The swastika is an ancient Indian symbol that derives from the Sanskrit word svástika स्वस्तिक. The word स्वस्तिक is a grammatical composite from सु + अस्ति + क which means (Su-good, Asti - to be, K - object suffix)
"may it be well with one."
The Swastika is found in its right-facing (卐) form or its mirrored left-facing (卍) form.
Symbologically, the Swastika is a Brahmi morphograph - where the individual letters for SU ASTI K - are morphed into a composite symbol. This morphograph is unique that is is a logograph is created by morphing its phonographic components.
"may it be well with one."
The Swastika is found in its right-facing (卐) form or its mirrored left-facing (卍) form.
Symbologically, the Swastika is a Brahmi morphograph - where the individual letters for SU ASTI K - are morphed into a composite symbol. This morphograph is unique that is is a logograph is created by morphing its phonographic components.
Next to OM ॐ, swastika is the most ubiquitous and revered symbol in one of the oldest living tradition of India
Swastika is a cross with four arms of
equal length, with the ends of each arm bent at a right angle. Sometimes
dots are added between each arm
Swastika is an ancient symbol, and found
worldwide. It is a sacred and prehistoric symbol that predates all
formal religions known to humankind. In Nepal, India, and Tibet many
Hindu and Buddhist gods and goddess holding Swastika. Also it can be
seen in the art of the Egyptians, Romans, Greeks, Celts, Native
Americans, and Persians as well Hindus, Jains and Buddhists.
The swastika's Nepalese name comes from the Sanskrit word svasti, meaning good fortune, luck and well being.
The swastika's Nepalese name comes from the Sanskrit word svasti, meaning good fortune, luck and well being.
The
various ways in which the Swastika is depicted, is also revered by
Hindu , Buddhist and ranks second only to OM is the Swastika. Today, It
remains widely used in Dharmic religion such as Hinduism, Buddhism and
Jainism. Though once commonly used all over the world without stigma,
because of Hitler's use of the Swastika on the flag of
National-socialist Germany, the symbol has become stigmatized in the
Western world, the Swastika is known to the world over not as a
religious symbol but as the Nazi emblem, notably even outlawed in
Germany.
But the Swastika continues to hold a religious significance for the
Hindus,Buddhist, Jain and Others. Like OM, the origins of Swastika are
lost in the misty realms of the past and they can only be guessed by
piecing together of the surviving clues.
Swastika can be seen in the art of the Egyptians, Romans,
Greeks, Celts, Native Americans, and Persians as well Hindus, Jains and
Buddhists.
In Hinduism, the right-hand swastika (clockwise) is a symbol of Ganesha and Vishnu (Creator), while the left-hand (counterclockwise) swastika represents Kali and magic(disaster). The Buddhist swastika is almost always clockwise.
In Buddhism, the swastika signifies auspiciousness and good fortune as well as the Buddha's footprints and the Buddha's heart. The swastika is said to contain the whole mind of the Buddha and can often be found imprinted on the chest, feet or palms of Buddha images. It is also one of the 65 auspicious symbols on the footprint of the Buddha.
The swastika has also often been used to mark the beginning of Buddhist texts. In China and Japan, the Buddhist swastika was seen as a symbol of plurality, eternity, abundance, prosperity and long life.
The swastika is used as an auspicious mark on Buddhist temples and is especially common in Korea. It can often be seen on the decorative borders around paintings, altar cloths and banners. In Tibetan Buddhism, it is also used as a clothing decoration.
You may like to read about what is the Ganesha body Symbolise....
In Hinduism, the right-hand swastika (clockwise) is a symbol of Ganesha and Vishnu (Creator), while the left-hand (counterclockwise) swastika represents Kali and magic(disaster). The Buddhist swastika is almost always clockwise.
In Buddhism, the swastika signifies auspiciousness and good fortune as well as the Buddha's footprints and the Buddha's heart. The swastika is said to contain the whole mind of the Buddha and can often be found imprinted on the chest, feet or palms of Buddha images. It is also one of the 65 auspicious symbols on the footprint of the Buddha.
The swastika has also often been used to mark the beginning of Buddhist texts. In China and Japan, the Buddhist swastika was seen as a symbol of plurality, eternity, abundance, prosperity and long life.
The swastika is used as an auspicious mark on Buddhist temples and is especially common in Korea. It can often be seen on the decorative borders around paintings, altar cloths and banners. In Tibetan Buddhism, it is also used as a clothing decoration.
You may like to read about what is the Ganesha body Symbolise....
The symbol of the
4-sided swastika is an archetype for the rotations of time and
consciousness - moving clockwise and counterclockwise - in upward or
downward spirals - allowing souls to experience many levels of reality
simultaneously.
Alternative historical English spellings of the Sanskrit word include suastika and svastica.
