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05-29-2004, 06:59 PM
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Idaho Courthouse Floor Sports a Swastika
It is known as a symbol of hate. The Swastika was used decades ago as a symbol of the Nazi's rise to power in Germany.
One man hopes to rid a local county building of this symbol many people do not even know is there. Here is senior reporter Suzanne Hobbs.
Since 1952, Reginald Reeves has worked as an attorney in Idaho Falls. He has roamed the halls of the historic Bonneville County Courthouse all these years. And one thing has stood out as offensive: these Swastikas placed in the tile floor of the rotunda when it was first built, 83 years ago; around the time the national socialist party was formed, taking on the Swastika as its symbol.
Reginald Reeves: "The symbol is offensive, not just to people of Jewish ancestry, but to thinking people, and concerned people everywhere."
Despite all these years of asking for change, nothing permanent has been done. Reeves suggests the tiles be removed and placed in a local museum.
for full article see....
http://www.kpvi.com/index.cfm?page=n...s.cfm&ID=18681
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05-29-2004, 07:18 PM
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They are actually NOT swastikas. What are now known as swastikas are seen the world over as symbols of GOOD LUCK. I saw them worked into the architecture in Washington DC, and those buildings were built long before Hitler was even born.
If you look at Navajo blankets you can see swastikas. But the direction of the Nazi use is opposite of one used by everyone else.
It is just sad that this symbol has been changed into one of hate and prejudice. But it is just as sad that people can't tell the difference and don't know the history.
Here is some information to read.
http://www.intelinet.org/swastika/swastika_intro.htm
ETA: They mention the world good luck connection IN the article, one has to wonder which direction those "swastikas" are facing. This man has won many awards for his good works, and I am sure he means well, but the cultural significance of a similar symbol should not be ignored. Why should people who have their own cultural ties be punished for some psycho, murdering dictator changing it?
Last edited by aurora_borealis; 05-29-2004 at 07:30 PM.
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05-29-2004, 07:37 PM
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Swastikas to be Taken Out of Courthouse
May 28, 2004
The Bonneville County Courthouse will soon be getting a new look. But you'll have to look close to see the change.
The county commissioners have been getting complaints that the tile in the courthouse is in the symbol of a swastika.
The court house was built in 1921, before Hitler was known in America. Commissioners tell us the swastika is actually a Hindu symbol, but they'll be changing it anyway.
They'll paint in one box to make the symbol four boxes instead.
“We decided just to change it rather than cause any heart ache or offend someone who might be offended," says Dave Radford, County Commissioner.
The courthouse is recognized as a national historic building.
**I pasted the article since they are acknowledging that is a national historic place, and it is a Hindu symbol. My favorite part is "offend someone who might be offended". WTH? I am surprised the Register of National Historical Places is going to let them do it. The Idaho reputation for harboring hate groups is in northern Idaho anyway, this place is way down near Wyoming, so it isn't as if there is a history there. **
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05-30-2004, 01:00 AM
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Before WWII, the symbol of the 45th infantry (based in Oklahoma) was a swatztika. Back then, it was simply known as an indian symbol of good luck.
But yeah, considering what this symbol has come to mean, I think we can come up with some better decor.
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05-30-2004, 01:21 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by ktsnake
Before WWII, the symbol of the 45th infantry (based in Oklahoma) was a swatztika. Back then, it was simply known as an indian symbol of good luck.
But yeah, considering what this symbol has come to mean, I think we can come up with some better decor.
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It isn't the same symbol, swastikas face a different way. Instead of ripping up the floor, or painting over it, why not oh...educate people about it? It is only a symbol of hate when people are misinformed.
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05-30-2004, 03:50 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by aurora_borealis
It isn't the same symbol, swastikas face a different way. Instead of ripping up the floor, or painting over it, why not oh...educate people about it? It is only a symbol of hate when people are misinformed.
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05-30-2004, 05:48 AM
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Interesting to note that in Asian nations, the Swastika is not seen as a symbol of hate. I know in Bali, there is a hotel called the Swastika Bungalow.
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05-30-2004, 10:48 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by aurora_borealis
It isn't the same symbol, swastikas face a different way. Instead of ripping up the floor, or painting over it, why not oh...educate people about it? It is only a symbol of hate when people are misinformed.
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While on one hand, I agree with you, on the other hand, if you've ever been to a courthouse (I'm in one almost daily), the types of people there aren't exactly the most educated folks around. You can try to "educate", but many of the people in the courthouse aren't the types that are willing to subject themselves to learning.
The courthouse is their courthouse as well though. A public building should be very sensitive of the public that frequents it. Maybe move the symbol to the floor of a county office or something, maybe you could move it to the bankruptcy court area  , etc.. I just don't think anything that represents that part of history to some people (right or wrong) should be on public display.
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06-01-2004, 02:39 AM
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It no longer matters what it was. Symbols, words, etc. take on different meanings in different contexts and with histories. It should be removed because really what purpose is it there for? Is it there to be an exhibit for Indians? No. Is it there as a decoration? Yes. Regardless it'll get removed.
