Missing from the annals of African American
history and the history of Nazi Germany are the documented
stories and struggles of African Americans, straight and “queer.”
Valaida Snow, captured in Nazi-occupied Copenhagen and interned
in a concentration camp for nearly two years, is one such
story forgotten every Black History Month when we are celebrating
our heroes and survivors.
Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Valaida
Snow came from a family of musicians and was famous for playing
the trumpet. Named “Little Louis” after Louis Armstrong (who
called her the world’s second best jazz trumpet player, aside
from himself, of course) Snow played concerts throughout the
U.S., Europe
and China.
On a return trip to Denmark
after headlining at the Apollo Theater in Harlem,
Snow, the conductor of an all-women’s band, was arrested for
allegedly possessing drugs and sent to an Axis internment
camp for alien nationals in Wester-Faengle.
While in pre-Hitler Germany
all-female orchestras were de rigueur in many avant-garde
entertainment clubs, these homosocial all-women’s bands created
tremendous outrage during Hitler’s regime. Snow was sent to
a concentration camp not only because she was black and in
the wrong place at the wrong time, but also because of her
“friendships” with German women musicians, implying lesbianism.
Although laws against lesbianism had not been
codified, and lesbians were not criminalized for their sexual
orientations as gay men were, gay German women were nonetheless
viewed as a threat to the Nazi state and were fair game during
SS raids on lesbian bars, sentenced by the Gestapo, sent to
concentration camps, and branded with a black triangle. As
a matter of fact, any German woman, lesbian, prostitute or
heterosexual, not upholding her primary gender role - “to
be a mother of as many Aryan babies as possible” - was deemed
anti-social and hostile to the German state.
Because Nazis could not discern between the
sexual affection and social friendship between straight and
lesbian women, over time they dismissed lesbianism as a state
and social problem, as long as both straight and lesbian women
carried out the state’s mandate to procreate.
Nazi
Germany’s extermination plan of gay men is a classic example
of how politics informed their science. Paragraph 175 of the
German Criminal Code differentiated between the type of persecution
non-German gay men received from German gay men because of
a quasi-scientific and racist ideology of racial purity. “The
polices of persecution carried out toward non-German homosexuals
in the occupied territories differed significantly from those
directed against Germans gays,” wrote Richard Plant in “The
Pink Triangle: The Nazi War Against Homosexuals.” “The Aryan
race was to be freed of contagion; the demise of degenerate
peoples was to be hastened.”
Hans J. Massaquoi, former Ebony Magazine magazine
editor, and the son of an African diplomat and white German
mother, in his memoir, Destined
to Witness: Growing Up Black in Nazi Germany,
depicts a life of privilege until his father returned to his
native Liberia. Like all non-Aryans,
Massaquoi faced constant dehumanization and the threat of
death by Gestapo executioners. “Racist[s] in Nazi Germany
did their dirty work openly and brazenly with the full protection,
cooperation, and encouragement of the government, which had
declared the pollution of Aryan blood with ‘inferior’ non-Aryan
blood the nation’s cardinal sin,” he wrote. Consequently,
the Gestapo rounded up and forcibly sterilized and subjected
many non-Aryans to medical experiments, while other just simply
mysteriously disappeared.
There was no systematic program for elimination
of people of African descent in Nazi Germany from 1933 to
1945 in Nazi Germany because their number were few, but ther
abuses they suffered in German-occupied territories, like
the one in which Snow was captured, were great and far-reaching.
After 18 months of imprisonment, Snow was one
of the more fortunate blacks to make it out of Nazi Germany,
released as an exchange prisoner. She was, however, both psychologically
and physically scarred from the ordeal and never fully recovered.
Snow attempted to return to performing but her spark, tragically,
was gone.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe is
a religion columnist, theologian, and public speaker. A native
of Brooklyn, Rev. Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College
and Union Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and
served as a pastor at an African-American church before coming
to Harvard Divinity School for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow.
Reverend Monroe’s “Let
Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow 365 Days a Year - Meditations
on Bible Prayers"
will be out in June, 2008. As an African American feminist
theologian, she speaks for a sector of society that is frequently
invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com. Click
here to contact the Rev. Monroe.