ushmm.org
What are you looking for?
Search
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Museum Education Research History Remembrance Genocide Support
ushmm.org/travelingexhibitions
ushmm.org > museum > exhibit > traveling exhibitions
Nazi Persecution of Homosexuals <br />1933–1945

NAZI PERSECUTION OF HOMOSEXUALS
1933–1945


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.

 
  Current Schedule
 
 
April 20, 2013 through June 9, 2013
New Rochelle, NY
Temple Israel of New Rochelle in partnership with The LOFT: LGBT Community Services Center
June 20, 2013 through August 14, 2013
Kingston, NY
Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center
December 29, 2013 through May 2, 2014
Farmington Hills, MI
Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus
 
  Hosting this exhibition  
 

 

Traveling exhibitions
State of DeceptionSTATE OF DECEPTION:
The Power of Nazi Propaganda
Deadly MedicineDEADLY MEDICINE:
Creating the Master Race
Fighting the Fires of HateFIGHTING THE FIRES OF HATE:
America and the Nazi Book Burnings
The Nazi OlympicsTHE NAZI OLYMPICS:
Berlin 1936
Nazi Persecution of Homosexuals <br />1933–1945NAZI PERSECUTION OF HOMOSEXUALS
1933–1945
"[This] new exhibit shows how slow prejudice is to wither, if it ever does."
BALTIMORE SUN, 2002
Contact us
traveling@ushmm.org
202.314.0325
This exhibition is ideal for:
History museums
Jewish museums
Community centers
Historical societies
Holocaust centers or museums
Libraries
Colleges or universities