A Short Story based on Historical People
By Maryanne Peters
It seems hard to believe with everything that happened afterwards, but in the 1920s and 1930s Germany was at the forefront of the battle for rights for homosexual and transsexual people.
The Berlin based sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld led a campaign throughout Europe with the formation of “The World League of Sexual Reform”. He toured America in 1931 with the Hearst newspaper chain dubbing him “the Einstein of Sex”. It was Hirschfeld who first outlined the full spectrum of sexual variations, by gender and orientation.
When he died in 1935 the homosexual and transsexual (he termed the phrase) communities in Berlin and elsewhere, mourned him. He was not just studying them; he was championing them. He was our champion, for I was a part of that community then.
This was Germany at the height of the Weimar Republic. It was democratic, liberal and centrist, so a target for the extremes of both left and right – The Communists to the left, and to the right the factions that were to come together as the Nazis.
Magnus was Jewish and was attacked by the Nazis from early in their history – to them he was the example of Jewish perversion and debauchery.
But they were yet to come to power, and in that prior age of laissez-faire Germany and Berlin in particular became the Mecca for homosexuals and those fascinated by the bizarre. Visitors came from Britain, Western Europe, Eastern Europe and North America. Tourism publications of the time touted Berlin nightlife. There were cabarets and nightclubs everywhere – in fact the show and movie “Cabaret” is based on this period in Berlin’s history.
One famous show was the “Tiller Girls”. Our show was a similar chorus line except we were not entirely girls – none of us was.
I worked at the “El Dorado” which was known as a transvestite venue. Even visitors commonly arrived in drag, or at least men in suits would apply a little rouge and lipstick. It was a honey pot for artists, authors, celebrities, and tourists wanting to admire a piece of “decadent” Berlin or catch a glimpse of someone famous.
Every night would start with a performance by us before rows of chairs before tables were brought out for coffee at 10:00pm. Then at 11:00pm all tables were cleared for dancing. As employees we would perform, serve coffee and be available as dance partners. It was barely a living, but there were private rooms presenting other opportunities to make money, and I had my admirers who sponsored me.
It enabled me, and a few others, to work and live in Berlin as women, which was all I had ever wanted. As soon as I could escape my little village in Pomerania I went straight to Berlin to be able to do that. I grew my hair, which was already blonde, I shaved my legs and I put on a dress, and I never wanted to go back.
I was prepared to do anything to become female, and Magnus would help me.
At Magnus Hirschfeld’s Institute of sexology there were two doctors who he said could help me. Both of them were working with Magnus at the time, although they would soon be forced to shun him.
The first was Dr. Adolf Butenandt who was to receive a Nobel Prize for his discovery of female sex hormones. He had been able to produce progesterone from the urine of mares and was keen to see the effect of the chemical on male subjects. Magnus recommended me and I enthusiastically agreed.
The second doctor was Dr Erwin Gohrbandt, a surgeon of some repute. Erwin had been born in a village quite close to mine, and he seemed like a very nice man. He spoke to me about surgery to give me the body of a woman. At the time he was the only person known to have performed such surgery. His first patient was working for Magnus as a maid and cleaner - her name was Dora Richter. Only the year before I met her, in 1932, Erwin had removed her penis and constructed a vagina – she had been castrated at the institute some years prior.
Dora was quiet and plain, but totally feminine and a hard worker. She was totally loyal to Magnus, but by the time I met her Magnus had been absent from Germany for some time and he was never to return. She stayed at the institute through the destruction by Nazi thugs in 1933 and was said to have died at the hands of the invaders. But as it turned out, that was not the case.
Erwin is perhaps more famous for his second sex change surgery, only a month after Dora, performed on a Danish artist named Lili Elbe. More famous only because this was a more publicized event. Sadly this surgery was not as successful, and Lily died.
But that did not put me off. Again I was a willing volunteer and submitted to surgery in March 1932.
