MSNBC
http://www.msnbc.com/news/641353.asp?cp1=1
 
German Lothar Machtan, author and professor of modern history,
with his book "Hitler's Secret" at the Frankfurt Book Fair
 
Hitler was closet gay,German historian says
 
Nazi leader exploited ‘erotic charisma’ to win backing of militia ‘brown shirts,’
author contends, rejecting suggestion that his work is hostile to homosexuals.
 
FRANKFURT, Germany, Oct. 11 —  Adolf Hitler was a closet homosexual and used his homoerotic charisma to gain power, a leading German historian says. Lothar Machtan’s book “Hitler’s Secret: The Double Life of a Dictator” argues that an awareness of the Nazi leader’s sexual orientation may help us understand his life. Its launch has caused a sensation at this year’s Frankfurt Book Fair.
 
“THERE ARE THINGS in Hitler’s life which are puzzling. The knowledge of his homosexuality can help us to understand him better,” Machtan, professor of modern history at Bremen University, said Wednesday in an interview at the fair.
       “The key point is not that I can reveal the universal truth about Hitler. But his homosexuality could be a missing link to help us understand unclear elements in his life.”
       Hitler learned to manipulate his “homoerotic potential” and used this “erotic charisma” to gain power.
       “If we look at the important circle of people around Hitler, an awareness of his homosexuality makes it easier to comprehend how a man like him without contacts or influence could become so powerful,” Machtan said.
 
       Hitler used this charisma to win the backing of groups such as the Freikorps (Free Corps) militia and the Nazi “brown shirts” who provided the muscle that aided his accession to power in the chaotic democracy of the Weimar Republic.
       “These all-male groups were looking for a theorist who would present the vision of an ideal man,” Machtan said.
       “Hitler exploited this.”
       But though Machtan affirms “Hitler loved men,” he also stresses that this impulse was largely repressed: “He could never fully deny his homosexuality but could also never fully live it. He was a man who was never what he appeared to be.”
BLACKMAIL FEAR
       Previous biographies have focused on Hitler’s rather ambiguous relationships with his niece Geli, who killed herself in 1931, and with Eva Braun, the companion whom he married just hours before their suicide pact at the war’s end in 1945.
       Machtan concedes there is no irrefutable proof Hitler was gay or acted on any homosexual urges. But he argues in the book that Hitler led a gay lifestyle in his early days in Vienna and Munich and had a number of homosexual friendships in the 1920s.
 
       Hitler felt he could be blackmailed over this past, Machtan said, and this fear led to the bloody purge of many gay comrades during the “Night of the Long Knives” in 1934, including Ernst Roehm, the leader of the Nazis’ SA stormtroopers.
       “The fact that Hitler felt he could have been blackmailed because of his past
played an enormous role in his political decisions,” Machtan said.
Homosexuals were brutally oppressed after Hitler took power in 1933. Tens of thousands died in camps, forced to wear a pink triangle where the Nazis’ Jewish victims bore a yellow star.
But understanding Hitler’s sexuality does not explain the policy of mass extermination of the Jews, Machtan said.
       “It does not explain many things such as the Holocaust. It would be absurd to explain the Holocaust on the basis of repressed homosexuality,” he said.
       He rejected any suggestion his work was hostile to homosexuals.
       Previous views of Hitler tended to portray the private man behind the dictator as something of a “empty shell,” Machtan said. But Machtan said he thought Hitler’s private life was an important dimension to the dictator’s character.
       “I don’t pretend that this will be the last word on this subject,” he said. “We are only beginning to research this very complex area and hopefully my book can help.”
 
© 2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters
 
Berlin Stories
German Cultures Hitler's Gay Secret
By Imre Karacs
October 7, 2002

Hardly a week passes without some historical figure being outed as a closet homosexual. Such "revelations" are often based on the flimsiest of evidence, cobbled together in the secure knowledge that the dead cannot contradict or sue. We must wait until Tuesday, when the latest sensation is due to be detonated at the Frankfurt Book Fair, to see what dirt Professor Lothar Machtan of Bremen University has amassed on a certain limp-wristed German statesman with a penchant for uniforms and black leather. Yes, Prof Machtan's thesis is that the Führer was gay.

