Many ceremonies in the Netherlands on 4 May commemorate the victims of World War II. At the homo-monuments in The Hague and Amsterdam, special tribute is paid to gay and lesbian victims of Nazi persecution.
"Magnus Hirschfeld was one of the first sexologists ever," explains Berlin gay activist and filmmaker Rosa von Praunheim, director of ‘The Einstein of Sex'. "And after 200 years of sexual repression by the church he stood up and said I'm fighting for gay rights. As a doctor, as a scientist, as a respected person in society he was close to losing everything and making a lot of people very angry. But he managed in his very humanistic way to convince people who were trying to change the law known as Paragraph 175."
Stamping out sex perversion
Part of German law since 1871, Paragraph 175 was used mainly to keep control of the gay community and, in 1929, Hirschfeld's long-sought effort seemed within reach. A Reichstag committee approved repeal of the law by a narrow margin, supported by both the Communists and Social Democrats. But Hitler's official newspaper gave an ominous response:
"We congratulate you, Mr Hirschfeld, on the victory in committee. But don't think that we Germans will allow these laws to stand for a single day after we have come to power… These efforts are nothing but vulgar, perverted crimes and we will punish them by banishment or hanging."
When the Nazis came to power, they not only prevented the repeal of Paragraph 175 but strengthened its enforcement, as reported on the front page of the New York World Telegram on 17 December 1934:
"Adolf Hitler's secret police, aided by the Elite Guards, began a nationwide drive today to purge the Reich of sexual abnormality. They threw into jail between 500 and 700 men accused of perversion. In recent conferences of the party, Herr Hitler emphasised a determination to stamp out sex perversion among all Nazi organisations. It was recalled that after his ‘purge' of June 30, he made a pledge ‘to German mothers that their sons would never be contaminated if they joined his Storm Troopers'."
Shoe testing and target practice
Oranienburg, just north of Berlin, could be any town in northern Europe. The streets are quiet and the homes well-kept. But it was there, in those years before and during the Second World War, that most of the homosexuals arrested in Berlin were taken - to a concentration camp known as Sachsenhausen. Most of them did not survive the experience.
Prisoners were forced to run in heavy, often ill-fitting, boots. ‘Shoe testing' it was called. But in reality it was a brutal exercise in torturous endurance. The track was covered in different surfaces, asphalt, stones, sand, mud. The prisoners ran for hours upon hours carrying heavy loads on their backs, and were beaten if they fell. Some prisoners were forced to build a wall for target practice - and became targets themselves. Any prisoner who attempted escape was hanged in front of the whole camp. But the worst assignment of all was the Klinkerwerk, or Brick Works, about 2 km away.
"We learned that we were to be segregated in a penal command and the next morning would be transferred as a unit to the Klinkerwerk,” remembers Sachsenhausen survivor L.D. von Classen-Neudegg. “We shuddered because these bone mills were more dreaded than any other work detail. Guarded by staff sergeants with machine guns, we had to sprint in lines of five until we arrived… They kept beating us with rifle butts and bullwhips… To shoot someone "trying to escape" was a profitable business for the guards. For everyone they killed, they received five marks and three days' special furlough…”
Liberation and imprisonment
The gay men ‘lucky' enough to be liberated from Sachsenhausen at the end of the war were then imprisoned for the remainder of their sentence. They were, after all, still guilty of committing homosexual acts. In December 2000, the German parliament officially apologised to gays and lesbians who were persecuted under the Nazi regime. They also expressed regret for the ‘harm done to homosexual citizens up to 1969' for it was only then that Paragraph 175 was repealed.
In April 2000 producer David Swatling took a train to Sachsenhausen, now a memorial site, to view an exhibition by the Schwules (Gay) Museum in Berlin on the persecution of homosexuals during the Nazi regime. The programme he made won the 2001 Seigenthaler Excellence in Audio Award presented by the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association in Washington DC.
A Train to Sachsenhausen was originally broadcast in June 2000 as part of the series Aural Tapestry.























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