joined the SA mistakenly believing that Rohm would protect them 26 The most visible members of the LGBT community including prostitutes transvestites and activist leaders were targeted and high profile locations were shut down The average homosexual s daily life however did not change and some gay bars in Hamburg and smaller cities remained open Some men were able to adapt to the closures by meeting with gay friends in primarily heterosexual establishments Most homosexuals were not yet afraid of the Gestapo 34 They believed they could keep a low profile until the end of the Nazi regime seen as coming soon 10 During the initial years of Nazi rule the number of men sentenced to prison under Paragraph 175 increased from 464 in 1932 to 575 in 1933 and 635 in 1934 35 There was no systematic persecution of individual homosexual behavior and until 1935 convictions remained below the high of 1 107 convictions set in 1925 36 Rohm purge and expanding persecution 1934 1935 Edit After the 1933 revolution Hitler began to see Rohm as a threat to his power and the SA as a liability due to their random acts of violence which detracted from the Nazis desired image as the party of law and order 37 On 30 June 1934 Rohm and several other SA leaders were suddenly arrested and executed This event was later justified in Nazi propaganda mainly by the alleged corruption and scheming with foreign powers but also citing Rohm s homosexuality and the fact one of the victims of the purge Edmund Heines had allegedly been arrested while in bed with another man 38 Heinrich Himmler and Reinhard Heydrich leaders of the SS a rival of Rohm s SA supported the purge to assert their control over the Nazi police state 39 Eventually Himmler who is described by historian Nikolaus Wachsmann as one of the most obsessive homophobes in the Nazi government 12 became commander of the SS the Gestapo and the concentration camp system making him the second most powerful man in Nazi Germany 40 The purge ended the sense of safety many German homosexuals still felt Some homosexual Nazis ceased participating in the party 39 while others themselves former perpetrators of violence against Nazi opponents became victims 41 Gestapo Radio Telegram for a list of suspected homosexuals for the Chief of Police in Dortmund 24 October 1934 Anti gay repression began immediately after the purge initially focusing on alleged homosexual cliques in the party and state bureaucracy 42 39 In October 1934 Heydrich ordered the police of all large cities to make a list of homosexuals 43 A separate Gestapo department the Special Commission for Homosexuality in Berlin was set up 43 In late 1934 the Gestapo targeted Berlin and Munich raiding gay bars and making mass arrests of homosexual men most of those arrested were not involved in politics 42 Many men accused of homosexuality would admit to acts that were not punishable under Paragraph 175 expecting to be released 10 instead they were mistreated and incarcerated in Columbia Haus Lichtenburg or Dachau concentration camp By early 1935 80 percent of the prisoners held in protective custody in the concentration camps were there for alleged homosexuality To convict these men it was decided to change the criminal code 42 Almost exactly a year after Rohm was killed 35 Paragraph 175 was amended The changes were demanded especially by prosecutors and other legal professionals 10 The new version of the law punished all sexual acts defined broadly objectively when a general sense of shame is harmed and subjectively when there exists the lustful intention to excite either of the two men or a third party 43 In theory it became a crime to look at another man with desire 42 44 Men were convicted for mutual masturbation or simply embracing each other 43 and in a few cases when no physical contact had occurred 45 Under the new law typically all participants were viewed as equally guilty whereas under the previous law the active and passive participants were differentiated 45 The new law made it much easier to arrest and convict homosexual men 35 43 leading to a large increase in convictions 46 Under a new section 175a the law also introduced harsher penalties for male prostitution sex with a man younger than 21 or sex with a student or employee 43 The change in the law was not publicized for fear of spreading knowledge of homosexuality Most Germans were unaware the law had changed and many of those arrested under the new law had no knowledge they were committing a crime 45 47 The law was also applied retroactively 47 Peak of persecution 1936 1939 Edit Number of convictions under Paragraph 175 over time From 1936 to 1939 German police focused on homosexuality as a top priority 48 In 1936 the Special Commission for Homosexuality in Berlin became the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion working with Gestapo Special Bureau II S 43 49 The new office organized conferences and issued directives to increase the effectiveness of anti homosexual persecution 49 During the first years of Nazi rule regional differences in the prosecution of homosexuals reflected pre Nazi trends in policing but in 1936 the police launched a nationwide campaign against homosexual meeting places This campaign was less effective in rural than urban areas which saw a greater number of prosecutions 41 50 51 If the Gestapo believed there were not enough charges for homosexuality being brought in a certain area they would send in a special unit to train and encourage local criminal police 52 In March 1937 Himmler ordered police departments to make lists of suspected homosexuals and oblige them to register changes of address and to monitor suspected homosexual meeting places hotels and personal ads in newspapers 53 The assigning of responsibility for carrying out the anti homosexuality campaign to police and courts which were not given any additional personnel or resources caused serious operational difficulties Besides the significant increase in the number of criminal cases to be prosecuted cases of homosexuality demanded more time and attention because of the difficulty of proving private conduct 54 Because of the difficulty in identifying homosexuals some police departments resorted to calling in entire classes of teenage boys and asking them about their sexual experiences In this manner it was possible to increase the number of charges of homosexuality brought by 1939 such youthful relationships were the basis of 23 9 percent of charges Himmler approved of such methods arguing that without them homosexuality would spread unchecked in all male Nazi institutions 52 Between 1937 and 1939 nearly 95 000 men were arrested for homosexuality more than 600 per week representing a major investment from the Nazi police