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Title: Ernst Röhm, The Highest-Ranking Gay Nazi
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://daily.jstor.org/ernst-rohm-the-highest-ranking-gay-nazi/
Published: Mar 27, 2017
Author: Matthew Wills
Post Date: 2020-09-27 09:29:35 by BTP Holdings
Keywords: None
Views: 399
Comments: 6

Ernst Röhm, The Highest-Ranking Gay Nazi

Ernst Röhm, the highest-ranking gay Nazi, presents an interesting study in the construction and containment of masculinity by the right.

Nazis Kurt Daluege, Heinrich Himmler, Ernst Röhm in 1933 via Wikimedia Commons/Bundesarchiv

By: Matthew Wills March 27, 2017

A man in make-up and pearls condemning transgender people may seem counterintuitive, but Milo Yiannopoulos is hardly the first gay reactionary. The case of Ernst Röhm, the highest-ranking gay Nazi, presents an interesting study in the construction and containment of masculinity by the right.

Röhm was Hitler’s right-hand man as head of the Sturmabteilung (SA, the Brownshirts), the Nazi paramilitary wing. Instrumental in the rise of the party via the street-fighting and extra-judicial murders of the late 1920s and early 1930s, Röhm’s sexual orientation was no secret after the mid-1920s. Hitler either ignored it or said it was immaterial, depending on who he was talking to, including other Nazis.

If Röhm’s masculinity reassured some Nazis, it threatened others. Röhm opposed his party’s stand on Paragraph 175 of the German penal code, which made male homosexual acts illegal. This made some German homosexuals think he might ultimately tone down the Nazi stance. That was always wishful thinking, but became especially moot after 1934’s “Night of the Long Knives,” when Röhm and others were massacred as Hitler consolidated his power. (Earlier, the Social Democrats, one of the few parties to campaign for the repeal of Paragraph 175, showed itself willing to gay-bait Röhm.)

As Eleanor Hancock explains, Röhm, his face scarred from war wounds, stressed a hyper-masculinity to counteract contemporary views of homosexuality as feminine. A First World War veteran, Rohm “attached paramount importance to the values of militarized masculinity.” This aligned with Nazi views of the homosocial Männerbund. Such all-male organizations of warrior-comrades were supposed to be united under the banner of discipline and order against the threatening “wave” of the bourgeoisie, women, Jews, socialists, Bolsheviks, all of whom represented weakness, chaos, and disorder—in short, the Weimar Republic. Röhm suggested that the line between homosocial and homosexual, however, was potentially fluid.

Hancock says that Röhm “challenged the privileging of heterosexual over homosexual masculinities. If Röhm’s masculinity reassured some Nazis, it threatened others. His open homosexuality may have threatened the psychological security of some other National Socialists, creating a form of ‘male homosexual panic.'” She goes further, wondering if “the purge of the SA and the killing of Röhm represented the literal objective correlative for the suppression and repression of the homosexual desires in their own Nazism?”

Even before Ernst Röhm was murdered, the Nazis had begun cracking down on homosexuality, banning organizations, burning books, and arresting the first of some 100,000. Around 15,000 gay people were sent to concentration camps, where some were experimented upon in bizarre efforts to find a “cure” for sexual orientation, a foreshadowing of American psychological and later fundamentalist efforts to try the same thing.


Poster Comment:

When I lived in Chicago, one night there was a fight at the corner tap. The windows got broken out so it was closed the next night.

One guy wanted a beer so he went across the street to The Blue Pub. It was a gay bar. Some guy grabbed his ass and he punched him out. The cops came and arrested him.

I heard when he got in front of the Judge the Judge said, "I'm tired of you tough guys beating up the gays." He gave him 30 days in Cook County Jail.

I knew about that place so I stayed away from it.

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#5. To: BTP Holdings (#0)

I knew about that place so I stayed away from it.

By not 'beating up the gays'? ;)

NeoconsNailed  posted on  2020-09-28   2:22:10 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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#6. To: NeoconsNailed (#5)

By not 'beating up the gays'?

I knew that place was a gay bar. It was simple choice to stay way from it since I wasn't that way. I liked women.

But the book keeper at the gay florist lived in an apartment nearby. He met some guy over there and they flopped a his place. He told me, "It was glorious."

Some guys just like to take it in the ass on a regular basis. :-/

BTP Holdings  posted on  2020-09-28 08:01:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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