Contacted at his office, the historian declined to divulge his sources to this paper. His book Hitler's Secret: the Double Life of a Dictator is being kept under close wraps ahead of its simultaneous publication next week in 12 countries.

According to a document Prof Machtan claims to have unearthed, Hitler's bosom buddy in the trenches of the Somme was actually his "whore" for five years. Some mind-boggling reassessments follow: for instance, the so-called "Night of the Long Knives" – the massacre of the SA and the murder of its openly homosexual leader, Ernst Röhm – might have been triggered by Röhm's intimate knowledge of Hitler's private affairs.

Or it may be complete nonsense. Hitler is the most meticulously researched figure of the 20th century. Why should Prof Machtan, an expert on the 19th century, now succeed where so many of his peers failed? But if it all turns out to be true, please remember that you read it here first


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IWon News
http://news1.iwon.com/article/id/140981|oddlyenough|10-11-2001::14:40|reuters.html
 
Hitler Was Gay, German Historian Says
October 11, 2001

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Adolf Hitler was a closet homosexual and used his homoerotic charisma to gain power, a leading German historian said.

Lothar Machtan's book "Hitler's Secret: The Double Life of a Dictator" argues that an awareness of the Nazi leader's sexual orientation may help us understand his life. Its launch has caused a sensation at this year's Frankfurt Book Fair.

"There are things in Hitler's life which are puzzling. The knowledge of his homosexuality can help us to understand him better," Machtan, professor of modern history at Bremen University, told Reuters in an interview at the fair.

Hitler learned to manipulate his "homoerotic potential" and used this "erotic charisma" to gain power.

"If we look at the important circle of people around Hitler, an awareness of his homosexuality makes it easier to comprehend how a man like him without contacts or influence could become so powerful," Machtan said.

Hitler used this charisma to win the backing of groups such as the Freikorps (Free Corps) militia and the Nazi "brown shirts" who provided the muscle that aided his accession to power in the chaotic democracy of the Weimar Republic.

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Planet Out News

Book Uncovers Hitler's 'Gay Friendships'
http://www.planetout.com/pno/news/article.html?2001/10/08/2

Reuters
October 8, 2001

SUMMARY: Adolf Hitler had numerous homoerotic friendships and his later life can only be understood by taking into account his gay preferences, a German historian said.

BERLIN -- Adolf Hitler had numerous homoerotic friendships in the 1920s and the dictator's later life can only be understood by taking into account his gay preferences, a German historian said on Friday.

In a book to be launched at next week's Frankfurt book fair, Lothar Machtan, modern history professor at Bremen University, hopes to shed new light on old speculation that the Nazi leader was a closet homosexual.

"Adolf Hitler was fond of men. He had a homosexual nature," Machtan told Die Welt daily in an interview due for publication on Saturday. "This seems at first quite trivial. But it is a detail that helps us to see his biography from another angle."

Machtan, author of "Hitler's Secret: the Double Life of a Dictator," said the subject had been taboo among historians, partly because examining Hitler's private life might be seen as a step towards humanizing him and excusing his crimes.

Machtan said there was also no irrefutable proof that Hitler was gay.

"The job of the historian is to examine the facts and put them together in a plausible way. From them comes indicative evidence that Hitler was fixated on his own sex his whole life, but a mistake in that can never be ruled out," he said.

"One must be very careful with the expression 'homosexual activities' because we do not know how Hitler lived them out. We can say that until the late 20s Hitler had a range of homoerotic friendships. Many of them were characterized by contemporaries as homosexual," he said.

Machtan said that from 1930 Hitler felt that his past could be used against him and this was behind his decision in 1934 to have killed many former gay friends from his time in Munich, including Ernst Roehm, the leader of his storm troopers.

Tens of thousands of German gays later perished in concentration camps at the hands of the Nazis.

Machtan said he did not believe that Hitler's homosexuality had anything to do with his decision to murder Europe's Jews, although he said there was evidence that time spent living a gay lifestyle in Vienna had helped fuel his anti-Semitism.

