hidden europe 11

Multiple meanings: the swastika symbol

by Nicky Gardner

Summary

A moniker replete with evil meaning, but was it always thus? We visit Amiens, Copenhagen and Oslo in search of some very innocent swastikas.

On an icy early March morning, towards the end of a frigid winter when all Berlin's lakes had long been frozen, pilots coming in to land at the city's Tegel airport reported to the airport that the surface of the snow covered Schäfersee in Berlin's northern suburb of Reinickendorf had evidently been embellished during the night with a giant swastika. Police never discovered who was responsible, and within a few hours the offending symbol had been removed - but not before it was seen by hundreds of plane passengers coming in to land at Tegel.

The Schäfersee swastika served as a chilling reminder of the potency of symbols associated with Germany's fascist past. A few years ago, foresters in a remote area northeast of Berlin, near the village of Zernikow, had to go to great lengths to remove a great swastika pattern, visible only at certain times of the year, created in the late 1930s by inter-planting of larch trees within a pine forest. For a few weeks each autumn, the yellow larch stood out as a prominent swastika against a green background. At other times of the year, contrasts in colour were less evident but the swastika was nonetheless discernible.

Related articleFull text online

The road to Abergwesyn

The tides in the Mawddach estuary never come too early. Nor too late. The rain never beats too hard on the road to Abergwesyn. hidden europe editor Nicky Gardner celebrates the communities in rural Wales where she once lived.

Related articleFull text online

Of maps and men: Landranger sheet 57

With place names like Pendicles of Collymoon and Nether Easter Offerance, Ordnance Survey Landranger Sheet 57 fires the imagination. Maps tell stories, as do old men in pubs. Like the Tartan traveller we met in the Tyrol who tried to persuade us that Garibaldi had Scottish ancestry. From Baldy Garrow it is but a short step to Garibaldi.

Related articleFull text online

Admiralty Handbooks: Baedekers with a Twist

Some of the best academic minds in Britain spent the Second World War writing guidebooks about far-flung places. We explore a clandestine area of professional geographical endeavour which resulted in the Naval Intelligence Guides – often called the Admiralty Handbooks.