Ernst Röhm born 28 November 1887 (d. 1934)Ernst Julius Röhm was a German military officer, and the commander and co-founder of the Nazi Sturmabteilung, or storm troopers — the SA, also known as 'Brownshirts'.
Ernst Röhm was one of the most prominent of a number of early Nazi party members who was a homosexual, and his homosexuality was ultimately the pretext used for his removal during the purge of the SA. The real reason was the threat he eventually posed to Hitler's authority. Having been outed in 1925, Röhm made little attempt to hide his sexuality. Despite Hitler's pretense of shock upon discovering his deputy's sexual orientation, he had in fact long known - probably since 1919 - that Röhm was homosexual.
During Röhm's tenure at the head of the SA, it has been suggested that a number of homosexual men (notably Karl Ernst, a former bouncer at a gay nightclub, and Edmund Heines) were appointed to and promoted within the SA as a result of high-level liaisons with powerful SA figures. Röhm's Brownshirt militia - mostly undisciplined soldiers and roughnecks from the city-slums - contained many gay men, and there was debauchery in the ranks. This was despite the openly anti-gay policies of the Nazis, exemplified by their strengthening of Paragraph 175 (criminalising homosexual acts) of the German Criminal Code of 1871.
Röhm was executed without trial during the purge of the SA — the so-called 'Night of the Long Knives' in June 1934.
In the wake of Röhm's execution, Hitler ordered the registration of homosexuals and the Gestapo was charged with the responsibility of creating dossiers on homosexuals and other 'asocials' in the Third Reich. The beginning of the Nazi terror against homosexuals was marked by the murder of Ernst Röhm.
Ernst Röhm
The Gay Holocaust - Nazi Persecution: The Röhm Affair
On a personal note, I gave considerable thought as to whether I wanted to feature a leading Nazi in Gay For Today - this site has always been intended to mark and celebrate the contributions of gay men to (usually) the worlds of the arts, media, sport, politics and entertainment and so on - but a Nazi? And Hitler's deputy to boot. However, the story of Ernst Röhm's openness about his sexuality, his leading role in the early days of the Nazis - he very much believed in the 'socialist' part of National Socialism - and the way Hitler tolerated this powerful homosexual as long as he was useful to him and then ruthlessly snuffed him out and purged the SA and then Germany of homosexuals is interesting and significant.
In the end, yes, Ernst Röhm was a gay man and a Nazi but he ultimately became a victim of the Nazis and his death, as it says above, marked the real beginning of the still tragically under-told story of the Nazi terror against homosexuals - an intensely dark period in the long, dark history of gay persecution and oppression.










3 comments:
The fact that Ernst Rohm was killed and happened to be a homosexual does not somehow exempt him from the brutal acts he perpetrated against proponents of free speech. Just because he was gay and was killed does not make him a martyr!
I've just been researching gay nazis and Hitler Youth camps, which were also very corrupt.
In this video clip from British Pathe you can see Hitler pass a young boy very swiftly and smoothly over to Rohm during a parade - http://www.britishpathe.com/record.php?id=50434
And then in this video we see 100s of boys being encourage to swim and wrestle near naked - http://www.britishpathe.com/record.php?id=7563
It really does seem like the Nazis had a vast gay undertone. Well, perhaps no 'gay', but homoerotic and homosexual.
Röhm cannot be described as a "gay martyr", that's a fact. But he has somehow his place here.
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