Alternative names for the shape are:
- Crooked cross
- Cross cramponned - in heraldry, as each arm resembles a crampon or angle-iron
- Cross gammadion - tetragammadion or just gammadion, as each arm resembles the Greek letter (gamma)
- Fylfot- meaning "four feet", chiefly in heraldry and architecture
- Sun wheel - German Sonnenrad - a name also used as a synonym for the sun cross
- Tetraskelion - Greek "four legged", especially when composed of four conjoined legs
- Thor's hammer - from its supposed association with Thor, the Norse god of thunder, but this may be a misappropriation of a name that properly belongs to a Y-shaped or T-shaped symbol.
- Hooked cross - (Dutch: hakenkruis, Icelandic Hakakross, German: Hakenkreuz, Finnish: hakaristi, Norwegian: Hakekors, Italian: croce uncinata and Swedish: Hakkors)
- Black Spider - to various peoples in middle and western Europe
History
The swastika appears in art and design
from pre-history symbolizing, in various contexts: luck, the sun,
Brahma, or the Hindu concept of samsara. In antiquity, the swastika was
used extensively by Hittites, Celts and Greeks, among others. It occurs
in other Asian, European, African and Native American cultures -
sometimes as a geometrical motif, sometimes as a religious symbol.
Today, the swastika is a common symbol in Hinduism, Buddhism and
Jainism, among others.
The ubiquity of the swastika has been
explained by three main theories: independent development, cultural
diffusion, and external event. The first theory is that the swastika's
symmetry and simplicity led to its independent development everywhere,
along the lines of Carl Jung's collective unconscious, or just as a very
simple symbol.
Another explanation is suggested by Carl
Sagan in his book Comet. Sagan reproduces an ancient Chinese manuscript
that shows comet tail varieties: most are variations on simple comet
tails, but the last shows the comet nucleus with four bent arms
extending from it, recalling a swastika. Sagan suggests that in
antiquity a comet could have approached so close to Earth that the jets
of gas streaming from it, bent by the comet's rotation, became visible,
leading to the adoption of the swastika as a symbol across the world.
Theories of single origin as a sacred
prehistorical symbol point to the Proto-Indo-Europeans, noting that the
swastika was not adopted by Sumer in Mesopotamia, which was established
no later than 3500 BC, and the Old Kingdom of Egypt, beginning in 2630
BC, arguing that these were already well-established and codified at the
time of the symbol's diffusion. As an argument ex silentio, this point
has little value as a positive proof.
The swastika symbol is prominent in
Hinduism, which is considered the parent religion of Buddhism and
Jainism, both dating from about the sixth century BC, and both borrowing
the swastika from their parent. Buddhism in particular enjoyed great
success, spreading eastward and taking hold in southeast Asia, China,
Korea and Japan by the end of the first millennium. The use of the
swastika by the indigenous Bon faith of Tibet, as well as syncretic
religions, such as Cao Dai of Vietnam and Falun Gong of China, is
thought to be borrowed from Buddhism as well. Similarly, the existence
of the swastika as a solar symbol among the Akan civilization of
southwest Africa may have been the result of cultural transfer along the
African slave routes around 1500 AD.
Regardless of origins, the swastika had
generally positive connotations from early in human history, with the
exceptions being most of Africa and South America.
Adoption of the Swastika in the West
The discovery of the Indo-European language group in the 1800s led to
a great effort by archaeologists to link the pre-history of European
peoples to the ancient Aryans. Following his discovery of objects
bearing the swastika in the ruins of Troy, Heinrich Schliemann consulted
two leading Sanskrit scholars of the day, Emile Burnouf and Max MŸller.
Schliemann concluded that the swastika was a specifically Aryan symbol.
This idea was taken up by many other writers, and the swastika quickly
became popular in the West, appearing in many designs from the 1880s to
the 1920s.
The positive meanings of the symbol were subverted in the early
twentieth century when it was adopted as the emblem of the National
Socialist German Workers Party. This association occurred because Nazism
stated that the historical Aryans were the modern Germans and then
proposed that, because of this, the subjugation of the world by Germany
was desirable, and even predestined. The swastika was used as a
convenient symbol to emphasize this mythical Aryan-German
correspondence. Since World War II, most Westerners see the swastika as
solely a Nazi symbol, leading to incorrect assumptions about its
pre-Nazi use and confusion about its current use in other cultures.
Geometry and Symbolism
A right-facing swastika may be described as "clockwise"...... or
"counter-clockwise"A swastika composed of 17 squares in a 5x5 grid.
Geometrically, the swastika can be regarded as an irregular icosagon
or 20-sided polygon. The arms are of varying width and are often
rectilinear (but need not be). Only in modern use are the exact
proportions considered important: for example, the proportions of the
Nazi swastika were based on a 5x5 grid.
The swastika is chiral, with no reflectional symmetry, but both
mirror-image forms have 90° rotational symmetry (that is, the symmetry
of the cyclic group C4).
"Left-facing" and "right-facing" are used mostly consistently.
