Più di un milione di libri, a un clic di distanza!
Bookbot

Pierre Seel

    16 agosto 1923 – 25 novembre 2005

    Le esperienze di Pierre Seel durante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale, quando fu deportato dalla Francia a causa della sua omosessualità, formano il nucleo della sua narrazione. Negli anni '80, iniziò coraggiosamente a parlare, condividendo la sua storia. La sua testimonianza getta luce su un aspetto della persecuzione bellica spesso trascurato. La volontà di Seel di raccontare la sua terribile esperienza funge da potente atto di ricordo e testimonianza di resilienza.

    I, Pierre Seel, deported homosexual
    Liberation was for others
    • At the age of seventeen, in the arms of a thief, Pierre Seel felt his watch sliding off his wrist. So begins the astonishing chain of events that led to the Schirmeck-Vorbruch concentration camp, where Seel suffered unspeakable horrors for the sole "crime" of being a homosexual.The story of survival in the camps has been told many times, but Seel's is one of the only firsthand accounts of the Nazi roundup and deportation of homosexuals. For nearly forty years he kept his experiences - including torture, humiliation, and witnessing the vicious murder of his lover at the hands of the Nazis - a secret in order to cover up his homosexuality. He found a wife through a personal ad, married, and raised three children. "The Liberation," he writes, "was for others." Finally, haunted by his experiences and by the silence of others, he decided to bear witness to an aspect of the Holocaust rarely seen. As he noted, "If I do not speak, I will become the accomplice of my torturers."

      Liberation was for others
    • As a young man in German-occupied France, Pierre Seel appeared on a list of accused homosexuals and was sent to an interment camp. He managed to survive the war, spending most of it as cannon fodder on the Russian front. Available for the first time in English, this account of Seel's experiences provides an invaluable contribution to the literature of the Holocaust.

      I, Pierre Seel, deported homosexual