Meghalaya, India - No Furor Over Adolf Hitler's Name On Ballot |
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FILE - A security personnel stands guard outside a new restaurant, named after Adolf Hitler and promoted with posters showing the German leader and Nazi swastikas, on the outskirts of Mumbai August 21, 2006. ReutersMeghalaya, India - Adolf Hitler is running for election in India. So is Frankenstein.
The tiny northeast Indian state of Meghalaya has a special fascination for interesting and sometimes controversial names, and the ballot for state elections Saturday is proof.
Among the 345 contestants running for the state assembly are Frankenstein Momin, Billykid Sangma, Field Marshal Mawphniang and Romeo Rani. Some, like Kenedy Marak, Kennedy Cornelius Khyriem and Jhim Carter Sangma, are clearly hoping for the electoral success of their namesake American presidents.
Then there is Hitler.
This 54-year-old father of three has won three elections to the state assembly with little controversy over being named after the Nazi dictator.
His father had worked with the British army, but apparently developed enough of a fascination with Great Britain’s archenemy to name his son Adolf Hitler - though he also gave him the middle name Lu, Hitler said.
“I am aware at one point of time Adolf Hitler was the most hated person on earth for the genocide of the Jews. But my father added `Lu’ in between, naming me Adolf Lu Hitler, and that’s why I am different,” Hitler told The Associated Press from the small village of Mansingre, 200 kilometers west of Gauhati, the capital of the nearby state of Assam.
Hitler said his name has not stopped him from traveling the world, including to the United States and Germany.
“I never had problems obtaining a visa but I was asked many times during immigration as to why I should have such a name. I told the immigration staff I possibly didn’t have a role in my naming,” he said.
India played little role in World War II, and many Indians view Hitler not as the personification of evil but as a figure of fascination. Hitler’s book “Mein Kampf” is prominently displayed at many Indian bookstores. The owner of a menswear shop named his store “Hitler,” then expressed puzzlement last year after Israel complained.
Musfika Haq, a teacher in Meghalaya’s capital, Shillong, said such names are common in the state.
“Parents obviously get fascinated by names of well-known or great leaders, but must be unaware that some of them, like Hitler, had been highly controversial,” he said.
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Read Comments (8) — Post Yours »
1
Feb 22, 2013 at 08:46 AM Ina Says:Report as Inappropriate
“Parents obviously get fascinated by names of well-known or great leaders, but must be unaware that some of them, like Hitler, had been highly controversial,” he said.
No, he was not controversial, just evil. And, these people are fascinated by evil. May G-d help us all.
2
Feb 22, 2013 at 09:23 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
I once witnessed an office wherein an worker from India posted a good luck symbol in his cubicle. It was a backwards swastika. Another fellow from India then had to explain to him that he needed to take it down and why.
3
Feb 22, 2013 at 09:27 AM bored Says:Report as Inappropriate
This is the result of worshiping cows.
4
Feb 22, 2013 at 09:32 AM Yiddl Says:Report as Inappropriate
Was Alexander the great so great? Many jews are named after him.
5
Feb 22, 2013 at 10:24 AM Pony Express Says:Report as Inappropriate
This article is somewhat confusing. At first I thought they had chosen to write Adolf Hitler ym's on their ballot to make the day look like it could be won by an angry wicked dictator. Then I guess you are telling me it is the guys real name who is running? Either or, if that guys name is A. H. I would think that his intelligence might be to wish to change his name in light of the horrors of the past. But really, if that's his name, this story is not a sinful wicked romance with death but a sad tragedy of someones naming being off the righteous path of humanity.
6
Feb 22, 2013 at 11:36 AM Anonymous Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ Was Alexander the great so great? Many jews are named after him. ”
Yes he was a close friend of Shimon HaTzaddik and upon meeting him made a (brief because of his death) time of peace between Greece and Judea
7
Feb 22, 2013 at 11:59 AM vbtwo Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ I once witnessed an office wherein an worker from India posted a good luck symbol in his cubicle. It was a backwards swastika. Another fellow from India then had to explain to him that he needed to take it down and why. ”
It wasn't a backwards swastika, it was the correct version. It has always been a symbol of good, and is still seen that way in some countries in the East. Some countries also use it to designate religious temples (see Google map of Japan for example).
It's the Nazis who took the symbol, made it backwards, and made it their logo, and since then it's associated with the Nazis in the Western world.
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Feb 22, 2013 at 03:20 PM Yiddl Says:Report as Inappropriate
“ Yes he was a close friend of Shimon HaTzaddik and upon meeting him made a (brief because of his death) time of peace between Greece and Judea ”
And what about the rest of the world what did he do to them?