Looking at an upright swastika, the upper arm clearly faces towards the
viewer's left (SM) or right (SP). The other two descriptions are
ambiguous as it is unclear if they refer to the direction of the bend in
each arm or to the implied rotation of the symbol. If the latter, the
question as to whether the arms lead or trail remains. The terms are
used inconsistently (sometimes even by the same writer) which is
confusing and may obfuscate an important point, that the rotation of the
swastika may have symbolic relevance.
The swastika is, after the simple equilateral cross (the "Greek cross"), the next most commonly found version of the cross.
Seen as a cross, the four lines emanating from the center point to
the four cardinal directions. The most common association is with the
Sun. Other proposed correspondences are to the visible rotation of the
night sky in the Northern Hemisphere around Polaris.
The Swastika was long considered a symbol of good luck, balance and
harmony in the universe before it was vilified because of its adoption
by the Nazi flag and their actions. It is probably Sanskrit it means
"May All Be Well," or "Good Health," indicating balance and harmony in
nature and the human body.
I was digging into some old texts (in other languages) one of which mentioned that the big dipper was charted for millenia. The regularity of its rotation came to symbolize the regularity of seasons and balance in the universe.
Then, in a book written in Bengali by Swami Vivekananda (the best Vedic scholar in recent times) I found a strange reference. He mentioned (correctly) that the Big Dipper was also called "The Plough." He explained that not only was it because it is shaped like a plough, but that the position of the Big Dipper in the sky was used to determine agrarian planting and harvesting seasons.
Therefore it may be the reason the Swastika symbolized "Good Harvest" and "Good Health," or "Svasta" in Sanskrit. Farm implements in India till today have the Swastika drawn on them, with a prayer "May your good harvest be as regular as the rotation of stars."
In Hinduism, the right-hand (clockwise) swastika is a symbol of the god Vishnu (Preserver of the Universe), while the left-hand (counterclockwise) swastika represents Shiva and Kali and her dance of death (destruction and disaster). The ancient images of Kali show her dancing, with blood dripping from her mouth, naked and only clad in a garland of severed human heads, on a rampaging killing spree, as Shiva lies supine at her feet.
What could reverse the direction of the Big Dipper? I can think of no other reason than a pole-shift, if the earth flips on its axis, when north becomes south and vice-versa. Is the symbolism meant to be a warning for such an event?
I was digging into some old texts (in other languages) one of which mentioned that the big dipper was charted for millenia. The regularity of its rotation came to symbolize the regularity of seasons and balance in the universe.
Then, in a book written in Bengali by Swami Vivekananda (the best Vedic scholar in recent times) I found a strange reference. He mentioned (correctly) that the Big Dipper was also called "The Plough." He explained that not only was it because it is shaped like a plough, but that the position of the Big Dipper in the sky was used to determine agrarian planting and harvesting seasons.
Therefore it may be the reason the Swastika symbolized "Good Harvest" and "Good Health," or "Svasta" in Sanskrit. Farm implements in India till today have the Swastika drawn on them, with a prayer "May your good harvest be as regular as the rotation of stars."
In Hinduism, the right-hand (clockwise) swastika is a symbol of the god Vishnu (Preserver of the Universe), while the left-hand (counterclockwise) swastika represents Shiva and Kali and her dance of death (destruction and disaster). The ancient images of Kali show her dancing, with blood dripping from her mouth, naked and only clad in a garland of severed human heads, on a rampaging killing spree, as Shiva lies supine at her feet.
What could reverse the direction of the Big Dipper? I can think of no other reason than a pole-shift, if the earth flips on its axis, when north becomes south and vice-versa. Is the symbolism meant to be a warning for such an event?
Sauwastika
The name sauwastika is sometimes given for the supposedly "evil",
left-facing, form of the swastika (SM). However, the evidence for
sauwastika seems sketchy and there seems to be very little other than
conjecture to support the notion that the left-facing swastika is
regarded as evil in Hindu tradition. Although the more common form is
the right-facing swastika, Hindus all over India and Nepal still use the
symbol in both orientations for the sake of balance. Buddhists almost
always use the left-facing swastika.
Some contemporary writers - Servando Gonzalez, for example - confuse
matters even further by asserting that the right-facing swastika, used
by the Nazis is in fact the "evil" sauwastika. (Gonzalez "proves" that
the left-facing swastika is the sunwise one with reference to a 1930s
box of Standard fireworks from Sivakasi, India.) This inversion -
whether intentional or not - might derive from a desire to prove that
the Nazi's use of the right-handed swastika was expressive of their
"evil" intent. But the notion that Adolf Hitler deliberately inverted
the "good left-facing" swastika is wholly unsupported by any historical
evidence.
