Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Flag waving

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Flag waving

    The Times (London)
    April 27, 2004, Tuesday

    Flag waving


    Iraq's Governing Council has just created employment for thousands of
    tailors and seamstresses. The Iraqi flag, which for 40 years
    fluttered across courts, barracks and stadiums, has been changed. The
    three stars, adopted by the Baathists as symbols of their ideology,
    have given way to a pale blue crescent, intended to symbolise peace,
    surmounting two lines of blue, the Tigris and the Euphrates, with a
    strip of yellow sand. At least this new flag, unlike our own, will
    not be inadvertently flown upside down.

    Flags are today the most potent symbols of nationhood. When a border,
    system or constitution changes, so does the flag. Apartheid and
    communism have been consigned to the dustbin of history and so has
    the hammer and sickle, as well as the old South African symbols of
    Dutch and British settlement. The Rising Sun shed its rays after
    Hiroshima and the swastika mercifully was obliterated. The Arab world
    has had its share of changes: in the heady 1960s, when short-lived
    unions inspired nationalist fervour, stars were sewn on or ripped off
    at a dizzying rate.

    The United States slowly added stars to the 13 bars as states joined
    the union.

    Indeed, the most persuasive argument against statehood for Puerto
    Rico is the havoc an extra star would play with the constellation.
    The European Union, thankfully, has stuck at 12, even though it is
    soon to be 25.

    Flags were originally markers, "colours" to rally troops lost in the
    confusion of the battlefield. They then were used to designate the
    lands and cities over which the king's writ held sway. For centuries
    they were iconic symbols, emblematic of patron saints, mercantile
    interests or national history. England chose St George - a saint
    rescued from right-wing extremism by football, his banner now greased
    on a thousand supporters' faces. Some countries made confusingly
    similar choices: in strong sunlight the Italian flag could be
    mistaken for the Irish, the Dutch for the flag of Luxembourg. Newer
    countries wanted clearer symbols: the Lebanese chose a cedar tree,
    the Cypriots a map (which ought, perhaps, to be divided now), the
    Saudis a Koranic credo.

    Colours matter too. Blue is the universal favourite. Communists had a
    passion for red, Muslims prefer any combination of the sacred colours
    red, green, black and white, and the old maxim that blue and green
    should never be seen largely holds true. Politics is never far away.
    The Greeks were furious at Macedonia's claim to the many-pointed
    star. The best retort was that of Gromyko to the Turks' objection
    that Soviet Armenia's flag pictured Mount Ararat, in Turkey: "Your
    flag has a crescent. Do you claim the moon?" Let us hope that no one
    else now lays claim to the Euphrates.
Working...
X