state 55 From 1936 to 1939 nearly 30 000 men were convicted under Paragraph 175 Unlike in the past these men were virtually guaranteed to receive a jail sentence 13 The length of sentences increased many men were sentenced to years in jail 49 50 Prosecutors judges and others involved in the cases increasingly cited Nazi ideology to justify harsh punishment adopting the regime s rhetoric of stamping out the plague of homosexuality 13 50 The use of concentration camp imprisonment increased after 1937 those considered to have seduced others into homosexuality were confined to concentration camps 56 World War II Edit Kurt Wilcke 1908 1944 was imprisoned for his homosexuality in Fuhlsbuttel concentration camp de Later transferred to a penal battalion he died during the Battle of Narva From 1939 to 1940 the number of men sentenced in civil courts under Paragraph 175 fell from 7 614 to 3 773 More men were subject to military jurisdiction 13 and with the onset of war homosexuality was no longer the top priority of the security police 57 In anticipation of the outbreak of war at the end of August 1939 Heydrich ordered the Gestapo to transfer most homosexual cases to the Kriminalpolizei criminal police or Kripo to free up resources for the persecution of opposition groups 58 It is unknown how many Paragraph 175 cases were handled by the special courts 59 An estimated 6 400 to 7 000 men were convicted by the military courts in Nazi Germany de under Paragraph 175 59 60 The military considered homosexuals to be predators who disrupted morale and unit cohesion 61 Prior to the war homosexuals were offered re education and if this failed they could be dismissed and incarcerated in a concentration camp for the duration of their compulsory military service 62 Under the manpower requirements of war it was felt necessary to recruit all available men 61 it was also a concern that rejecting homosexuals from military service could open a loophole for draft evaders 63 Men considered sex offenders including homosexuals rapists and child molesters could serve in the German military assuming they were willing to bear arms and remain celibate during their military service Known homosexuals and some former concentration camp prisoners were conscripted 64 Even castrated homosexual men could be drafted 63 Military courts were generally more lenient than civilian courts with cases involving consensual sex but harsher in cases falling under 175a 65 Although military courts followed the 1935 version of Paragraph 175 they generally issued a conviction only when there was attempted or actual contact with another man s genitals More than 90 percent of those convicted were reintegrated into the military 66 Although innate homosexuals were considered dangerous to the military the German military assumed that most cases of homosexuality were situational Younger men often seen as the victims of homosexual seducers and one time offenders were shown leniency 67 On average soldiers convicted of homosexuality were sentenced to one year prison sentences but served only a fraction of this before being paroled to the front The length of time served decreased because of the increasing manpower shortage 68 In 1943 Himmler who believed that the military was not hard enough on homosexuality demanded a classification system that would see incorrigible homosexual offenders sent to concentration camps The military attempted to ensure as many men as possible were retained under military jurisdiction to preserve vital manpower but cooperated with the Gestapo to rid itself of a few men who were seen as a threat to the military 69 Beginning in 1944 some homosexual concentration camp prisoners were forcibly enlisted in the army which continued until a week before the unconditional surrender of Germany 70 These men were typically recruited into penal battalions especially the Dirlewanger Brigade 71 Annexed territories Edit The persecution of homosexuals was extended to the annexed territories but not to the rest of German occupied Europe 72 the Nazis were mostly uninterested in punishing homosexuals who were not considered ethnically German 73 Criminal prosecutions of men for homosexuality in Austria almost doubled under Nazi rule 74 Both regular and special courts applied draconian punishments including the death penalty 75 German law was applied in the Sudetenland after its annexation in late 1938 and in the case of homosexuals applied retroactively 76 77 German law was imposed in Alsace Lorraine in January 1942 homosexuals there soon faced a harsh legal crackdown including retroactive application of the law 76 In the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia German law applied to ethnic Germans and the old Austrian criminal code which imposed lower penalties for male homosexuality applied to non Germans 78 Czech men were not deported to concentration camps solely because of conviction for homosexuality but sometimes they were deported in combination with other reasons such as anti Nazi activity 79 Although prosecutions increased dramatically during the German occupation 80 the police focused their efforts on breaking up male prostitution rings rather than homosexual relationships between Czechs 81 In 1945 Edvard Benes president of Czechoslovakia offered an amnesty to those convicted for homosexuality during the occupation although the law remained in effect 82 Nazi views of homosexuality EditThe Nazis were influenced by earlier ideas conflating homosexuality child molestation and the seduction of youth 42 Before the Nazis rise to power there was a widespread belief among Germans that homosexuality is not inborn but instead could be acquired and spread 83 The Nazis were particularly concerned that their all male organizations such as the Hitler Youth SS and SA must not be seen as hotbeds of homosexual recruitment 36 Based on the theories of Karl Bonhoeffer and Emil Kraepelin 84 the Nazis believed homosexuals seduced young men and infected them with homosexuality permanently changing their sexual orientation Rhetoric described homosexuality as a contagious disease 85 but not in the medical sense Rather homosexuality was a disease of the Volkskorper national body a metaphor for the desired national or racial community Volksgemeinschaft 86 The Nazis especially Himmler held conspiratorial beliefs about homosexuals believing they were more loyal to each other than to the Nazi Party and Germany 87 88 After the Rohm purge he told Gestapo personnel they had narrowly avoided the capture of the state by homosexuals 42 In 1937 a headline in the SS magazine Das Schwarze Korps declared homosexuals enemies of the state explaining they must be eradicated because they form a state within a state a secret