ICONZ
FOR THE COMMUNITY ::
What it means....Pink Triangle and Related Symbols
The
pink triangle is easily one of the more
popular and widely-recognized symbols for the gay community. The pink
triangle is rooted in World War II times, and reminds us of the tragedies
of that era. Although homosexuals were only one of the many groups
targeted for extermination by the Nazi regime, it is unfortunately
the group that history often excludes. The pink triangle challenges
that notion, and defies anyone to deny history.
The
history of the pink triangle begins before WWII, during Adolf Hitler's
rise to power. Paragraph 175, a clause in German law prohibiting homosexual
relations, was revised by Hitler in 1935 to include kissing, embracing,
and gay fantasies as well as sexual acts. Convicted offenders - an
estimated 25,000 just from 1937 to 1939 - were sent to prison and
then later to concentration camps. Their sentence was to be sterilized,
and this was most often accomplished by castration. In 1942 Hitler's
punishment for homosexuality was extended to death.
Each
prisoner in the concentration camps wore a colored inverted triangle
to designate their reason for incarceration, and hence the designation
also served to form a sort of social hierarchy among the prisoners.
A green triangle marked its wearer as a regular criminal; a red triangle
denoted a political prisoner. Two yellow triangles overlapping to
form a Star of David designated a Jewish prisoner. The pink triangle
was for homosexuals. A yellow Star of David under a superimposed pink
triangle marked the lowest of all prisoners -- a gay Jew.
Stories
of the camps depict homosexual prisoners being given the worst tasks
and labors. Pink triangle prisoners were also a proportionally large
focus of attacks from the guards and even other inmates. Although
the total number of the homosexual prisoners is not known, official
Nazi estimates were an underwhelming 10,000.
Although
homosexual prisoners reportedly were not shipped en masse to the death
camps at Auschwitz, a great number of gay men were among the non-Jews
who were killed there. Estimates of the number of gay men killed during
the Nazi regime range from 50,000 to twice that figure. When the war
was finally over, countless many homosexuals remained prisoners in
the camps, because Paragraph 175 remained law in West Germany until
its repeal in 1969.
In
the 1970s, gay liberation groups resurrected the pink triangle as
a popular symbol for the gay rights movement. Not only is the symbol
easily recognized, but it draws attention to oppression and persecution
-- then and now. In the 1980s, ACT-UP (AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power)
began using the pink triangle for their cause. They inverted the symbol,
making it point up, to signify an active fight back rather than a
passive resignation to fate. Today, for many the pink triangle represents
pride, solidarity, and a promise to never allow another Holocaust
to happen again.
Like
the pink triangle, the black triangle
is also rooted in Nazi Germany. Although lesbians were not included
in the Paragraph 175 prohibition of homosexuality, there is evidence
to indicate that the black triangle was used to designate prisoners
with anti-social behavior. Considering that the Nazi idea of womanhood
focused on children, kitchen, and church, black triangle prisoners
may have included lesbians, prostitutes, women who refused to bear
children, and women with other "anti-social" traits. As
the pink triangle is historically a male symbol, the black triangle
has similarly been reclaimed by lesbians and feminists as a symbol
of pride and solidarity.
Reportedly,
the burgundy triangle may have been used
to designate transgendered prisoners. Unfortunately, I have not yet
found a resource to substantiate this suggestion.
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Pink
Triangle
(Bisexual)
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Black
Triangle
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Pink
Triangle
(Jewish)
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Pink
Triangle
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