Then in the summer of 1932 everything went up in flames. Even before the Nazis took power, the pressure imposed by them on Chancellor Franz von Papen, a Catholic conservative, was too great. He ordered a crack-down on "sexual immorality" which resulted in everybody associated with the Institute being attacked. The building itself remained open until the following year – the first year of Nazi rule. On May 6 th of that year a group of university students who belonged to the National Socialist Student League stormed the institution, shouting “Burn
Hirschfeld!”. People were attacked and said to have been killed, and books were burned. All of the years of research by Magnus and others carried out over decades, was destroyed.
I was not there. The El Dorado Club had to adapt to the new reality. I remained as a waitress. At least I was physically beyond discovery, unlike some of my colleagues.
Doctors Butenandt and Gohrbandt were not there either. Like the club, they needed to adapt to survive. Dr. Butenandt signed the “
Vow of allegiance of the Professors of the German Universities and High-Schools to Adolf Hitler and the National Socialistic State
” following the attack, and was to go on to join the Nazi party and apply himself to their evil work, as I shall explain. Erwin had been a field surgeon in the First War and something of a hero (I learned later that he had been awarded the Iron Cross First and Second Class) so in time he was called up for service in the Second War, but we stayed in touch.
10 days after the attack on the Institute Magnus Hirschfeld died in Nice, France, having learned of the destruction of his life’s work. Only those with courage attended his funeral, but there were many. The Nazis were watching. It was the beginning of a period of the systematic genocide of the homosexual and transsexual communities in Germany.
I witnessed many of the awful events of 1933. From Hitler becoming Chancellor in January, all civil liberties were gone by the end February, the first concentration was built by the end of March, all Jews were removed from professional practice by the end of April when the Gestapo was established, and eugenic sterilization was the law by the end of May. Homosexuals and similar behavior became a crime punishable by death.
Even just working at the Club had people wondering about me. I felt that as I was now no longer just dressing as a woman, perhaps it was no longer the place for me. But it was still the place where my friends were, even if it had lost much of its spark under the heel of the Gestapo boot.
It was actually Erwin Gohrbandt (who was still working in surgical research in Berlin) who suggested the solution: Join the army – the Wehrmacht. Everybody knew that joining up meant a physical examination, so if I passed that, my status was assured – I was female. Plus with the testimonial of a retired senior army officer, I could achieve a good posting
It was also a way to escape the Lebensborn program. Under the Nazi regime women should become mothers – preferably wives and mothers, but if not, just mothers. For example the SS Marriage Order of 1932 prescribed that every member should father four children, in or outside marriage. There was no room for sterile women such as I was.
By joining the Wehrmachtshelferinnen and becoming involved in training I could become indispensable and not be expected to marry and give birth. It meant that I had to follow the directives of following the hateful Nazi ideology and “to remain feminine and never to become rough warriors”.
Clerical skills were in demand, and I had none of those, but I had been in charge of a chorus line. So I quickly adapted to the role of drill sergeant for all the young women who were joining up for the first time.
Even in uniform, German society looked down on us for not being mothers. Perhaps because of my background I was used to that and I knew how to cope. I told my women to be proud to serve the Reich. Most were, but for me it was just a place to hide.
It might have been easier if I was plain like Dora, but I always wanted to be pretty and I was pleased that I was. I was not about to present myself any other way. That meant that I got plenty of attention. It also meant that I had to give myself a little. I am not ashamed. I had a vagina that functioned well enough for all but the very largest of men.
I had several proposals of marriage, which I was able to dodge by a variety of means, from trumped up incompatibility to finding fault with lineage in my desire to protect my Aryan heritage. And as a last resort I could organize a transfer and say: “For the Fatherland we must part”.
To do that I needed promotion, and I won it. When war broke out our numbers increased, as did our increasing involvement in anti-aircraft operations and civil defense. These were roles that did not require us to become “rough warriors” and at the start of the war were insignificant. The first Allied bombing of Germany was upon industrial areas in the West, where I went to learn. From August 1940 Berlin was being bombed regularly and I was in charge (only of the women) of almost 100 anti-aircraft installations.
People were dying, including civilians all around me and some of my own women soldiers. Nothing can prepare you for this much horror and sorrow, but perhaps I was used to dealing with stress better than the average woman. That is what I felt I was. Nobody questioned it and I kept my secret.