organization that runs counter to the interests of the people 42 87 The newspaper argued only two percent of those who engaged in homosexual acts were committed homosexuals and the rest could be turned away from homosexuality 57 Forty thousand homosexuals were considered capable of poisoning two million men if left to roam free 56 Homosexual men were also considered to be shirking their duty to repopulate the German nation after World War I and create sons who could be drafted into the military to fight Hitler s planned wars of aggression 89 On 18 February 1937 Himmler gave a speech about homosexuality in Bad Tolz that was based on the 1927 book Eroticism and Race by Herwig Hartner which claimed homosexuality was a Jewish plot against Germany 87 90 According to Himmler homosexuality could lead to the end of Germany and cause depopulation by reducing the number of men who were available for reproduction 91 92 93 The Nazis distinguished between congenital homosexuals who would require permanent imprisonment and others who had engaged in homosexuality but were thought to be curable with a short stay in a concentration camp or psychiatric treatment Distinguishing between these categories was a difficulty that preoccupied the Nazis especially after many cases of homosexuality surfaced in the supposedly racially pure SS Succumbing to a homosexual act once especially when drunk was not necessarily considered evidence of homosexual inclination 94 86 The Goring Institute offered treatment to homosexuals referred by the Hitler Youth and other Nazi organizations by 1938 it claimed to have changed the sexual orientation in 341 of 510 patients and by 1944 it claimed to have eliminated homosexuality in more than 500 men The institute intervened to reduce sentences in some cases 95 The converse of the Nazis persecution of homosexuality was their encouragement of heterosexual relations including extramarital sex for racially desirable people 96 After 1934 homophobia became a regular theme in Nazi propaganda 39 most Germans came into contact with this homophobic propaganda 97 Although one of the Nazi regime s goals was to eliminate all manifestations of homosexuality in Germany 98 there was never a Nazi policy of exterminating all homosexuals in the way the Final Solution targeted Jews 98 99 Methods EditIdentification and arrest Edit Homosexuals were more difficult to round up than other groups the Nazis targeted 100 Police were given detailed instructions on spotting homosexuals they were instructed to look for flamboyant men those who avoided women or were seen walking arm in arm with other men and anyone who rented a double room at a hotel Hairdressers bathhouse attendants hotel receptionists railway station porters and others were asked to report suspicious behavior Complicating the Nazis efforts many homosexual men did not fit these stereotypes and many effeminate men were not homosexual 55 According to one estimate denunciations resulted in 35 percent of arrests of homosexuals 101 Men were denounced by neighbors relatives coworkers students employees or even ex boyfriends seeking to settle grievances passers by who overheard suspicious conversation and Hitler Youth and other Nazi supporters who voluntarily acted as the morality police State employees working in youth welfare and rail stations Nazi functionaries in the German Labor Front DAF the SA the SS and the Hitler Youth brought cases to the attention of the authorities 102 A disproportionate number of denunciations concerned child abuse or youth seduction because there was an injured party to complain 103 Some men were falsely denounced as homosexual by other Germans 104 The snowball method involved arresting one man interrogating him and searching his belongings to find additional suspects 42 this method accounted for thirty percent of arrests 101 Some men were observed before their arrests or temporarily released in hopes they would lead the police to additional suspects Some were shown photograph albums of other suspected homosexuals male prostitutes were often willing to identify other homosexuals this way 105 Another ten percent of victims were arrested in police raids which were often conducted in parks public toilets and areas frequented by male prostitutes 101 102 In Hamburg the police watched restaurants that served a mixed heterosexual and homosexual clientele as well as the most trafficked public toilets 50 Entrapment was also used to ensnare homosexuals 89 Charges of homosexuality were sometimes deployed against people who were not guilty 89 106 Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels commented When Himmler wants to get rid of someone he just throws 175 at him 89 About 250 Catholic clergy were charged with same sex activity de in the mid 1930s Many of the charges which included sexual abuse of minors and consensual homosexual sex were true but others were probably invented The trials were of limited efficacy in their intended purpose of discrediting the Catholic Church 89 107 108 Catholic authorities alternated between reprimanding the guilty and covering up the scandal 109 Regional and class based targeting Edit Regional differences in convictions under Paragraph 175 in Germany 1930s Hamburg is the highest Active policing tactics were mainly limited to the larger cities in rural areas the police relied on denunciation 89 The difference in policing strategy and likely over representation and greater visibility of homosexuals in urban areas led to vastly different conviction rates in different parts of Germany Convictions in Bavaria and Mecklenburg were below the national average while in Rhine Province Hamburg and Berlin they exceeded the average Within states urban areas had more cases than rural areas Because of the reliance on denunciation in rural areas a disproportionate number of cases involved child abuse or youth seduction 103 Young and working class men who may have been less able to evade the authorities were over represented among those who were arrested and prosecuted 110 111 Half of the suspects were working class men and another third came from the lower middle class 111 In Austria where working class homosexuals were traditional targets of criminalization arrests were extended to the middle class but more egregious behavior was required for a higher class man to be punished for homosexuality 65 The first homosexuals to be targeted by the Nazis prior to the Rohm purge were also Jewish and left wing political activists 41 A considerable number of those persecuted for homosexuality were also targeted for other reasons for example being Romani disabled a sex worker accused of other criminal offenses a political opponent of the Nazis or a deserter 112 113 Interrogation