AC. “Lower your trousers” — a German order dreaded by homosexual prisoners

The history of wartime confinement often focuses on the broader geopolitical strokes of conflict, yet some of the deepest institutional scars were recorded within the clinical, white-tiled rooms of camp infirmaries. In these spaces, state-sponsored pseudo-science was deployed as an instrument of total degradation against those deemed non-compliant with regime ideologies. Among the most systematic targets of this domestic enforcement were the prisoners designated by the pink triangle—men persecuted under historical legal frameworks like Paragraph 175, whose personal identities were reclassified by administrative authorities as systemic deviations requiring correction.

For survivors like Gabriel Lerois, a thirty-four-year-old French architect arrested during a private gathering in Paris in June 1943, the transition from civilian professional to camp inmate involved an immediate stripping of personal agency. Transported to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp north of Berlin, Lerois joined thousands of others caught within a bureaucratic apparatus designed to enforce ideological conformity through physical confinement and medical coercion.

The Architecture of Institutional Confinement

Situated just thirty kilometers from the administrative heart of the Reich, Sachsenhausen operated not only as a confinement facility but as a primary testing ground for the enforcement mechanisms of the SS. It was a site where forced labor, structural deprivation, and experimental programs were formalized before being implemented across other sectors. Within this hierarchy of hardship, prisoners marked with the pink triangle faced an exceptionally rigid disciplinary regime, enduring targeting from both the camp administration and the broader institutional framework.

By late 1943, the camp held approximately 180 prisoners under this specific designation. While the majority were German citizens, the expanding borders of the wartime occupation brought in individuals from France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Among this group was a small cohort of French nationals whose paths intersected within the crowded residential barracks:

These individuals, separated by background and age, were unified by an administrative system that sought to reduce their human complexity to a singular, state-defined classification.

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The Ideological Framework of Medical Intervention

The medical facility at Sachsenhausen was presented in official documentation as a standard healthcare unit, but in practice, it functioned as an unregulated laboratory for experimental biology. Under the direction of staff physicians such as Dr. Ernst Hoffman, the facility focused heavily on the prevailing socio-biological theories of the era, which posited that personal identity and orientation were structural pathologies capable of being corrected through chemical or surgical intervention.

Hoffman’s methodology relied on a series of invasive physical assessments designed to establish anatomical correlations with specific social behaviors. For the prisoners subjected to these daily inspections, the process represented an institutional effort to transform the private human form into an object of clinical evaluation.

When Gabriel Lerois was first brought before the medical staff, the interaction was characterized by an absolute absence of standard medical ethics. The physical inspections were brief, detached, and designed to maximize the psychological vulnerability of the captive. This clinical detachment was far more insidious than overt hostility, as it framed institutional violation as a standard scientific procedure.

During these evaluations, the prisoners quickly recognized that their physical survival depended entirely on their utility to the research program. While Antoine Mercier was initially dismissed from immediate experimentation due to advanced physical exhaustion from factory labor—receiving temporary administrative rations solely to increase his mass for future study—others were selected for immediate, long-term clinical trials.

Experimental Coercion and Chemical Interventions

In late November 1943, a selected group of twelve prisoners, including Lerois, Petit, and Duval, were permanently transferred to a specialized wing of the medical block to begin a structured hormone assignment program. The guiding hypothesis of Hoffman’s research was that high-dosage chemical rebalancing could fundamentally alter human behavior and align it with state mandates.

The subsequent regime involved daily, high-concentration injections of synthetic compounds. For individuals already weakened by chronic malnutrition and intense physical labor, these unmonitored chemical introductions caused severe systemic shock. The immediate side effects included acute cardiovascular distress, severe dermatological inflammation, and profound metabolic instability.

The human cost of these procedures manifested rapidly. Julien Petit, the youngest member of the group, suffered terminal cardiac failure during a morning assembly after consecutive weeks of chemical exposure. The administrative response to his collapse was entirely statistical, recorded in the facility logs as a failure of the subject’s underlying constitution rather than a direct consequence of the injection protocol. This reduction of a young life to a single line in an administrative ledger illustrated the total devaluation of human identity within the camp framework.

For the surviving participants, the loss of their companions reinforced the reality that the medical program was a slow process of physical attrition. Henri Vasseur, using his background as a medical professional, recognized that the procedures lacked any legitimate scientific baseline, operating instead as a form of ideological theater disguised as clinical research.