The swastika is common as a design motif in current Hindu
architecture and Indian artwork as well as in ancient Western
architecture, frequently appearing in mosaics, friezes, and other works
across the ancient world. Ancient Greek architectural designs are
replete with interlinking swastika motifs. Related symbols in classical
Western architecture include the cross, the three-legged triskele or
triskelion and the rounded lauburu. The swastika symbol is also known in
these contexts by a number of names, especially gammadion. Pictish rock
carvings, adorning ancient Greek pottery, and on Norse weapons and
implements. It was scratched on cave walls in France seven thousand
years ago.
In Chinese, Korean, and Japanese art, the swastika is often found as
part of a repeating pattern. One common pattern, called sayagata in
Japanese, comprises left and right facing swastikas joined by lines. As
the negative space between the lines has a distinctive shape, the
sayagata pattern is sometimes called the "key fret" motif in English.
The swastika symbol was found extensively in the ruins of the ancient city of Troy.
In Greco-Roman art and architecture, and in Romanesque and Gothic art
in the West, isolated swastikas are relatively rare, and the swastika
is more commonly found as a repeated element in a border or tesselation.
A design of interlocking swastikas is one of several tesselations on
the floor of the cathedral of Amiens, France. A border of linked
swastikas was a common Roman architectural motif, and can be seen in
more recent buildings as a neoclassical element. A swastika border is
one form of meander, and the individual swastikas in such border are
sometimes called Greek Keys.
The Laguna Bridge in Yuma, Arizona was built in 1905 by the U.S.
Reclamation Department and is decorated with a row of swastikas.
The Canadian artist ManWoman has attempted to rehabilitate the "gentle swastika.
Religion and Mythology
Hinduism
The swastika is found all over Hindu temples, signs, altars, pictures
and iconography in India and Nepal, where it remains very popular.
It is considered to be the second most sacred symbol in Hinduism,
behind the Om symbol.In Hinduism, the two symbols represent the two
forms of the creator god Brahma: clockwise it represents the evolution
of the universe (Pravritti), anti-clockwise it represents the involution
of the universe (Nivritti).
It is also seen as pointing in all four directions (North, East,
South and West) and thus signifies stability and groundedness. Its use
as a sun symbol can first be seen in its representation of Surya, the
Hindu lord of the Sun.
The swastika is considered extremely holy and auspicious by all
Hindus, and is regularly used to decorate all sorts of items to do with
Hindu culture.
It is used in all Hindu yantras and religious designs. Throughout the
subcontinent of India it can be seen on the sides of temples, written
on religious scriptures, on gift items, and on letterhead.
The Hindu God Ganesh is closely associated with the symbol of the swastika.
Amongst the Hindus of Bengal, it is common to see the name "swastika"
applied to a slightly different symbol, which has the same significance
as the common swastika, and both symbols are used as auspicious signs.
This symbol looks something like a stick figure of a human being.
"Swastika" is a common given name amongst Bengalis and a prominent literary magazine in Calcutta is called the Swastika.
These two symbols are included, at least since the Liao dynasty, as
part of the Chinese language, the symbolic sign for the character
meaning "all", and "eternality" (lit. myriad) and as SP which is seldom
used.
A swastika marks the beginning of many Buddhist scriptures.
The swastikas (in either orientation) appear on the chest of some
statues of Gautama Buddha and is often incised on the soles of the feet
of the Buddha in statuary.
Because of the association with the right facing swastika with
Nazism, Buddhist swastikas after the mid 20th century are almost
universally left-facing.
This form of the swastika is often found on Chinese food packaging to
signify that the product is vegetarian and can be consumed by strict
Buddhists. It is often sewn into the collars of Chinese children's
clothing to protect them from evil spirits.
Additionally, the left-facing swastika is found on Japanese maps to indicate a temple.
The swastika used in Buddhist art and scripture is known in Japanese
as a manji, and represents Dharma, universal harmony, and the balance of
opposites. When facing left, it is the omote (front) manji,
representing love and mercy.
Facing right, it represents strength and intelligence, and is called
the ura (rear) manji. Balanced manji are often found at the beginning
and end of Buddhist scriptures.
Jainism
In Jainism, the swastika symbol is the only holy symbol. Jainism does
not use the Hindu om symbol at all and thus gives even more prominence
to the swastika than Hinduism. It is a symbol of the seventh Jina
(Saint), the Tirthankara Suparsva. It is considered to be one of the 24
auspicious marks and the emblem of the seventh arhat of the present age.
All Jain temples and holy books must contain the swastika and
ceromonies typically begin and end with creating a swastika mark several
times with rice around the altar.
The Abrahamic Religions
The swastika was not widely utilized by followers of the Abrahamic
religions. Where it does exist, it is not portrayed as an explicitly
religious symbol and is often purely decorative or, at most, a symbol of
good luck. The floor of the synagogue at Ein Gedi, built during the
Roman occupation of Judea, was decorated with a swastika. Some Christian
churches built in the Romanesque and Gothic eras are decorated with
swastikas, carrying over earlier Roman designs. Swastikas are
prominently displayed in a mosaic in the St. Sophia church of Kiev,
Ukraine dating to the 12th century. They also appear as a repeating
ornamental motif on a tomb in the Basilica of St. Ambrose in Milan. The
Muslim "Friday" mosque of Isfahan, Iran and the Taynal Mosque in
Tripoli, Lebanon both have swastika motifs.