and trial Edit After arresting a man he was presumed to be guilty especially if there was a history of homosexual acts or a previous conviction 114 Police would tell his family the reason for his arrest 101 With a conviction the victim could expect a complete life breakdown often including loss of home and job expulsion from professional organizations and revocation of awards and doctorates 49 Harsh interrogations were aimed at forcing the victim to confess to the acts the police believed him guilty of Austere cells of temporary detention facilities were sufficient to obtain confessions in some cases Other suspects would crumple in the face of screams curses threats and endless questions and some were beaten Some men were held for weeks with nothing to do but await interrogation and suffered mental breakdowns Some men were sent to concentration camps under protective custody to encourage them to confess or to incarcerate them when there was not enough evidence to obtain a conviction The police would tell suspects they would get a lighter punishment if they confessed and indefinite detention in a concentration camp if they did not 102 Both the Gestapo and the Kripo targeted homosexuals a rivalry that may have encouraged the latter to adopt the more brutal tactics of the former 115 Torture was regularly used to extract confessions and the use of enhanced interrogation verscharfte Vernehmung was explicitly approved of by Josef Meisinger head of the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion 52 After 1936 cases were processed more quickly and the accused rarely had a legal defense Most had already confessed guaranteeing a guilty verdict An unknown number of men who were found unfit to stand trial were confined to psychiatric hospitals 50 Prisons Edit Arnold Bastian 1908 1945 was arrested in 1944 for his homosexuality and died in prison in 1945 Most men who were persecuted for homosexuality were convicted in the civil legal system and imprisoned 12 In Germany it had long been the practice to isolate homosexual prisoners in individual cells but because of the vast increase in arrests this proved to be impractical In addition the economic exploitation of prisoner labor meant many prisoners were held in labor camps and housed in barracks While some officials built tiny one man cells to keep homosexual prisoners isolated other officials distributed homosexuals among the general prison population and encouraged brutal homophobia to isolate homosexuals Homosexual prisoners did not have to wear a badge but could be identified by red underlining on their name tags 116 Before 1933 prison sex had been common but its prevention and punishment became much more important under Nazi rule Any prisoner who tried to initiate a same sex relationship even if it did not result in any physical contact could expect harsh punishment The wardens relied on informers among the inmates to deter same sex activity Despite facing discrimination however homosexual prisoners were much better off in the prisons than in concentration camps 117 Castration Edit Friedrich Paul von Groszheim 1908 2006 was spared from a concentration camp after agreeing to castration under pressure in 1938 In June 1935 the Sterilization Law de was amended to allow individual convicted criminals to be voluntarily sterilized to eliminate their degenerate sex drive 105 118 During the Nazi era the regime considered extending the policy of involuntary castration that was previously applied to child molesters and other sex offenders to homosexuals but such a law was never passed 119 In 1943 Gestapo chief Ernst Kaltenbrunner advocated for a law for involuntary castration of homosexuals and sex offenders but withdrew this request because he believed the Gestapo could ensure castrations were carried out where it desired 120 121 Although the fiction of voluntary castration was maintained some homosexuals were subject to severe pressure and coercion to agree to castration There was no age limit some boys as young as 16 were castrated Those who agreed to castration were exempted from being transferred to a concentration camp after completing their legal sentence a threat which was leveraged to encourage men to volunteer for the procedure 122 An estimated 400 to 800 men were castrated in this manner 60 Concentration camps Edit 5 September 1940 Gestapo order for the detention of Hans Retzlaff 1901 1940 an incorrigible homosexual in Sachsenhausen Unlike the legal punishment system prisoners in concentration camps were held in indefinite detention at the mercy of the SS and Gestapo 123 The use of concentration camp detention for homosexuals began in 1934 and 1935 it was initially seen as a temporary re education measure 56 In May 1935 the Prussian police detained 513 accused homosexuals in protective custody 55 Himmler did not consider a time limited prison sentence was sufficient to eliminate homosexuality 124 After 1939 it was a policy to send men who were convicted of multiple homosexual acts to a concentration camp after they served their prison sentences 123 On 12 July 1940 the Reich Security Main Office formalized this policy decreeing in future all homosexuals who seduced more than one partner shall be taken into preventive custody by the police after their release from prison 56 According to research in some parts of Germany non aggravated homosexuality as a rule was not punished with concentration camp imprisonment which was mostly reserved for those who were considered youth seducers or had been convicted of male prostitution or child molestation In other cases men who were convicted with homosexuality combined with other criminal offenses or political opposition could be transferred to a concentration camp 125 Historian Clayton J Whisnant states homosexual concentration camp prisoners experienced some of the worst conditions that humans have ever been forced to endure 126 In the prewar camps Jewish and homosexual prisoners ranked at the bottom of the prisoner hierarchy and homosexual Jews fared the worst 127 Along with Jews homosexuals were often assigned to segregated labor details and had to perform especially dirty and backbreaking work and endured worse conditions than the rest of the camp 56 128 129 Homosexual prisoners rarely benefited from solidarity from other prisoners even Jews because of widespread homophobia 128 130 Surviving the camps often required either building social networks with other prisoners or being promoted to a position of authority Homosexuals were disadvantaged in both of these aspects some younger more attractive men could obtain advantages from a sexual relationship with a kapo prison functionary or SS guard 131 After 1942 conditions improved because of the need for