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The black triangle was a badge used in Nazi concentration camps to mark prisoners as "asocial" or "arbeitsscheu" (disabled benefit recipients are workshy.
The symbol originates from Nazi concentration camps, where every prisoner had to wear one of the Nazi concentration camp badges on their jacket, the color of which categorized them according to "their kind." Individuals deemed "asocial" had to wear the Black Triangle. Many Black Triangle prisoners were either mentally disabled or mentally ill. The homeless were also included, as were alcoholics, the habitually "work-shy," prostitutes, and others (including draft dodgers and pacifists).[1]
Lesbians have over time claimed the black triangle as a symbol of defiance against repression and discrimination, and it is considered a counterpart to the gay pink triangle. Lesbians in Germany and the United States began reclaiming the black triangle as a pride symbol in the 1980s.
The use of the symbol as a sign of lesbian victimization has been challenged on the grounds that lesbian sex was not criminal under Paragraph 175 of the Nazi legislation on sexual behavior, and there is no record of the black triangle having been imposed on lesbians, or of lesbians as a group being confined to concentration camps. The archive of the memorial site of Ravensbrück has evidence of four women with an additional remark of being lesbians: two of them had been persecuted for political reasons, two for being Jewish. One of the Jewish inmates was given a black triangle due to sexual contacts with non-Jews.[2]
It is possible that Playing for Time ('Sursis pour l'orchestre'), a holocaust memoir by Frenchwoman Fania Fénelon, helped create the belief that the black triangle was worn by lesbians. Fénelon's memoir includes lesbian themes and describes an evening of entertainment in the asocials' barracks as the "Black Triangles' Ball."
Some UK groups concerned with the rights of disabled people have adopted the symbol in their campaigns.[3][4] Such groups cite press coverage and government policies, including changes to incapacity benefit and disability living allowance, as the reasons for their campaigns.[5][6]
Nazi Germany, Transgender, Lgbt, LGBT symbols, San Francisco
The Holocaust, Sobibór extermination camp, Treblinka extermination camp, Einsatzgruppen, Operation Reinhard
Gender studies, Sexual orientation, LGBT history, Romani people, Transgender
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Buchenwald concentration camp, Sobibór extermination camp, Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, Dachau concentration camp, The Holocaust