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- Newsgroups: soc.bi
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!ieunet!tcdcs!maths.tcd.ie!longvalley!cjmchale
- From: cjmchale@dsg.cs.tcd.ie (Ciaran McHale)
- Subject: Re: question about the triangle
- Message-ID: <1993Jan24.211552.21106@dsg.cs.tcd.ie>
- Organization: DSG, Dept. of Computer Science, Trinity College Dublin
- References: <1993Jan24.130204.10122@iscsvax.uni.edu>
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 21:15:52 GMT
- Lines: 67
-
- In <1993Jan24.130204.10122@iscsvax.uni.edu> weaverli0469@iscsvax.uni.edu writes:
- >Just a quick question : What does the triangle stand for? I see them every so
- >often at the bottom of people's notes...
-
- This would make a good candidate for inclusion in the FAQ posting.
-
- In the Nazi concentration camps, during WWII, one or more coloured
- triangles, about 6cm along a side, were sewn into prisoner's clothing.
- The colour of the triangle signified what that person's crime was. Pink
- was used to indicate homosexual men and yellow for Jewish men. If a
- prisoner was a gay and Jewish then the triangles overlapped---one up,
- one down---to form a Star of David. There were other colour categories
- too for gypsies, political prisoners, common thieves etc. There was no
- specific category for lesbians so they were given the same coloured
- triangle, black, as another group (I forget which group this was).
-
- From this origin of oppression, the pink triangle has been reclaimed to
- be a symbol of gay pride. The black triangle has been similarly
- reclaimed but it not as well-known as its pink counterpart.
-
- Somewhere along the line, the pink triangle as a gay pride symbol was
- modified to produce a bisexual pride symbol. The result is
- overlapping pink and blue triangles, with the pink one being in
- front and slightly to the right. On some versions, the overlapping
- part of the triangles is shaded in whatever colour you get when you mix
- pink and blue together.
-
- If you are interested, the following book provides some more details.
- It includes a table on page twenty-something or thirty-something which
- gives the triangle colour coding scheme used to designate prisoner
- categories.
-
- @book{history-2,
- author = "Heinz Heger",
- title = "{The Men With the Pink Triangle}",
- publisher = "GMP Publishers Ltd.",
- address = "P.O.~Box~247, London~N15~6RW, England.",
- year = "1986",
- series = "Gay Modern Classics",
- note = "ISBN~0-85449-014-0. ISBN~0-907040-03-9~paperback.
- \pounds 3.95",
- blurb = "A unique first-hand account of the life and death of
- homosexual prisoners in the Nazi concentration camps",
- annote = "Very enlightening. This book paints a very different
- picture of concentration camps to that which I had
- previously seen. It is also an account of the use of
- the pink triangle in concentration camps."
- }
-
- I know that there is another book which deals with gay men in
- concentration camps, but I do not know what it is called.
-
- Coloured triangles cannot be reproduced on ASCII terminals, but you may
- sometimes see triangles in the .signatures at the end of postings. Some
- bisexual posters try to reproduce the overlapping triangle effect while
- others use a sinle triangle with "bi" written inside it, as follows:
-
- ----
- \bi/
- \/
-
-
- Ciaran.
- --
- ---- Ciaran McHale (cjmchale@dsg.cs.tcd.ie)
- \bi/ Department of Computer Science, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland.
- \/ Telephone: +353-1-7021539 FAX: +353-1-6772204
-