Ger J Z Zielinski on Sat, 4 Mar 2000 23:16:43 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-bold] IGLHRC Alert:GERMANY: HOMOSEXUAL VICTIMS OF NAZISM IGNORED |
---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Fri, 3 Mar 2000 13:57:43 -0800 (PST) From: IGLHRC ERN <ern-en@mail.iglhrc.org> Reply-To: iglhrc@iglhrc.org Subject: IGLHRC Alert:GERMANY: HOMOSEXUAL VICTIMS OF NAZISM IGNORED EMERGENCY RESPONSE NETWORK The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ ACTION ALERT! @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ GERMANY: GOVERNMENT EXCLUDES HOMOSEXUAL VICTIMS OF NAZISM FROM REHABILITATION AND COMPENSATION @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ SUMMARY @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Fifty-five years after the fall of Nazism, most of those who suffered imprisonment or death at its hands have been legally rehabilitated in Germany. However, homosexuals, along with military deserters, continue to be excluded both from procedures erasing legal stigma, and from collective or individual compensation for injustice. IGLHRC joins with German and international activists in calling on German authorities to recognize and, so far as remains possible, to right the wrongs endured by those imprisoned under Paragraph 175 of the German penal code, in force both during and after the Nazi regime. It urges the German government to annul sentences, apologize publicly for homophobic persecution, and include homosexuals among those entitled to recognition and recompense as victims of Hitler's hatred. @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ ACTION @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Please send letters protesting the German government's inaction to the German Ministry of Justice (Bundesministerin der Justiz) and the German Parliament Committee on Justice (Vorsitzenden des Rechstausschusses). A sample letter follows. Please address letters to: Bundesministerin der Justiz Frau Prof. Dr. Herta Daeubler-Gmelin Jerusalemer Str. 24 - 28 11015 Berlin GERMANY Vorsitzenden des Rechtsausschusses Herrn Prof. Dr. Rupert Scholz Deutscher Bundestag 11011 Berlin GERMANY ------- Please send a copy of your letter to the Lesben-Schwulenverband Deutschland (LSVD), the German LGBT advocacy group which introduced the resolution, at: LSVD Projekt Erinnern und Gedenken Katzbachstr. 5 10965 Berlin GERMANY You may also e-mail copies of your letter to LSVD at etz@snafu.de and guenter.dworek@gruene-fraktion.de. Sample letter: Dear Herrn Prof. Dr. Rupert Scholz; I am writing in solidarity with the Lesben- Schwuleverband Deutschland (LSVD) and in support of the Pink Triangle Coalition's demands passed at their International Colloquium in Berlin this February. I adamantly urge the following: _ That all those convicted under Paragraph 175 of the Reich Penal Code between 1935 and 1945 have their sentences immediately annulled. Specifically, the sentences imposed on homosexual victims by the Nazi judiciary pursuant to Paragraphs 175 and 175a, No. 4, RStGB (Reich Criminal Code) must be officially set aside in a wholesale manner. _ That the Bundestag, the German governement, and all other German states support initiatives such as those undertaken by the City of Hamburg and sponsored by the PDS group in the Budestag, pertaining to the full rehabilitation of the homosexual victims of National Socialism. _ That the German Bundestag apologize for the fact that the exact 1935 version of Paragraph 175 remained in effect until 1969 in the Federal Republic of Germany, and give collective reparation, e.g. by the restoration of a Magnus Hirschfeld Institute on Sex Research in Berlin. _ That individual rehabilitation and compensation be offered to all , whether the injustice was sustained before or after 1945. Thank you for your attention to this matter. I know that you, like me, are horrified by the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis. I am sure you will agree that in light of the persecutions under Paragraph 175, these demands are both reasonable and just. Sincerely, Cc: LSVD @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ BACKGROUND @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ IGLHRC forwards this action on behalf of the Pink Triangle Coalition, of which it is a founding member. The Pink Triangle Coalition, an International Coalition for Coordinating Affairs Relating to Nazi Persecution of Gay Men and Lesbians, was formalized in February 1998 in Berlin. The purpose of the coalition is twofold: * to ensure representation of the gay victims of the Nazis vis-ý-vis the various new international funds that are being created (such as the Swiss Humanitarian Fund and the Nazi Persecutees Fund) with a view to maximizing resources for educational projects and ensuring fair distribution of any such resources; and * to collect and disseminate information about Nazi persecution of gay men and lesbians with a view to involving other NGOs and facilitating a structured approach. At the Pink Triangle Coalition's February 1999 colloquium