Hitler suffered from prejudice against homosexuals but also benefited from his experiences in male societies in Munich where he learned to manipulate a kind of erotic charisma, he said.

"This kind of self stage-managing was completely new in those days. It was existential acting," Machtan said. "It initiated his career in the homosocial milieu of the men's associations and later on the stage of great politics."

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The Independent.Co.Uk

Survivors of a Forgotten Holocast

Heinrich Himmler set out to rid Germany of the homosexual 'plague' by mass extermination; Peter Tatchell hears the testimony of gay men and woman who survived nazi death camps, but, whose stories were never told after the war.

http://www.independent.co.uk/story.jsp?story=77531

June 12, 2001

"We must exterminate these people root and branch. We can't permit such danger to the country; the homosexual must be entirely eliminated."

With these chilling words, the head of the SS, Heinrich Himmler, set out the Nazi master plan for the sexual cleansing of the Aryan race.

Heinz F, now 96, was a carefree young gay man living in Munich in the early 1930s. He had no idea of what was about to happen. "I didn't fully understand the situation," he admits with pained regret. One morning, out of the blue, the police knocked on his door. "You are suspected of being a homosexual," they told him. "You are hereby under arrest."

"What could I do?" he asks, struggling to hold back the tears. "Off I went to Dachau, without a trial."

After spending a year and a half in Dachau, Heinz was released but soon rearrested and sent to Buchenwald. He was stunned to discover the grisly fate of gays in the camp. "Almost all the homosexuals ­ nearly all of them," he says, now sobbing, "were killed."

Heinz survived a total of eight years in concentration camps. Following the war, he never spoke to anyone about his experiences. He was afraid. Gay ex-prisoners were regarded as common criminals ­ not victims of Nazism. "Nobody wanted to hear about it," he says, with tears still rolling down his cheeks.

Heinz is one of only eight known gay holocaust survivors who are still alive. Together with five others ­ and one lesbian ­ he recounts his experience of the homophobic witch-hunts of the Third Reich in a new film, Paragraph 175, which premieres in Britain this week.

The feature-length documentary is by the US directors Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, who won an Oscar for their Aids film Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt. "Paragraph 175 explores a history that has not been told," says Epstein. "We felt a particular urgency to record what stories we could while there were still living witnesses to tell them."

The dignified, defiant testimonies of gay survivors are seldom heard in mainstream holocaust histories. Indeed, until now most historians have neglected the Nazi war against homosexuals.

Martin Gilbert's recent book, Never Again, purports to be "a comprehensive account of the holocaust". Yet the fate of non-Jews merits only one two-page chapter and the mass murder of homosexuals is accorded a single sentence.

The film Paragraph 175 rescues historical truth from half a century of amnesia. There is no happy ending, but the beginning was full of joy and hope. Before the ascent of Nazism, Berlin was the queer capital of the world. Jewish lesbian Annette Eick, who escaped to Britain shortly before the outbreak of war in 1939, recalls with fond nostalgia: "In Berlin, you were free. You could do what you wanted."

The city boasted dozens of gay organisations and magazines; plus more than 80 gay bars, restaurants and night clubs. The film describes it as "a homosexual Eden".

Although homosexuality was illegal under paragraph 175 of the German criminal code, prior to the Third Reich it was rarely enforced. In the Reichstag, MPs were on the verge of securing its repeal. A new era of freedom seemed to be dawning.

Within a month of assuming power in 1933, Hitler outlawed homosexual organisations and publications. Gay bars and clubs were closed down soon afterwards. Stormtroopers ransacked the headquarters of the gay rights movement, the Institute of Sexual Science, and publicly burned its vast library of "degenerate" books. Before the end of the year, the first homosexuals were deported to the concentration camps which had been established to hold political and social "undesirables", Communists and homosexuals among them.

Now 78, Gad Beck was, in those days, a precociously gay Jewish schoolboy, innocent of homophobia. "I had an athletics teacher ­ one day we were showering together and I jumped on him. I ran home to my mother and said: 'Mother, today I had my first man.'" Fortunately, his parents accepted his homosexuality. But they feared for his future. He remembers their reaction: "They said: 'Oh my God, he's Jewish and he's gay. Either way he'll be persecuted. This cannot end well.'"

