Many of us probably know how Nazi Germany nearly totally suppressed the Swastika at least outside of certain religious communities even till this day, at least in the West (though it would appear to have had less of an impact in the East, from India to Japan especially, where it continues to be widely used today, albeit more cautiously when it involves the sale of commercial products to the West). Prior to the Nazi era, the Swastika was commonly used across the West within many other more secular contexts, as a good luck charm, for decorative purposes, etc.
As Nazism grew, Rudyard Kipling had the Swastika removed from some of his books to avoid any false association between his beliefs and Nazism; and many abandoned the Swastika as a good luck charm on sports uniforms or pilots' suits, for decorative or other purposes. Even today, the only Western vestiges of the Swastika outside of certain religious or Neo-Nazi contexts are to be found among official symbols that had used the Swastika before the rise of Nazism and had simply continued its maintenance to this day, such as on the flag of the Finnish Air Force.
I was surprised to learn recently of further influences of Nazi Germany's on Western culture. As it turns out, the US Pledge of Allegience from the late 1800s up to almost the end of 1942 was accompanied by the Bellamy salute, almost indistinguishable from the Nazi Salute. It was no coincidence that the Americans had dropped the Bellamy Salute; depending on the angle of a camera, the Bellamy Salute looked just like the Nazi Salute, especially in the absence of the US flag in the picture to show what it was the saluter was saluting.
Seeing that the Nazis had in fact adopted and appropriated many Western symbols, I'd be curious to know in what other ways Nazism may have killed off many Western traditions which are for the most part all but dead today except in their association with Nazism in the popular imagination even if they were not even originally Nazi symbols. Among some of the Western traditions Nazism had unintentionally suppressed to this day could be read about here:
Swastika - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bellamy salute - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Please add any more you know about as you come across it.
As Nazism grew, Rudyard Kipling had the Swastika removed from some of his books to avoid any false association between his beliefs and Nazism; and many abandoned the Swastika as a good luck charm on sports uniforms or pilots' suits, for decorative or other purposes. Even today, the only Western vestiges of the Swastika outside of certain religious or Neo-Nazi contexts are to be found among official symbols that had used the Swastika before the rise of Nazism and had simply continued its maintenance to this day, such as on the flag of the Finnish Air Force.
I was surprised to learn recently of further influences of Nazi Germany's on Western culture. As it turns out, the US Pledge of Allegience from the late 1800s up to almost the end of 1942 was accompanied by the Bellamy salute, almost indistinguishable from the Nazi Salute. It was no coincidence that the Americans had dropped the Bellamy Salute; depending on the angle of a camera, the Bellamy Salute looked just like the Nazi Salute, especially in the absence of the US flag in the picture to show what it was the saluter was saluting.
Seeing that the Nazis had in fact adopted and appropriated many Western symbols, I'd be curious to know in what other ways Nazism may have killed off many Western traditions which are for the most part all but dead today except in their association with Nazism in the popular imagination even if they were not even originally Nazi symbols. Among some of the Western traditions Nazism had unintentionally suppressed to this day could be read about here:
Swastika - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bellamy salute - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Please add any more you know about as you come across it.