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Flag of East Timor

The national flag of East Timor (Portuguese: Bandeira de Timor-Leste) is one of the official symbols of East Timor. It consists of a red field with the black isosceles triangle based on the hoist-side bearing a white five-pointed star in the center superimposed on the larger yellow triangle, also based on the hoist-side, that extends to the center of the flag.

Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste
UseNational flag and ensign
Proportion1:2
AdoptedNovember 28, 1975; 47 years ago (1975-11-28) (de facto)
May 19, 2002; 21 years ago (2002-05-19) (de jure)
DesignA red field with the black isosceles triangle based on the hoist-side bearing a white five-pointed star in the center superimposed on the larger yellow triangle, also based on the hoist-side, that extends to the center of the flag.
Designed byNatalino Leitão
Flying flag of East Timor at sunset

Official description of the flag Edit

 
Construction sheet for the flag of East Timor.

According to the Constitution of the Democratic Republic of East Timor, Part I, Section 15:

"The national flag is rectangular and is formed by two isosceles triangles, the bases of which are overlapping. One triangle is black and its height is equal to one-third of the length overlapped to the yellow triangle, whose height is equal to half the length of the Flag. In the centre of the black triangle there is a white star of five ends, meaning the light that guides. The white star has one of its ends turned towards the left side end of the flag. The remaining part of the flag is red."[1]

With the constitution of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste on November 28, 1975, the flag was officially adopted for the first time. The symbolism of this flag was given the following meaning:

  • Black represents the four centuries of colonial oppression.
  • The yellow arrowhead represents "the traces of colonialism in East Timor's history" and the struggle for independence.
  • Red stands for the spilled blood of the population.
  • The white star symbolises hope for a better future.

Today, both the colours and their meanings are specified in the new Constitution of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste of 2002 (Part I, Section 15):[1]

  • Black symbolises obscurantism, which must be overcome.
  • Yellow represents the wealth of the country.
  • Red symbolises the struggle for national liberation.
  • The white star, or "the light that guides", is white to represent peace.

Flags are powerful symbols in East Timorese culture and have a high cultural significance. They play a significant role in East Timorese identification as a community. Flags are automatically attributed a symbolic power, making them a sacred object.[2]

Variations Edit

 
Flag of East Timor
(according to the flag of the Independence Ceremony with straight star)
 
National flag in Souro

The tones of the individual colours are not precisely defined in the Constitution. The Independence Day Celebrations Committee of the United Nations Transitional Administration for East Timor (UNTAET) indicated light orange (PMS 123) as the correct shade of yellow, which is usually found on official flags. In flag illustrations in books or on the internet, but also in flags commonly used in East Timor, a light yellow is also widely used. According to the UNTAET source, the red corresponds to the tone PMS 485. Here, too, there are versions with a light red in East Timor. Even darker versions only appear as flag images, but not as flags. Although UNTAET gives the size of the black triangle as a quarter of the flag's length, the existing flags and illustrations all have a triangle with a size of one third.

There is disagreement about the correct proportions of the flag. While the 1975 flag always had the 2:3 ratio common in most of Europe, flags with a ratio of 1:2 also appeared in official use with the independence of East Timor. The reason for this is presumably that these flags are manufactured in Australia, where the proportions of 1:2 are customary. A clear uniform regulation was initially pending,[3] but Law 02/2007 on the national symbols shows a picture of a flag with a 1:2 ratio in the appendix.[3] Furthermore, the law lists in Article 4 the different formats of the flag in which the cloth flag should hang in public offices, barracks, private and state schools. Type 1 consists of a cloth 45 centimetres wide, Type 2 consists of a cloth 90 centimetres wide, Type 3 135 centimetres wide and so on up to Type 7 315 centimetres wide. However, in paragraph 2, the article explicitly allows smaller and larger flags, as well as those with sizes in between, as long as the proportions are respected.[3]

Flags are often seen with the top of the star pointing straight up. This was often the case with the 1975 flag. But today's constitution clearly states that the star should point with a tip to the upper left corner. This is also followed by the illustration in Law 02/2007.

The flag of East Timor used for the independence celebration on 20 May 2002 had a straight star despite the clear specifications.[4][5] It also had an aspect ratio of 1:2 and used the bright yellow in combination with the bright red.

