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The mystique
of Swastika
By Shiv
Darshanlal Sharma
A SURVEY of literature reveals that the
Swastika symbol is generally referred to as the
gamma-like cross by western scholars because it can be
resolved into four gammas joined at right angles. It is
perhaps one of the most ancient symbols associated with
the sun. The most ancient Swastikas have been discovered
in Susa in Persia, Mohenjodaro and Harappa in Pakistan
and Sammarra in Mesopotamia. It has been seen on
terracotta articles as well as ancient vases of Greece,
Cyprus, Crete and Rhodes. On an Athenian vase it appears
thrice. On a vase now at Vienna it is depicted as an
ornament on the breast of Apollo. It was a favourite
symbol on the coins of ancient Greece and India. Swastika
is also found engraved on funeral urns which have been
dug up in northern Italy.

It is found
as a religious and ornamental symbol in ancient Egypt.
The excavations undertaken recently by the Turkish
Government at Aladja-Hoyuk uncovered the so-called
standards made out of Swastika symbols. These metallic
articles were buried along with corpses during the 22nd
century B.C. Probably these were kept there to ensure the
safety and wellbeing of the deceased. In Lycaonia, on a
Hittite monument, it appears as an ornament on the border
of the robe of a person engaged in offering sacrifice. In
the designs on jars excavated in Cappadocia, spirals,
Swastikas and Crosses are found. All these vases belong
to the Hittite age, about 2200-1200 B.C. Swastika, called
as flyfot, was a popular artistic and sacred
symbol throughout the Teutonic age in Europe. It appeared
on jewels and weapons, not only of Gallic, but also of
German and Scandanavian people. When placed beside a
human head, it represented God. In company with the
thunderbolt and the wheel it is seen inscribed on the
altars of the Gallic-Roman period. It is regarded as the
sacred symbol in Roman England. It adorned the floor of
the thresholds of the famous Roman villa excavated at
Lullingstone in Britain.
Swastika is marked on a
number of early Christian tombs. It was an archaic custom
to mark the tombs with this symbol or to place vases with
Swastika symbols in tombs. It was performed to ensure the
safety of the departed soul or to fend off demonic
spirits. Subsequently, the Swastika was replaced by the
Cross. Swastika has been discovered at several locations
in the New World. It was considered as an auspicious sign
by some of the original inhabitants of America. Swastika
is found in monumental remains of the primitive Mexicans
and Peruvians and on objects exhumed from prehistoric
burial mounds within the limits of the USA.
It was revived by Hitler
when he made it the national emblem of Nazi Germany. He
believed that this ancient Aryan sign brought prosperity
and victory. It has been the sacred symbol of the
Buddhists and the Jains. It bears the name of Swastika
when the limbs are bent towards the right, and Suavastika
when they are turned to the left. It is believed that the
first represents Lord Ganesha, while the second
represents goddess Kali. According to the other school of
thought, the first stands for the sun, for light and
life; the second stands for night and destruction.
Indians inscribe it on the opening page of their account
books. In ceremonies associated with marriages, mundan,
the worship of luxmi etc the Swastika is worshipped as
the symbol of Ganesha. It is marked along with the sign
of Navagrahas.
Swastika is one of the
eight types of yogic seats mentioned in the Vayaviya-samhita
of the Shiv Purana. The discovery of Swastika in
almost all parts of the globe has given rise to so many
interpretations.
Certain authorities
believe that Ganesha on his Vahana, the rat,
symbolised a sun-god, overcoming the animals. Which, in
archaic mythology was a sign of night. The cult of sun
worship is probably the most primitive one. The sun
brings joy, light and life for mankind. People belonging
to the Indus Valley civilisation believed in sun
worshipping, which is evident from the discovery of a
number of signs and symbols associated with the sun.
These signs are found on several so-called punch marked
coins that have been excavated from many places in India.