One of the sites my crews were charged with protecting was the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Biochemistry, which was designated as being ”kriegswichtig“ – essential to the war effort. By sheer chance on a visit there I met up with Magnus’s past-friend Dr. Adolf Butenandt who was then the Director. At first, he was uncomfortable to see me because of the connection, but then he became curious to examine me as an example of the long-term effect of female hormones on a male.
I was ready to refuse, but I was curious, and I asked him to explain what he was doing. It was my condition for helping him, so he explained it to me in complete confidence, which is a confidence I kept in all the time he remained alive.
He also gave me my first shot of hormones for many years. I loved the feeling of it. I had no testicles and earlier treatment had given me some breasts tissue, but I hungered to feel as womanly as I felt with those drugs inside me. He promised to keep me supplied with enough for an ampoule every month, and that was a promise he kept.
Dr. Butenandt examined me with particular attention to my breasts and bottom, and my soft skin and hair. He asked me a number of questions about my work in the army. I don’t think that he had any idea about what the Wehrmachtshelferinnen was, but I explained that we did what we could, not fight because we could “never be rough warriors”. He seemed very excited, as he said that his research on others was inconclusive.
H e told me that he had been experimenting on others, volunteers from a place called Buchenwald. I had never heard of this town, but in my naivety I imagined it as a nice place where you could sit and read books among the trees, as the name implies. Like many Germans,
I was completely unaware of the horrors there, but I could hardly be surprised given all the friends of mine who had died at the hands of the Nazis for nothing but their gentle nature.
He told me that if it could be established that hormones could render men incapable of violence, some method of mass dosing might render the enemy passive, allowing German men to end the war by the force of their own sexuality. The idea seemed laughable to me, but Nazi fervor could make even scientists ignore logic.
This kind of thinking marked the period in our city’s history that we call Endkampf - the final struggle. Not just weird and wonderful ideas, but the recruiting of children and the arming of the Wehrmachtshelferinnen including me.
To prove how wrong Dr Butenandt was, there were plenty of women who knew nothing but female hormones who were as blood thirsty as men, under my command. But I did my best to avoid conflict for all our sakes and led my teams west in order to surrender to the Americans rather than the Russians who seemed bent on vengeance.
And it was as a prisoner of war that I met Herb Gaffney, the man who was to become my husband and take me back to America. He called me his “Little Soldier Girl”, but the truth is I was none of those things. I never told him who I was. Records of my past life were destroyed, in any event. All he knew was that I spoke English because I was involved with tourism before the war, which led to me becoming involved in that after we married.
I had told him that I was unable to have children, and that I was under treatment from a specialist based in Berlin (Dr. Butenandt). He wanted kids so we went back to Germany in 1946 and adopted 3 German orphans. Even then things were very depressed in Germany and Berlin was slow to rebuild, whereas the USA was entering a boom time.
I never went back to Berlin after that, but before he died Dr. Butenandt wrote to me of his joy in seeing the divided city reunited after so many years, when the Berlin Wall came down. He was unable to supply me with hormones after that, but having recently lost my husband, I was ready for menopause by then
The End
© Maryanne Peters 2020
Author’s Note:
The German doctors in this story as well as Magnus Hirschfeld (and Dora and Lili), were real people. Dr Gohrbandt served as an advisory surgeon in the army and after the war was Vice President of the Berlin Red Cross. He died in 1971. Dr. Adolf Butenandt collected his Nobel Prize only after the war, but the work he did during the war remains a mystery. His institute received funding for concentrated research marked “important for the war” some of which was involved in blood chemistry for high altitude pilots, almost certainly involving concentration camp prisoners. There is some evidence of the possible use of female hormones as a weapon. He stayed with the Institute after the war (then renamed the Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science). He died in 1995, at the age of 91.
Author's Note: So many thanks to Rose who sweated over this to present the whole story with images, for me. Just in case I attach the pdf file.
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Sexpiation
A Short Story
By Maryanne Peters
When the world is on fire, how far would you leap to escape the flames? That is how we looked at it. We were not escaping from justice – we were escaping from madness.