History Edit

Monarchical Era (1702–1910) Edit

 
Flag of the Portuguese Governor

Until independence from Portugal, the colony of Portuguese Timor used only the flag of Portugal. The Liurais, the traditional rulers of Timor, drew part of their claim to rule from sacred (lulik) objects owned by the ruling families. When the Portuguese subjugated the Timorese, they gave the Liurais as vassals the Portuguese flag, which in the eyes of the Timorese, just like the flagpole, became sacred objects themselves, legitimising the rule of the Portuguese and the Liurais loyal to them. Especially in the culture of the Mambai, the flag cult took on a central significance. According to their myth of origin, the world order is created by two brothers. The elder brother, from whom the Timorese descend, holds the ritual power over the cosmos. The younger brother has the power over the social order. The non-Timorese peoples, in this case the Portuguese, are descended from this brother. The myth tells of the loss, search and recovery of a lost, sacred object, namely the Portuguese flag. This sacred meaning of the blue and white flag led to some problems when the flag of Portugal was changed in 1910 when the country changed from a monarchy to a republic.[6][7]

Republican Era (1911–1975) Edit

 
Reception for the Portuguese affected by the war in Timor on February 15, 1946

On 15 February 1946, the Angola arrived at the Portuguese naval base of Alcântara from Portuguese Timor. She brought home Portuguese who had lived in the colony during the Battle of Timor in the Second World War. A white flag with the Portuguese Timorese coat of arms on a green and red cross appears in the crowd.[8]

In 1961, a small, left-oriented Timorese resistance movement - the Bureau de Luta pela Libertação de Timor (BLLT) - used a flag that already had some elements of today's national flag. It consisted of a yellow-bordered black disc with a five-pointed white star on red cloth. Later, the BLLT established a short-lived government-in-exile in Jakarta called the United Republic of Timor, which used the same flag.

In 1967, there were proposals for separate flags for the individual Portuguese colonies, with the coat of arms of the colony added to the lower right of the flag of Portugal. However, the proposals were never implemented.[9]

Independence (1974-1975) Edit

 
  Flag of East Timor in a 2:3 ratio as it was used in 1975

After the Carnation Revolution in Portugal, parties were also allowed in Portuguese Timor. East Timor's dominant leftist party, the Frente Revolucionária de Timor-Leste Independente (Fretilin) used the same colours as the BLLT in its party flag and also the white star on a black background. Apart from their political orientation, there are no links between the two organisations. To what extent the flag served as a model or simply common socialist symbols, such as the five-pointed star and the colour red, were used on the party flag is not clear. According to legend, the resistance fighter Natalino Leitão designed the current national flag based on the Fretilin flag the night before the proclamation of independence from Portugal on 28 November 1975. The incipient occupation of the country by Indonesia had put the Fretilin on the spot. Today, 28 November is East Timor's bank holidays, when official buildings are flagged. Only nine days after the declaration of independence, Indonesia openly started to invade East Timor. Natalino Leitão was killed in the process.

 
Che Guevara in the Timorese national colours in Baucau, East Timor

The declaration of independence was only recognised by a few countries. Politically, Indonesia was supported by the United States and Australia, as they feared a second Cuba due to the leftist orientation of Fretilin. The extent to which the red basic colour and the certain similarity of the flag design to Cuba's flag supported this assumption is debatable. That the flag of Cuba or the flag of Mozambique were models for Leitão's triangular design can only be assumed. At least there were and still are sympathies for Cuba and especially for Ernesto Che Guevara in East Timor. Fretilin already had close relations with Mozambique and its ruling party FRELIMO.

Indonesian occupation (1975–1999) Edit

 
    Variant of the flag of the National Council of Maubere Resistance with the full name of the organisation

Beyond party political affiliation, the flag of the Fretilin became more and more a symbol of the organisation of resistance for the people during the occupation, and the national flag of 1975 a symbol of the people and their urge for independence. The occupation forces reacted to the use of the flags with severe repression. The use of flags other than the flag of Indonesia was forbidden.[2] Until 1999, East Timor was governed by Indonesia as a province, while internationally it was considered a "dependent territory under Portuguese administration". As an Indonesian province, it was also given a provincial flag, but this was only used in the governor's office, as was customary with all provincial flags. The flag of Timor Timur, as East Timor was officially called at the time, displayed the provincial coat of arms on an orange background.[10] When a Portuguese parliamentary delegation was due to visit East Timor in 1989, the Indonesian government distributed 30,000 Indonesian flags to be placed on the homes of Dili. This was intended to demonstrate the integration of East Timor into Indonesia.[2]

