In this letter, the Wissenschaftlich-humanitäres Komitee
(Scientific-Humanitarian Committee), or WhK, invited members of the
Reichstag from the center-liberal German Democratic Party to visit its
Institute for Sexual Science, in order to learn more about
homosexuality, to meet with gay men in person, and to hear their
concerns. The Reichstag’s committee on criminal law was in the midst
of a debate in 1929 over modifying or repealing the German law known
as Article 175, which criminalized sexual acts between men, and the
WhK hoped that this meeting might sway political opinion in favor of
repeal.
Founded in 1897 by the pioneering sex researcher and political
reformer Magnus Hirschfeld, the WhK helped to launch the homosexual
emancipation movement in Germany and to make that country a world
center for research, publishing, and advocacy on issues related to
what we know today as LGBTQ+ issues. Hirschfeld’s motto, “through
science to justice,” expressed his belief that research would pave the
way toward a broader acceptance of sexual minorities by proving the
innateness of their natures. He established the Institute for Sexual
Science in 1919 in order to share scientific findings on homosexuality
and transgenderism with a larger public, and the WhK’s invitation to
Reichstag members to visit the Institute fit perfectly with his
philosophy that enlightenment would reshape policy.
Throughout the 1920s, Hirschfeld, his Institute, and the WhK
collected signatures on petitions and gathered people together to push
for a repeal of Article 175. The law declared that “Unnatural
fornication, whether it is committed between persons of the male sex
or between humans and animals, is punishable by imprisonment and can
result in the loss of rights.” Germany’s criminal code did not
prohibit sex between women, however, nor did Article 175 prevent
Germany in the 1920s from developing the most vibrant queer urban
subculture that the world had yet seen, including bars, social
organizations, and nearly two dozen newsletters and magazines with
nationwide circulations.
Officials could nevertheless use the law to justify arresting and
imprisoning men, often causing them to lose their jobs, friends, and
family; and its existence stigmatized and marginalized otherwise
peaceful, productive, and law-abiding members of society. Article 175
also enabled blackmail, with Hirschfeld estimating that one-third of
gay men had been the target of blackmail at some point in their lives,
and the press regularly publishing stories on suicides by blackmail
victims. For these reasons, the WhK and other gay-rights
organizations, along with a number of human-rights and legal-reform
groups, and the Social Democratic (SPD) and Communist (KPD) political
parties, all advocated revising the law or eliminating it
altogether.
After the May 1928 elections produced a new left-center coalition
government, the moment looked right for the Reichstag to take a new
look at this legal reform. The committee on criminal law had 28
members, exactly half of them from parties on the left and
center-left, including the SPD, the KPD, and the German Democratic
Party (DDP). This initiative by WhK aimed at ensuring that the DDP
members joined their SPD and KPD colleagues in voting to remove or
revise the law when it came up for a vote. When the committee finally
voted on the measure on October 16, 1929, over six months after the
March meeting took place at the Institute for Sexual Science, all of
the DDP members serving on it did, indeed, join their fellow KPD and
SPD colleagues in voting to strike Article 175 from the books. One
other member also voted to do so: the committee’s chair, Wilhelm Kahl,
who came from the center-right German People’s Party (DVP). Kahl had
moral misgivings about male homosexuality, but he believed in an
adult’s right to his own body, as long as it did no injury to third
parties, and he also hoped that the law’s repeal would actually
diminish the gay movement, since repealing the law seemed to be the
primary animating force behind its organizations and magazines. Kahl’s
vote gave the measure the majority it needed to move out of the
committee and go to a general vote in the Reichstag.
The measure never did come to that general vote in the Reichstag,
though, since the government first presented it to a different
committee whose task was to the make the German legal code more
compatible with the Austrian, in anticipation of some closer
arrangement between the two nations. As the Depression set in and the
September 1930 election produced a more right-leaning Reichstag,
lawmakers simply tabled the proposed revisions to the legal code, and
Article 175 stayed on the books.