Some sources indicate that the Chinese Empress Wu (684-704) of the
Tang Dynasty decreed that the swastika would be used as an alternative
symbol of the sun.
The left-facing Buddhist swastika also appears on the emblem of Falun
Gong. This has generated considerable controversy, particularly in
Germany, where the police have reportedly confiscated several banners
featuring the emblem. A court ruling subsequently allowed Falun Gong
followers in Germany to continue the use of the emblem.
Japan
n Japan, the swastika is called manji (SM). On Japanese town plans, a
swastika (left-facing and horizontal) is commonly used to mark the
location of a Buddhist temple. The right-facing manji is often referred
as the gyaku manji ("reverse manji"), and can also be called kagi jokji,
literally "hook cross." A PokEmon playing card sold in Japan had a
manji graphic. Because of its resemblance to the Nazi swastika (see
below), the card was altered for Western translations, and eventually
withdrawn in Japan following Western complaints. Similarly, a manji
symbol was incorporated as a level design in both the Japanese and U.S.
versions of the 1986 The Legend of Zelda video game.
Native American Traditions
The swastika was a widely used Native American symbol. It has been
found in excavations of Mississippian-era sites in the Ohio valley. It
was widely used by many southwestern tribes, most notably the Navajo.
Among different tribes the swastika carried various meanings. To the
Hopi it represented the wandering Hopi clans; to the Navajo it was one
symbol for a whirling log (tsil no'oli'), a sacred image representing a
legend that was used in healing rituals.
From The Book of the Hopi by Frank Waters
The swastika symbol represents the path of the migrations of the Hopi clans.
The center of the cross represents Tuwanasavi or the Center of the
Universe which lay in what is now the Hopi country in the southwestern
part of the US. Tuwanasavi was not the geographic center of North
America, but the magnetic or spiritual center formed by the junction of
the North-South and the East-West axws along which the Twins sent their
vibratory messages and controlled the rotation of the planet.
Three directions (pasos) for most of the clans were the same: the ice
locked back door to the north, the Pacific Ocean to the west and the
Atlantic Ocean to the east.
Only 7 clans-the Bear, Eagle, Sun, Kachina, Parrot, Flute and Coyote
clans-migrated to South America to the southern paso at it's tip. The
rest of some 40 clans, having started from somewhere in southern Mexico
or Central America, regarded this as their southern paso, their
migration thus forming a balanced symbol.
Upon arriving at each paso all the leading clans turned right before retracing their routes.
Pre-Christian European Traditions
The swastika, also known as the fylfot in northwestern Europe,
appears on many pre-Christian artefacts, drawn both clockwise and
counterclockwise, within a circle or in a swirling form. The Greek
goddess Athena was sometimes portrayed as wearing robes covered with
swastikas. The "Ogham stone" found in County Kerry, Ireland is inscribed
with several swastikas dating to the fifth century AD, and is believed
to have been an altar stone of the Druids. The pre-Christian Anglo-Saxon
ship burial at Sutton Hoo, England, contains gold cups and shields
bearing swastikas. Today it is used as a symbol for Asatru, the
reconstructed religion of Northern Europe.
Europe
The British author Rudyard Kipling, who was strongly influenced by
Indian culture, had a swastika on the dust jackets of all his books
until the rise of Nazism made this inappropriate. One of Kipling's Just
So Stories, "The Crab That Played With The Sea", had an elaborate
full-page illustration by Kipling including a stone bearing what was
called "a magic mark" (a swastika); some later editions of the stories
blotted out the mark, but not its captioned reference, making the
readers wonder what the "mark" was.
The Russian Provisional Government of 1917 printed a number of new
bank notes with right-facing diagonally-rotated swastikars in their
centres. Some have suggested that this may have been the inspiration
behind the Nazis adoption of this symbol as Alfred Rosenberg was in
Russia at this time.
It was also used as a symbol by the Boy Scouts in Britain, and
worldwide. According to "Johnny" Walker, the earliest Scouting use was
on the first Thanks Badge introduced in 1911.
Robert Baden-Powell's 1922 Medal of Merit design adds a swastika to
the Scout fleur-de-lis as good luck to the person receiving the medal.
Like Kipling, he would have come across this symbol in India.
During 1934 many Scouters requested a change of design because of the
use of the swastika by the Nazis. A new British Medal of Merit was
issued in 1935.
The Lotta Svard emblem was designed by Eric Wasstrom in 1921. It includes the swastika and heraldic roses.
During World War I, the swastika was used as the emblem of the British National War Savings Committee.
In Finland the swastika was used as the official national marking of
the Finnish Air Force and Army between 1918 and 1944. The swastika was
also used by the Lotta Svard organisation.
