Last modified: 2015-06-13 by zoltán horváth
Keywords: world peace association | brotherhood flag | international organizations |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
image by Rob Davis, 5 March 2005
See also:
The "World Peace Association" appears to be based in Jenkins, Minnesota. I
assume the red-white-brown-yellow-black is to represent the "five races of
mankind". I found this flags on a card at
http://www.dicklightle.com/card.asp?ID=33997.
Jan Mertens, 16 February 2004
I ran across the Brotherhood Flag card you put on the internet. My mother was
the Foreign Correspondent for the World Peace Association, appointed 30 June
1957. The flag you depicted on the card was dedicated at Odessa, New York in May
of 1958. It then became part of the exhibit for the association at the Brussels
World's Fair. I was the flags standard bearer at the dedication.
I can
tell you the people in the organization for world peace began in 1915 in
Northfield, Minnesota, USA. They designed the International World Peace Flag. It
was a white flag with a 3" red strip at the top and bottom to outline the flag.
the center of the flag was a globe showing the East and Western hemispheres.
Centered in the globe was a dove and olive branch. Northfield, Mn is just south
of Saint Paul, Minneapolis on the interstate. At sometime prior to 1930 the
headquarters moved to Jenkins, Minnesota. My mother's certificate of appointment
has Northfield printed on it, crossed out, and Jenkins printed in its place. On
the 12th day of May, 1938 the
association applied for registration of the
flag and changed flag design. and registered it with the Secretary of State
Office in Minnesota and the flag became official on 5 November 1939. The
description of that flag as written on the certificate is as follows.
"The Brotherhood Flag consists of five (5) horizontal stripes of equal width. The first or top strip is red the second stripe is white, the third stripe is brown, the fourth strip is yellow and the fifth or bottom stripe is black. Each stripe represents one of the five different groups of the human race."The flag prior to the final one I just described consists, by dimensions, of two squares of equal size. The staff end (one square) is composed of a blue field upon which fifty white five-pointed stars have been arranged in such manner as to form a large five-pointed star, in the center of which a white dove in full flight, with green olive twig in beak. The blue star-studded half of the flag has long been a symbol representative of the heavens and of man's belief in a Divine Creator and of his hope for a life hereafter. The dove with olive twig in beak has likewise long been recognized throughout the world as man's most outstanding emblem of peace. The fly end of the flag (also one square) has the 5 horizontal stripes. Due to costs of the flag's manufacture this flag was discontinued and the flag with just the 5 horizontal stripes became the associations official flag. This flag was discontinued due to the cost of manufacture as was the 1915 version.
image by Randy Young, 20 December 2014
In searching for info on
my postcard, your FOTW site has the most info on
this group of any that I googled!!!
Since your info did not include a pix of the a dove/globe flag, I thought you
might want to add it to your site. I also included the back of the postcard
which has a double verse phrase that might be interest as well.
Bill Gush Omaha, 28 April 2011
The verses mentioned are:
The clouds of war are shifting,
The light of Love appears,
The Dove of Peace descends to Earth,
Dispelling all our fears.
Peace with the home,
Peace within the State,
Peace through our native land,
Universal Peace create.
Rob Raeside, 29 April 2011
Since I've been working on peace flags and updating those pages on FOTW
lately, I figured I'd go ahead and respond to this E-mail of Rob's from April
2011. I giffed the flag of the International World Peace Association to FOTW
standard, based on the scanned postcard that was sent to us three years ago.
Randy Young, 20 December 2014
image by Randy Young, 09 June 2015
While searching for information on the World Peace Flag, I came across this:
"James William van Kirk, a minister from Youngstown, Ohio, designed a peace flag
with rainbow stripes, stars and a globe. With this flag, he twice made a peace
tour through Europe. The Universal Peace Congress adopted this flag as its World
Peace Flag."
The flag in question is
this. (An early reproduction of the World Peace Flag. Printed by Koopman,
W.A.F., Den Haag). The
picture caption mentions that the flag was created in
December 31, 1912.
Here's an image of the
adopted proposal.
Source:
http://www.flagguys.com/peace.html.
In this provided link there's a 1917
postcard
with which the author promoted the
flag, and there's even a photograph of the designe with the actual flag, plus
additional information on the meaning of the colors, design, etc.
Since this 1912 proposal flag was adopted by the XXth
Universal Peace Congress in The Hague as the "World Peace Flag", then we
should include it in our own "World Peace Flag".
Esteban Rivera, 06 June 2015