forced labor and some homosexual prisoners were promoted because of the influx of non German prisoners who were ineligible for kapo positions 132 About 5 000 to 6 000 homosexual men were imprisoned in the concentration camps 133 Sociologist Rudiger Lautmann examined 2 542 known cases of homosexual concentration camp prisoners and determined their death rate was 60 percent compared with 42 percent of political prisoners and 35 percent of Jehovah s Witnesses 56 Assuming a death rate of between 53 and 60 percent at least 3 100 to 3 600 men died in the camps 134 SS guards murdered homosexual prisoners out of cruelty or during sadistic games disguising the deaths as natural causes 135 At camps like Mauthausen and Flossenburg it was standard practice to work homosexual prisoners to death In mid 1942 almost all the homosexual prisoners at Sachsenhausen at least two hundred were executed Many homosexual prisoners at Ravensbruck died at the same time 56 123 The chances of survival depended on which camp the men were incarcerated in Neuengamme was considered less harsh for homosexual prisoners than Buchenwald Dachau or Sachsenhausen 136 Initially homosexuals were differentiated from other prisoners with a badge bearing capital letter A that was used at Lichtenberg The standardized Nazi concentration camp badges that included a pink triangle for homosexual prisoners were adopted in 1938 56 Homosexual prisoners were a preferred target of Nazi human experimentation during the last years of Nazi rule The best known experiments involving homosexual men were attempts by endocrinologist Carl Vaernet to change prisoners sexual orientations by implanting a pellet that released testosterone Most of the victims non consenting prisoners at Buchenwald died shortly thereafter 132 137 Homosexual and Jewish prisoners were also given experimental treatments for typhus at Buchenwald for phosphorus burns at Sachsenhausen and were used for testing opiates and Pervitin 132 Some homosexual prisoners were castrated 138 Death penalty Edit Wilhelm Zimek 1919 1942 persecuted for desertion and homosexuality executed at Wolfenbuttel Prison de In a 1937 speech Himmler argued SS men who had served sentences for homosexuality should be transferred to a concentration camp and shot while trying to escape 123 139 a This policy was never implemented 123 although a few death sentences against SS men for homosexual acts were pronounced between 1937 and 1940 141 In a speech on 18 August 1941 Hitler argued homosexuality in the Hitler Youth should be punished by death 142 After learning of Hitler s remark Himmler drafted a decree mandating the death penalty to any member of the SS or police who were found guilty of engaging in a homosexual act Hitler who was worried the decree might encourage left wing propaganda that homosexuality was especially prevalent in Germany signed the decree on 15 November 1941 on the condition there was no publicity 142 After the decree only a few death sentences were pronounced 99 143 Himmler often commuted the sentence especially if he thought the accused was not a committed homosexual Many of those whose sentences were commuted were sent to serve in the Dirlewanger Brigade where most were killed 99 After late 1943 because of military losses it was policy to send SS men who were convicted of homosexuality into the army 144 The 1933 law on habitual criminals allowed for execution after the third conviction 145 On 4 September 1941 a new law allowed the execution of dangerous sex offenders and habitual criminals when the protection of the Volksgemeinschaft or the need for just atonement require it 146 This law enabled authorities to pronounce death sentences against homosexuals and is known to have been employed in four cases in Austria 146 147 In 1943 Wilhelm Keitel authorized the death penalty for German soldiers who were convicted of homosexuality in particularly serious cases 148 149 Only a few such executions are known to have occurred mostly in conjunction with other charges especially desertion 148 Some homosexuals were executed at Nazi euthanasia centers such as Bernburg and Meseritz Obrawalde It is difficult to estimate the number of homosexual men who were directly killed during the Nazi era 134 Continued existence EditHistorian Alexander Zinn de estimates about one quarter of German homosexual men were investigated during the Nazi era and that up to one tenth of those were imprisoned According to Zinn this rate is evidence of indifference among the general German population towards homosexuality denunciation of consensual homosexual relations was less common 103 Zinn said that while all homosexuals in Nazi Germany suffered from the indirect effects of criminalization their lives cannot be reduced to fear of arrest and they retained a limited degree of personal freedom 150 Even before 1933 many homosexual men married women and the Nazis rise to power provided an added incentive although such marriages were usually unhappy Homosexual desires did not go away some men sought homosexual contact outside of marriage risking denunciation by an unhappy wife Some men organized lavender marriages with lesbians they had known before 1933 151 Although nearly all homosexuals tried to avoid the attention of the authorities 101 men continued to find sexual partners at Kreuzberg bathhouses and Munzstrasse de movie theaters and by cruising in places such as Alexanderplatz and the Friedrichstrasse in Berlin Many suffered from disrupted relationships loneliness or loss of self esteem 152 A significant number of homosexual and bisexual men including 25 percent of those persecuted in Hamburg committed suicide 112 134 According to historian Manfred Herzer de homosexual men and women who avoided persecution belonged to the willing subjects and beneficiaries of the Nazi state just like other German men and women 152 The likelihood of being persecuted was lower for those who suppressed their sex lives or served the higher goals of Nazism 153 Some German homosexuals joined the Nazi Party or fought for Germany during World War II 152 War and armed service provided an opportunity for sexual encounters with other men both civilians and members of the armed services There were also opportunities for non consensual sex with other soldiers subordinates people from occupied countries and prisoners Both types of sex might be practiced by men who did not identify as homosexual During the last years of the war there were increased opportunities for sexual encounters in bombed out cities 154 Himmler ordered culturally prominent German homosexuals to be ignored and required his permission to be obtained before they were arrested 65 155 For example writer Erich Ebermayer continued living with his