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   From: "The Left Fork"    
   Subject: The Extermination of Homosexuals   
   Message-ID:    
   Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2016 11:07:41 +0200 (CEST)   
   Newsgroups: dfw.eats,dfw.jobs,dfw.personals   
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   Homosexuals were one of the specially selected groups in the    
   concentration camps. Far less numerous than other prisoners,    
   they experienced a hell of a particular kind. The first    
   transport of homosexuals noted by the Nazis arrived at    
   Fuhlsbuttel concentration camp in the fall of 1933. This was a    
   new prisoner category. They were marked with the letter “A,”    
   which was later replaced by the pink triangle (Rose Winkeln). As    
   opposed to the Jews and the Roma, the Nazis intended not to    
   exterminate homosexuals, but to “reeducate” them. The death rate    
   among homosexuals was high, especially when compared to other    
   groups imprisoned for purposes of reeducation. Fifty-five    
   percent of homosexual prisoners died in the camps, as opposed to    
   40% of political prisoners and 34.7% of the Jehovah’s Witnesses.   
      
   Between 5,000 and 15,000 gays died in the camps, although this    
   figure might have been much higher since homosexuals, as opposed    
   to Jews and Roma, could easily conceal their otherness.    
   Homosexuals were treated as the lowest of the groups within the    
   prisoner population. As a rule, they obtained the worst labor    
   assignments, and were often rejected by their fellow prisoners    
   and treated as deviants. The camp capos who oversaw the labor    
   details also refused to help them. They had limited contact with    
   the outside world; it rarely happened that families maintained    
   contact with prisoners wearing the pink triangle, and their    
   friends outside had no desire to maintain contact with those who    
   were in the camps. Impulses of solidarity occurred sporadically    
   among the homosexuals themselves. As Raimund Schnabel writes in    
   his study of Dachau, “Those whose behavior could be called    
   perverted were seldom found among the homosexuals; nevertheless,    
   there were some sycophants and fraudsters. The prisoners wearing    
   the pink triangle never lived long. The SS murdered them quickly    
   and systematically.”   
      
   Little is known about the lesbians who were in the camps.    
   Historians are aware of only one document that lists a woman’s    
   homosexuality as the reason for her being incarcerated in the    
   Ravensbrück camp. The eleventh woman on a transport list to that    
   camp, arriving on November 30, 1940, is a 26-year-old Jewish    
   woman, Ella S. Next to her name, the word “lesbian” is written.    
   She was placed among the political prisoners, but little is    
   known of her subsequent fate. In Sachsenhausen, men wearing the    
   pink triangle were separated from the rest of the prisoners in a    
   so-called “sissy block.” More than 180 of them were confined to    
   this former student dormitory, without any distinction among    
   them: from unqualified manual laborers and shopkeepers to    
   musicians, professors, and clergymen, and even aristocrats and    
   magnates. Homosexuals were not allowed to hold any prisoner    
   functionary positions. They were also forbidden to converse with    
   prisoners from other blocks. It must have been feared that they    
   would entice others into homosexual behavior. There is evidence,    
   however, that such acts occurred more frequently in other blocks    
   than in the one for homosexuals.   
      
   Homosexual prisoners were forced to sleep in nightshirts and to    
   hold their hands outside the covers. This was supposed to    
   prevent masturbation. One prisoner recalled that “anyone caught    
   without underwear or with their hands under the covers—and there    
   were several checks each night—was taken outside, had several    
   buckets of water dumped on them, and was made to stand that way    
   for a good hour. Only a few survived, especially when there was    
   a centimeter of ice on the windowpanes. Bronchitis was prevalent    
   as a result, and it was rare for a homosexual to come back alive    
   from the hospital.”   
      
   A block supervisor in Gross-Rosen Concentration Camp (now    
   Rogoznica, Poland) was notorious for exceptional cruelty. As    
   Józef Gielo writes in his Gross-Rosen camp memoirs, “this German    
   convict and sexual pervert lured young boys into his room and,    
   after several days of having relations, murdered them in cold    
   blood. He also murdered anyone who witnessed his actions, even    
   accidentally.”   
      
   Homosexuals were assigned to particularly hard labor in    
   Sachsenhausen, Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Auschwitz, and other    
   camps. They labored in the Sachsenhausen cement plant and in the    
   underground factories near Buchenwald that manufactured V-2    
   rockets. Rudolf Hoess, who held the post of commandant of the    
   Sachsenhausen camp before being transferred to Auschwitz, was    
   convinced that sexual orientation could be changed through hard    
   labor. The results of this reeducation were lamentable: the    
   majority of the prisoners under his control died. The    
   Sachsenhausen camp, regarded until 1942 as “the Auschwitz for    
   homosexuals,” held large numbers of homosexuals. They labored    
   mostly at quarrying clay and making bricks in the camp.    
   Regardless of the weather, they had to push carts full of clay    
   towards the machines that produced the bricks. This work was    
   particularly difficult because the pits were almost empty; most    
   of the clay had already been dug out of them. The half-dead    
   prisoners pushed their carts uphill, urged on all the time by    
   the SS men and the capos guarding them. The carts ran on tracks,    
   but they frequently derailed and tumbled back downhill, crushing    
   defenseless prisoners who did not even attempt to get out of the    
   way. The sounds of breaking bones and the lashings of the blows    
   directed at the prisoners who remained alive could be heard.   
      