The blue swastika was the good luck symbol used by the Swedish Count
Erich von Rosen, who donated the first plane to the Finnish White Army
during the Civil War in Finland. It has no connection to the Nazi use of
the swastika. It also still appears in many Finnish medals and
decorations. In the very respected wartime medals of honor it was a
visible element, first drafted by Axel Gallen-Kallela 1918-1919.
Mannerheim cross with a swastika is the Finnish equivalent of Victoria
Cross, Croix de Guerre and Congressional Medal of Honor. Due to
Finland's alliance with Nazi Germany in World War II, the symbol was
abandoned as a national marking, to be replaced by a roundel.
The Swedish company ASEA, now a part of Asea Brown Boveri, used the
swastika in its logo from the 1800s to 1933, when it was removed from
the logo.
In Latvia too, the swastika (known as Thunder Cross and Fire Cross)
was used as the marking of the Latvian Air Force between 1918 and 1934,
as well as in insignias of some military units. It was also used by the
Latvian fascist movement Perkonkrusts (Thunder Cross in Latvian), as
well as by other non-political organizations.
The Icelandic Steamship Company, Eimskip (founded in 1914) used a swastika in its logo until recently.
In Dublin, Ireland, a laundry company known as the Swastika
Laundry was in existence on the south side of the city. Featuring a
black swastika on a white background, the business started up in the
early 20th century and continued up until recent times.
North America
The Theosophical Society, founded in New York in 1875, incorporated
the Swastika into its seal because of the Buddhist associations of the
symbol.
The swastika's use by the Navajo and other tribes made it a popular
symbol for the American Southwest. Until the 1930s blankets, metalwork,
and other Southwestern souvenirs were often made with swastikas.
One year in the first part of the 20th century, the Corn Palace in
Mitchell, South Dakota featured a design that had a swastika on one of
the towers.
Swastika is the name of a small community in northern Ontario,
Canada, approximately 580 kilometres north of Toronto, and 5 kilometres
west of Kirkland Lake, the town of which it is now part. The town of
Swastika was founded in 1906. Gold was discovered nearby and the
Swastika Mining Company was formed in 1908. The government of Ontario
attempted to change the town's name during World War II, but the town
resisted.
In Windsor, Nova Scotia, there was an ice hockey team from 1905-1916
named the Swastikas, and their uniforms featured swastika symbols. There
were also hockey teams named the Swastikas in Edmonton, Alberta (circa
1916), and Fernie, British Columbia (circa 1922).
The 45th Infantry Division of the United States Army used a yellow
swastika on a red background as a unit symbol until the 1930s, when it
was switched to a thunderbird.
In 1925, Coca Cola made a lucky watch fob in the shape of a swastika with the slogan, "Drink Coca Cola five cents in bottles".
The Health, Physical Education and Recreation Building (HPER) at
Indiana University contains decorative Native American-inspired reverse
swastika tile work on the walls of the foyer and stairwells on the
southeast side of the building. HPER was built as the university field
house in the 1920's, before the Nazi party came to power in Germany. In
recent years, the HPER swastika motif, along with the Thomas Hart Benton
murals in nearby Woodburn Hall have been the cause of much controversy
on campus
Nazi Germany
The National Socialist German Workers Party (Nationalsozialistische
Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP) formally adopted the swastika or
Hakenkreuz (hooked cross) in 1920. This was used on the party's flag
(right), badge, and armband. (It had been used unofficially by the NSDAP
and its predecessor, the German Workers Party, Deutsche Arbeiterpartei
(DAP), however.)
In Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler wrote:
I myself, meanwhile, after innumerable
attempts, had laid down a final form; a flag with a red background, a
white disk, and a black swastika in the middle. After long trials I also
found a definite proportion between the size of the flag and the size
of the white disk, as well as the shape and thickness of the swastika.
The use of the swastika was associated by Nazi theorists with their
conjecture of Aryan cultural descent of the German people. Following the
Nordicist version of the Aryan invasion theory, the Nazis claimed that
the early Aryans of India, from whose Vedic tradition the swastika
sprang, were the prototypical white invaders. Thus, they saw fit to
co-opt the sign as a symbol of the Aryan master race. The use of
swastika as a symbol of the Aryan race dates back to writings of Emile
Burnouf. Following many other writers, the German nationalist poet Guido
von List believed it to be a uniquely Aryan symbol. Hitler referred to
the swastika as the symbol of "the fight for the victory of Aryan man" -
Mein Kampf.
The swastika was already in use as a symbol of German volkisch nationalist movements. In Deutschland Erwache - Ulric of England writes:
What inspired Hitler to use the swastika
as a symbol for the NSDAP was its use by the Thule-Gesellschaft since
there were many connections between them and the DAP. From 1919 until
the summer of 1921 Hitler used the special Nationalsozialistische
library of Dr. Friedich Krohn, a very active member of the
Thule-Gesellschaft. Dr. Krohn was also the dentist from Sternberg who
was named by Hitler in Mein Kampf as the designer of a flag very similar
to one that Hitler designed in 1920 During the summer of 1920, the
first party flag was shown at Lake Tegernsee. These home-made early
flags were not preserved, the Ortsgruppe MŸnchen flag was generally
regarded as the first flag of the Party.
