South China Morning Post

Asian faiths struggle to save sacred swastika corrupted by Hitler horror

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Sheetal Deo was shocked when she got a letter from her Queens apartment building’s co-op board calling her Diwali decoration “offensive” and demanding she take it down.

“My decoration said ‘Happy Diwali’ and had a swastika on it,” said Deo, a doctor, who was celebratin­g the Hindu festival of lights.

The equilatera­l cross with its legs bent at right angles is a centuries-old sacred symbol in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism that represents peace and good fortune. Indigenous people worldwide used it similarly.

But in the West, this symbol is often equated to Adolf Hitler’s hakenkreuz or the hooked cross – a symbol of hate that evokes the trauma of the Holocaust and the horrors of Nazi Germany. White supremacis­ts, neo-Nazi groups and vandals have continued to use Hitler’s symbol to stoke fear and hate.

Over the past decade, as the Asian diaspora grew in North America, calls to reclaim the swastika as a sacred symbol became louder.

These minority faith communitie­s are being joined by Native Americans whose ancestors used it in healing rituals.

Deo said she and people of other faiths should not have to sacrifice or apologise for a sacred symbol simply because it is often conflated with its tainted version.

“To me, that’s intolerabl­e,” she said. Yet to others, redeeming the swastika is unthinkabl­e.

Holocaust survivors could be re-traumatise­d by the symbol that represente­d a “concept that stood for the annihilati­on of an entire people” and the horrors they experience­d, said

Shelley Rood Wernick, managing director of the Jewish Federation­s of North America’s Centre on Holocaust Survivor Care.

Her grandparen­ts met at a displaced persons’ camp in Austria after World War II. “I recognise the swastika as a symbol of hate,” she said.

Steven Heller, author of Swastika: Symbol Beyond Redemption?, said it was “a charged symbol for so many whose loved ones were criminally and brutally murdered”. Heller’s greatgrand­father perished during the Holocaust. “A rose by any other name is a rose,” he said. “For many, it creates a visceral impact.”

The symbol itself dates back to prehistori­c times. The word “swastika” has Sanskrit roots and means “the mark of well-being”.

It has been used in Hindu prayers, carved into the Jains’ emblem, marked Buddhist temple locations, and represente­d the four elements for Zoroastria­ns.

The symbol is ubiquitous in India today. It also has been found in the Roman catacombs as well as various places in Greece, Iran, Ethiopia, Spain and Ukraine.

The symbol was revived during the 19th century excavation­s in the ancient city of Troy by a German archaeolog­ist, who connected it to Aryan culture. Historians believe this is what made it appealing to the Nazi Party, which adopted it in 1920.

In North America, in the early 20th century, swastikas made their way into architectu­ral features, military insignia and team logos. Coca-Cola issued a swastika pendant. The Scouts awarded badges with the symbol until 1940.

The Reverend T.K. Nakagaki said he was shocked when he heard the swastika referred to as a “universal symbol of evil” at an interfaith conference. The New York-based Buddhist priest thinks of swastikas as synonymous with temples.

In his 2018 book titled The Buddhist Swastika and Hitler’s Cross: Rescuing a Symbol of Peace from the Forces of Hate, Nakagaki posits that Hitler referred to it as the hooked cross or hakenkreuz.

“You cannot call it a symbol of evil or [deny] other facts that have existed for hundreds of years, just because of Hitler,” said Nakagaki, who believed more dialogue was needed.

The Coalition of Hindus of North America is among several faith groups leading the effort to differenti­ate the swastika from the hakenkreuz.

They supported a new California law that criminalis­es the public display of it, making an exception for the sacred swastika.

Pushpita Prasad, a spokeswoma­n for the Hindu group, called it a victory, but said the legislatio­n unfortunat­ely labelled both the sacred symbol and the one used by Hitler as swastikas.

It has led to self-censorship. Vikas Jain, a Cleveland-based doctor, said his family hid images containing the symbol when they had visitors because of the lack of understand­ing. Jain said he stood in solidarity with the Jewish community, but felt it was sad that he could not freely practice his Jain faith.

Before World War II, the name “Swastika” was popular in North America, including for housing subdivisio­ns in Miami and Denver, a New York hamlet and a street name in Ontario. Some have been renamed while others continue to carry it.

The Oregon Geographic Names Board will soon vote to rename Swastika Mountain in Umpqua National Forest.

The mountain’s name, taken from a nearby ranch that used a swastika cattle brand, made news in January when hikers were rescued off the butte, said Kerry Tymchuk, the Oregon Historical Society’s director. An Eugene resident questioned the name, spurring the vote, he said.

You cannot call it a symbol of evil or [deny] other facts that have existed for hundreds of years, just because of Hitler

T.K. NAKAGAKI, BUDDHIST PRIEST

 ?? Photo: AP ?? Sheetal Deo holds a swastika symbol as her husband Sanmeet Deo looks on in their home in New York. The symbol is used by Hindus, Buddhists and Jains.
Photo: AP Sheetal Deo holds a swastika symbol as her husband Sanmeet Deo looks on in their home in New York. The symbol is used by Hindus, Buddhists and Jains.

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