What is Nostr?
ava
npub1f6u…zcka
2025-03-15 23:35:50

ava on Nostr: Don’t get these symbols mixed up The Nazi Party appropriated this beautiful symbol ...

Don’t get these symbols mixed up

The Nazi Party appropriated this beautiful symbol for their insignia, and its true meaning is the antithesis of what they have bastardized it to stand for.


Throughout human history, the hooked cross design (卐 or 卍) has held sacred significance across countless civilizations. This ancient emblem appears in cultural and religious contexts spanning Eurasia, with similar motifs found in certain African and American indigenous traditions as well.

Most people in Western societies today primarily associate this symbol with the horrors of Nazi Germany, whose regime co-opted it as their party emblem in the early 20th century. This dark association persists through its continued use by neo-Nazi and white supremacist groups worldwide.

Yet this appropriation represents a profound distortion of the symbol’s authentic heritage. For millennia before Hitler’s regime, the swastika served as a revered representation of spiritual enlightenment, divine blessing, and cosmic harmony within Eastern religious traditions.

Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism all incorporate this symbol in their sacred iconography, where it typically appears as a balanced cross with each arm making a perpendicular bend.

Historical Origins vs. Nazi Perversion

The swastika’s rich cultural legacy spans numerous civilizations, each attributing their own sacred meanings to this ancient design.

What distinguishes the Nazi emblem from traditional religious versions is its presentation—rotated 45 degrees and typically rendered in stark black against a white circle on a red background.

Hitler’s regime deliberately misappropriated this sacred symbol, twisting its meaning to support their fabricated narrative of "Aryan" racial supremacy while connecting it to ancient Indo-European imagery.

The term itself reveals its true essence - "swastika" derives from the Sanskrit स्वस्तिक (svastika), which translates to "that which brings good fortune" or "conducive to wellbeing." This etymology alone stands in stark contrast to the hatred the symbol later came to represent under Nazi use.

Hindu traditions distinguish between the right-facing form (卐), known as the swastika, which represents the sun god Surya, prosperity, and auspiciousness, and the left-facing variation (卍), called sauvastika, associated with night and tantric aspects of the goddess Kali.

For Jains, the symbol adorns their religious flag and represents Suparshvanatha, the seventh of their twenty-four revered spiritual teachers.

Buddhist traditions view it as symbolizing the Buddha’s footprints and the eternal cycle of dharma.

Beyond South Asia, various ancient Indo-European cultures associated this symbol with concepts of fire, lightning, solar energy, and cosmic order.

Archaeological discoveries have unearthed swastika motifs in artifacts from the Indus Valley civilization, ancient Samarra, early Byzantine culture, and European Iron Age sites.

Modern Context

Though German ultranationalists first employed the symbol for antisemitic purposes before World War I, the swastika maintained its positive associations throughout most of Western society until the 1930s.

The Nazi Party’s adoption of it as their emblem, followed by the unspeakable atrocities of the Holocaust, permanently transformed Western perception of this ancient symbol into one representing hatred, genocide, and evil.

This tragic association has led to legal prohibitions against displaying the swastika in Germany and several other nations.

However, across Hindu, Buddhist and Jain communities in countries like Nepal, India, Thailand, Mongolia, Sri Lanka, China and Japan, the symbol retains its original sacred status.

It also holds cultural significance for some Native American nations. Hindu wedding ceremonies and Diwali celebrations continue to incorporate the swastika as a traditional blessing symbol.

Today, many Eastern religious communities work to educate the public about the symbol’s authentic spiritual heritage, to reclaim its positive associations from the shadow of its darkest misuse.

See this article for more...

https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-29644591

#IKITAO #Spirituality #Symbolism
Author Public Key
npub1f6ugxyxkknket3kkdgu4k0fu74vmshawermkj8d06sz6jts9t4kslazcka