male partner during the Nazi dictatorship other homosexual couples and the bisexual actor Gustaf Grundgens were left alone 65 Aftermath EditNazi Germany s persecution of homosexuals is considered to be the most severe episode in a longer history of discrimination and violence against homosexuals never before or since have so many homosexuals been sentenced to prison in such a short period even disregarding concentration camp imprisonment 156 157 An estimated 100 000 men were arrested and of these half spent time in prison 158 Post war attitudes towards homosexuality were influenced by Nazi propaganda associating homosexuality with criminality and medical illness 158 Because the various Allied countries considered homosexuality a crime those prisoners who had not finished serving their sentence under Paragraph 175 had to do so but those who had never been convicted or who had already served the full time were released 159 Arrest and incarceration of men for consensual homosexual acts continued to be commonplace in West Germany and Austria through the 1960s 160 161 between 1945 and 1969 West Germany convicted about 50 000 men the same number of men as the Nazis had convicted during their twelve year rule 162 The 1935 version of Paragraph 175 one of the few Nazi era laws that remained in force and unaltered in West Germany 163 was upheld by the Federal Constitutional Court in 1957 164 and remained in force until 1969 when homosexuality was partially decriminalized 165 In 1962 historian Hans Joachim Schoeps commented For the homosexuals the Third Reich has not yet ended 166 167 Although not entirely accurate this statement captured the view of many West German homosexuals 166 In East Germany homosexuality was rarely prosecuted after 1957 and was decriminalized in 1968 161 the number of convictions there was much lower 162 The decriminalization did not result in widespread social acceptance and Paragraph 175 was not repealed until 1994 60 Recognition as victims of National Socialism Edit Homosexual concentration camp prisoners were not recognized as victims of National Socialism 168 133 Just as there was a hierarchy among prisoners in the concentration camps there was a hierarchy among survivors 133 Reparations and state pensions available to other groups were refused to gay men who were still classified as criminals Political prisoners and persecuted Jews could be disqualified from victim status if they were discovered to be homosexual 169 In the 1950s Rudolf Klimmer unsuccessfully petitioned the East German government to recognize homosexuals as victims of Nazism and offer them compensation in line with that for other victims 170 In West Germany in the 1970s activists made similar demands but these were rejected 171 In 1985 the Nazi persecution of homosexuals was officially recognized for the first time in a speech de by West German president Richard von Weizsacker 60 172 In 2002 Germany annulled the Nazi era judgements under Paragraph 175 173 and in 2017 victims were offered compensation 174 The 2017 annulment of judgements and compensation extended to men who were convicted after 1945 making this the only case in which the German state offered reparations for acts not considered typical Nazi injustice that would not be possible in a democratic state 175 Legacy Edit Berlin s Memorial to Homosexuals Persecuted Under Nazism in Tiergarten Park Before 1970 there were hardly any references to the persecution of homosexuals This changed in the aftermath of the Stonewall riots and the partial decriminalization of homosexuality in Germany that triggered the era of gay liberation 176 The memory of the Nazi persecution of homosexuals came to the attention of the LGBT community in the 1970s as large scale LGBT rights movements developed 177 The awareness of homosexuals as a separate category of Nazi victims began in the United States and was later adopted by German homosexual activists 178 The term Homocaust came into use shortly after Holocaust activists claimed there had been 250 000 deaths but historical research soon refuted this number 179 Martin Sherman s 1979 play Bent brought additional attention of the Nazi persecution of homosexuals in English speaking countries 180 The pink triangle became one of the most prominent symbols of gay liberation in the United States 181 176 Activists use the symbol to connect Nazi persecution to present day discrimination and violence against LGBT people and to mobilize opposition against it 182 The practice of laying memorial wreaths in concentration camps in memory of homosexual victims began in the 1970s 60 172 Permanent memorials were added to several concentration camps including Mauthausen 1984 Sachsenhausen 1992 Dachau 1995 and Buchenwald 2002 133 172 This memorialization encountered strong resistance from established survivor associations 133 Memorials have also been constructed in several German cities such as Frankfurt 1994 Cologne 1995 Berlin 2008 and Lubeck de 2016 Memorials to Nazi persecution of homosexuals have also been constructed in Amsterdam Bologna Turin Barcelona San Francisco New York Montevideo Sydney and Tel Aviv he 183 184 Hundreds of Stolpersteine have been installed to commemorate individual victims of the Nazis anti homosexual persecution 112 In the United States there was less emphasis on memorialization 185 and more explicit comparisons between the Jewish Holocaust and persecution of homosexuals German gay activists tended to see a close parallel to the Nazi persecution of communists and socialists 186 Sources attesting to the Nazi persecution of homosexuals are scarce 187 Most homosexuals especially those who avoided arrest never spoke about their experiences 187 188 The Nazis destroyed a great number of records including the archive of the Reich Central Office for the Combating of Homosexuality and Abortion Remaining sources are mainly in the form of police and court records 187 In 1972 concentration camp survivor Josef Kohout published his memoir The Men With the Pink Triangle which is one of few accounts from a pink triangle prisoner 189 The first historical research appeared at the end of the 1970s 190 See also EditList of LGBT monuments and memorialsReferences EditNotes Edit A euphemism for the premeditated murder of concentration camp prisoners 140 Citations Edit Whisnant 2016 p 92 Whisnant 2016 p 4 Marhoefer 2015 p 214 Whisnant 2016 pp 4 17 Giles 2010 p 385 Marhoefer 2015 pp 202 203 Whisnant 2016 p 200 Marhoefer 2015 p 176 Giles 2001 p 240 a b c d Giles 2010 p 387 Whisnant 2016 p 106 a b c Wachsmann 2015 p 144 a b c d Wachsmann 2015 p 146 Marhoefer 2015 pp 151 152 Marhoefer 2015 p 152 Whisnant 2016 pp 206 207 a b Whisnant 2016 p 208 Marhoefer 2015 p 154 Hancock 1998 p 635 Knoll 2017 p 