   L.D. von Classen-Neudegg, who survived Sachsenhausen    
   Concentration Camp, describes the death of some 300 homosexuals    
   laboring in the cement plant. “We learned that we were being    
   separated by a penal order and transferred the next morning to    
   the unit working in the cement plant. We trembled, because the    
   death rate among workers in that factory was higher than    
   anywhere else. Guarded by soldiers with automatic rifles, we had    
   to run to our workplace in rows of five. They hurried us along    
   with blows from their rifle butts and bullwhips. Forced to carry    
   twenty corpses, those who remained alive were covered with blood    
   by the time they got there. This was, alas, only the beginning    
   of the hell. Two-thirds of my fellow prisoners died within two    
   months. To kill someone attempting to escape paid off for the    
   soldiers. For each prisoner he killed, a soldier received five    
   marks and three days’ leave. They used the bullwhips most often    
   in the morning, when they were forcing us down into the pits.    
   ‘Only 50 are left alive,’ the man beside me whispered several    
   days later. A certain sergeant told me one morning, ‘that’s    
   enough. Do you want to cross over to the other side? It won’t    
   hurt. I’m an excellent shot.’”   
      
   Tomasz Gedziorowski, the author of the book Widma [The Spectres]    
   recounts the relations between a Dachau labor detail capo, Georg    
   Schittkett, and younger prisoners: “He was a short, slender man    
   with something feline about his movements. He moved almost    
   noiselessly through the corridors and the cellars where potatoes    
   were stored. His motionless face betrayed no feelings. His stony    
   features only softened when he paused to talk with his favorites    
   in the labor detail. They were two young boys, one from Lódz and    
   the other a Pole from France, whom he affectionately called    
   ‘Bubi.’ Bubi had a plump face with gentle girlish features, and    
   there was nothing manly about the way he swished his hips when    
   he walked. The capo’s assistant was a husky young German wearing    
   a black triangle.”   
      
   Over time, the ‘Nazis perfected the technique of using other    
   methods than exhaustive labor to exterminate homosexuals. In the    
   Flossenbürg camp, for instance, they opened a house of    
   prostitution and forced homosexuals to visit it as a form of    
   treatment. The prostitutes were Jewish and Roma women from the    
   nearby women’s camp. The Nazis cut holes in the walls through    
   which they could observe the “behavior” of their homosexual    
   prisoners. Homosexuals who were cured of their “sickness” were    
   sent for “good behavior” to the Dirlewanger division, formed of    
   prisoners to combat Russian partisans on the eastern front.   
      
   In 1943, Himmler issued a new decree allowing homosexuals who    
   submitted to castration and demonstrated good behavior to be    
   released from the camps. Some of them took advantage of this    
   ruling, although “walking out the gates of the camps” did not    
   mean they were no longer under the “care” of the Nazis. They    
   were assigned to the penal Dirlewanger division and sent into    
   combat, which equaled a death sentence. The death rate among the    
   soldiers in this division, which was notorious for its brutality    
   towards Russian partisans, was extremely high.   
      
   Homosexuals were subjected to medical experiments. A Danish    
   endocrinologist, Carl Vaernet, castrated 18 homosexuals in the    
   Buchenwald camp and then injected them with high doses of male    
   hormones. The goal of the experiment was to discover whether    
   they would be interested in the opposite sex following such    
   procedures. The results remain unknown, since a yellow fever    
   epidemic in the camp caused the experiment to be suspended.    
   Vaernet carried out similar experiments at the Neuengamme camp.   
      
   At the end of the war, the majority of homosexuals were freed    
   from camps in both parts of divided Germany. However, the    
   homophobia directed against them by the public remained strong.    
   Article 175—the basis for sending thousands of innocent people    
   to concentration camps—remained in force in the DDR until 1967,    
   and in West Germany until 1969. There were some American and    
   British lawyers who demanded that homosexuals convicted under    
   Article 175 serve out their full sentences. For instance, if    
   someone had been sentenced to eight years and served five years    
   of the sentence in prison followed by three years in a    
   concentration camp, the lawyers demanded that the person return    
   to prison to serve out three years. The number of people forced    
   to “complete” their sentences in this way is not known. To this    
   day, no financial compensation has been paid to the victims of    
   Nazi homosexual policies, despite the fact that the German    
   government offered compensation to victims of Jewish ethnicity,    
   political prisoners, and other groups that survived the    
   concentration camps. Only the homosexuals were passed over. Many    
   people deny that the homosexuals have a right to any such    
   compensation, stating that victims with an alternative sexual    
   orientation were justly imprisoned, and “had no one but    
   themselves to blame.”   
      
   Significant numbers of the homosexuals who survived the war    
   found themselves unable to return to their families or hometowns    
   following their camp experiences. There were many reasons for    
   this. Above all, however, shame and the fear of being    
   stigmatized motivated homosexuals to change not only their    
   addresses but everything else that could have been associated    
   with their earlier lives.   
      
   The attempts that homosexuals made to conceal their pasts in the    
   camps combined with the attitudes prevailing in postwar Europe    
   to make it difficult for researchers to find many of those who    
   had been sentenced under Article 175. As one of those    
   researchers, Richard Plant, noted in his book The Pink Triangle:    
   “Despite the fact that they no longer had to wear the pink    
   triangles that designated them, they remained marked to the end    
   of their lives.”   
      
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