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Flag of Kurdistan

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Kurdistan
Alaya Rengîn ("The Colourful Flag")
Proportion2:3
Adoptedc. 1927 by Republic of Ararat[1]
1992 by Kurdistan Region
DesignA red, white, and green tricolour, with a yellow 21 rayed sun in the center (Kurdish Sun).

The flag of Kurdistan (Kurdish: ئاڵای کوردستان, Alaya Kurdistanê) is the flag of Kurds[2][3][1] and was created by the Society for the Rise of Kurdistan in 1920. It would later, in different variants, be adopted as the national flag of different Kurdish states including Republic of Ararat, Republic of Mahabad and most recently by Kurdistan Region in 1992. Moreover, the Kingdom of Kurdistan used the crescent flag (shown below) which was also considered a Kurdish flag.[1]

History

Union Jack

In October 1918, near the end of World War I, Mahmud Barzanji broke away from the Ottoman Empire and established the Kurdish state. As it was initially subordinate to Britain, the polity flew the British Union Jack until it revolted in May 1919.[4]

Crescent flag

In May 1919, the Kurdish State revolted against the British Empire, and adopted a crescent flag. The British Empire conquered the Kurdish state in June 1919.[5][6]

After the establishment of the Kingdom of Kurdistan in 1921, The crescent flag was again hoisted in Sulaymaniyah by Mahmud Barzanji. According to historian Rafiq Hilmi, the Kingdom of Kurdistan considered the crescent flag as the national flag of Kurds. He wrote: "A big meeting was held at the house of Şêx Qadir, the Speaker of the National Assembly, and with official permission, the official Kurdish flag was raised. On the day of the meeting, about 10,000 people gathered in front of the Grand Mosque."[1]

CTK flag

This flag was created in 1920 by the Society for the Rise of Kurdistan (CTK). Shortly after, it was used by the nationalist party Xoybûn who hoisted the flag over the city of Ağrı during the Ararat rebellion. In his memoir Doza Kurdistan, Kurdish politician Kadri Cemilpaşa of the CTK declared that this flag was the national Kurdish flag whose colors and shape had now been defined. In 1925, during the trial of CTK politicians in Turkey, they stated that the Ottoman flag was dead and that the Kurdish flag would shine like a sun.[1]

Republic of Mahabad (1940s)

Prior to the declaration of the Republic of Mahabad from Iran in 1946, Kurdish leaders in Iran from Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI) with support from Kurds in Iraq, had prepared the flag to be used as the national flag of the Mahabad Republic. The prepared flag was altered and approved by the KDPI who went on to hoist it in the official office of the Iranian government in Mahabad on 17 December 1945. When the republic was declared on 22 January 1946, the flag was hoisted at the main square while Ey Reqîb was being sung. In his speech, President Qazi Muhammad declared the flag as "flag of Kurdistan" and it was hoisted in all towns which was under his control. Days before the collapse of the republic, President Muhammad handed over the flag on his desk to Mustafa Barzani, leader of Kurdistan Democratic Party, who had fled to Mahabad after the 1943 Barzani revolt.[1]

Symbolism

The Kurdish flag is the most important symbol of cohesive Kurdish identity. Since it was first hoisted in 1946 to represent the concept of an independent Kurdistan (called the Republic of Mahabad and founded in Iranian territory) it has become a symbol of the national identity of Kurds.[7]

The main characteristic of the flag is the blazing golden sun emblem (Roj in Kurdish) at its center. The emblem's sun disk has 21 rays, equal in size and shape, with the single odd ray at top and the two even rays on the bottom.

The symbolism of the colours is:[8][9]

Colour Meaning
Red

RGB: (235,35,35)

HEX: #ED2024

Symbolizes the blood of the martyrs and the continued struggle for freedom and dignity.
Green

RGB: (39,138,65)

HEX: #278E43

Expresses the beauty and landscapes of Kurdistan. Life and vitality.
Yellow

RGB: (250,185,20)

HEX: #FEBD11

Represents the source of life and light of the people. The sun is an ancient symbol and twenty one sunbeams represent March 21, Newroz.
White

RGB: (255,255,255)

HEX: #FFFFFF

Represent peace and equality.

In the fall of 2006, the Iraqi Kurdish leadership gave orders for Kurdish officials to stop flying the Iraqi flag under decree number 60 "to hoist the flag of Iraqi Kurdistan". Masoud Barzani issued orders that the Ba'athist flag should be lowered and all regions in Iraqi Kurdistan should "hoist only the Kurdistan flag" because the symbols of Ba'athism were associated with the Anfal genocide where 180,000 people died. When the Ba'athist symbols were removed from the Iraqi flag in 2008, the KRG hoisted the Iraqi flag to fly alongside the Kurdish flag, reported to still be the practice as of March 2013. Flying the Iraqi flag side by side with the Kurdish flag is symbolic of their acceptance of Iraqi federalism.[7]

Modern adaptation to international flag standards

The flag appeared in Kurdish media throughout the 1990s with MED TV, Kurdsat, Kurdistan TV and their affiliates broadcasting with the flag appearing frequently in their programming allowing it to become a symbol of Kurdish statehood.[10][11]

Other flags used by Kurds

Similar flags

Due to Iranian roots of the Kurds,[14] the colours used in flags used by Kurds are the same that are used in other Iranian-origin areas like Iran and Tajikistan, known as Pan-Iranian colors.[15]

Kurdistan Region's flag day

Since 1993, the Kurdish Flag Day is celebrated on December 17.[16][17][18]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Veroj, Sêid (17 December 2021). "Seîd Veroj/ Ala Kurdistanê; berhemê têkoşîna netewî ya miletê Kurd e û berê sed (100) sal hatîye çêkirin". Kovara Bîr (in Kurdish). Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  2. ^ "The National Flag of Kurdistan"., Kurdish Institute of Paris.
  3. ^ Hamit, Bozarslan (2021). The Cambridge History of the Kurds. Cambridge University Press. p. 5.
  4. ^ Kilic, Ilhan (2018). Britain's Kurdish Policy and Kurdistan 1918 -1923 (PDF). School of History of the University of East Anglia. pp. 182–183.
  5. ^ MacArthur-Seal, Daniel-Joseph; Barlas, Dilek; Hale, William (2022-12-26). "Chapter 3 - The Emergence of Turkish Iraq". From Enemies to Allies: Turkey and Britain, 1918–1960. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-000-81886-4.
  6. ^ "World Flag Chart 1919 - Flag Log". flaglog.com. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  7. ^ a b Iraqi Federalism and the Kurds: Learning to Live Together
  8. ^ Danilovich, Alex (2016). Iraqi Federalism and the Kurds: Learning to Live Together. Routledge. p. 101. ISBN 9781317112938. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  9. ^ HUMANRIGHTSWATCH (1992). "Turkish Forces Kill Scores of Peaceful Demonstrato Turkish Forces Kill Scores of Peaceful Demonstrators" (PDF). Helsinki Watch. 4 (9): 8. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  10. ^ Haiderali, Karim (2003). The Media of Diaspora. Psychology Press. pp. 82–83. ISBN 9780415279307. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  11. ^ Kontra, Miklós (1999). Language, a Right and a Resource: Approaching Linguistic Human Rights. Central European University Press. p. 228. ISBN 9789639116641. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  12. ^ "Kurds declare federal region in Syria's north". France 24. 17 March 2016. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  13. ^ "Why Syria's Kurds want federalism, and who opposes it". Al Jazeera. 17 March 2016. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  14. ^ Foltz, Richard (2016). Co-Opting the Prophet: The Politics of Kurdish and Tajik Claims to Zarathustra and Zoroastrianism In book: The Zoroastrian Flame: Exploring Religion, History and Tradition. I.B.Tauris. pp. 325–341. ISBN 9781784532734. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  15. ^ Tajikistan flag. "Tajikistan flag". Graphic Maps.
  16. ^ "Learn About the Kurdistan Flag". The Kurdish Project.
  17. ^ "On Kurdistan's National Flag Day, Kurds Show Solidarity with Peshmerga". ekurd.net.
  18. ^ "Kurdistan Region: Flag Day". PUKmedia. 17 December 2013. Archived from the original on 2018-08-26. Retrieved 2018-08-26.