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Loading... The Men with the Pink Triangle (1972)by Heinz Heger
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. So different from David Koker's 400 page At The Edge of the Abyss: A Concentration Camp Diary, 1943-1944 ... composed as diary entries sent surreptitiously to friends in Holland, and altogether different from cousin Odd Nansen's book: From Day To Day: One Man's Diary of Survival in Nazi Concentration Camps ... both books published after the fact ... Koker's long after his death on the way from Auschwitz to Dachau, near the end of the war, but primarily composed during his interment at Konzentrationslager Herzogenbush,, located near a small Dutch village called Vught. Koker managed to make a life in what eventually became a transit camp, by becoming "useful', both as a teacher of the children in the camp ... and as a worker at the Phllips Electronic Corporation workshop. Nansen, of course, wasn't Jewish, but he was arrested at his home in Norway, when it became known that he had helped German Jews escape Germany ... (actually, before the war even started).. Compared to some concentration camp inmates, he was an "Aryan", and the son of Fridtjof Nansen, world famous Arctic explorer (and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize),, Odd Nansen was somewhat privileged during his internment at prison camps in Grini, near Oslo, at Veidal, north of the Arctic Circle ... and later, at Sachsenhausen, the notorious German Concentration Camp north of Berlin. Nansen managed to keep an almost daily diary ... each page of which was spirited out of those camps to his wife in Oslo. As his diary was written to his wife, Nansen must have concealed much of the truth of what he experienced and saw ... if only to spare her feelings. His book was published after his return to Norway. Later translated into English, Nansen's book fills more than 600 pages. On the other hand, Joseph Kohout's slim 120 page remembrance: The Men With The Pink Triangle, was compiled years after the war by Hans Neumann, based on a series of interviews with Kohout. Free by then to say exactly what he thought and experienced ... Kohout's brief narrative pulls no punches. After being arrested in March 1939 by the SS,at his Austrian home, Kohout spent his first six months imprisoned in Austria, after which he was transferred to the Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp .. and though, like Nansen, not Jewish, Kohout, being a despised "homosexual" ... (despised not only by their Nazi overlords, but by every other concentration camp inmate), he saw and experienced many of the particularly brutal horrors inflicted by the SS upon his kind.(Note: The play BENT was based on his experiences at Sachsenhausen) In May 1940 Kohout was transferred to Flossenburg Concentration Camp, located just west of the Czech border. Young, intelligent, and educated,, Kohout quickly learned that survival depended upon bending his moral principles to conform to the needs of those few who were in positions of power ... whether they be SS or a CAPO ... a prisoner in charge of work details. Six long years later ... Joseph Kohout and all the other prisoners at Flossenburg were told they were to be marched out under SS guard ... on their way (like David Koker) to Dachau. After walking for three days and nights, the prisoners awoke to find their SS guards had mysteriously vanished ...After spending the next night in a farmer's barn, they awoke to the sound of American tanks ... and freedom. The only quibble I have with Hans Neumann's book is that apparently Joseph Kohout did not edit the manuscript. Neumann's rendition of the horrors witnessed and experienced by Joseph Kohout seems all too matter-of-fact ... Neumann's version lacks a certain force of "I was there This is what I saw and experienced, and this is how those things affected me." no reviews | add a review
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For decades, history ignored the Nazi persecution of gay people. Only with the rise of the gay movement in the 1970s did historians finally recognize that gay people, like Jews and others deemed "undesirable," suffered enormously at the hands of the Nazi regime. Of the few who survived the concentration camps, even fewer ever came forward to tell their stories. This heart wrenchingly vivid account of one man's arrest and imprisonment by the Nazis for the crime of homosexuality, now with a new foreword by Sarah Schulman, remains an essential contribution to gay history and our understanding of historical fascism, as well as a remarkable and complex story of survival and identity. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)940.547243History & geography History of Europe History of Europe 1918- Military History Of World War II Prisoners of war; medical and social services Prisoner-of-War Camps German & Central European POW campsLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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