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Robert M. Sarwark

Flagging Interest

HAPPY 40th, Mozambique

6/25/2015

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In honor of Mozambique's 40 years since it gained independence from Portugal (June 25, 1975), here is its present national flag. It was first hoisted in 1983 after the fledgling nation had jointly flown both the flags of Portugal and FRELIMO (the Liberation Front of Mozambique, the leading independence party) in the interim since independence. The above flag is based on FRELIMO's own, used during the struggle for independence against not only Portugal but other independence movements, with the additions of the yellow star, book, hoe, and rifle to the red triangle. 

Of the basic design, the green symbolizes the fertility of Mozambique's land; the white fimbriations (separating lines) for peace; black for the people and continent of Africa; yellow for the nation's mineral wealth; and red for the struggle for independence. 

Where this flag gets particularly interesting is obviously in the red triangle at the hoist (left side): a black rifle - specifically an AK-47 - is crossed with a black hoe before a white open book, all before the yellow star typically associated with the socialism that FRELIMO espouses. Such a confluence of images is clearly a sign of the complex aspirations and concerns of the new nation. The book (education) and the hoe (agriculture) in particular seem almost at odds with the rifle (defense and vigilance), but within the context of a new nation-state forged from the downfall of fascist Portugal and even today at risk of internal conflict, the reasoning behind such multi-layered symbolism becomes clearer. 

While several other nations' flags also depict weaponry of various kinds (Angola, Sri Lanka, Saudi Arabia, Kenya, etc.), Mozambique's flag has the rare distinction of being the only official national flag that features a firearm. 

For more information:

https://flagspot.net/flags/mz.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Mozambique

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About this blog

6/23/2015

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As the controversy currently comes to a boil about not only the Confederate battle flag on the grounds of the South Carolina State Capitol, but also the use of the defunct flags of both apartheid-era South Africa and Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) by suspected murderer Dylann Roof, flags and their meanings are in the news in a big way. 

While oftentimes overlooked as merely abstract representations of political units of varying kinds, flags are in fact highly symbolic and are laden with historical meanings that resonate well into the present. Vexillology is the study of flags and their history, symbolism, and usage. This blog aims to detail and discuss these issues and hopefully shed some light on a topic that has been, at least until recently, fairly underrepresented in public discourse. 


For more information, see the Wikipedia page for vexillology. 

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