But Beck survived, although nearly everyone around him perished. Two of his lovers were seized by the Nazis. "I met this beautiful blond Jew. He invited me to spend the night. In the morning the Gestapo came ­ I showed my ID ­ not on the list. They took him to Auschwitz. It had a different value then, a night of love."

Later, Beck tried to free another lover, Manfred, from a Gestapo transfer camp by posing as a Hitler Youth member. This incredibly dangerous deception was successful, but as they walked to freedom, Manfred told Gad he could not abandon his family in the camp. Beck watched helplessly as his lover returned to be with them. He never saw Manfred again.

In 1934, the Nazis stepped up their anti-gay campaign, with the creation of the Reich Office for Combating Abortion and Homosexuality. According to Heinrich Himmler: "Those who practise homosexuality deprive Germany of the children they owe her ­ our nation will fall to pieces because of that plague." The police were ordered to draw up "pink lists" of known or suspected homosexuals. Mass arrests followed.

At the age of 17, Frenchman Pierre Seel was detained by the invading Germans, who had raided local police files on homosexuals. "They saw our names on these lists," he says. "I ended up at the camp in Schirmeck. There was a hierarchy from weakest to strongest. The weakest in the camps were the homosexuals. All the way at the bottom.

"I was tortured, beaten, sodomised and raped," Seel continues. His lover, Jo, was attacked by the Nazis' Alsatian dogs.

The Nazis again intensified the war against "abnormal existence" in 1935, broadening the definition of homosexual behaviour and the grounds for arrest. Gossip and innuendo became evidence. A man could be incarcerated on the basis of a mere touch, gesture or look.

Later, Himmler authorised a scientific programme for the eradication of "this vice", with homosexual prisoners being subjected to gruesome medical experiments ­ including hormone implants and castration.

From 1933 until the final defeat of the Nazis in 1945, about 100,000 men were arrested under Paragraph 175 for the crime of homosexuality. Some were sent to prisons; others to concentration camps. The death rate of gay prisoners in the camps was 60 per cent.

Heinz Dörmer, now a very frail 89-year-old, spent nearly 10 years in prisons and concentration camps. In a quivering, barely audible voice, he remembers the haunting, agonised cries from "the singing forest", a row of tall poles on which condemned men were hung: "Everyone who was sentenced to death would be lifted up on to the hook. The howling and screaming were inhuman. Beyond human comprehension."

This "homocaust" was an integral part of the holocaust. The planned eradication of Jews and queers was part of the grand design for the racial purification of the German volk. The Nazis set out to eradicate all racial and genetic "inferiors", including Jewish, gay, disabled, black, Slav, Roma and Sinti people.

Even after the Nazi defeat in 1945, homosexual survivors of the camps ­ about 4,000 people ­ continued to be persecuted. Men liberated from the concentration camps who had not completed their sentences were re-imprisoned by the victorious Allies. Since they were regarded as criminals, all were denied compensation for their suffering. The German government still refuses to pay reparations. As a further insult, the work of the former SS guards in the concentration camps counts toward their pension entitlements, whereas the time spent in the camps by gay inmates doesn't.

Similarly, after the war, most Nazi doctors, including those who experimented on gay prisoners, were never put on trial at Nuremburg. The most notorious of all, Dr Carl Vaernet, was allowed by the British military authorities to escape to Argentina, where he lived freely until his death in 1965.

Paragraph 175 remained in force in Germany until 1969. Some gay holocaust survivors, such as Heinz Dormer, were repeatedly re-arrested in the post-war period and again jailed. In the 1950s and 1960s, the number of convictions for homosexuality in West Germany was as high as it had been under the Nazi regime.

The film Paragraph 175 is the last testament of the remaining few living victims of Nazi homophobia. It will indict for all time, not just the perpetrators of the holocaust, but also the victorious Allies, successive post-war German governments and revisionist historians who have allowed the gay holocaust survivors to pass unnoticed into history.

Holocaust: News History - 1933,1934,1935,1936 - Hitler's Rise
http://aish.com/holocaust/headlines/he71f33.htm

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