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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Pierre Seel (August 16, 1923, Haguenau, Bas-Rhin ? November 25, 2005) is the only French person to have testified openly about his experience of deportation during World War II due to his homosexuality.Pierre was the fifth and last son of an affluent Catholic Alsatian family, and he was born at the family castle of Fillate in Haguenau. At the age of eleven, he discovered that his younger sister, Josephine (Fifine to him), was in fact his cousin, adopted by his father when her mother died. His father ran a successful patisserie-confiserie shop on…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Pierre Seel (August 16, 1923, Haguenau, Bas-Rhin ? November 25, 2005) is the only French person to have testified openly about his experience of deportation during World War II due to his homosexuality.Pierre was the fifth and last son of an affluent Catholic Alsatian family, and he was born at the family castle of Fillate in Haguenau. At the age of eleven, he discovered that his younger sister, Josephine (Fifine to him), was in fact his cousin, adopted by his father when her mother died. His father ran a successful patisserie-confiserie shop on Mulhouse's main street (at 46 rue du Sauvage). His mother, Emma Jeanne, once director of a department store, joined the family business when she married. By his late teens, Pierre Seel was part of the Mulhouse (Alsace) gay and Zazou subcultures.