I still remember the smell before I even remember the light. It was the scent of damp wood, dirty straw, and the peculiar, sharp odor of a body deprived of sustenance for far too long. On May 5, 1945, within the confines of the Flossenbürg concentration camp, I remained unaware that the war was drawing to a close. I lay on my wooden plank bunk, unable to sit up without feeling the protests of my own bones against my skin.
I weighed 42 kg. Before the war, I had been a healthy 76. Three years in the camp had been enough to transform my body into that of an old man, though I was still young in years. I no longer contemplated the future; my existence was a mere succession of pain and exhaustion. Survival meant nothing more than holding on until the sun went down.
That night, however, the atmosphere shifted. There were no sounds of boots in the yard, no harsh orders barked at dawn, and no barking dogs. The silence was so profound that it pulled me from my sleep. In the camp, silence was synonymous with a trap. There was always a cry, a howl, or a summons. I listened for a long time, not daring to move. Around me, the other men in Block 13—men like me—breathed shallowly.
We all wore the pink triangle sewn onto our chests. It was a mark that placed us at the very bottom of the social hierarchy, even among the prisoners. Of the 187 men who had arrived with this mark between 1942 and 1945, only 32 of us remained. The others had vanished into the quarry, consumed by hunger, illness, or the sheer weight of despair. I didn’t know why I was still among the living. I possessed no exceptional strength, only a stubborn, almost absurd refusal to die before witnessing the end of those who had decided I didn’t deserve to exist.
The Arrival of the Unknown
By morning, no guards arrived to open the doors. No one lined us up for the dehumanizing ritual of the roll call. We remained motionless, paralyzed by the suspicion that this was a final cruel trick. Then, a new sound reached us—a distant, mechanical rumble of engines we didn’t recognize.
I struggled to my feet, my legs shaking so violently that I had to press my weight against the cold wall. I had to see. When I reached the door of the barracks and peered outside, I saw uniforms I had never seen before. These soldiers were clean; their helmets were a different shape, and they carried their weapons without the casual brutality we were used to. Most importantly, they had no dogs. They spoke a language that was a rhythmic, unknown tumble of sounds. Later, I would learn it was English. At that moment, I only knew one thing: they were not the ones who had held us captive.
A young soldier approached. He stopped dead when his eyes met mine. I will never forget his gaze. It wasn’t the cold indifference or the burning hatred I was accustomed to; it was pure, unadulterated horror. He murmured something I couldn’t understand, but the tone was unmistakable. It was pity.
In that camp, pity had been a forgotten concept. He reached out cautiously, as if he feared I might shatter under his touch. I took his hand. It was the first kind touch I had felt since my arrest in 1942, and yet I didn’t feel joy. I felt a crushing confusion. Freedom seemed unreal, a dangerous illusion. For three years, every glimmer of hope had been met with a blow. My mind simply refused to accept the reality of our liberation.

The Mark of Paragraph 175
As the soldiers entered the block, I found myself staring at the pink triangle on my chest. I was arrested in Berlin for violating Paragraph 175. My “crime” wasn’t violence, theft, or treason. My crime was loving another man.
I had been an accountant, living a quiet, careful life. I thought caution would be my shield. But one evening in a discreet bar, I met someone. Three weeks later, the authorities were at my door at dawn. The betrayal was absolute. They wanted names, but I gave none—not out of a sense of heroism, but because I realized that speaking would not buy my safety. I was labeled “degenerate” and sent to Flossenbürg.
In the camp, I learned what the pink triangle truly meant. We were targeted more than the others, fed less, and often despised by our fellow prisoners. I saw men choose to end their suffering by throwing themselves into the electric fences or the quarry. I stayed alive because of a man named Klaus, a former teacher. Every night, he whispered that if even one of us survived, the world would have to listen. Klaus died in 1943 during a medical experiment. Otto and Ernst followed. I was the last one left from our small circle of friends.
Now, on May 5, the young soldier sat me down and gave me water. I wept as I drank. But when I saw him notice the pink triangle, and saw the confusion and eventual distance in his eyes, I felt a new fear. The war had ended, but the law that sent me here had not.
A Fragile Freedom
The Americans set up a makeshift infirmary in the old administrative building. For the first time in years, we were ordered to rest. A doctor examined me with such care it felt alien. They gave me clear broth. To eat without fear, to drink without being struck—it felt like a dream I might wake from at any moment.