227 Marhoefer 2015 p 155 Whisnant 2016 p 201 a b Whisnant 2016 p 209 Giles 2010 pp 386 387 Marhoefer 2015 p 193 a b Giles 2010 p 386 Herzog 2011 p 71 Marhoefer 2015 pp 175 176 Whisnant 2016 pp 209 210 Marhoefer 2015 pp 174 175 Whisnant 2016 p 210 a b Whisnant 2016 p 211 Herzog 2011 p 81 Whisnant 2016 p 212 a b c Wachsmann 2015 p 145 a b Schwartz 2021 p 385 Whisnant 2016 p 213 Whisnant 2016 pp 213 214 a b c d Whisnant 2016 p 214 Herzog 2011 p 73 a b c Schwartz 2021 p 386 a b c d e f g h Zinn 2020b p 7 a b c d e f g Whisnant 2016 p 215 Snyder 2007 p 104 a b c Giles 2010 p 388 Schwartz 2021 p 387 a b Murphy 2017 p 122 Longerich 2011 p 231 a b c d Zinn 2020b p 8 a b c d e Whisnant 2016 p 216 Zinn 2020a p 21 a b c Zinn 2020b p 11 Zinn 2018 p 31 Zinn 2020b pp 8 10 a b c Giles 2010 p 392 a b c d e f g h Zinn 2020b p 12 a b Longerich 2011 p 238 Longerich 2011 p 472 a b Grau 2014 p 44 a b c d e Schwartz 2021 p 383 a b Crouthamel 2018 p 434 Snyder 2007 p 33 a b Schlagdenhauffen 2018 pp 14 15 Snyder 2007 pp 24 110 a b c d Schwartz 2021 p 388 Snyder 2007 pp 106 127 Crouthamel 2018 p 435 Snyder 2007 pp 54 55 Snyder 2007 pp 107 109 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 15 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 32 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 8 Whisnant 2016 p 228 Kirchknopf 2018 p 48 Kirchknopf 2018 p 44 a b Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 12 Seidl 2018 p 54 Seidl 2018 pp 54 56 Seidl 2018 pp 57 58 Seidl 2018 pp 54 55 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 11 Seidl 2018 p 55 Vendrell 2020 p 4 Snyder 2007 p 105 Giles 2010 pp 390 391 a b Whisnant 2016 p 227 a b c Giles 2010 p 390 Snyder 2007 pp 105 106 a b c d e f Giles 2010 p 389 Longerich 2011 p 232 Longerich 2011 pp 232 233 Giles 2010 pp 389 390 Whisnant 2016 p 226 Giles 2010 p 391 Whisnant 2016 p 236 Herzog 2011 p 72 Micheler 2002 p 116 a b Lautmann 2020 p 178 a b c Giles 2010 p 394 Giles 2010 p 395 a b c d e Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 24 a b c Whisnant 2016 p 217 a b c Zinn 2020b p 10 Wunschmann 2015 pp 141 142 a b Whisnant 2016 p 218 Wunschmann 2015 p 141 Schwartz 2014 pp 13 14 Schwartz 2021 pp 392 393 Schwartz 2014 p 14 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 pp 24 25 a b Schwartz 2021 pp 388 389 a b c Bollmann 2014 p 129 Hajkova Anna 4 March 2019 Queer History and the Holocaust On History Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 29 January 2022 Whisnant 2016 pp 216 217 Longerich 2011 p 227 Wachsmann 2015 pp 147 148 Wachsmann 2015 pp 148 149 Wachsmann 2015 pp 146 147 Wachsmann 2015 pp 143 144 146 Murphy 2017 p 120 Giles 2001 pp 248 249 Wachsmann 2015 p 147 a b c d e Giles 2010 p 393 Zinn 2020b pp 11 12 Zinn 2020b pp 12 13 Whisnant 2016 p 219 Wunschmann 2015 pp 141 143 a b Wunschmann 2015 p 143 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 25 Whisnant 2016 pp 220 221 Whisnant 2016 p 220 a b c Whisnant 2016 p 223 a b c d e Schwartz 2021 p 382 a b c Lorenz 2018 p 11 Whisnant 2016 pp 222 223 Whisnant 2016 p 221 Weindling 2015 pp 183 184 Weindling 2015 p 30 Longerich 2011 p 234 Westermann 2018 pp 98 99 104 105 Lorenz 2018 p 15 a b Giles 2010 pp 393 394 Longerich 2011 p 239 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 33 Lorenz 2018 pp 12 13 a b Scheck 2020 p 422 Lorenz 2018 p 13 a b Storkmann 2021 p 28 Lorenz 2018 pp 14 16 Zinn 2020b pp 11 13 Whisnant 2016 p 231 a b c Whisnant 2016 p 232 Schwartz 2021 p 389 Whisnant 2016 p 239 Murphy 2017 p 116 Zinn 2020b p 13 Murphy 2017 p 123 a b Whisnant 2016 p 240 Newsome 2022 pp 59 60 Jensen 2002 pp 321 322 a b Whisnant 2016 p 242 a b Schwartz 2021 p 379 Whisnant 2016 p 250 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 35 Whisnant 2016 p 251 a b Grau 2014 p 48 Schwartz 2021 p 377 Zinn 2020b p 6 Schlagdenhauffen 2018 pp 34 35 Jensen 2002 pp 323 324 Grau 2014 p 45 a b c Jensen 2002 p 336 Braun 2021 p 91 Braun 2021 p 77 Braun 2021 p 78 a b Lautmann 2020 p 175 Jensen 2002 p 321 Lautmann 2020 p 177 Lautmann 2020 pp 175 177 Seifert 2003 pp 94 108 Seifert 2003 p 94 Jensen 2002 pp 320 326 327 Whisnant 2016 p 252 Orangias et al 2018 pp 707 709 Jensen 2002 p 338 Jensen 2002 p 342 a b c Schlagdenhauffen 2018 p 21 Whisnant 2016 pp 240 241 Jensen 2002 p 325 Grau 2014 p 43 Sources Edit Books Edit Herzog Dagmar 2011 Sexuality in Europe A Twentieth Century History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 87096 2 Longerich Peter 2011 Heinrich Himmler A Life Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 161705 8 Lorenz Gottfried 2018 Todesurteile und Hinrichtungen wegen homosexueller Handlungen wahrend der NS Zeit Mann mannliche Internetprostitution Und andere Texte zur Geschichte und zur Situation der Homosexuellen in Deutschland Death sentences and executions for homosexual acts during the Nazi era male male internet prostitution and other texts on the history and situation of homosexuals in Germany in German LIT Verlag ISBN 978 3 643 13992 4 Marhoefer Laurie 2015 Sex and the Weimar Republic German Homosexual Emancipation and the Rise of the Nazis University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 1957 9 Newsome W Jake 2022 Pink Triangle Legacies Coming Out in the Shadow of the Holocaust Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 5017 6549 0 Snyder David Raub 2007 Sex Crimes Under the Wehrmacht University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 0742 4 Storkmann Klaus 2021 Tabu und Toleranz Der Umgang mit Homosexualitat in der Bundeswehr 1955 bis 2000 Taboo and Tolerance Homosexuality and the Bundeswehr 1955 to 2000 in German De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 073290 0 Vendrell Javier Samper 2020 Seduction of Youth Print Culture and Homosexual Rights in the Weimar Republic University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4875 2503 3 Wachsmann Nikolaus 2015 2004 Hitler s Prisons Legal Terror in Nazi Germany Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22829 8 Weindling Paul 2015 Victims and Survivors of Nazi Human Experiments Science and Suffering in the Holocaust Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4411 7990 6 Whisnant Clayton J 2016 Queer Identities and Politics in Germany A History 1880 1945 Columbia University Press ISBN 978 1 939594 10 5 Wunschmann Kim 2015 Before Auschwitz Jewish Prisoners in the Prewar Concentration Camps Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 96759 5 Zinn Alexander 2018 Aus dem Volkskorper entfernt Homosexuelle Manner im Nationalsozialismus Removed from the national body Homosexual men under National Socialism in German Campus Verlag de ISBN 978 3 593 50863 4 Chapters Edit Braun Kathrin 2021 Justice at Last The Persecution of Homosexual Men and the Politics of Amends Biopolitics