GwydionM
Yes, the date of my post indicates a cultural context. It says that this site operates on a Julian calendar, the accepted norm in the western hemisphere. If it were run from Amman or Cairo, the date might well be different.
I live and work with people, mostly British, some of whom have cultures slightly different to mine. I'm happy to celebrate Diwali with them, or any other festival.
Taking a totally parochial view, I feel it would be wrong for me to suggest that a symbol which has acquired negative connotations because of the Nazis, should be forbidden to those to whom it has a completely different meaning. They are still British and have the same rights as any other Briton.
I do, of course, agree that firm action should be taken against anyone using the symbol to distress or intimidate another individual or group.
The problem is not the symbol per se, it is how it is used. To ban it "in a western context" is to discriminate against those for whom it has a legitimate, positive meaning.
I don't see the swastika as, necessarily, a racist symbol, it's an arrangement of lines.
Rosie