Corporal James Mitchell, the young man who found me, visited me often. He tried to smile, but the environment made it difficult. When he finally asked the interpreter what my pink triangle represented, I watched his face freeze. He became serious, his help now tinged with a solemnity that suggested he had realized the complexity of our “crimes.”
As the weeks passed, documentation began. Officers interviewed the survivors, seeking evidence of atrocities. When my turn came, I spoke of the quarry and the beatings. But when the officer asked specifically about my conviction for homosexuality, his gaze turned cold. It was the first sign that our liberation would be different. While the political prisoners and other groups received immediate compassion, we received a heavy, uncomfortable silence.
Mitchell, however, stayed. One evening, he discreetly gave me an extra piece of bread. He looked around before doing so, as if he were being watched. He placed a hand on my shoulder for a brief second before pulling it away. In his eyes, I saw something more than pity—I saw a silent, pained recognition. I didn’t know his secret then, but I felt he understood my isolation in a way the others did not.
The Second Captivity
In June 1945, the illusion of freedom shattered. An officer informed me that my case had been reviewed. Because my conviction was based on a civil law—Paragraph 175—which still existed in the German legal code, my sentence was not considered over. I was to be transferred to a civilian prison to serve the remainder of my time.
I argued that I had already endured three years in a concentration camp. The officer remained unmoved; he said it wasn’t his decision to make. To the law, I was still a criminal. Mitchell learned the news that evening. He looked as though he wanted to protest, but the fear in his eyes told me he couldn’t. Defending me would expose him to the same suspicions. His silence hurt more than the camp’s brutality because it came from a friend.
I was escorted from Flossenbürg not as a survivor, but as a prisoner. The metal doors of the Nuremberg civilian prison closed with the same definitive “clack” as the gates of the camp. While I had a mattress and real food, the moral fatigue was crushing. I was a “convict” again.
My cellmate, Martin, also wore a pink triangle. He had been transferred directly from another camp. He told me, “For us, the war never really ended.” The Allies had destroyed the camps, but they had maintained the laws that had sent us there. We were freed from a brutal system only to be returned to a “civilized” one that still deemed our existence a fault.
The Long Road Back to Berlin
I was released in September 1945. My sentence was “served.” I walked into the ruins of post-war Germany with nothing but a set of oversized civilian clothes and papers that still bore the mark of a criminal.
Berlin was a skeleton of a city. I found a small room and a job in a warehouse. I was an accountant by trade, but my hands shook too much for pens, and my mind was haunted by the quarry. Every time I heard boots on the pavement, my heart stopped. Every night, I saw the faces of Klaus, Otto, and Ernst.
I lived in absolute discretion. In 1946, homosexuality was still a crime in Germany. There was no aid for men like me. We were the “invisible” victims, omitted from public memory. I met Martin again in the streets of Berlin. He had been fired from a job after his employer learned of his conviction. We realized then that our liberation was conditional. We had to remain invisible to survive.
In 1947, I received a letter from America. It was from James Mitchell. He hoped I was “free and safe.” I sat with the letter for hours, unable to explain that my freedom felt like another form of captivity. I finally replied, thanking him for his kindness on that May morning.
The Last Witness
The 1950s and 60s passed in a monotonous blur of caution. Society talked of reconstruction and the future, but our past remained a forbidden subject. Martin died in the early 60s, and as I stood by his grave, the weight of being the “last witness” settled on my shoulders. If I remained silent, the stories of Block 13 would die with me.
I began to write. I wrote about the snow, the quarry, and the names of the men who had been erased. I entrusted these pages to a lawyer, to be opened only after my death. I wasn’t seeking justice; I was seeking the truth.
Much later, a final letter arrived from Mitchell. He was old now, and he confessed that he was finally speaking publicly about what he saw at Flossenbürg. He had been afraid all his life, but he didn’t want to die in silence.
I realized then that we had both been fighting the same battle from different sides of the ocean. First, we survived. Then, we understood. Finally, we spoke.
I died in a quiet apartment, much as I had lived. Years later, my pages were found and read. Historians finally began to add our names to the accounts of the war. Freedom, I finally understood, wasn’t just the absence of barbed wire; it was the ability to tell one’s story without fear. My story, and the stories of the men with the pink triangles, finally belonged to the world.