 
  Variant of the flag of Falintil in the National Museum of the Resistance

The armed resistance against the Indonesians was led by Falintil, which was originally the military arm of Fretilin. In 1987, its leader Xanana Gusmão transformed Falintil into a national army of East Timorese resistance. He designed a new blue-white-green-black flag of the Falintil.[11] The Conselho Nacional de Resistência Timorense (CNRT), the umbrella organisation of East Timorese resistance founded in 1998, adopted the Falintil flag as a politically neutral symbol. They replaced the lettering "FALINTIL" with "CNRT" and changed the symbols in the shield. The Falintil used a yellow five-pointed star, two traditional swords (suriks) and three feathers. The CNRT used a spear and two arrows instead of the feathers, and the star was now white. The Falintil adopted this version of the coat of arms for its flag relatively soon. The shield in the flag of the CNRT is also found in slightly modified form with the same elements in the later first coat of arms of East Timor (2002-2006) after the restoration of independence. In the Falintil camps, it was strictly forbidden to walk through the shadow of the flag. Allegedly, this rule dates back to colonial times, when Timorese were beaten up if they walked through the shadow of the flag of Portugal.[12]

In the 1999 independence referendum in East Timor, the population could choose between full independence and remaining part of Indonesia as the Special Autonomous Region of East Timor (SARET). Article 20 of SARET's draft constitution provided for the possibility of adopting its own coat of arms, but not its own flag. Instead, the flag of Indonesia was to continue to be used.[13]

Contemporary Era (1990–Present) Edit

 
International Stabilization Force flag

When the United Nations took control in East Timor after the referendum, they used the United Nations flag. At the Sydney Olympics in 2000, four East Timorese athletes participated as Independent Olympic Athletes under the flag of the Olympic Games, as East Timor was not yet independent and there was no National Olympic Committee.

The flag of East Timor was adopted in 2002. It is the same as the flag that was originally adopted when the country declared its independence from Portugal in 1975, nine days before being invaded by Indonesia.[14] At midnight on 19 May 2002, and during the first moments of Independence Day the next day, the United Nations flag was lowered and the flag of an independent East Timor was raised. The flag was officially reinstated on 20 May 2002, when the United Nations flag was taken down at midnight and the East Timorese flag was hoisted. According to the various local accounts, people were in tears for days and produced a special hand woven textile (Tais) in which to wrap the downed UN flag,[15] as if it was a death shroud, but also to protect it and to preserve its mystical ‘sacred’ power (luli).[16] This flag became a symbol of liberation and protection for the Timorese.[16]

After independence, every village in the country received a copy of the new national flag, which was handed over to them in a solemn ceremony. Consciously or unconsciously, this follows the Portuguese tradition of handing over the Portuguese flag to the vassals.[17]

During the celebrations of the seventh anniversary of independence on 20 May 2009, the national flag fell to the ground. Many Timorese saw this as a bad omen. At the flag-raising ceremony in 2002, the flag did not flutter in the wind and violent riots broke out a few months later. The opposition party Fretilin saw the renewed incident as a sign that the government was in trouble, and one of the country's biggest newspapers, the Timor Post, reported the event on its front page.[18]

Since 1 August 2011, the national flag has been placed in front of public institutions on the first Monday of every month. Likewise on 2 February (East Timor Defence Forces Day FDTL), 27 March (East Timor National Police Day PNTL) and 20 August (FALINTIL Day). The flag is always raised at 8 am, with employees and officials of the institution all present and singing the national anthem.[19]

In 2016, MPs Manuel Castro, Manuel Guterres, and Natalino dos Santos Nascimento criticised the fact that more people were writing on the flag, for example with signatures. In the view of the politicians, this is a "crime" against which the police should take action. The flag, which had been bought "with bones and blood", was thereby desecrated.[20]

Alternative flag debate Edit

 
  Flag of the CNRT (semi-official flag of East Timor 1998-2002)
 
Flag of Fretilin

A different flag had been suggested by the representatives of the Timorese political parties and organisations during the first East Timorese National Convention held in April 1998 in Portugal. This flag was originally the flag of CNRT (Conselho Nacional de Resistência Timorense, National Council of Timorese Resistance). Because of CNRT's popularity, there was a consensus of the participants of the convention to adopt their flag as a temporary flag for East Timor. It was replaced by the former design of 1975 in 2002.

