Arrests As
police raids on homosexuals began and became widespread, more and
more gays were identified and charged. A man suspected of violating
§ 175 would be questioned, phographed and often softened up with
the use force. Under
extreme pressure and violent interrogation those arrested would then
be forced to give the names and addresses of other homosexuals known
to them.
'It
had a different value then -
a night of love' Gay
survivor, Gad Beck
Survivor
Gad Beck, speaking about his arrest (taken from the documentary
'Paragraph 175')
Often the
Gestapo would have raided the house of a homosexual on arrest and
found an address book that would have lead them to other violators
of § 175.
Statements
and confessions were signed under intense, often physical pressure
and once a signature was obtained the arrestee would be charged. As
most 'confessed' to their crime, few were given a fair hearing or
the chance to fight their case in a court of law.
At the point
of arrest suspects were given no chance to return home or the opportunity
to communicate with their family about their whereabouts. Many did
not see their families again until after their liberation from concentration
camps or after completion of prison terms. Protective custody Homosexuals
charged under § 175 were held in so called schutzhaft or 'protective
custody' at a variety of prisons and detention centres including Waldheim
prison and Fuhlsbutter prison.
'Off
I went to Dachau without a trial - directly to Dachau' Gay survivor Heinz F.
speaking about his arrest (taken from the documentary
'Paragraph 175')
The first
special center to house criminals and homosexuals was erected in 1933
at Dachau, southern Germany, which was largely seen as the prototype
for further camps. The Sachsenhausen camp opened in 1936 to eventually
house more than 200,000 prisoners, including many homosexuals.
When
the huge network of concentration camps were in place throughout Germany
and occupied Europe, many arrested homosexuals found themselves deported
straight from the police custody, without any chance of trial. Violators
of §175 were then held mainly at Auschwitz- Birchenau, Treblinka,
Flossenburg, Neuengamme and Schirmeck, although the Dachau and Sachsenhausen
camps still continued to take homosexuals.
'Voluntary' castration
From
1935 men
convicted under § 175
could 'volunteer' to undergo castration in order to "free themselves"
from their "degenerate sex drive." This
was the idea of SS doctor Himmler. Many homosexuals agreed to the
operation believing that they would then be set free. After the operation
many were then simply re-arrested as they were still thought to be
a degenerate risk to the purity of the Reich.
Lesbians
While gay men made up the majority of homosexual victims, lesbians
were by no means saved from persecution. Although § 175 made
no reference to lesbianism, the Third Reich had no place for women
who could not reproduce and further the Aryan race. Homosexual men
were regarded as largely degenerate and dangerous impurities to the
Reich, where as all women were regarded as 'passive' and in need of
men. Generally lesbianism was regarded as a non-permanent state resulting
from confused friendships rather than a systematic threat.
The
Nazis outlawed and closed all lesbian bars, groups and publications.
Police were encouraged to raid known lesbian meeting places creating
a climate of fear. This forced many women to break off friendships
and to meet in secret. Some escaped possible persecution by entering
into marriages with homosexual friends as a form of cover, others
moved to different towns where they could pass unrecognised. Survivor
Annette Eick, b 1909, escaped to the UK on a false papers that she
had secured from a woman she had met at a lesbian bar. As a Jewish
Lesbian, she would have almost certainly been persecuted had she stayed
in Berlin.
In
some cases police arrested and charged lesbians as 'prostitutes' or
'asocials', which would certainly have lead to prosecution and possible
deportation, but there is no evidence to show that women were ever
made to wear the pink triangle.
There are
documented cases of lesbians being held at the German camp Ravesnbruck.
One woman, Henny Schermann, b 1912, was arrested in 1940 in Frankfurt
and was labelled 'licentious Lesbian' on her police mug shot. Also
identified as a 'stateless Jew', she was deported to Ravensbruck concentration
camp, where two years later she was selected for extermination and
gassed at the Bernburg psychiatric hospital.