Jose Manuel Erbez wrote:
The first time the swastika was used with
an "Aryan" meaning was on December 25, 1907, when the self-named Order
of the New Templars, a secret society founded by [Adolf Joseph] Lanz von
Liebenfels, hoisted at Werfenstein Castle (Austria) a yellow flag with a
swastika and four fleurs-de-lys.
However, Liebenfels was drawing on an already-established use of the symbol.
NSDAP flags at the 1936 Nazi Party rally in NurembergOn 14 March
1933, shortly after Hitler's appointment as Chancellor of Germany, the
NSDAP flag was hoisted alongside Germany's national colors. It was
adopted as the sole national flag on 15 September 1935.
The swastika was used for badges and flags throughout Nazi Germany,
particularly for government and military organizations, but also for
"popular" organizations such as the Reichsbund Deutsche Jagerschaft.
Nazi Party rally in NurembergOn 14 March 1933, shortly after Hitler's
appointment as Chancellor of Germany, the NSDAP flag was hoisted
alongside Germany's national colors. It was adopted as the sole national
flag on 15 September 1935.The swastika was used for badges and flags
throughout Nazi Germany, particularly for government and military
organizations, but also for "popular" organizations such as the
Reichsbund Deutsche JŠgerschaft.
The Iron Cross featured a swastika during the Nazi period
The Iron Cross featured a swastika during the Nazi period - while the
DAP and the NSDAP had used both right-facing and left-facing swastikas,
the right-facing swastika is used consistently from 1920 onwards.
However, Ralf Stelter notes that the swastika flag used on land had a
right-facing swastika on both sides, while the ensign (naval flag) had
it printed through so that you would see a left-facing swastika when
looking at the ensign with the flagpole to the right.
There were attempts to amalgamate Nazi and Hindu use of the swastika.
Notably by Savitri Devi Mukherji who declared Hitler an avatar of
Vishnu.
Taboo in Western Countries
Because of its use by Hitler and the Nazis and, in modern times, by
neo-Nazis and other hate groups, for many people in the West, the
swastika is associated primarily with Nazism, fascism, and white
supremacy in general. Hence, outside historical contexts, it has become
taboo in Western countries. For example, the German postwar criminal
code makes the public showing of the Hakenkreuz (the swastika) and other
Nazi symbols illegal and punishable, except for scholarly reasons.
The powerful symbolism acquired by the swastika has often been used
in graphic design and propaganda as a means of drawing Nazi comparisons;
examples include the cover of Stuart Eizenstat's 2003 book Imperfect
Justice, publicity materials for Costa-Gavras's 2002 film Amen, and a
billboard that was erected opposite the U.S. Interests Section in
Havana, Cuba, in 2004, which juxtaposed images of the Abu Ghraib
prisoner abuse pictures with a swastika.
Founded in the 1970s, the Raelian Movement, a religious sect
believing in the possibility of immortality by scientific progress, used
a symbol that was the source of considerable controversy: an interlaced
Star of David and swastika. In 1991, the symbol was changed to remove
the swastika and deflect public criticism. The Society for Creative
Anachronism, which aims to study and recreate Medieval and Renaissance
history, imposes restrictions on its members' use of the swastika on
their arms, although some arms dating to the early days of the group
have the symbol.
Raelian Symbol
The Ra‘lian symbol, before 1991 and afterIn recent years, controversy
has erupted when consumer goods bearing the symbol have been exported
(often unintentionally) to North America. In 2002, Christmas crackers
containing plastic toy pandas sporting swastikas were pulled from
shelves after complaints from consumers in Canada, although the
China-based manufacturer claimed the symbol was presented in a
traditional sense and not as a reference to the Nazis.
In 1995, the City of Glendale, California scrambled to cover up over
900 cast iron lampposts decorated with swastikas throughout the downtown
portion of the city; the lampposts had been manufactured by an American
company in the early 1920s, and had nothing to do with Nazism.
In 2004, Microsoft released a "critical update" to remove two swastikas and a Star of David from the font Bookshelf Symbol 7. The font had been bundled with Microsoft Office 2003.
Punk rockers like Siouxsie Sioux, Sid Vicious and John Lydon used,
and were photographed using, the Nazi version of the swastika for its
shock value, notwithstanding that Malcolm McLaren, the Sex Pistols'
manager, was half-Jewish.
The previously successful career of the British band Kula Shaker
virtually collapsed in the 1990s after the band's frontman, Crispian
Mills, son of actress Hayley Mills, expressed his desire to use
Swastikas as part of the imagery of their live show; because of this,
and additional remarks he made, he was widely accused of holding Nazi
sympathies.