A discussion began about which flag a future, independent East Timor should use. There were voices calling for the national flag to be changed, as the 1975 flag was a symbol of Fretilin. Already at the first East Timorese National Convention in Peniche (Portugal) from 23 to 27 April 1998, the delegates of the Timorese parties decided in favour of the flag of the CNRT as the provisional flag of East Timor. In the 1999 referendum on independence, the UN had accordingly depicted on the ballot papers the Indonesian flag for remaining with Indonesia and the flag of the CNRT for independence as a decision-making aid.[21][22] The veterans' organisation CPD-RDTL accused Fretilin of monopolising the current national flag. The group Colimau 2000 demanded that a Christian cross be included in the national flag to symbolise the importance of Catholicism in East Timor. However, most parties and the majority of the population do not support a change. They saw the national flag as a symbol of suffering in the struggle for independence, regardless of its authorship.[2]

At demonstrations in and outside East Timor, almost only the old 1975 flag and the Fretilin flag were displayed. The very similarity of the two flags was recognised in respect for the merits of Fretilin in the struggle for independence.[2] So in the end, the flag of 1975 was used. Another reason was probably the overwhelming majority of Fretilin in the new parliament. The Socialist Party of Timor (PST) had also demanded the red-yellow-black flag. The flag of the CNRT, as a symbol of the unity of the East Timorese, did not have the same popular support in the end.[2] The Timor Leste Defence Force (F-FDTL), which absorbed the FALINTIL, now use the FALINTIL flag and coat of arms in the spear-and-arrows version.

Other flags Edit

 
Sample ballot paper for the parliamentary elections with the flags of the parties running

Over the last few years, more and more flags of authorities, schools and other institutions have appeared. Usually they are single-coloured flags with the logo or coat of arms of the organisations. The country's football clubs also adorn themselves with logos and flags.

The flags of East Timor's political parties are diverse. They serve as advertising media at political events and were also depicted for illiterate people as an identifying sign on the ballot papers for the parliamentary elections on 30 June 2007. The importance of party flags for supporters was made clear by three incidents that took place during the unrest following the 2007 general election. At that time, Fretilin supporters had hung their flags in their eastern strongholds as a sign of protest against the new government. Australian troops then allegedly denigrated and stole three Fretilin flags as souvenirs.[23] The Australian commander, Brigadier John Hutcheson, personally returned one of the flags and expressed regret over the incident. The other two flags were returned through other authorities. Fretilin Secretary General Alkatiri nevertheless called for the withdrawal of the Australians, saying they were no longer neutral.[24][25][26]

In Catholic processions and celebrations, one sees blue-white and yellow-white flags, the latter sometimes with red crosses. Blue and white (as also found on the former flag of Portugal) are the traditional colours of Our Lady of the Conception (Nossa Senhora da Conceição). Mary is considered the patron saint of the country. Yellow and white are the colours of the Catholic Church (see also: Flag of Vatican City).

The veterans' organisation CPD-RDTL originally displayed the national flag of East Timor at its demonstrations.[27] However, at the end of 2012, flags were used whose design was reminiscent of the flag of the Bureau de Luta pela Libertação de Timor in 1961.[28]

Gallery Edit

Subnational flags Edit

 
Flag of Dili until 1975

Some of the Municipalities of East Timor have adopted their own flags. Originally, East Timor's municipalities did not have their own flags. However, during the colonial period between 1962 and 1975, Dili was the only place in Portuguese Timor to have a municipal flag that corresponded in design to the Portuguese municipal flags. It was green and white with eight stripes and showed the town's coat of arms in the centre: Red, a sandalwood tree in silver between two bundles of arrows with halberds and hunting spears. Above the escutcheon, a brick crown with five towers representing Dili's status as the capital of an overseas province. In addition, a banner with the words "O Sol logo em nascendo vê primeiro" (Where the sun was first born).[30][31] As a sign of solidarity, Dili's flag was hung in Lisbon's city hall in 1991.[32]

