Pink triangle: Difference between revisions
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A '''pink triangle''', pointing downwards, was used on badges worn by [[homosexual]] men in [[ | A '''pink triangle''', pointing downwards, was used on badges worn by [[homosexual]] men in [[Holohoax camps]]. [[Wikipedia]] alleges that it was a "badge of shame", but offers no evidence for this or that this symbol would have been intended to be more shameful than the many other symbols used to identify different groups of prisoners. | ||
After the war, Allied-controlled East Germany and West Germany continued to imprison certain homosexuals, as was the case also in other countries. | After the war, Allied-controlled East Germany and West Germany continued to imprison certain homosexuals, as was the case also in other countries. | ||
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== See also == | == See also == | ||
*[[Claimed mass killings of non- | *[[Claimed mass killings of non-jews by National Socialist Germany]] | ||
*[[The Myth of a Nazi Extermination of Homosexuals]] | *[[The Myth of a Nazi Extermination of Homosexuals]] | ||
*[[Yellow badge]] | *[[Yellow badge]] | ||
[[Category:Homosexuality]] | [[Category:Homosexuality]] |
Latest revision as of 06:01, 25 February 2024
A pink triangle, pointing downwards, was used on badges worn by homosexual men in Holohoax camps. Wikipedia alleges that it was a "badge of shame", but offers no evidence for this or that this symbol would have been intended to be more shameful than the many other symbols used to identify different groups of prisoners.
After the war, Allied-controlled East Germany and West Germany continued to imprison certain homosexuals, as was the case also in other countries.
More recently a pink triangle, sometimes pointing upwards, has been used by as a positive symbol of self-identity by some LGBT individuals and organizations.