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People with a History
An Online Guide to
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans* History
Site Maintainer: Paul Halsall
©1997


Contents:
Section IV: Europe Since World War I

Go to the following pages for other parts of People with a History


Chapter 12: The German Gay Rights Movement

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Chapter 13: The Nazis and the Gays

At one time it was fashionable to claim that the Nazis accepted homosexuality. Partly this was a way to slur the Nazis [as if they need slurring], and partly a reflection of the suppressed homoeroticism of Nazi visual expression. What was overlooked until the 1970s, and the publication of a series of articles by James Steakley in the Toronto Body Politic (quite possibly the best bi-weekly ever produced by the modern gay community), was that the Nazis had directed laws, prisons, and the full panoply of the state against homosexuals; had deliberately destroyed the sex research institute set up by Magnus Hirschfeld; and added homosexuals to the list of those to be eliminated. In other words the world managed to "forget" the holocaust of homosexuals.

In recent years this forgetting has been overcome. Thanks to the efforts of Steakley, Richard Plant and Burchhard Jellonek, as well as the publication by Hans Heger [pseud.] of his memoirs, and the play Bent by Martin Shaw, the suffering of gays under the Third Reich has become well known. Now the Holocaust Museum in Washington DC makes sure to explicate the issues involved.

The total number of gays killed seems to have been about 15,000 [figures from Jellonek], mostly by being worked to death. Gays were not sent as gays to extermination camps. This is massively smaller than the devastation visited on Jewish, Gypsy and Serbian populations. But documenting the Nazi attacks on homosexuals is not part of a "catch-up" game with Jews, or other groups. It is rather an exposing of the possible effects of dehumanizing any group.

Recently some members of the American Religious Right [a diverse group that should no more be demonized than any other], have taken to denying the gay holocaust, and in fact asserting that the Nazi part was essentially homosexual. This is nonsense, and not one serious historian countenances the charge. Nevertheless the book - The Pink Swastika - which makes this charge has been subjected to a line by line refutation, available via here.

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Chapter 14: Post-WW I Europe to 1990

Discussions: Entire Period

Discussions: InterWar Years

Discussions: Entire Period since WWII

Discussions: 1950s

Discussions: 1960s

Discussions: Gay Rights Movement

Discussions: Gay Rights Movement Since Origins

Discussions: 1970s

Discussions: 1980s

Discussions: 1990s

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Texts: Literary

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Chapter 15: The Lesbian and Gay Movement in Europe

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Chapter 16: Europe: Current Politics and Strategies

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© 1997, Paul Halsall, halsall@murray.fordham.edu [a picture!]
Update: 4/11/2007
Note: I read all mail, and keep much of it, but I will not be able to reply to all notes.