However, the band was musically influenced by Indian styles, and
Mills asserted that his attraction to the swastika was part of an
attempt to reclaim the Indian usage of the symbol in the West.
In January 2005 there was much criticism when Prince Harry of Wales,
third in line of succession to the British throne, was photographed
wearing what appeared to be intended as an Afrika Korps uniform, plus a
Nazi swastika armband, to a fancy dress party.
The stone overlooks the valley of the River Wharfe, and is identical
to some of the 'Camunnian Rose' designs in Val Camonica, Italy - nine
cup-marks in a cross shape, surrounded by a curved swastika-shaped
groove. The Ilkley carving also has an 'appendage' off the east arm - a
cup surrounded by a curved hook-shaped groove. It is unique on the moor
(which is covered in hundreds of cup-and-ring type carvings) although
there is an unfinished swastika design (more angular, without cups) on
the nearby Badger Stone.
One of the lines of cups on the Swastika Stone is less than a degree
off magnetic north-south. One naturally looks north from the stone, as
it is on a rocky outcrop on the north side of the moor. Was it
associated with the Pole Star with which its cups align? Why then does
its shape describe a clockwise motion, whereas the stars turn
anti-clockwise around the pole?
Perhaps the design relates to the shamanic practice of ascent up the
'Pillar of the World' (to use the Lapp term). Numerous Siberian and
northern European peoples documented by Mircea Eliade see the Pole Star
as the summit of a pole holding up the sky (seen as a tent). Eliade
notes similar beliefs about the Pole Star in Ancient Saxon, Scandinavian
and Romanian myths. If, then, one imagines the Swastika design to be
the base of a Pillar of the World, the implicit motion of the design
makes sense. Something that appears to turn anti-clockwise when looking
up from the bottom of a pole will, if it slides down the pole and is
viewed from above, appear to turn clockwise.
The Swastika Stone may map the turning sky down onto the ground,
forming the bond between 'levels' that is so central to shamanic
cosmology.
Also, the 'appendage' cup, in relation to the central cup, would have
only been a couple of degrees off the summer solstice sunrise during
the period 2000BCE - 100CE (covering most of the likely times at which
the glyph was carved. The 'hook' groove, if imagined to turn with the
swastika, would 'haul' the cup-sun across the sky. This seems to
strengthen the swastika-sky connection.
(I should note that I do not support the idea that cup-and-ring
patterns are maps of stellar constellations. Perhaps some involved
rudimentary attempts at this, but no one has found accurate
correspondences in any existing patterns. They seem to me to be more
generally concerned with access points to alternate realities).
With the Pole Star/Pillar of the World ideas in mind, one could see
some cup-and-ring markings as being related. The 'tail' grooves could be
the Pillar reaching up to the cup-pole, surrounded by rings of
revolving stars. Some local cup-and-ring markings, like those on the
Panorama Stone, have 'ladders' instead of 'tail' grooves. This image
further supports the shamanic interpretation of the petroglyphs, as
ladders are among the most frequently occurring representations of
shamanic ascent to other worlds. Human figures atop ladders appear in
!Kung San rock art related to trance-state ascension.
Cup-and-ring style petroglyphs in the British Isles are usually dated
to the Bronze Age (because some are included in, or in the proximity
of, Bronze Age burials) or the Neolithic (because of comparable carvings
on Irish passage graves from that period - see also Richard Bradley's
recent work 'Signing the Land' for arguments dating this style of
prehistoric art to the Neolithic).
The Swastika Stone is arguably associated with this style of rock
art, due to its use of cup-marks, but I have recently come to see it as
most likely originating in the Iron Age, or even during Roman
occupation. This is because of Verbeia, a Romano-Celtic goddess revered
by the Roman troops stationed in Ilkley (then Olicana). Verbeia is often
accepted as being a version of the Celtic spring/fire goddess Brigid,
who is still associated with swastika-like symbols in Ireland. Also, the
Roman cohort which set up her altar were recruited from the Lingones, a
Gaulish Celtic tribe.
Apparently Romano-Celtic coins have been found in Gaul bearing
swastika-like designs. It seems tempting to think that the Lingones
cohort carved the Swastika Stone when they were here, but this would
surely be unusual. Or perhaps the recruited Celtic/Roman troops were
influenced in their choice of 'genuis loci', Verbeia, by the native
Celts of West Yorkshire, the Brigantes (whose name derives from the
goddess Brigantia, related to Brigid), who may have already carved the
stone.
The Swastika may map the turning sky down onto the ground, forming
the bond between 'levels' that is so central to shamanic cosmology.
Legend has it that the Vedic civilization was highly advanced. The
sages that oversaw its development, through their mystic insight and
deep meditation, discovered the ancient symbols of spirituality -
Aumkara and Swastika. They also discovered many scientific principles
that they applied to develop a highly advanced technology. They gave the
atom its sanskrit name "Anu".
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