Did You Know...Or Do You Care?

Lasza

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Did You Know...Or Do You Care?

here is the link.


Our pink triangle is actually called a Rosawinkel. The pink triangle badge was used by Nazis to identify homosexuals in the concentration camps. A German gay rights organization campaigning for compensation for gay camp survivors reclaimed the name and symbol.

American painter Romaine Brooks was born on May 1, 1875. In 1915, while living in Paris, Brooks met and fell in love with writer Natalie Barney, with whom she spent the next fifty years, building a home together, sharing a bank account, and even arranging to be buried together.

In 1998, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously that federal law prohibiting sexual harassment covers cases of same-sex sexual harassment.

In Berlin in 1919, Magnus Hirschfeld produced the first film depicting positive images of gay life, Anders als die Andern (Different from the Others).

Charles Socarides was one of the most vocal anti-gay psychiatrists of the 1950s and 1960s. He claimed he was able to cure homosexuality. Guess the cure didn't work, at least not on his own gay son Richard Socarides who went on to become President Clinton's liaison to the lesbian and gay community.

In 1987, the Homomonument was erected in Amsterdam, Holland, by designer Karin Daan. The monument has three interlocking pink granite triangles which commemorate victims of homophobia.

French writer Andre Gide (1869-1951) was the first out-gay man to receive a Nobel Prize for Literature. The prize was awarded to him in 1947.

The top Hollywood box office star of the 1930s was actor William Haines who lived in an openly gay relationship with Jimmy Shields for almost fifty years.

Metropolitan Community Church was founded by the Rev. Troy Perry. Perry was a Pentecostal minister until 1967, when he was excommunicated after refusing to denounce his homosexuality.

In June 1997, before three hundred gay pride marchers paraded through the streets of Bozeman, Montana, members of the town's Klu Klux Kan distributed flyers warning residents to stay inside and not breathe the air in order to avoid getting AIDS.

In June 1997, the Southern Baptist Convention voted to boycott the Walt Disney Company because of their belief that the company promotes homosexuality in its films and television programs, and because Disney offers domestic partner benefits to its employees.

The Group (1966), was the first mainstream Hollywood film to use the word "lesbian". It starred Candace Bergen in the lesbian role.

Before words like gay and homosexual, gay men were referred to as Urnings. It was coined by German sexologist Karl Heinrich Ulrichs in the 1860s and referred to a "third sex", a man's body with a female spirit trapped inside.

David Kopay was the first professional football player to come out as gay. While Kopay disclosed his sexual orientation after his playing career had already ended, he was unable to get a coaching job as a result of this disclosure and ended up working at his uncle's linoleum store.

In July of 1997, Harvard University became the first major university to allow same-sex couples to hold commitment ceremonies in the school's main chapel.

Gay Comics. D.C. Comics has produced a four-book miniseries, Metropolis S.C.U. (Special Crimes Unit), in which the main character is Captain Maggie Sawyer, a lesbian superhero.

In 1986, William Hurt became the first actor to win an Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of a gay character. The film? Kiss Of The Spiderwomen.
 
OMG thats an INTRESTING history! thanks for sharing WOW im impressed, and i somehow knew no matter how far back we go we re still going to be reconized for our belifs not for our sexual perferences, but for the love of our partners and our circle of friends :)
 
I knew a lot of these facts. In fact, I saw a plaque commemorating the gay and lesbian victims of the Nazi era at the Nollendorf subway station in Berlin, and saw the Sachsenhausen concentration camp where they executed/worked a lot of gay and lesbian prisoners to death.

I watched a German movie about Magnus Hirschfeld who was a sexologist and established the first sex museum in Germany until the Nazi government closed it down. Magnus Hirschfeld went into exile and left his "lovers" to suffer in Germany while he was in Paris with a new Asian lover. Hmmm

Also, I saw the Homomonument in Amsterdam, which incidentially was very close to Anne Frank House.
 
Lasza -- yes ive read many of the history and it is indeed very interesting! i was already aware of some of the history u had listed on here -- especially those from WW2 era in Nazi Germany -- the GLBT community definately has come a VERY long way in the histories and thanks to the 1969 Stonewall riots that occurred in Greenwich Village, NY it was (i think) the point where the doors has been thrown open and more gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered has come out despite the risks and today in 2003 there are more overall acceptance
 
A German gay rights organization campaigning for compensation for gay camp survivors reclaimed the name and symbol.
Yes, but the pink triangle didn't become a popular symbol until the '70's after the play "Bent" was on Broadway.
 
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