I am not going to comment on the crimes of Hans Giese who I once was, or the crimes of Erich Kreindl who leapt with me out of the inferno, or those of Dr. Aribert Heim who helped us. We all admit that in a world on fire we did more than stand by; we fed the flames or stoked the coals, because we believed in a concept, a perfect world that was promised to us.
The word “Nazi” is now associated with such atrocities, but for us it was the highest of ideals. World peace by domination. It seemed like the only way. And the advancement of the human race by purification. The elimination of filth and greed created by lower peoples. The belief that Germans who were at the heart of science and the arts in the first part of the 20th century, represented all that was good in the world.
But we all know now that it was all a fraud, perpetrated by a lunatic.
Justice for us would have to wait. At that time, the Russians were close to Berlin, and to them justice meant nothing. We were dead men. At that time, we were still men, but that would change.
Many spoke about surrendering to the Western Allies, but the three of us knew that for us, this presented no better option. We were war criminals, all three of us. We were not low enough to be regarded as unimportant, and not high enough to truly cover our tracks.
“We will be found,” said Aribert. “And we will be executed. We must get away but adopt a foolproof disguise. If I was not so tall, I would seek the help of Butenandt and Gohrbandt. You could.”
We may have regarded it as gallows humor, but we were not laughing. Fear is the strongest of all emotions. It can paralyze you and confuse you, but it can also give you a clarity of thought to enable the most outrageous plan to be thought through.
Aribert Heim, like Adolf Butenandt and Erwin Gohrbandt, was a physician and a gynaecologist. But Heim was also in the SS as we were, whereas Butenandt was a kriegswichtig (important for the war) civilian, and Gohrbandt was in the wehrmacht (army). Aribert’s link to war crimes was clear and the same was true for us. Butenandt and Gohrbandt could assume themselves safe, but were still willing to help. In particular Butenandt had reason to secure our silence because of his experiments on high-altitude oxygen deprivation.
Let me explain who these people were. Dr. Adolf Butenandt who was to receive a Nobel Prize for his discovery of female sex hormones. He had been able to produce progesterone from the urine of mares and through his association with Magnus Hirschfeld’s Institut fur Seualwissenschaft (Sexology Institute) in Berlin he was able to see the effect of the chemical on male subjects. Dr Erwin Gohrbandt was a gynaecological surgeon responsible for the first sex change surgery on the Danish artist who became Lili Elbe. Aribert knew them both very well.
I posed the question when I started: How far would you go to survive? Before you say that you would never surrender your genitals, you need to look death in the face. When you have done that then you may understand. You would cut off an arm to free yourself from a sinking ship.
Butenandt and Gohrbandt were reluctant to help, but they agreed to perform the surgery and supply the hormones.
“The physical effects are irreversible,” Butenandt warned. “The mental effects are unknown. We have only operated on men who thought that they were women, which is not the case with you two. And remember that we can only make you appear as women but not behave as women. Those treated at the Institute were able to do that because they felt like women.”
Gohrbandt could offer us some assistance with our outrageous plan. He said that he had an ex-patient who was then known by her married name Schulz, but she had not always been female. She lived in Bamberg and she and her husband could be prevailed upon to take in two boarders in exchange for more hormones. Bamberg seemed ideal – well away from Berlin and the Russians, and close enough but not too close, to the advancing American army in the West.
The surgery took place in Berlin only days before the city fell. I could hear the sound of gunfire as I lost consciousness. I might well have died right there – a slip of the scalpel or a shell through the roof – I would never have known. But I resolved that if I woke, I would live and be free.
There was pain. But pain is like work – if it is shared it is halved.
“Let us hold hands as women do,” said Elsa, which was now the name my colleague would carry through her life. We both discovered that there was comfort in contact beyond anything men could share. It changed things for both of us.
In addition to removing all trace of male genitals both Erich and I had undergone some small level of facial surgery which was concealed under oxygen masks. We remained on stretchers for the journey West, in bandages and immobilized.
