Of Swastika, Nazis and sacred symbols

The recent controversy around Germany’s proposal to seek an EU ban on swastikas (and later its abandonment: see here and here) prompted me to dig up and refresh this article which I wrote for my newsletter almost two years ago. (Mar ’05):

Swastika and its Religious Significance:

As some of you may be aware, there has been a great deal of controversy in the UK regarding the wearing of an armband by Prince Harry that had a “swastika” badge on it.
This created a predictable uproar in the local media with many people being reminded of the grim horrors of the Holocaust (the Prince was wearing a replica Nazi uniform).
Along with the reaction, there were calls for the symbol to be banned (on the grounds of being racially offensive).
Thankfully, the Hindu Forum of Great Britain got into the act (see, “HFB launches national campaign to reclaim swastika“) and decided to start a campaign to create awareness amongst the general public about how an ancient Hindu symbol had been misappropriated by the Nazis.
As I watched this controversy unfold, I realised that I was myself not fully aware of the significance of “swastika” and how it had come to be associated with the Nazis.

Below is a summary from my research on the subject.

Origins

The word “swastika” originates in Sanskrit. It is composed of “su”, meaning good/well and “asti” meaning “to be”; svasti thus means “well-being”; -ka forms a diminutive, and svastika/swastika might thus be translated literally as “little thing associated with well-being”. In ancient Indo-European cultures, it was put on objects to symbolise good luck. In geometric terms, the swastika is an irregular icosagon or a 20-sided polygon.

The right-handed clockwise swastika is considered an auspicious symbol of the sun or of Lord Vishnu, the sustaining aspect of God (in the Trinity of Brahma, Vishnu and Maheshwar). It also represents the world-wheel around a fixed and unchanging centre, God. I am not sure about the first appearance of the word or the symbol in ancient Indian texts but it has been in use since antiquity.

Swastika

Usage
As a symbol, it has been used for several millennia – not just in India but also in other ancient civilisations (e.g. it has been found in the ruins of the city of Troy). Other than Hinduism, it has also been used in Buddhism, Jainism, and other cultures including in the Native American cultures (one of my friends even found the “symbol” on an art piece in a museum in Turkey).

In earlier times, the swastika was used freely by Sumerians, Hittites, Celts and Greeks, among others. Even the pre-Christian Anglo-Saxon ship burial at Sutton Hoo, England, contains gold cups and shields bearing swastikas. The swastika has also appeared in South and Central America, and has been widely used in Mayan art during that time period.

In both Hinduism and Jainism, the swastika is used to mark the opening pages or their account books, thresholds, doors, and offerings.

The major difference between the Nazi swastika and the ancient symbol of many different cultures, is that the Nazi swastika is at a slant, while the ancient swastika is rested flat.

Here is a fascinating titbit from a BBC article on the subject:

“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. It was also a symbol used by the scouts in Britain, although it was taken off Robert Baden-Powell’s 1922 Medal of Merit after complaints in the 1930s.

The Finnish Air Force also used it as its official symbol in World War II, and it still appears on medals, but it had no connection with the Nazi use.It is rarely seen on its own in Western architecture, but a design of interlocking swastikas is part of the design of the floor of the cathedral of Amiens, France.”

Association with Nazism and anti-Semitism

The almost universally positive meanings of the swastika were subverted in the early twentieth century when it was adopted as the emblem of the National Socialist German Workers Party. Since World War II, most Westerners see it as solely a fascist symbol, leading to incorrect assumptions about its pre-Nazi use and its current use in other cultures.

Below is an abbreviated chronology of how the symbol became associated with Hitler in the early part of 20th century.

The symbol’s first use as an anti-Semitic symbol was in 1870 when it was used by the Austrian, pan-German followers of Schoenerer, an Austrian anti-Semitic politician.

In 1910, a poet and nationalist Guido von List suggested that the swastika as a symbol for all anti-Semitic organizations. When the National Socialist Party was formed in 1919, it adopted this ancient symbol, thus setting the stage for destroying the positive symbolism with which the swastika had been associated for thousands of years.

The Nazi party formally adopted the “swastika” (called Hakenkreuz meaning the hooked cross) in 1920. This was used on the party’s flag, badge and armband. In 1935, the black swastika on a white circle with a crimson background became the national symbol of Germany.

While it is important to make every effort to reclaim the swastika, we should, at the same time, make strenuous efforts to ensure that it is clearly differentiated from the design and symbolism used by the Nazis and everything associated with it.Next, some excerpts (paraphrased slightly for readability) from an interesting thesis regarding how (and why) the symbol was hijacked by the Nazis.

