| Image courtesy of WikiMedia Commons |
Long before Adolph Hitler adopted the swastika as the symbol for his Nazi party, it was a symbol of spirituality in Eastern cultures and a symbol of good luck in the West.
| American Farmer, by Solon L. Goode. 1907, page 101. |
Finding a mention of a Swastika Club meeting in an old newspaper was shocking and I had to find out more about the group.
| Medina Gazette, 29 March 1935, page 1. |
Most of the newspaper articles about the club were just announcements of meetings or events like luncheons and banquets. The club's purpose was elusive.
| Articles like this one did little to expose the club's purpose. Medina Gazette 5 March 1937, page 3. |
Articles like the following one, from a 1917 issue of Ladies Home Journal seem to indicate that it was a woman's club:
| Ladies Home Journal January 1917 page 52. |
Finally, this article from 1935 sheds some light on the Medina group:
| Medina Gazette 12 March 1935 page 1. |
The articles in the digitized edition of the Medina newspapers only span the 1930's with a peak of articles in 1935. No one article showed the beginnings of the group, but this one tells what happened to them:
| Medina Gazette 3 March 1939 page 2. |
Eastern cultures sometimes still use the swastika as a spiritual symbol, which can cause confusion among Western cultures who view it as a symbol of the terrors and genocide of the Nazi regime.
SOURCES:
- American Farmer, by Solon L. Goode. 1907, page 101.
- "File:Four-Swastika collage(transparent).png; Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository, 2017.
- Ladies Home Journal January 1917 page 52.
- Medina Gazette
- 12 March 1935 page 1.
- 29 March 1935, page 1
- 5 March 1937, page 3.
- 3 March 1939 page 2.
- "Swastika" Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 2018.
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