Difference between revisions of "Sharley McLean"
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'''Sharley McLean''', 1923–2013, was a long-standing gay rights campaigner. | '''Sharley McLean''', 1923–2013, was a long-standing gay rights campaigner. | ||
− | She was born Lotte Reyersbach in Germany in 1923. Her socialist father and Jewish mother both died in the Holocaust, but she managed to escape Britain in 1939, in one of the last transports of children allowed to leave Germany before the Nazis closed the borders. Her gay uncle, Kurt Bach, a left-wing activist, was arrested by the Gestapo in a gay bar in Berlin in 1937, and died in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.<ref>http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2013/10/28/lgbt-campaigner-and-holocaust-survivor-sharley-mclean-dies-aged-90/ ''Pink News''</ref> | + | She was born Lotte Reyersbach in Germany in 1923. Her socialist father and Jewish mother both died in the Holocaust, but she managed to escape Britain in 1939, in one of the last transports of children allowed to leave Germany before the Nazis closed the borders. Her gay uncle, Kurt Bach, a left-wing activist, was arrested by the Gestapo in a gay bar in Berlin in 1937, and died wearing the [[pink triangle]] in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.<ref>http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2013/10/28/lgbt-campaigner-and-holocaust-survivor-sharley-mclean-dies-aged-90/ ''Pink News''</ref> |
− | During the war Sharley worked as a nurse at Lewisham hospital. She carried on working in the NHS until she retired, and became involved with the [[Terrence Higgins Trust]] in the 1980s. | + | During the war Sharley worked as a nurse at Lewisham hospital, but suffered abuse for her German nationality; she was able to fit in better when she acquired a British surname by marriage. At the time of her marriage she had feelings for other women, but had no name for this. She realised later that some of the women she worked with wer lesbians. When one of them told her: "You're one of us, you know," she interpreted this as meaning she could pass for British, and took it as a huge compliment.<ref name=guardian>http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/05/sharley-mclean-obituary David Semple, Sharley McLean obituary, ''The Guardian'', 5 November 2013</ref> |
+ | She carried on working in the NHS until she retired, and became involved with the [[Terrence Higgins Trust]] in the 1980s. | ||
Sharley was also a long-time activist in the [[Campaign for Homosexual Equality]] (CHE). | Sharley was also a long-time activist in the [[Campaign for Homosexual Equality]] (CHE). |
Revision as of 07:37, 17 April 2014
Sharley McLean, 1923–2013, was a long-standing gay rights campaigner.
She was born Lotte Reyersbach in Germany in 1923. Her socialist father and Jewish mother both died in the Holocaust, but she managed to escape Britain in 1939, in one of the last transports of children allowed to leave Germany before the Nazis closed the borders. Her gay uncle, Kurt Bach, a left-wing activist, was arrested by the Gestapo in a gay bar in Berlin in 1937, and died wearing the pink triangle in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.[1]
During the war Sharley worked as a nurse at Lewisham hospital, but suffered abuse for her German nationality; she was able to fit in better when she acquired a British surname by marriage. At the time of her marriage she had feelings for other women, but had no name for this. She realised later that some of the women she worked with wer lesbians. When one of them told her: "You're one of us, you know," she interpreted this as meaning she could pass for British, and took it as a huge compliment.[2] She carried on working in the NHS until she retired, and became involved with the Terrence Higgins Trust in the 1980s.
Sharley was also a long-time activist in the Campaign for Homosexual Equality (CHE).
References
- ↑ http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2013/10/28/lgbt-campaigner-and-holocaust-survivor-sharley-mclean-dies-aged-90/ Pink News
- ↑ http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/05/sharley-mclean-obituary David Semple, Sharley McLean obituary, The Guardian, 5 November 2013