We were to be evacuated as patients under care, with Aribert and Dr. Butenandt physicians attending us. This would prove invaluable. Female patients are assumed non-combatants and civilian doctors are treated with respect. Aribert had burned his uniform and military papers, and Dr. Butenandt’s war merit crosses awarded by Hitler himself, were left in a safe in Berlin
Dr. Gohrbandt would go on to stay behind in Germany and he never left. The Russians needed his skills, and he went on to have a long medical career in Berlin. Dr Butenandt and Dr. Heim would go on to do the same thing. They had skills in demand.
The hunt was on for people like Hans Giese and Erich Kreindl. They were the visible war criminals. They were not looking for females. While there were women war criminals identified, this did not occur until years later, when the men were arrested and many of them already executed.
That could have been our fate, but we had new identities –Erich Kreindl became Elsa Stein and I became Carlotta Gruber.
These new identities were obtained from hospital records that would later be destroyed. It was as we had gone to hospital to die but we had survived by a miracle – two miracles in fact. That was what we told ourselves. We were alive and Hans and Erich had ceased to exist, like so many in the inferno that was our fatherland.
The people who knew who we truly were the three doctors who helped us, and their silence was assured.
The transit through the American lines was surprisingly easy, largely given to the respect given to physicians carrying civilian papers, and their patients in post-operative convalescence, especially if they were women. At that time and for a long while after the war, German women were seen as the saddest victims of war. Many had lost sons or husbands and had played no active part in the war, or even the politics that bought the Nazis to power. Elsa and I could draw upon the sympathy of many.
But before we did that, we would need to learn how to be woman, and Dora Schulz could be no better teacher, having herself changed from a man to a woman.
Dora was quiet and plain, and she wore simple clothes and no cosmetics, and yet she was clearly female. She had clear skin and soft hair, and she took pride in looking after those.
“You cannot step outside dressed as a cabaret singer,” she would say. “No real woman does that. Only men dressing as women.”
We listened, but Elsa had her own views. She had decided that she did not like the idea of being plain, so she spent time on presenting herself in a different way. She found the right balance eventually. The fact is that unlike Dora, she did have some rather heavy features which could be softened with makeup, and with an eye-catching hairstyle.
I can say without fear of contradiction that I was the prettiest of all three of us. I have large blue eyes but otherwise darker hair. My body responded well to Dr. Butenandt’s miracle drug, and I developed a bust and used an old-fashioned corset to create to shape so popular in the forties. I used makeup as Elsa would, but more sparingly, except when the occasion called for more.
The Americans had arrived and Bamberg was in the heart of the US sector, with 3 US military bases within 2 hours drive. Dora was not interested in the Americans. Her husband worked hard for her, and she loved him and cared for him so much that it did not matter she could not bear him a child. But women in Germany who were not married were interested in the Americans. It was a matter of survival.
You have to understand that Germany was destroyed by World War 2. The country was defeated and many men had died. Some were still interned in the Soviet Union and would take years to come back. Some were maimed or otherwise injured physically or mentally. There was little food, and in the parts of Germany where fighting had been desperate, little in the way of shelter. Paid jobs were few, so many just went about rebuilding without pay, and relying on community food rations.
But the Americans were increasingly seen as being there to rescue us. They had a plan – the Marshall Plan. We barely understood it at the time but we knew that the Americans were not going to be like the French who had sought to humiliate us after World War 1. They wanted to restore German pride and to promote a democracy that would prevent totalitarianism.
To many, the Americans were like us. Eisenhower is a German name – even Marshall if it is spelt correctly. The Russians hatred of us seemed perpetual, and the French hostile; the British seemed distrustful but the Americans were friendly.
For me, I still carried some concern in those days, because I was in shock that the dream of a new world order seemed lost. To me the Americans seemed selfish and decadent, whereas I believed in duty and the pursuit of a national goal. But all principles must be put aside.
I had always regarded myself as a person only sexually attracted to women, but that was something that I needed to put aside too. The commissaries of the US military bases seemed to be overflowing with food, and to be invited there was to eat enough to last for a week. Elsa told me and I learned.
But we were living hand to mouth, and we knew it. If Elsa and I had one advantage it was that we were educated, and we both spoke English very well. The Americans were looking for local people to help them, and we both applied.
