Cartoonist sets out to take taboo out of swastika
Last Updated: Thursday, March 20, 2008 | 5:03 PM ET
CBC News
Swastikas can be funny, insists American cartoonist Sam Gross, whose new book is devoted to cartoons featuring the controversial symbol most often associated with the German Nazi Party.
The swastika is the focus of the jokes in We Have Ways of Making You Laugh: 120 Funny Swastika Cartoons, the latest effort from the 74-year-old cartoonist best known for his drawings of talking cats, flying cows and snails falling in love with Scotch-tape dispensers.
The idea came to Gross 11 years ago during an evening news story about vandalism, Gross told CBC's Q radio program Thursday. The report was about a boy in suburban New York who was drawing the swastika symbol on garage doors. Gross said he didn't understand why the story made headline news.
"The symbol is held in such awe and terror. I just got so angry that I decided to have fun with it," he said.
The goal was both to take the power out of the swastika and also to be funny, he said.
One such example is a cartoon in which a dog says to a vandal who has just painted a swastika on a wall, "Try scent marking. It's nicer."
Swastika predates Hitler
The swastika has actually been around for thousands of years, primarily in Hindu culture. Since Adolf Hitler adopted it as the emblem of the Nazi Party leading up to the Second World War, the sign has become associated with painful memories of the Holocaust.
Even three generations later, people still have a tough time dealing with the swastika, Gross said, so he knew he would provoke reaction.
Some people have accused the cartoonist of trivializing the Holocaust by using the swastika in his latest drawings, published by Simon and Schuster in March.
"I'm not trivializing the Holocaust. I'm trivializing the swastika," Gross argues. "The swastika is not the Holocaust. The swastika is a symbol."
Gross has worked for more than 40 years as a cartoonist. His work has appeared in many notable publications, including the New Yorker and Esquire.
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