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Haha OK well! I knew some of this line of thinking. Your answer about all this was education over a Nazi symbol, however, which isn't hardly any better than saying the Nazis are important and split hairs. Thanks for 3 people jumping on this. I suppose? You just now started even properly applying the idea of the immovable opinion and attachment of the Indian subcontinent to these symbols. (hooray!)Those who were killed are no more. Germans, Russians, Europeans, Americans, Japanese, Indians too who fought along with the Allies. But we need the welfare of those who now live on earth - Humans, animals, Vegetation - as I said none excluded.
"Dyavah shaantih Antariksham shaantih, Prithivee shaantih Aapah shaantih;
Oshadhayah shaantih Vanaspatayah shaantih, Vishvedevaah shaantih Brahma shaantih;
Sarvam shaantih Shaantireva shaantih, Saamaa shaantiredhih."
May peace radiate there in the whole sky, as well as in the vast ethereal space everywhere.
May peace reign all over this earth, in water and in all herbs, trees and creepers.
May peace flow over the whole universe, May peace be in the Supreme Being Brahman.
And may there always exist in all peace and peace alone, peace, peace and peace to us and all beings!
Shanti Mantra
Haha OK well! I knew some of this line of thinking. Your answer about all this was education over a Nazi symbol, however, which isn't hardly any better than saying the Nazis are important and split hairs. Thanks for 3 people jumping on this. I suppose? You just now started even properly applying the idea of the immovable opinion and attachment of the Indian subcontinent to these symbols. (hooray!)
Nazism and its symbol are in the gutter of history though some in Europe still cling to it.Your answer about all this was education over a Nazi symbol, however, which isn't hardly any better than saying the Nazis are important and split hairs.
Well, that is your view. It depends on the sense a person uses it. In my culture, it is a dearest symbol of a message of welfare of all things existing on Earth. You find it everywhere. In temples, in account books of traders, on the implements of a worker, on the entrance of a house, on invitation for auspicious occasions. The question really is where you may not find it? It is put on the head of a male child twice - at the time of his first tonsure (mundana) and when he is given the sacred thread (yajnopavita). You know that very well, so, kindly be fair in your judgment.As far as using the swastika, have to ask: do the reasons for using it outweigh the reasons for not using it? And if the answer is an obvious no, what does that say about the person who uses it anyway?
As far as using the swastika, have to ask: do the reasons for using it outweigh the reasons for not using it? And if the answer is an obvious no, what does that say about the person who uses it anyway?
The symbol was also used by people outside of India on all continents for many thousands of years.Thanks for 3 people jumping on this. I suppose? You just now started even properly applying the idea of the immovable opinion and attachment of the Indian subcontinent to these symbols. (hooray!)
How about answering both questions.That they don't change their lives because someone bastardized a symbol they hold sacred.
How about answering both questions.
The swastika's religious significance isn't in question. Your motives for using it in a community with a significant Jewish membership is what's up for debate.Nazism and its symbol are in the gutter of history though some in Europe still cling to it.Well, that is your view. It depends on the sense a person uses it. In my culture, it is a dearest symbol of a message of welfare of all things existing on Earth. You find it everywhere. In temples, in account books of traders, on the implements of a worker, on the entrance of a house, on invitation for auspicious occasions. The question really is where you may not find it? It is put on the head of a male child twice - at the time of his first tonsure (mundana) and when he is given the sacred thread (yajnopavita). You know that very well, so, kindly be fair in your judgment.
That you had even considered the first question was less than apparent.I thought my inclusion of the fact that there are those that hold the symbol as sacred was apparent as an answer to the question about the reason for use outweighing the reason for non-use.
That you had even considered the first question was less than apparent.
I think I have answered both the questions in my post # 45.How about answering both questions.
My reason is explained in my post # 21. It may be a misconception among a few people which I want to remove.The swastika's religious significance isn't in question. Your motives for using it in a community with a significant Jewish membership is what's up for debate.
Hakencruez or the reversed Swastika is a Buddhist symbol and a symbol of left-hand practices in Hinduism, which is considered not good for general public and is deprecated. we never make it like that and also never in black.I will also offer that the symbol for the Nazi party was call the hakenkreuz, or hooked cross in English. The fact that it resembles a swastika doesn't make it so. Nor should the swastika's use in religion bear the same stigma as the hakenkreuz.
Just curious if there is a particular reason that @Apocolypse, @Orleuge, @Vinayaka, @pcarl, @Hubert Farnsworth, @tas8831, @Frank Goad, @calm and @whirlingmerc don't have an avatar. I'm not complaining about it, but more curious than anything.
Hopefully, my elaboration has offered clarity.