This is one of the more credible explanations that I have come across so far (see full article here). I have paraphrased it slightly for purposes of summary.

A (likely) explanation of how this ancient symbol became associated with Nazi ideology: In the later part of 18th century, as British interest in India grew, there began efforts to do more research on the art, culture and languages of ancient India. One of the earliest researchers was Sir William Jones (1746-94) who established the Royal Asiatic Society. A gifted linguist who studied Sanskrit, Jones is widely regarded as the father of “Indology”.

Knowledge of this ancient and sacred Hindu language made many scholars realise not only its great antiquity, but also its affinity to most of the languages spoken in the West – an interest that was taken up most stridently by the Germans.

A weak and divided people at the time and suffering the threat of domination by both France & Austria, the Germans were split into various states and dukedoms, the largest of which was Prussia. This period of alienation, accentuated by events such as the fall of the Holy Roman Empire due to Napoleon’s conquest, led many German thinkers of the early nineteenth century to look for inspiration to India.

These included Frederick von Schlegel, his brother Augustus Wilhelm, Wilhelm von Humbolt, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Hegel. There was also the rise of romanticism in Germany, a reaction to the industrialisation of European society that was fast gathering pace. While “romanticism”, i.e. an idealisation of the past before industrialisation, manifested itself in the poetry of Wordsworth in Britain, in continental Europe, it meant something else.

As well as idealising the pre-industrial “purity” of humans living in harmony with nature, the German romanticists also talked of the pagan heroes before the time of Christianity, in their view, brave warriors who held off the Romans in the almost impenetrable forests of central Europe.
This however, had a more sinister side. Some romanticists wanted to free themselves of the “alien” Jewish contamination brought into German society by Christianity, as well as by the Jews themselves.

As Prussia emerged as a military power and German unification was achieved in 1871, the British looked on with alarm. Indeed Sir Henry Maine, former Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University said: “..a nation has been borne out of Sanskrit.”

In the meantime, in their efforts to create a intermediating class (“white Brahmins”) between themselves and the “dark subjects”, the British began a programme of “re-discovering”(and researching) ancient Indian culture in earnest. The intention may have been to undermine the belief system of at least the “progressive” Indians with the hope that they would become dis-enchanted with the literary and cultural heritage of India, once the “truth” (via such research) became evident.

In this effort, the person they turned to for help was a devout Protestant and gifted Vedic scholar, German Sanskritologist, Friedrich Max Muller. For a princely sum (in those days) of �10,000 Max Muller was persuaded to work for the British East India Company by Macaulay, to translate the Rig Veda. His intentions were, however, less than noble.

In 1866, in a letter to his wife about his work, he wrote, “..this edition of mine and the translation of the Veda, will hereafter tell to a great extent on the fate of India and on the growth of millions of souls in that country. It is the root of their religion and to show them what the root it, I feel sure, is the only way of uprooting all that has sprung from it during the last three thousand years.”

Though one cannot cast doubt on his intelligence and talent, Muller’s scholarship is nevertheless marred by this ulterior motive.

What he wrote in the letter above was only the beginning.

It was Max Muller himself who gave “Aryan” a racial meaning, knowing full well as a scholar well versed in that ancient language, that Sanskrit “Arya” does not mean race.

From this point onwards, the idea of Aryan race could not be contained; In parallel, the idea of an “Aryan” invasion by Indo-European (and obviously fair-skinned) tribes from Central Asia, who authored the Vedas and established the basis of Hinduism, came to be widely accepted, even though it had absolutely no basis in any indigenous tradition of India. In reality, this was an “invention” of Muller who employed it as an ideological mechanism for colonial domination by the British.

The idea was adopted and further enhanced by romanticist intellectuals who wanted to free themselves of all Judaic influence brought upon them by Christianity, and saw this Aryan racial theory as another string to their bow. (Read this essay to see how the idea has been discredited)

Like the artificial dating of the Vedas to 1400BCE (so as to be more recent than the books of the Bible), it had absolutely nothing to do with India itself, and the people of India neither had any role nor any influence in this discourse.

The swastika, symbol of ancient cultures par excellence, was an ideal mechanism with which to manufacture a mythical past, which never existed. And it served as a counter-point of stability in a turbulent environment that was dominated by power politics, the formation of nation states, anti-Semitism and influenced by ideas of Social Darwinism and eugenics.

Runic symbols, Norse gods such as Odin, and even the ancient Greek myth of Atlantis, all were exploited along with the swastika and idea of the Aryan race to bolster Nazi theory and ideology.
Sadly the misunderstanding caused by this and widespread ignorance about the original meaning and significance of the symbol still persists – even amongst otherwise widely read and well educated people, including Indians.

