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Gay and Jewish in Wartime Berlin: The Link Between Homosexuality and Zionism

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Feb 2, 2022, 3:32:39 AM2/2/22
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In his book “Ziffer and his Kind,” author and Haaretz correspondent Benny
Ziffer quoted a letter he found among his records. In this letter he wrote
to the Tel Aviv Municipality and suggested that the name of Independence
Park, a seafront hot spot for gay pickups, be renamed for Jewish-German
sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld (1868-1935), a leader in the struggle for gay
and lesbian rights in pre-Nazi Germany.

1868: The 'Einstein of sex' is born (and dies)
Ziffer believed “there is a strong link between Hirschfeld and the
founding of Zionism.” First, because Hirschfeld founded a group for gay
and lesbian rights, called the Scientific Humanitarian Committee, in 1897,
“the same year the First Zionist Congress convened.” Second, because these
two revival movements had similar goals – to bring the Jewish people back
into the family of nations, and to bring homosexuality back into the realm
of humanity’s accepted practices. Third, after the two movements started
and began to flourish, the Nazis came to power - and they abhorred
homosexuality as much as Judaism.

Another attempt to commemorate Hirschfeld in Israel leaped off the pages
of fiction and into political reality in 2004, when Jerusalem Municipality
councillor Sa’ar Netanel (Meretz) suggested that a street in the capital
be renamed for Hirschfeld, as his memory has become entwined with the
tireless struggle for human and civil rights, as well as the struggle
against the Nazi racism.

According to Netanel, commemorating Hirschfeld - whose writings were
banned and burned by the Nazis - would be a sign of solidarity by Israel,
“which was founded after the tragedy of the Holocaust, with other victims
of the Nazi regime.” The committee rejected the suggestion, however, on
the grounds that there was no connection between the sexologist and
Jerusalem.

Although Hirschfeld isn’t well known in Israel, in Berlin today he is
regarded as a prophet of his time – and he can even be granted that
coveted title of “gay icon.” The German capital, which long ago ceased to
be embarrassed by its gay community, proudly commemorates Hirschfeld’s
legacy, as he is remembered not only as the founder of the Scientific
Humanitarian Committee but also as the founder of the city’s first
sexology institute, in 1919, where the first sex-change operation took
place.

Hirschfeld also developed the theory of “the third sex,” which posited
that gays, lesbians, transvestites and intersex individuals belonged,
biologically, to a sex that was neither masculine nor feminine. He also
played himself in a 1919 film called “Different From the Others,” directed
by Richard Oswald, which was one of the first films to depict
homosexuality. Hirschfeld was not in Germany when the Nazis came to power
in 1933, and as they decided to close the sexology institute, he decided
not to return there. He passed away two years later in France.

A section of the Spree river that transverses Berlin is named for
Hirschfeld, and he has recently been featured as part of a historical
“lesbian/Jewish/gay” exhibit at the Schwules Museum, an LGBT museum in the
Tiergarten district of Berlin. The exhibition is dedicated to 24 gay and
lesbian German Jews who contributed to the struggle for freedom both of
Jews and the gay and lesbian community. Many of those featured were
artists, writers or scientists, and their lives document the historical
transition from democracy to the Weimar Republic, to the dictatorship of
the Third Reich.

The exhibition is the museum’s contribution to Berlin’s memorial year for
“destroyed diversity,” which commemorates 80 years since the Nazi rise to
power, and 75 years since Kristallnacht. The exhibition’s curator,
historian Dr. Jens Dobler, says the featured individuals “represent the
wide range of persecution, of both Jews and gays, during the Nazi era, and
offer some deep insight into the fates of those who suffered from double
stigmas.”

The double stigma was expressed most vividly in the yellow-pink patches
that the Nazis forced gay and lesbian Jews to wear in concentration camps.
Dobler says there is no exact figure for how many people were made to wear
this patch - a pink inverted triangle, superimposed upon a yellow one -
but estimates range between 5,000 and 10,000. It is unclear how many of
those were Jews. According to his research, a substantial number of
closeted gays and lesbians should be added to those figures.