The Strategy of Internal Sabotage

The nature of the experiments shifted in early 1944 when Vasseur was reassigned from general labor to an assistant role within the laboratory storage units due to a shortage of qualified personnel. This placement provided the physician with direct access to the experimental compounds and the administrative logs used to track patient progress.

Recognizing that overt resistance would result in immediate execution, Vasseur initiated a covert program of internal frustration. He utilized his understanding of chemical preservation to systematically compromise the efficacy of the experimental solutions. By intentionally exposing specific hormone shipments to direct light and temperature fluctuations prior to preparation, he ensured that the active ingredients degraded significantly before administration.

This hidden intervention had a measurable impact on the camp’s research program:

  • The severe, life-threatening internal reactions among the test subjects began to stabilize.

  • The statistical data compiled by Hoffman’s staff failed to show the behavioral modifications demanded by the regional directors in Berlin.

  • The overall cost of the facility’s specialized pharmaceutical logistics could no longer be justified by the stagnant research outcomes.

By maintaining a completely neutral demeanor while performing his daily administrative duties, Vasseur successfully leveraged his technical knowledge to protect his fellow inmates from the full impact of the chemical assignments. However, the margins for such activities were incredibly narrow. In March 1944, a discrepancy in the storage inventory led to a internal investigation by camp security. Though Vasseur managed to convey a final warning to Raymond Duval to secure their private documentation, he was removed from the general compound and did not return.

Documentation and the Preserved Record

Following the closure of the specific hormone research program due to its lack of quantifiable success, the surviving prisoners were returned to standard industrial labor detachments in the regional quarries. Despite the return to intense physical strain, the psychological focus of the group shifted toward preservation and documentation.

Raymond Duval, the former theologian, assumed the responsibility of maintaining a detailed written record of their experiences. Utilizing fragments of administrative paper salvaged from facility refuse and a concealed pencil lead, Duval meticulously logged the names of the participants, the dates of specific medical interventions, the observed physiological reactions, and the names of the directing medical personnel. These records were stored beneath the floorboards of the residential barracks, serving as a silent archive of the structural violations occurring daily within the medical block.

The value of this documentation became paramount during the final phases of the wartime conflict. In April 1945, as Allied forces advanced toward the regional capital, the camp administration initiated a hurried evacuation, forcing thousands of weakened inmates into protracted foot marches toward the northwestern territories. These movements, completed under severe structural breakdown and constant security threats, resulted in massive casualties along the rural corridors.

During the confusion of a regional aerial disturbance on the fourth day of the march, Duval and Lerois managed to separate themselves from the main column, seeking shelter within the dense woodlands of Mecklenburg until the arrival of advanced units of the international forces. Throughout this entire period of displacement, Duval carried the concealed documentation stitched into the lining of his civilian attire, ensuring that the historical details survived the collapse of the regime.

The Post-War Legacy and Historical Accountability

The conclusion of hostilities did not bring an immediate restoration of justice for survivors of the pink triangle. In the post-war era, many individuals faced continued legal challenges under existing national statutes that maintained the criminalization of non-traditional identities, forcing many survivors to maintain absolute silence regarding their wartime experiences to avoid further social and legal marginalization.

Gabriel Lerois returned to Paris, resuming his architectural practice and rebuilding his professional life within a society focused entirely on post-war reconstruction. For decades, his experiences within the medical blocks of Sachsenhausen remained completely unshared, a private burden carried beneath a veneer of conventional professional success. It was only in the early twenty-first century, through the efforts of specialized historical researchers documenting the specific experiences of wartime minorities, that the details of his narrative were formally entered into the public archive.

Raymond Duval’s preserved documentation eventually found its way into regional research repositories, providing international historians with the precise clinical data necessary to counter the institutional attempts to erase the program’s records during the final days of the war. These records confirmed that the interventions were not isolated instances of individual cruelty, but represented a structured, state-funded effort to utilize medical authority as an instrument of social engineering.

The historical accounts indicate that many of the directing medical personnel, including Hoffman, avoided formal prosecution during the post-war tribunals, often vanishing into civilian roles or relocating to alternative jurisdictions amidst the broader geopolitical reconfigurations of the Cold War era. This lack of formal resolution underscores the limitations of post-war legal frameworks in addressing specific forms of institutional and medical abuse.

Today, the preservation of these testimonies serves a critical function within the historical record. By documenting the precise mechanisms through which administrative power was used to violate the physical and psychological autonomy of individuals based on their identity, these narratives ensure that the experiences of the pink triangle prisoners remain recognized not as footnotes, but as essential warnings regarding the misuse of scientific authority in the service of ideological conformity.