Exhibition installed at the William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum in Atlanta, Georgia. William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum, Atlanta, GA
Exhibition installed at the Urban Culture Project in Kansas City, Missouri. Urban Culture Project, Kansas City, MO
Exhibition installed at the Alachua County Library District in Gainesville, Florida. Alachua County Library District, Gainesville, FL
Between 1933 and 1945, the Nazi German regime promoted racial health policies that sought to eliminate all sources of biological corruption to its dominant “Aryan” race. Among the groups persecuted as threats to the national health were Germany’s homosexual men. Believing them to be carriers of a “degeneracy” that weakened society and hindered population growth, the Nazi state arrested and incarcerated in prisons and concentration camps tens of thousands of German men as a means of terrorizing them into social conformity.
Nazi Persecution of Homosexuals 1933–1945 examines the Nazi regime’s attempt to eradicate homosexuality, which left thousands dead and shattered the lives of many more.