Hirschfeld is without doubt the most well known of those in the
exhibition, though he is featured alongside many other stand-out
individuals, such as historian George Mosse (1919-1999), who escaped from
Nazi Germany during his youth and went on to write extensive studies on
Nazi racism and the legacy of manliness, sexuality and homosexuality; and
Felice Schragenheim (1922-1945), a young woman from Berlin who perished in
the Holocaust. Her tragic romance with another young German woman, Lilly
Wust, was documented in the book “Aimee & Jaguar,” written by Erica
Fischer.

Also, as Dobler points out, many of the women featured in the exhibition
were in danger of being completely forgotten. One of the more astounding
women featured is Charlotte Wolf (1896-1987), who was a doctor, writer and
sexuality researcher. She was from a wealthy Jewish family in Riesenburg
(then in Prussia, now Prabuty in Poland), and in her youth realized that
she was attracted to women. In 1918 she began to study medicine,
psychology and philosophy at the University of Freiburg.

When she moved to Berlin, where she finished her studies in 1928, she
became involved with the city’s permissive culture and found social
gatherings for lesbians. She advanced professionally, and became the de
facto head of a family-planning clinic in Berlin, but was forced to leave
the position when the Nazis came to power because she was Jewish. In
February 1933, Wolf was arrested by the Gestapo because she wore men’s
clothing and was suspected of espionage, but was released shortly after.

A few months later she escaped to France, and became a palm-reading
fortune-teller. She moved to London in 1936, where she read the palms of
many leading authors and artists, including Virginia Woolf, Marcel
Duchamp, T.S. Eliot and George Bernard Shaw. Later, she developed a theory
on the physiological and psychological features of the human hand. In the
1950s, she began to focus her efforts on the research of sexuality, and
conducted a comprehensive and revolutionary psychological study on lesbian
love, published in 1971.

In 1977, she published an empirical study of bisexualism in which she
claimed that it is the root of human sexuality. In addition to her
studies, she released a biography of Magnus Hirschfeld, published before
she died. Wolf saw herself as the “perfect outsider,” as she was both
Jewish and lesbian.

Another subject of the exhibition, which runs until September 9, is author
and cultural researcher Richard Plant (1910-1998), born Richard Plaut in
Frankfurt. His grandfather was the chief rabbi of the city but his
immediate family was secular. When he was 14 he realized he was attracted
to men, and for this he was sent for therapy with psychiatrist Kurt
Goldstein, who was a family member. Goldstein, however, was unable to
change his sexual preference, and actually encouraged Plant to accept
himself.

In 1929, Plant began to study philology and German history in Frankfurt.
Later, as Hitler was appointed chancellor, the university informed him
that his doctoral dissertation would not be accepted. He moved to Basel,
Switzerland, and in 1938 immigrated to the United States, changing his
name from Plaut to Plant, and settled in New York. Plant’s father, who
remained in Germany, committed suicide later that year, after
Kristallnacht, and Plant’s other family members were killed in
concentration camps.

During the 1960s Plant began to write for an LGBT newspaper, and in 1973
wrote his most important work, “The Pink Triangle: The Nazi War against
Homosexuals” (published in 1986). What started as Plant’s efforts to
discover the fates of German friends from when he was younger, became an
in-depth and groundbreaking study into the Nazi persecution of
homosexuals.

Not only did he write about the conditions that allowed for thousands of
gays and lesbians to be sent to the camps by the SS, but also about the
thousands more who were sentenced to death by the German legal system, as
clause 175 of the criminal code forbid homosexual relations. There were,
of course, many differences between the Nazis’ persecution of gays and
Jews, but, as Plant shows, the Nazis’ antigay and anti-Semitic policies
were closely related.

https://www.haaretz.com/life/books/.premium-gay-and-jewish-in-wartime-
berlin-1.5315422
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