Tel Aviv dedicates monument to gays persecuted by Nazis

A monument to gays persecuted by the Nazis was dedicated in Tel Aviv.

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JERUSALEM (JTA) — A monument to gays persecuted by the Nazis was dedicated in Tel Aviv.

The monument, the first of its kind in Israel, was constructed in Meir Park, near the Tel Aviv Gay and Lesbian Association Center in the central part of the city.

The monument is made up of a concrete pink triangle along with a bench and a plaque providing information on the persecution of gays and lesbians during the Holocaust. Gays and lesbians were forced to wear an identifying pink triangle on their clothing in the same way that Jews were forced to wear a yellow star.

The inscription on the memorial reads in Hebrew, English and German: “In memory of those persecuted by the Nazi regime for their sexual preference and gender identity.”

Tel Aviv Councilman Eran Lev, who is gay, initiated the project.

“The significance here is that we are recognizing that there were other victims of the Holocaust, not just Jews,” Lev said at the dedication on Jan. 10, according to The Associated Press.

Memorials to the gay victims of Nazi persecution exist in Berlin, Amsterdam, Sydney and San Francisco.

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