And then Hank walked into my life. He says it was love at first sight for him, but how could it be that for me. As I said, I could not imagine myself as being attracted to him because he was a man. I may have pretended to be interested to get what I needed, but his interest in me was real, and after a while I found myself responding to him in the same way.
I was troubled by it to start with, but he treated me like I was the most important person in the world. I don’t think that any man can appreciate what that feels like. Only women can live that experience, and that is what I now was.
I realized that I was becoming emotionally attached to him the moment that I decided that he needed to understand my medical condition. I had him call Dr. Butenandt to hear is directly, in English as the doctor could also speak it well. I listened.
“Yes, Carlotta is a patient of mine Captain,” the doctor said. “She suffered internal injuries. She has no womb or ovaries, and she will need further surgery to other female organs to function fully. These procedures can be arranged over time.”
When he put the phone done Hank seemed very distressed. In some ways that is what I wanted. I wanted to show him that I could never be more than a passing affair in a foreign country, and one where the sexual acts were limited to what I could do with my hands or my mouth.
“But he would not let go. He wanted me, and increasing I discovered that I wanted him.
It was love – I know that now. It seems strange to me still. To him it has always been love between a man and a woman, but to me love needs honesty and everything about me was a lie. And yet I needed him not to know – not ever.
Elsa was not able to find love the way I did, but like me she learned how to please a man. When I told her about Dr. Butenandt’s “surgery to other female organs to make them function fully” she was to find her way to Berlin to have that done.
For my part I waited years and I am glad that I did. My surgery was done in Morocco by the French surgeon George Burou who pioneered “penile inversion vaginoplasty”. At last I was able to give Hank all that a wife should.
I had been married to him almost 10 years by then and we had adopted 3 German orphans as our family during the three years he was stationed in Germany to implement the Marshall Plan. So he took me back to America as his wife in 1949 and that is where I have lived ever since – except for a month in Morocco and a few visits back to Europe.
When I last visited Germany Elsa told me that she had visited Dr. Butenandt, much to his embarrassment. He had won much praise and recognition for his work on hormones including German and foreign awards, but his role in the Nazi regime was never mentioned.
Dr. Heim had been more open about his past in the Third Reich and he suffered for it. For a while he ran a private practice in Baden Baden before the Nazi hunters caught up with him. But he was warned (it is said by the organization ODESSA) and he escaped to South America leaving his family behind.
It reminded both Elsa and I of our miracle. We were alive, even though our lives had changed beyond belief to do that.
Elsa said that to her it seemed that she knew a man once and his name was Erich – he was a Nazi and he did evil things but she had no hand in it. He is gone now, and the world is better off without him. It seems that for her, playing some small role in his “death” is atonement.
I don’t feel the same way. Hans is no longer a person, but his sins are mine. I have always felt the need for expiation somehow, and for me I have achieved that with my family. My children and their children will always understand the need to see evil when a demagogue arises, spewing hate; to fight that, but otherwise to do good wherever they can. I cannot forget or even forgive myself, let alone seek the forgiveness of others, but I feel that a wife and mother has a role in ensuring that her family make the world a better place.
The End
© Maryanne Peters 2022
Author’s Notes:
I have referred to these true historical characters in a prior story ("Berlin 1945") but I could not resist another story given the intersecting stories of the Nazis and HRT/SRS.
It was often assumed that post op transsexual Dora Richter was killed on the burning of the Berlin Sexology Institute on May 6, 1933 but there is reference to her being married and named Schulz, residing in Bamburg even after the war
Dr. Butenandt went on to continue in medical research and biochemistry finally settling in Munich in 1956.
Dr. Aribert Heim set up a medical practice in Baden Baden after the war and lived there openly until 1962. Having been warned of impending arrest he evaded investigators and fled to South America and lived there until 1993. Then he once again fled, this time to Egypt where he died in 2009.
The organization “Odessa” - Organisation der ehemaligen SS-Angehörigen or the organization of former members of the SS, did exist but was never the underground railroad of fiction. Even today there are people who say that it never existed at all.