Please share this with friends and colleagues so that we can counter mis-information and ill-informed debate with facts and truth.

B Shantanu

Post Script:
Here is some more information on how the symbol was hijacked by the Nazis and completely deprived of it original meaning (from an article by Chirag Badlani, “Nazi Swastika or Ancient Symbol? Time to Learn the Difference”, Jun ’97)

Here is a somewhat dated (’99) article about how a misunderstanding about the symbol caused an Indian employee to loose his job in the US

Finally, a link to an excellent and scholarly introduction to various Hindu symbols

And a fascinating hypothesis regarding the origins of “Aum” and “Swastika” 

P.P.S. Extracts from Sh Koenraad Elst’s essay on this topic: Can we still use the swastika? (emphasis is mine): 

The Nazi flag was designed by Adolf Hitler himself….

His creation was a black swastika standing in an angle of 45°, surrounded by a white circle on a red background. The Nazi flag was not ‘a’ swastika, but this very specific swastika, without counterpart anywhere or at any time.

…In Germany, only Sanskritists and Theosophists called the swastika symbol a ‘swastika’. The usual term was Hakenkreuz. The Haken is simply a hook, or specifically a hooked cloth-hanger. Kreuz means ‘cross’, and the whole is rendered in English as ‘hooked cross’.

…There exists a popular genre of myth-making around the Nazis. Thus, they are believed to have built a rocket base on Antarctica, there to make their escape to Aldebaran or so. It is likewise fabulated that they were into Oriental religions, and even, by Ivy League Sanskrit professor Sheldon Pollock (‘Deep Orientalism’, 1993), that the Hindu philosophy called Purva Mimansa, ‘the first hermeneutic (of the Vedas)’, was the backbone of the National-Socialist worldview.

In reality, Hinduism had little to offer to the Nazis. Among Adolf Hitler’s own rare utterances on the Hindus, each of them negative, was a racial interpretation of the Aryan Invasion Theory: ‘We know that the Hindus in India are a people mixed from the lofty Aryan immigrants and the dark-black aboriginal population, and that this people is bearing the consequences today; for it is also the slave people of a race that almost seems like a second Jewry.’ (Warum sind wir Antisemiten?, 1920)

In one sentence, he calls the Hindus “mixed”, half “dark”, “slave people” and “second Jewry”: in his worldview these were not compliments. He told Subhas Bose to his face that Germany was not interested in his independence for India, a cold shower for Bose after Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, more of a diplomat, had given him a different impression. Indeed, Hitler thought it was better for the Hindus to be governed by the racially purer and hence superior Aryans from Britain.

…At any rate, the Nazis had an over-all contempt for Hinduism.

With this contempt, it would seem bizarre that they borrowed a symbol that is Hindu par excellence. The explanation is that they didn’t. They considered the hooked cross as originating in Europe and then brought into India by the Aryan invaders.

All over the world, the hooked cross motive is found here and there. It is quite common among various Amerindian nations, who speak of rolling logs. There are synagogues and churches with hooked cross patterns as floor design. As an image of cosmic motion, it is obviously universal.

Only those with a narrow vision would identify it with their own little world. The Nazis saw it as typically European. The two areas of highest concentration of these swastika designs in Europe were the Greek world and the Baltic….

The Baltic was one area where German military effort made the difference, and where the hooked cross flourished (and does so till today). During WW2, Germans came to the aid of the Finns to ward off Soviet aggression. The Finns used the swastika as emblem, and even now this war is commemorated with swastika insignia. A particularly fitting use of the hooked cross was as emblem of the air force, because it was the weapon of the thunder god (Lithuanian Perkunas, Latvian Perkons, Slavic Perun, all related to Sanskrit Parjanya; Germanic Thor/Donar). Indeed, in the Baltic the hooked cross was also ‘Thor’s hammer’, the lightning thrown by the storm god, equivalent to Indra’s vajra. 

….But more important for Hitler’s design were the Freikorps militias in 1919. ….After forcing the Soviets to give up their annexation efforts, the German soldiers went home, fired up with nationalism and anti-Bolshevism. They were among the pioneers of the new Deutsche National-Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei (German National-Socialist Workers’ Party), the Nazi party. And they brought the hooked cross with them.

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28 Responses

  1. Apollo says:

    Nice article.I think it is time to dump the fantasy of “Indology”.

  2. B Shantanu says:

    Thanks Apollo…I agree with you.