-Rudey
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06-01-2004, 11:19 AM
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I did some thinking about this, and I think they should leave the floor as is, and use the money that would have been used to remove it, to make an interactive educational tool to explain the differences between the two. There can be different aspects in the exhibit. People who experience will learn geography (all parts of the world that used this symbol), Arts & Crafts, American History (Native Americans), World History (the change of the symbol by Hitler), and hopefully with all that they will come away knowing what happened in WWII Germany, and why it "never again" is so important. By educating people it removes the hateful associations, and therefore the power is returned to those cultures that are being punished for Hitler changing it for his evil purposes. A similar turn around has been done with the gay community and the pink triangle. The pink triangle was used in Nazi Germany to identify sexual deviants, and is now a symbol that was used in the gay rights movement.
I also think, that removing symbols of other cultures, specifically Native North American cultures, is bigger problem. It may just be a floor in the Bonneville County Courthouse, but the symbol is in many other places. Should the Capitol Building in DC be next, or the Philadelphia Museum of Art? The article below mentions that historical pieces of these people are hidden away because of Hitler, and they stopped using that design because of him. Why keep letting his hate oppress the history and culture of people that lived here for thousands of years?
http://www.collectorsguide.com/fa/fa086.shtml
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06-01-2004, 11:47 AM
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Sorta like blackface. "Come on people, these white kids just want to dress up like their favorite rappers. So what if it meant something else at one time."
-Rudey
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06-01-2004, 11:56 AM
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Political correctness rearing up its ugly head yet again.
The Nazis co-opted the swastika as the emblem of their political party, though it had already been used as the emblem of the Ehrhardt Brigade (a far-right wing paramilitary corps (read: ass-kickers) in post-World War I Germany). Likewise, they also co-opted the Sieg rune - among others - as the emblem of the Jungvolk (the pre-Hitler Youth)and the SS. (One Sieg-rune for the Jungvolk, two for the SS. The latter insisted in referring to the SS using the twin Sieg-runes instead of the twin capital S on all typed and printed documents; German-made typewriters made during the Third Reich era actually included a key for the SS runes.)
More information on how the Nazis adopted the swastika: http://flagspot.net/flags/de193345.html - look on the link 'Origins of the Swastika flag'.
I agree with aurora_borealis in that they should put up some kind of a display explaining the historical origins of the swastika to inform people that NOT ALL swastikas are the root of unspeakable evil in the world. Unfortunately, the American people
I don't see people clamoring for the banning of the hammer-and-sickle as the symbol of Communism, even though to some it is a symbol that incites hate as much as the swastika. Originally, it meant to be a symbol of the workers and peasants uniting against capitalism, over time it became associated with Stalin's purges and later the 'Evil Empire'.
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Last edited by AlphaSigOU; 06-01-2004 at 11:59 AM.
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06-01-2004, 12:01 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by AlphaSigOU
Political correctness rearing up its ugly head yet again.
The Nazis co-opted the swastika as the emblem of their political party, though it had already been used as the emblem of the Ehrhardt Brigade (a far-right wing paramilitary corps (read: ass-kickers) in post-World War I Germany). Likewise, they also co-opted the Sieg rune - among others - as the emblem of the Jungvolk (the pre-Hitler Youth)and the SS. (One Sieg-rune for the Jungvolk, two for the SS. The latter insisted in referring to the SS using the twin Sieg-runes instead of the twin capital S on all typed and printed documents; German-made typewriters made during the Third Reich era actually included a key for the SS runes.)
More information on how the Nazis adopted the swastika: http://flagspot.net/flags/de}ns_or.html
I agree with aurora_borealis in that they should put up some kind of a display explaining the historical origins of the swastika to inform people that NOT ALL swastikas are the root of unspeakable evil in the world. Unfortunately, the American people
I don't see people clamoring for the banning of the hammer-and-sickle as the symbol of Communism, even though to some it is a symbol that incites hate as much as the swastika. Originally, it meant to be a symbol of the workers and peasants uniting against capitalism, over time it became associated with Stalin's purges and later the 'Evil Empire'.
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You gotta be kidding...the hammer and sickle is comparable to a swastika??
Hey Chuck, so tell me where your interests are because I want to understand what it is that moves you to educate others on what the swastika used to mean. Please tell me about it.
-Rudey
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06-01-2004, 12:40 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by Rudey
You gotta be kidding...the hammer and sickle is comparable to a swastika??
Hey Chuck, so tell me where your interests are because I want to understand what it is that moves you to educate others on what the swastika used to mean. Please tell me about it.
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Before ANYONE gets ANY ideas twisted in their minds that I am a closet brown-shirted-goose-stepping-Nazi-lover, let me set a couple of things straight:
One of my interests is reading about history, specifically World War II and the Third Reich. What Adolf Hitler and his Nazis did to the world at large during World War II, especially to the Jews and anyone not meeting the 'Aryan' standard is a horrifying example of man's inhumanity to man. Never again should we sit complacently and watch someone impose his twisted will upon any country again. 'Know thine enemy' should be the watchword everyone should remember.
If German racial laws of the time applied to me, I wouldn't qualify as an 'Aryan', I'd be considered a 'bastard'. My membership in the Masonic Fraternity would have been enough to have been taken in for 'questioning' by the Gestapo. If I were a prominent Freemason (say, a Grand Lodge officer), it would have been a one-way trip to a concentration camp.
I grew up in a predominantly Jewish neighborhood in Miami, where it was common to see older people wearing concentration camp ID tattoos on their forearms. I've listened to first-hand experiences of concentration camp survivors; when I hear pathetic examples of 'revisionist' history claiming the Holocaust is a fabrication, my blood boils.
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Causa latet vis est notissima - the cause is hidden, the results are well known.
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