Since 2015, the municipalities have adopted logos and coats of arms as symbols, which are then also presented on flags with a single-colour background. For example, the Oe-Cusse Ambeno Special Administrative Region has a green flag with a logo and the municipality of Manufahi has an orange flag with its coat of arms. Baucau displays its coat of arms on a white background.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "CONSTITUTION OF THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF EAST TIMOR". Constitution.org. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Arthur, Catherine (June 2018). "From Fretilin to freedom: The evolution of the symbolism of Timor-Leste's National flag". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 49 – via ResearchGate.
  3. ^ a b c (PDF) (in Portuguese). 6 March 2007. Archived from the original (PDF; 584 kB) on 21 June 2007. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  4. ^ "May 2002 ET Postings Menu - Independence Ceremonies". www.etan.org. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  5. ^ Flagge bei der Unabhängigkeitsfeier in Suai/Cova Lima, Retrieved on 15 May 2015.
  6. ^ Geoffrey C. Gunn: 2009-03-24 at the Wayback Machine Technical University of Lisbon (PDF-Date; 805 kB)
  7. ^ Monika Schlicher: Portugal in Osttimor. Eine kritische Untersuchung zur portugiesischen Kolonialgeschichte in Osttimor 1850 bis 1912. Abera, Hamburg 1996, ISBN 3-931567-08-7, (Abera Network Asia-Pacific 4), (Zugleich: Heidelberg, Univ., Diss., 1994).
  8. ^ "Os portugueses em Timor na II Guerra Mundial". www.jornaldenegocios.pt (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  9. ^ "East Timor: flag proposal of 1967". www.fotw.info. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  10. ^ "Indonesian provincial flags". www.fotw.info. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  11. ^ "Timor-Leste builds National Park Kay Rala Xanana Gusmão « Government of Timor-Leste". timor-leste.gov.tl. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  12. ^ Irena Cristalis: East Timor: A Nation's Bitter Dawn. Zed Books Ltd., 2013, [1] at Google Books.
  13. ^ "Indonesian occupation flags in East Timor". www.fotw.info. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  14. ^ Complete Flags of the World. Dorling Kindersley. 1997. p. 279. ISBN 978-1-4093-5371-3.
  15. ^ Cristalis, Irena (2009). East Timor: A Nation's Bitter Dawn, Second Edition (Revised and Updated, 2nd ed.). USA exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan, London, New York, NY: Zed Books.
  16. ^ a b Molnar, Andrea K. (2006). "'Died in the Service of Portugal': Legitimacy of Authority and Dynamics of Group Identity among the Atsabe Kemak in East Timor". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 37 (2): 335–355. doi:10.2307/20072713?uid=3737864&uid=2129&uid=2&uid=70&uid=4&sid=21103327209711. ISSN 0022-4634.
  17. ^ "Osttimor 16 - Suai". www.hpgrumpe.de. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  18. ^ Nomad, Radio (20 May 2009). "Dropping the Flag". Notes from Abroad & Home. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  19. ^ Press release of the Government of East Timor of 30 July 2011: Flying the National Flag on Solemn Days
  20. ^ Agora, Timor (4 August 2016). "- TIMOR AGORA: RISKA 'BURADU" BANDEIRA RDTL, PN HUSU PNTL HALO KAPTURASAUN". - TIMOR AGORA. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  21. ^ UNAMET. "tl011999-zettel" (PDF). Database and Search Engine for Direct Democracy. Retrieved 12 February 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  22. ^ . UN.org. Archived from the original on 15 March 2003. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  23. ^ "Diggers stole Fretilin flags". ABC News. 19 August 2007. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  24. ^ . Adnkronos Politics. 20 December 2015. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 28 July 2023 – via Archive.org.
  25. ^ Darwin, Lindsay Murdoch in (21 August 2007). "Defence Force apologises for soldiers' desecration of Fretilin flag". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  26. ^ . Antara. 20 August 2007. Archived from the original on 23 December 2015. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  27. ^ "The Dili Insider: CPD-RDTL Maliana Demo 29 June 09,". thediliinsider.blogspot.com. 1 July 2009. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  28. ^ . Timoran.com. 21 December 2012. Archived from the original on 12 January 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2023 – via Archive.org.
  29. ^ "Os portugueses em Timor na II Guerra Mundial". www.jornaldenegocios.pt (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  30. ^ "Díli District (East Timor)". www.fotw.info. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  31. ^ Legislacao.org: Text of the law of 1 October 1962
  32. ^ "Expectativa Municipal | Ver O Hastear Da Bandeira De Díli Por Autarca Eleito Pelos Timorenses". ANMP - Boletins ANMP [Editio Electronica]. 7 December 1991. Retrieved 10 February 2023.

