LGBT
Related: About this forumIsrael Inaugurates First Memorial to Gay Holocaust Victims in Tel Aviv
Under gray and rainy skies, without fanfare, history was made in Israel on Tuesday with the inauguration in Tel Aviv of the countrys first memorial to victims of the Nazis that commemorates not only their suffering as Jews. After Berlin, Amsterdam, Sydney and San Francisco, Tel Aviv now has a memorial to the thousands of people who were persecuted by the Nazis for their sexual orientation Jews and non-Jews both.
The memorial stands in front of the municipal community center established in Gan Meir (Meir Park) for the gay community in 2008, ahead of Tel Avivs centennial. The driving force behind the memorial, which was established and funded by the municipality, is attorney Eran Lev, an activist in the gay community who was a city councilman for Meretz. Its important to me that people understand that persecution of gay people was not the usual story of the Holocaust that we know from the final solution, and from the Wansee Conference. This is a different story, more modest, but still an important one, he said. Its important that people in Israel know that the Nazis persecuted others as well, not because they were Jews, but because they were gay, Lev said.
The memorial was planned by the landscape architect Prof. Yael Moriah, who has been in charge in recent years of the renovation of Gan Meir. It consists of three triangles the symbol of the gay community. One is concrete, and on it appears a explanation of the persecution of homosexuals during the Holocaust. The second, which is painted on a concrete triangle, is an upside-down triangle painted pink, of the type the Nazis forced homosexuals to wear. The third triangle faces the other two and consists of three pink benches.
On each of them a sentence is written in Hebrew, English and German: In memory of those persecuted by the Nazi regime for their sexual orientation and gender identity.
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MNBrewer
(8,462 posts)I can't imagine this memorial being put up anywhere else. That city seems to be an oasis of tolerance, the only one for hundreds of miles in any direction. I would love to visit some day (when I win the lottery!).
Old Union Guy
(738 posts)It wasn't just a Nazi aberration.
All the WWII "good guy" countries had anti-gay laws.
Behind the Aegis
(53,986 posts)The Nazis were a breed unto themselves.
King_David
(14,851 posts)I will visit and report back in February.