India Outside India

Swastika again …

It was Diwali week last week. A lot of people from home updated their facebook profile photos with images related to their Diwali celebrations. One of it was of a rangoli in the doorway with swastika in the center. I was wondering what people outside of India (Western countries) will associate it with.
I wrote a couple of blog posts some time (years?) back about Indian Swastika and Hitler’s Hakenkreuz, after the swastika controversy in TC. I talked with people wherever I went, about the Indian Swastika and the meaning of the word itself (Swasti = wellbeing). I tried to unpack my feelings about how I feel when it is misrepresented as a symbol of hate. Talked with the office of diversity in Teachers College and told them I will help with the lecture they were planning about symbols and their meanings in different cultures, in the hope that I can talk about the difference between the Indian Swastika, the meaning of the word and how it differs from Hitler’s symbol of SS.

Nothing much has changed after that. In the Diwali packet I got a sticker imitating Rangoli design. At both ends of the colorful strip are two swastikas. Rangoli designs are drawn for various reasons. The ones in the doorway like my sister sent, are to bring happiness, prosperity and feeling of festivity. The ausipicious symbol of a swastika, the name of which itself means ‘wellbeing’ is generally a given in such drawings. I obviously would not be putting it in my doorway in US for the fear that people will label me fascist, anti-Semite. I don’t know how I feel about this. I am not a big fan of Rangoli stickers (I rather draw whatever I feel like everyday) but the matter of am I free to draw or stick a swastika on my door (in the context of a rangoli) without being labeled anti-Semite still remains.

As I said nothing has changed.

India Outside India · Musings

Swastika Part II

As mentioned in the previous post, I have been trying to spread the word offline and online. A few of those efforts were met with encouraging reactions from some american students. For example, a TC student was happy to receive information about the Indian Swastika and the way we use it in daily life. She also volunteered to talk about it with a friend in the student senate so that it can be handled at a macro level. I also wrote a comment on the public scribbling board made available during the unrest in TC in the main lobby.

I asked a question regarding spreading information about Swastika on Yahoo Answers. It received  mixed responce. Here is the link to the QA:
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Ate.S03nXLZHNxWLaKSoIxnsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20071109171936AAsU3xV

I will keep updating this post as and when I get more feedback

India Outside India · Musings

Indian Swastika and Hitler’s Hakenkreuz

(Imported from Musings)
The Swastika controversy is another issue that has been a huge part of my discussions, fact finding missions and such for the last couple of weeks. The controversy in my mind started with an image of a swastika in a brochure about hate crimes on campus and how to react to them. Unfortunately, the image of swastika they published was the straight faced Indian Swastika and not the tilted swastika of hitler showing 2 intelocked ‘S’. It was a photo of the sign painted on an African American House sign so judgimg by the reference it was definately meant as a hate symbol. My first reaction was to laugh at it ‘The haters didn’t even know which swastika showed hate’. But what about the creaters of the brochure? Did they think twice before choosing this image as an example of hate crime?
The brochure was a 10 point ‘to do’ list. The first point was ‘Rise Up’. A sentence in that section caught my attention “I didn’t mean to hurt doesn’t remove the hurt” “Rise up. The world won’t change if people don’t change it.”

So I decided to rethink my approach/reaction to the way the word ‘Swastika’ is used in U.S. As an Indian, swastika to me is a symbol of wellbeing. The word (originating from sanskrit Swasti) literally means that. Swastika is part of an Indian’s everyday life. When repeatedly swastika is mentioned as a hate symbol, how do Indian students react to it? I react by doing nothing or feeling nothing. The underlying thought process is ‘they are not aware of my swastika. They aren’t talking about the Indian swastika so I need not be offended.’ I talked to a few Indian students and they had a similar reaction. ‘we know better, just let it go.’

But is it right/fair to let go. Is it not offensive to hear repeated mentions of a symbol as a hate symbol when it is one of the most used auspicious symbols of a culture? Is it not unfair that an Indian cannot use his/her most auspicious symbol due to fear of being branded as fascist unnecesarily?

Some interesting stories came up when I was talking with the Indian students. The stories were about lack of information about the Indian (real??) swastika by westerners and the problems crreated by it. The stories were exchanged mostly as hilarious incidents. One of it goes like this: “An Indian student was coming to US to study. His father thought that it would be easier for him to find his bags if he had some kind of identifying sticker on it. The easiest available was the rangoli sticker used on the doorways which is very popular in Maharashtra. A rangoli sticker invaribly has a swastika in the center of the design. As I said before, swastika is a omnipresent symbol in India. He was arrested on one of the airports in Europe during the layover.” I shared this story with couple other Indian students. The discussion invariably focused on ‘how people who haven’t travelled outside India do not have a sense of such things’. Why is the burden of knowing and understanding on the shoulders of an Indian? Is it because we believe in ‘let go’?

What have we achieved by not reacting? Did we unknowingly support the abuse of the word/concept of ‘Swastika’ by not reacting? Will it make a difference if we educate people around us? Will it make a differnce if we protest against the use of the word ‘Swastika’ as a hate symbol and insist that the Nazi hate symbol be properly identified as ‘Hitler’s Swastika’ or ‘Hakenkreuz (hook-cross))’?

I am still debating in my mind about these questions. In the meanwhile I have also started talking about the issue with various american freinds offline and online. Resolving these questions for myself is going to take a long time. As they arn’t really about swastika but about changing philosophy of life in a new environment.