I recently watched a movie called Paragraph 175. It is a documentary about the Nazis’ treatment of homosexuals in the holocaust. Everyone knows about the 6 million Jews who were murdered during the holocaust. Not many know about the 10-15000 gay men who were sent to concentration camps. Fewer than 10 of those men were still alive at the time of this movie.
Oddly enough there are only 5 cases of lesbians in concentration camps. This was because to the Nazis saw lesbianism as temporary and curable and that lesbians could still procreate for the Aryan cause. Basically it was easy to force procreative sex on lesbians.
Gay men mostly escaped the gas chambers because they were gay Christians. But they were the lowest of the low in the hierarchy of the concentration camps. They were marked with the Pink Triangle.
Here’s an excerpt from The Pink Triangle.com:
“Triangles of various colors were used to identify each category of “undesirable”: yellow for Jews, brown of Gypsies, red for political prisoners, green for criminals, black for anti-socials, purple for Jehovah’s Witnesses, blue for immigrants, and pink for homosexuals.
The pink triangles were slightly larger than the other colored triangles so that guards could identify them from a distance. It is said that those who wore the pink triangles were singled out by the guards to receive the harshest treatment, and when the guards were finished with them, some of the other inmates would harm them as well.”
When the Nazi regime fell almost all others were released homosexuals were branded criminals and sent to prison. East Germany’s version of Paragraph 175 lasted until 1968. West Germany kept the Nazi version of the law until 1969.
If you wish to hear some very moving stories about the experiences of homosexuals during the Nazi Regime Paragraph 175 is an amazing movie.