in Berlin, the following resolution was introduced by the Lesben-Schwulenverband Deutschland (LSVD), another member group. It was adopted unanimously. The resolution provides historical background exposing the inequity and inconsistency of the German government's present stance. ================================================================ Resolution by the International Colloquium "The Persecution of Homosexuals in the Third Reich" on 12/13 February 2000 in Berlin Immediate Rehabilitation of the Homosexual Victims of the National Socialist Judicial System The participants of the International Colloquium on "The Persecution of Homosexuals in the Third Reich" (held in February 2000 in Berlin by the Pink Triangle Coalition, coordinated by the the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, and by the Heinrich B–ll Stiftung-an affiliate of the German Green Party), demand the rapid and complete legal rehabilitation of the homosexual victims of the Nazi judicial system. We call upon the German Federal Government and the German Bundestag to take immediate action in this regard. In 1935, the National Socialists severely tightened the provisions of paragraph 175 of the criminal code, both in defining the "crime" of homosexuality and its possible punishment. Any type of sexual conduct between men was threatened with punishment. For some Nazi judges, even "covetous looks" were enough to constitute the crime. In the years 1935-1945, the Nazi judiciary convicted over 50,000 people for homosexual "lewdness." To this day, individuals convicted pursuant to Nazi paragraph 175 have still not received any type of compensation, nor have they been legally rehabilitated. In June 1998, the German Bundestag passed a "Law to Annul Unjust Sentences Imposed During the National Socialist Administration of Criminal Justice." Two groups were excluded from the wholesale annulment of unjust Nazi sentences: deserters and homosexuals. This gap in the Nazi Annulment Law must now finally be closed. The sentences imposed on homosexual victims by the Nazi judiciary pursuant to paragraphs 175 and 175a, No. 4, RStGB (Reich Criminal Code), must likewise be officially set aside in a wholesale manner. The city of Hamburg and the PDS group in the Bundestag have recently initiated legislation to this effect in independent initiatives. We call upon the Bundestag, the German government, and the other German states to support the initiatives and translate them into action. Those who refuse to do this are perpetuating injustice. Paragraph 175 retained validity, in its exact 1935 version, in the Federal Republic of Germany until 1969. As such, even following the end of the Nazi dictatorship, it had gravely affected the lives of homosexuals. We demand that the German Bundestag apologizes for this injustice and gives collective reparation, e.g. by the restoration of a Magnus Hirschfeld Institute on Sex Research in Berlin. We also demand individual rehabilitation and compensation for all victims if the injustice was sustained before or after 1945. @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ ABOUT IGLHRC @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC), founded in 1991, is a San Francisco-based non-governmental human rights organization. IGLHRC's primary work is to monitor, document and mobilize responses to human right abuses against lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgendered people, people with HIV and AIDS, and those oppressed due to their sexual identities or sexual conduct with consenting adults. IGLHRC 1360 Mission Street, Suite 200 San Francisco, CA 94103 USA Telephone: +1-415-255-8680 Fax: +1-415-255-8662 Email: iglhrc@iglhrc.org To receive the ERN via email (saving printing costs, postage, and trees), write to majordomo@gina.iglhrc.org with the following message in the body of the email: For the English version: "subscribe ern-en <your email address>" For the Spanish version: "subscribe ern-es <your email address>" For the French version: "subscribe ern-fr <your email address>" If you would like to cancel your printed ERN subscription, let us know by contacting IGLHRC. Contact information is above. Participation in the Emergency Response Network is free, but contributions are greatly appreciated and needed. Contributions are tax-deductible in the United States. Contributions can be made on your Visa or Mastercard (just include the amount, your account number, and expiration date). Alternatively, contributions can be sent by check via regular mail to the address above. --8< (cut) ---------------------------------------------------- I would like to provide the resources for IGLRHC to research, write and publish the ERN by making a contribution of: ___ $40 (suggested annual membership) ___ $75 ___ $100 ___ $500 ___ $__________ ___ Yes, sign me up for the Emergency Response Network: ___ Email ___ Regular mail Name: Address: City: State: Zip Code: Country: Phone: Fax: E-mail: I would like my ERN in ___ English ___ Spanish _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold