Kurdish flag

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 The official flag of Iraqi Kurdistan Flag Ratio: 2:3
The official flag of Iraqi Kurdistan Flag Ratio: 2:3

The Kurdish flag (also flag of Kurdistan, Kurdish: Alaya Kurdistanê[1]) first appeared during the Kurdish independence movement from the Ottoman Empire. It is said to have been created in the 1920s by the organisation of Xoybûn (Khoyboon).[2] An earlier version of this flag was flown by the break-away Republic of Ararat in Turkey during the period 1927-1931. It was later the flag of the Soviet-backed Kurdish state known as the Republic of Mahabad in 1946. It is flown by the Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraqi Kurdistan. The flag is banned in Syria and Iran. In Turkey, flying it is a criminal offence.[2][3]

The main Kurdish characteristic of the flag is the blazing golden sun emblem at the center, which is an ancient religious and cultural symbol among the Kurds. The sun disk of the emblem has 21 rays, equal in size and shape. The number 21 holds a primary importance in the Yazdani (Yazidi) religious tradition of the Kurds.[4]

Traditions among Kurds hold that the colours of the Kawa blacksmith's apron are now the colours of the Kurdish flag [5]. KDP who has used this tricolor flag for more than a half century explains the symbolism of the colors as following:

red symbolizes the blood of Kurdish martyrs and the continued struggle for Kurdish freedom and dignity.
green expresses the beauty and the landscapes of Kurdistan.
yellow represents the source of life and light of the people. [6]

Contents

[edit] Old flags used by Kurds

Some Kurdish principalities and states such as Soran or Kingdom of Kurdistan had their own flags.

[edit] Controversy over use of Iraqi flag in Kurdistan

Old version of Iraqi national flag, flown under Abdul Karim Qassim, which is allowed to be flown in Iraqi Kurdistan instead of the current Iraqi national flag
Old version of Iraqi national flag, flown under Abdul Karim Qassim, which is allowed to be flown in Iraqi Kurdistan instead of the current Iraqi national flag

Recently Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq, has banned the raising of the current national Iraqi flag beside the Kurdish flag on the regional government buildings rasing tensions among Iraqis domestically, and also internationally (most notably with Turkey).[7]

Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's office made a brief statement regarding the incident:

The present Iraqi flag is the only flag that should be hoisted on every inch of Iraqi soil until the parliament make decision about it according to the constitution.[8]

Shortly after, Barzani attacked Iraqi Arab leaders over their opposition to his order banning the Iraqi flag from government buildings. During a speech in the Iraqi Kurdistan's parliament, he said:

Those who condemn it are chauvinists, escaping from internal problems. They are losers. They are not rulers or statesmen. They can't run their region and they want to make Kurdistan just like their regions. The time of threats is over, no one has the right to force his will on the Kurdish people.[9]

Turkish foreign minister Abdullah Gül in an interview with NTV Turkey said:

Those who are doing this must see how dangerous this course is, if Iraq is willing to accept a flag that is not its own to fly on its own territory, it's over.[10]

[edit] References

[edit] External links