  3. Heinsie says:

    im so glad that you actually put out the truth, that the swastika not only symbolizes hate and death, it also symbolizes good fortune and blessings. i have a swastika tattooed and im scared to show it, even though its actual authentic meaning is beautiful and should be shown to the world. i hate that the world dosent know its other meaning other than the meaning hitler and the nazis gave to it. this symbol was hijacked.

  4. B Shantanu says:

    Dear Heinsie,
    Let us at least start by making our friends, colleagues and acquaintances aware of the true meaning of “Swastika” – change will surely come but it takes time.
    Thanks.

  5. Mr Shantanu,

    Please make it a point to read this book :

    Muslim League Attack on Sikhs and Hindus in the Punjab 1947

    it is at http://voiceofdharma.com/books/mla/index.htm

    It is quite long, but it is worth reading it

    Thanks

  6. Vijay says:

    I am very glad and relieved that Germany will not seek EU ban on swastika

    There were some rascals with a motive for mischief behind this.

    I also wanted to draw your attention to the fact that the Union-Jack which is the flag of britain ” hides” a swastika behind the +

    Just take a look at the .gif file I am enclosing and then extend the diagonal lines of the X behind the + of the Union Jack

    What you will notice is a compressed swastika. (minus the white spaces between the arms)
    The diagnonals which form the X in the Union-jack are not in a straight line!!

    Now the “Plus” sign in the Union jack was also used by the Germans on their Tanks and Planes

    The Plus sign is also called the gammadion because it can be formed by 4
    Gammas arranged like this

    __| |___
    __ ___
    | |

    Regards,
    Vijay

  7. Bhekare says:

    Good reading, keep up the good work.

  8. B Shantanu says:

    Thank you…I really appreciate your support and encouragement.

  9. PS says:

    Hello Shantanu,

    Came across your blog recently. Great to see other people in the blogosphere trying to ret the record on India’s history straightened out. I havent been blogging regularly for some time but plan to do more in the near future.

    Cheers,

    PS

    Oh ya, forgot to mention that India-Forum (http://www.india-forum.com/) is another good site on the above topic. Their discussion board on Indian history has a lot of useful information.

  10. B Shantanu says:

    Thanks PS.

    I will be watching your blog with interest….and yes, thanks for reminding me about India-Forum. It has been a while since I last visited the site.

  11. Nabanita says:

    I am deeply moved by your article. thankyou for writing that. It has been of immense help and is highly informative.

    A friend has asked me about the link between Nazi s and the swastika .. i had answered them to some extent– but the details about Max Mueller was invaluable. after reading your article I have replied her correctly and have also told her about ur article.

    Thank you once again for the knowlegable piece you have posted online for the benefit of general people who would otherwise be deprived of all this invaluable information.

  12. Shantanu, dude check this out: http://www.卐.com

  13. B Shantanu says:

    Sid: I have received a copy of Dr Aich’s book and am hoping to read and write a review soon.
    Thanks.

  14. Sid says:

    Shantanu,
    Any idea when would Dr. Aich’s book be released in the market?

  15. Sid says:

    Sandeep,
    Thanks.

  16. B Shantanu says:

    @Sid: I believe the book is already in the public domain…It may perhaps not be widely available though…Let me check and revert.

    I have already started on Chapter 2. It appears to be painstakingly researched. Thanks

  17. Sid says:

    Is there an online link or kindle version available?

  18. B Shantanu says:

    Good sense prevails…
    SoCal museum re-hangs tapestry with Hindu swastika
    IRVINE, Calif.—After removing a tapestry featuring a Hindu swastika amid complaints it was offensive, Pretend City Children’s Museum in Irvine has decided to re-hang the piece.

    The Orange County Register reported Thursday that museum officials decided to return the colorful Indian tapestry to its spot next week accompanied by better signage to help children learn about the multiple meanings of symbols.

    ***

    @Sid: Sorry I just noticed your question re. Dr Aich’s book. I am working with a few other friends to make a pdf version available soon…Thanks.

  19. Sid says:

    Shantanu,
    Thanks for remembering the request.

  20. B Shantanu says:

    Interesting read, How the world loved the swastika – until Hitler stole it By Mukti Jain Campion, from which this brief excerpt:
    “We just want people to know that the swastika comes in many other forms, none of which have ever been used for anything bad. We are also trying to show the right-wing fascists that it’s wrong to use this symbol. If we can educate the public about the true meanings of the swastika, maybe we can take it away from the fascists.”

  21. B Shantanu says:

    Placing this here for the record: Distorting the meaning of Swastika by Kalavai Venkat, 28-04-2015

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