and Historic Justice Coming to Terms with the Injuries of Normality transcript Verlag de pp 77 98 doi 10 1515 9783839445501 004 ISBN 978 3 8394 4550 1 Bollmann Ulf 2014 Gemeinsam gegen das Vergessen Stolpersteine fur homosexuelle NS Opfer Together against oblivion Stolpersteine for homosexual Nazi victims Homosexuelle im Nationalsozialismus Neue Forschungsperspektiven zu Lebenssituationen von lesbischen schwulen bi trans und intersexuellen Menschen 1933 bis 1945 Homosexuals Under National Socialism New Research Perspectives on the Life Circumstances of Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transsexual and Intersexual Persons from 1933 to 1945 in German De Gruyter pp 129 134 doi 10 1524 9783486857504 129 ISBN 978 3 486 85750 4 Giles Geoffrey J 2001 The Institutionalization of Homosexual Panic in the Third Reich Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany Princeton University Press pp 233 255 ISBN 978 0 691 18835 5 Giles Geoffrey J 2010 The Persecution of Gay Men and Lesbians During the Third Reich The Routledge History of the Holocaust Routledge pp 385 396 ISBN 978 0 203 83744 3 Grau Gunter 2014 Die Verfolgung der Homosexualitat im Nationalsozialismus Anmerkungen zum Forschungsstand The persecution of homosexuality under National Socialism Commentary on the state of research In Schwartz Michael ed Homosexuelle im Nationalsozialismus Neue Forschungsperspektiven zu Lebenssituationen von lesbischen schwulen bi trans und intersexuellen Menschen 1933 bis 1945 Homosexuals Under National Socialism New Research Perspectives on the Life Circumstances of Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transsexual and Intersexual Persons from 1933 to 1945 in German De Gruyter pp 43 52 doi 10 1524 9783486857504 43 ISBN 978 3 486 85750 4 Kirchknopf Johann K 2018 The Anschluss Also a sexual annexation Queer in Europe during the Second World War Council of Europe pp 39 52 ISBN 978 92 871 8464 1 Archived from the original on 17 February 2022 Knoll Albert 2017 Es muss alles versucht werden um dieses widernaturliche Laster auszurotten Homosexuelle Haftlinge in den fruhen Konzentrationslagern Everything must be tried to eradicate this unnatural vice Homosexual prisoners in the early concentration camps der schrankenlosesten Willkur ausgeliefert Haftlinge der fruhen Konzentrationslager 1933 1936 37 at the mercy of the most unrestrained arbitrariness prisoners of the early concentration camps 1933 1936 37 in German Campus Verlag pp 221 246 ISBN 978 3 593 50702 6 Lautmann Rudiger 2020 Engfuhrungen des Erinnerns an die NS Homosexuellenrepression und an die Shoah Ko Erinnerung Grenzen Herausforderungen und Perspektiven des neueren Shoah Gedenkens Commemoration Limits Challenges and Possibilities in Contemporary Shoah Remembrance in German De Gruyter pp 175 192 ISBN 978 3 11 062270 6 Murphy Melanie 2017 Homosexuality and the Law in the Third Reich Nazi Law From Nuremberg to Nuremberg Bloomsbury Academic pp 110 124 ISBN 978 1 350 00726 0 Schlagdenhauffen Regis 2018 Queer life in Europe during the Second World War and Punishing homosexual men and women under the Third Reich Queer in Europe during the Second World War Council of Europe pp 7 20 21 38 ISBN 978 92 871 8464 1 Archived from the original on 17 February 2022 Schwartz Michael 2014 Verfolgte Homosexuelle oder Lebenssituationen von LSBT QI Persecution of homosexuals or life circumstances of LGBT QI Homosexuelle im Nationalsozialismus Neue Forschungsperspektiven zu Lebenssituationen von lesbischen schwulen bi trans und intersexuellen Menschen 1933 bis 1945 Homosexuals Under National Socialism New Research Perspectives on the Life Circumstances of Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transsexual and Intersexual Persons from 1933 to 1945 in German De Gruyter pp 11 18 doi 10 1524 9783486857504 11 ISBN 978 3 486 85750 4 Seidl Jan 2018 Legal Imbroglio in the Protectorate of Bohemia Moravia Queer in Europe during the Second World War Council of Europe pp 53 62 ISBN 978 92 871 8464 1 Archived from the original on 17 February 2022 Zinn Alexander 2020a Gegen das Sittengesetz Staatliche Homosexuellenverfolgung in Deutschland 1933 1969 Against the Moral Law State persecution of homosexuals in Germany 1933 1969 Homosexuelle in Deutschland 1933 1969 Homosexuals in Germany 1933 1969 V amp R unipress pp 15 48 ISBN 978 3 8471 1169 6 Journal articles Edit Crouthamel Jason 2018 Homosexuality and Comradeship Destabilizing the Hegemonic Masculine Ideal in Nazi Germany Central European History 51 3 419 439 doi 10 1017 S0008938918000602 ISSN 0008 9389 Hancock Eleanor 1998 Only the Real the True the Masculine Held Its Value Ernst Rohm Masculinity and Male Homosexuality Journal of the History of Sexuality 8 4 616 641 ISSN 1043 4070 JSTOR 3840412 PMID 11620476 Jensen Erik N 2002 The Pink Triangle and Political Consciousness Gays Lesbians and the Memory of Nazi Persecution Journal of the History of Sexuality 11 1 2 319 349 doi 10 1353 sex 2002 0008 ISSN 1043 4070 JSTOR 3704560 Orangias Joseph Simms Jeannie French Sloane 2018 The Cultural Functions and Social Potential of Queer Monuments A Preliminary Inventory and Analysis Journal of Homosexuality 65 6 705 726 doi 10 1080 00918369 2017 1364106 PMID 28777713 Micheler Stefan 2002 Homophobic Propaganda and the Denunciation of Same Sex Desiring Men under National Socialism Journal of the History of Sexuality 11 1 105 130 doi 10 1353 sex 2002 0011 ISSN 1535 3605 Scheck Raffael 2020 The Danger of Moral Sabotage Western Prisoners of War on Trial for Homosexual Relations in Nazi Germany Journal of the History of Sexuality 29 3 418 446 doi 10 7560 JHS29305 Schwartz Michael 2021 Homosexuelle im modernen Deutschland Eine Langzeitperspektive auf historische Transformationen Homosexuals in Modern Germany A Long Term Perspective on Historical Transformations Vierteljahrshefte fur Zeitgeschichte in German 69 3 377 414 doi 10 1515 vfzg 2021 0028 Seifert Dorthe 2003 Between Silence and License The Representation of the National Socialist Persecution of Homosexuality in Anglo American Fiction and Film History amp Memory 15 2 94 129 doi 10 1353 ham 2003 0012 ISSN 1527 1994 Westermann Edward B 2018 Shot While Trying to Escape Procedural Legality and State Sanctioned Killing in Nazi Germany Dapim Studies on the Holocaust 32 2 93 111 doi 10 1080 23256249 2018 1459277 Zinn Alexander 2020b Das sind Staatsfeinde Die NS Homosexuellenverfolgung 1933 1945 They are enemies of the state The Nazi persecution of homosexuals 1933 1945 PDF Bulletin des Fritz Bauer Instituts in German 6 13 ISSN 1868 4211 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany amp oldid 1135938186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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