These are called Vishnu Chakras. Vishnus
incarnations are said to have killed their enemies by
using these chakras. Krishnas Sudarshan
Chakra can be referred to in this connection. Like Indra,
Vishnu is said to have subdued serpents. Krishna defeated
Kalinaga while Vishnu is depicted as reclining on
Sesnaga, who has one thousand hoods.
According to Vayu
Purana, "the lord of serpents, who lives on the
Devakuta mountain, has one hundred hoods and is marked
with the Chakras (Swastika) of Vishnu."
According to the same source, Brahma was practicing
severe penance, as a result of which sweat came from his
body which gave rise to the serpent world, which had
marks of Swastika on them. It is interesting to note that
on prehistoric bowls found at Sammarra, serpents are
shown as moving around the sun. Being a symbol of the
sun, the chakra represents life and movement,
which transform the dwarf into the giant or the microcosm
into macrocosm or again the centre into its diameter.
Aladja-Hoyuk, which is
identified with the Hittite city Ariana, was the seat of
the cult of sun god. The Buddhists inherited reverence of
Swastika from the belief that Lord Buddha is the
incarnation of Vishnu, and carried it to Tibet, China,
Japan and Korea. Swastika is found on the images of the
lord. It is seen on the footprint of Lord Buddha. In
China, swastika found a place among written characters,
where it contains the notion of abundance, prosperity and
long life. In Japan, it represents the number 10,000. The
Chinese empress Wu (684-704 A.D.) decreed that it should
be used as sign for the sun. The seal of the Harappan
period shows a man carrying a manger with propitiatory
offering for a tiger standing in front of him. On the
reverse the same inscription is repeated, besides a row
of five Swastikas as auspicious symbols signifying
security and good luck.
According to K.N.
Shastri, the sealing was obviously an amulet against
possible dangers arising from the depredations of tigers.
Ideas and beliefs migrate with traders, soldiers and
migrants. The ancient western Asia had trade relations
with the people of the Indus. Valley. It is evident from
the discovery of Indus Valley seals in Mesopotamia at the
level dating between 2300 and 2000 B.C. Some particular
seals found in Crete proved to be of exactly of the same
material as those found in the Indus Valley. The figures
of animals and birds with fish in their beaks appearing
on vases found from the tombs in Sammarra (dating 4000
B.C.) are significantly similar to that painted on
potteries found from tombs in Harappa.
The pipal tree (Ficus
religiosa) was regarded as sacred both in Harappa and
Elam (It may be due to the fact that this is the only
plant in the plant kingdom which releases more amount of
oxygen day and night, than any other plant). These
instances prove that Palestine, Elam and Harappa had
close trade and cultural relations. The appearance of the
Swastika on vases belonging to this period proves that
the symbol of Swastika was travelling from one place to
other along with the normal merchandise.
The Swastika was a very
popular symbol in ancient Turkey, where it was frequently
applied by the smiths of Anatolia. It is interesting to
note that two kinds of Swastikas, one revolving to the
right and other to the left have been excavated from a
tomb in Aladja-Hoyuk. These could be interpreted as the
rising and setting the sun. The Swastika is found on the
megalithic pottery from Kunnatur, Coorg and Coimbatore.
It has also been traced on a red ware belonging to the
Chalcolithic phase on the site of Rangpur. These
instances prove that the sacredness of the Swastika was
the most primitive belief in India. It seems that the
people of the Indus Valley, who inherited this symbol,
believed in sun worship and spread this cult to Elam.
Mesopotamia and Asia Minor or the people of these
countries got it from Indians migrants even before the
prosperous settlements of the Indus Valley came into
being. A scene of Swastika worship is found in the rock
paintings of Paria Bari. It is mentioned in the Puranas
that the masses worshipped the solar deity in its
symbolic forms of disc, wheel, lotus and Swastika.
The discovery of the
Swastika in the New World should not be explained away by
the so-called theory of independent origin. It may have
been carried to the New World by Asian Traders in the
most archaic times. Some historians claim that long
before the voyage undertaken by Columbus, America was
discovered by the Phoenicians, and the Chinese. The
discovery of images, said to be of the Lord Buddha, in
America is really a significant event.
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