Flag of New Zealand
From Open Encyclopedia
The current Flag of New Zealand is a defaced blue ensign with the Union Flag in the canton, and four red stars with white borders to the right. The stars represent the constellation of Crux, the Southern Cross.
The flag proportion is 2:1 and the colours are Red (Pantone 186), Blue (Pantone 280) and White. Proportion and colours are identical to the Union Flag.
Ships of the Royal New Zealand Navy wear this flag while at port as a jack (worn on the jackstaff), not an ensign (worn at the stern).
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History
The current flag was introduced in 1869, following the Colonial Navy Defence Act requirement that all colonial ships fly the defaced Royal Navy blue ensign with the Colonial badge. It was initially used only on Government ships, but was adopted as the de facto national flag in a surge of patriotism arising from the Second Boer War. To end confusion between various designs of the flag, it became the legal national flag when Parliament passed the New Zealand Ensign and Code Signals Bill in 1902. The British Union Flag was the previous official New Zealand flag following the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840. Prior to 1840 the Flag of the United Tribes of New Zealand was the official New Zealand flag. It featured two crosses of St George and four stars in the top left.
The current national flag is officially defined in the Flags, Emblems, and Names Protection Act 1981 s. 5(2) to be "the symbol of the Realm, Government, and people of New Zealand."
Image:Flag of the United Tribes of New Zealand.svg
The Flag Debate
For several years a number of people have been proposing designs for an alternative flag for New Zealand. In 1998 National Prime Minister Jenny Shipley backed Cultural Affairs Minister Marie Hasler's call for the flag to be changed. Shipley, along with the New Zealand Tourism Board, backed the quasi-national emblem of the Silver Fern on a black background as a possible alternative flag, along the lines of the Canadian Maple Leaf Flag. Recently a petition was launched by the NZ Flag.com Trust for a non-binding referendum on the subject. Under New Zealand law, a referendum may be held on any issue if 10% of electors sign a petition which is presented to Parliament. In response to the petition, the New Zealand Flag Institute was founded to oppose the referendum campaign and promote the current flag, as well as to offer a more scholarly view of the Flag. Surprisingly, the Royal New Zealand Returned Services' Association (the RSA), the New Zealand orgainisation for war veterans, did not openly back the current flag at its annual conference, calling instead for "...politics to be kept out of the debate". This attitude was however criticised by individual branches of the RSA, who supported the current flag.
The petition failed to attract enough signatures in time for the 2005 general election in September and was withdrawn in July. The NZ Flag.com Trust cited public apathy to change as the main reason for withdrawing the petition. The New Zealand Flag Institute ascribed the failure of the campaign to public support for the New Zealand Flag.
Image:Flagofnewzealandaucklandairport.jpg
Arguments for change
Proponents for change argue that the current flag design should change because:
- It is very similar to the Australian flag and is often confused;
- Does not evoke emotional feelings;
- Has little connection with the land.
Many also object to the presence of the Union Flag (also known as Union Jack) on the flag as being overly colonial, for which it has occasionally been mistaken by various parties. Image:Lockwoodnzflag-1-.gifA popular alternative to the current defaced Blue Ensign was designed by Kyle Lockwood (left). It won a Wellington newspaper flag competition in July 2004 and appeared on New Zealand Television in 2005 after winning a poll which included the present national flag. The fern represents the the people of New Zealand and the stars represent the location of New Zealand. The blue colour represents the ocean, the red represents the Maori and the blood of soldiers, and white is a reference to the "Land of the Long White Cloud" (translated from the Maori "Aotearoa").
Arguments against change
Opponents to change argue that the current flag:
- Was chosen by New Zealanders, and New Zealanders should be proud of it;
- Does evoke emotional response in them;
- Represents the history and geography of the country;
- The flag is a colourful good design;
- It is the flag New Zealanders have fought and died under while it has represented the country for 104 years.
Some also claim that it is not as similar to the Australian flag as is often suggested, and that many countries have flags that are very similar — or even identical — to the flags of other countries. They also criticise the proposed alternatives, saying they focus on Māori and Pacific designs when most of New Zealand's heritage is Anglo-Saxon and Celtic, or the Silver Fern which they say is the logo of some of New Zealand's sporting teams rather than the country itself.
Currently opinion polls indicate a majority in favour of retaining the present flag. There is no consensus among proponents of changing the flag as to which design should replace the flag, though this is not to say that there have been no well-known proposals for an alternative. However opinions as to the ideal alternative are varied, and proponents for changin the flag suggest they would rather leave the final decision on the future flag up to the New Zealand public.
Other Flags
There is also a New Zealand red ensign which became the official flag for merchant vessels in 1901.[1] Previously a plain red ensign was used. Image:New-Zealand-Merchant-Ensign.svgImage:NZ-Takitimu-Flag.svg The red ensign may continue to be flown on land in Māori areas or during Māori events under the Flags, Emblems, and Names Protection Act 1981[2] in recognition of long held Māori preference for red flags. New Zealand law allows the defacement of the flag in accordance to Māori custom in which white capital letters identifying a particular family or Māori tribe are added. In the case of the flag on the left, TAKITIMU refers to a grouping of Māori tribes descended from the crew of the ancestral canoe of that name [3]. Note: This flag type serves as a guide to one concept for flags representing both the North and South Islands (see List of flags - Flags of New Zealand).
Today, private and merchant craft can choose to fly the Flag of New Zealand (i.e., the blue ensign) or the Southern Cross red ensign.
Image:Maoriflag.gifSince 1990, some Māori have been using the red ensign less in favour of a new flag which lacks colonial connotations. Chosen through a competition, the Māori flag uses black to represent Te Korekore or potential being, white to represent Te Ao Marama to represent the physical world, red to represent Te Whei Ao, the realm of coming into being and the Koru, a curl representing the unfolding of new life. To a number of European New Zealanders, this flag represents radical Māori nationalists.
Image:Tapapa.pngThe Māori flags Te Paerangi and Te Paekinga of the Māori King movement, and Te Kooti's more elaborate battle flag all carried a 'triple star' which some have suggested represented the three main islands of Aotearoa or Tane's three baskets of knowledge. One of New Zealand's two national anthems, 'God Defend New Zealand', includes the line 'Guard Pacific's triple star' and there has been various speculation over the years as to whether this was a reference to the three islands, or perhaps to the Māori battle flag - the anthem's author, Thomas Bracken, being something of an Irish anti-colonial.
See also
- New Zealand Flag Institute
- Australian flag debate
- Canadian Flag Debate
- List of New Zealand flags
- Flag of Chatham Islands
External links
- Ministry of Culture and Heritage - New Zealand Flag
- New Zealand Flag Institute Official website
- NZ Flag.com Official website
- New Zealand and the Māori flag
- Other New Zealand flags From Flags of the World
- Proposals for a new flag [4] [5]
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es:Bandera de Nueva Zelanda fr:Drapeau de la Nouvelle-Zélande he:דגל ניו זילנד it:Bandiera neozelandese ja:ニュージーランドの国旗 ms:Bendera New Zealand nl:Vlag van Nieuw-Zeeland pl:Flaga Nowej Zelandii pt:Bandeira da Nova Zelândia sv:Nya Zeelands flagga wa:Drapea del Nouve Zelande zh:新西兰国旗