External links Edit


flag, east, timor, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, december, 2010, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, german, article, machine, translation, like, de. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German December 2010 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Flagge Osttimors see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Flagge Osttimors to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The national flag of East Timor Portuguese Bandeira de Timor Leste is one of the official symbols of East Timor It consists of a red field with the black isosceles triangle based on the hoist side bearing a white five pointed star in the center superimposed on the larger yellow triangle also based on the hoist side that extends to the center of the flag Democratic Republic of Timor LesteUseNational flag and ensignProportion1 2AdoptedNovember 28 1975 47 years ago 1975 11 28 de facto May 19 2002 21 years ago 2002 05 19 de jure DesignA red field with the black isosceles triangle based on the hoist side bearing a white five pointed star in the center superimposed on the larger yellow triangle also based on the hoist side that extends to the center of the flag Designed byNatalino Leitao Flying flag of East Timor at sunsetContents 1 Official description of the flag 1 1 Variations 2 History 2 1 Monarchical Era 1702 1910 2 2 Republican Era 1911 1975 2 3 Independence 1974 1975 2 4 Indonesian occupation 1975 1999 2 5 Contemporary Era 1990 Present 3 Alternative flag debate 4 Other flags 5 Gallery 6 Subnational flags 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksOfficial description of the flag Edit nbsp Construction sheet for the flag of East Timor According to the Constitution of the Democratic Republic of East Timor Part I Section 15 The national flag is rectangular and is formed by two isosceles triangles the bases of which are overlapping One triangle is black and its height is equal to one third of the length overlapped to the yellow triangle whose height is equal to half the length of the Flag In the centre of the black triangle there is a white star of five ends meaning the light that guides The white star has one of its ends turned towards the left side end of the flag The remaining part of the flag is red 1 With the constitution of the Democratic Republic of Timor Leste on November 28 1975 the flag was officially adopted for the first time The symbolism of this flag was given the following meaning Black represents the four centuries of colonial oppression The yellow arrowhead represents the traces of colonialism in East Timor s history and the struggle for independence Red stands for the spilled blood of the population The white star symbolises hope for a better future Today both the colours and their meanings are specified in the new Constitution of the Democratic Republic of Timor Leste of 2002 Part I Section 15 1 Black symbolises obscurantism which must be overcome Yellow represents the wealth of the country Red symbolises the struggle for national liberation The white star or the light that guides is white to represent peace Flags are powerful symbols in East Timorese culture and have a high cultural significance They play a significant role in East Timorese identification as a community Flags are automatically attributed a symbolic power making them a sacred object 2 Variations Edit nbsp Flag of East Timor according to the flag of the Independence Ceremony with straight star nbsp National flag in SouroThe tones of the individual colours are not precisely defined in the Constitution The Independence Day Celebrations Committee of the United Nations Transitional Administration for East Timor UNTAET indicated light orange PMS 123 as the correct shade of yellow which is usually found on official flags In flag illustrations in books or on the internet but also in flags commonly used in East Timor a light yellow is also widely used According to the UNTAET source the red corresponds to the tone PMS 485 Here too there are versions with a light red in East Timor Even darker versions only appear as flag images but not as flags Although UNTAET gives the size of the black triangle as a quarter of the flag s length the existing flags and illustrations all have a triangle with a size of one third There is disagreement about the correct proportions of the flag While the 1975 flag always had the 2 3 ratio common in most of Europe flags with a ratio of 1 2 also appeared in official use with the independence of East Timor The reason for this is presumably that these flags are manufactured in Australia where the proportions of 1 2 are customary A clear uniform regulation was initially pending 3 but Law 02 2007 on the national symbols shows a picture of a flag with a 1 2 ratio in the appendix 3 Furthermore the law lists in Article 4 the different formats of the flag in which the cloth flag should hang in public offices barracks private and state schools Type 1 consists of a cloth 45 centimetres wide Type 2 consists of a cloth 90 centimetres wide Type 3 135 centimetres wide and so on up to Type 7 315 centimetres wide However in paragraph 2 the article explicitly allows smaller and larger flags as well as those with sizes in between as long as the proportions are respected 3 Flags are often seen with the top of the star pointing straight up This was often the case with the 1975 flag But today s constitution clearly states that the star should point with a tip to the upper left corner This is also followed by the illustration in Law 02 2007 The flag of East Timor used for the independence celebration on 20 May 2002 had a straight star despite the clear specifications 4 5 It also had an aspect ratio of 1 2 and used the bright yellow in combination with the bright red Variants of East Timor s flags nbsp nbsp Variation with light yellow and dark red nbsp nbsp Historical variation with straight star and 2 3 aspect ratio nbsp nbsp Flag of the independenceceremony of20 May 2002History EditSee also History of East Timor Monarchical Era 1702 1910 Edit nbsp Flag of the Portuguese GovernorUntil independence from Portugal the colony of Portuguese Timor used only the flag of Portugal The Liurais the traditional rulers of Timor drew part of their claim to rule from sacred lulik objects owned by the ruling families When the Portuguese subjugated the Timorese they gave the Liurais as vassals the Portuguese flag which in the eyes of the Timorese just like the flagpole became sacred objects themselves legitimising the rule of the Portuguese and the Liurais loyal to them Especially in the culture of the Mambai the flag cult took on a central significance According to their myth of origin the world order is created by two brothers The elder brother from whom the Timorese descend holds the ritual power over the cosmos The younger brother has the power over the social order The non Timorese peoples in this case the Portuguese are descended from this brother The myth tells of the loss search and recovery of a lost sacred object namely the Portuguese flag This sacred meaning of the blue and white flag led to some problems when the flag of Portugal was changed in 1910 when the country changed from a monarchy to a republic 6 7 Republican Era 1911 1975 Edit See also East Timorese rebellion of 1911 1912 nbsp Reception for the Portuguese affected by the war in Timor on February 15 1946On 15 February 1946 the Angola arrived at the Portuguese naval base of Alcantara from Portuguese Timor She brought home Portuguese who had lived in the colony during the Battle of Timor in the Second World War A white flag with the Portuguese Timorese coat of arms on a green and red cross appears in the crowd 8 In 1961 a small left oriented Timorese resistance movement the Bureau de Luta pela Libertacao de Timor BLLT used a flag that already had some elements of today s national flag It consisted of a yellow bordered black disc with a five pointed white star on red cloth Later the BLLT established a short lived government in exile in Jakarta called the United Republic of Timor which used the same flag In 1967 there were proposals for separate flags for the individual Portuguese colonies with the coat of arms of the colony added to the lower right of the flag of Portugal However the proposals were never implemented 9 Independence 1974 1975 Edit nbsp nbsp Flag of East Timor in a 2 3 ratio as it was used in 1975After the Carnation Revolution in Portugal parties were also allowed in Portuguese Timor East Timor s dominant leftist party the Frente Revolucionaria de Timor Leste Independente Fretilin used the same colours as the BLLT in its party flag and also the white star on a black background Apart from their political orientation there are no links between the two organisations To what extent the flag served as a model or simply common socialist symbols such as the five pointed star and the colour red were used on the party flag is not clear According to legend the resistance fighter Natalino Leitao designed the current national flag based on the Fretilin flag the night before the proclamation of independence from Portugal on 28 November 1975 The incipient occupation of the country by Indonesia had put the Fretilin on the spot Today 28 November is East Timor s bank holidays when official buildings are flagged Only nine days after the declaration of independence Indonesia openly started to invade East Timor Natalino Leitao was killed in the process nbsp Che Guevara in the Timorese national colours in Baucau East TimorThe declaration of independence was only recognised by a few countries Politically Indonesia was supported by the United States and Australia as they feared a second Cuba due to the leftist orientation of Fretilin The extent to which the red basic colour and the certain similarity of the flag design to Cuba s flag supported this assumption is debatable That the flag of Cuba or the flag of Mozambique were models for Leitao s triangular design can only be assumed At least there were and still are sympathies for Cuba and especially for Ernesto Che Guevara in East Timor Fretilin already had close relations with Mozambique and its ruling party FRELIMO Socialist chevron flags nbsp Flag of FRELIMO nbsp Flag of Mozambique nbsp Flag of CubaIndonesian occupation 1975 1999 Edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Variant of the flag of the National Council of Maubere Resistance with the full name of the organisationBeyond party political affiliation the flag of the Fretilin became more and more a symbol of the organisation of resistance for the people during the occupation and the national flag of 1975 a symbol of the people and their urge for independence The occupation forces reacted to the use of the flags with severe repression The use of flags other than the flag of Indonesia was forbidden 2 Until 1999 East Timor was governed by Indonesia as a province while internationally it was considered a dependent territory under Portuguese administration As an Indonesian province it was also given a provincial flag but this was only used in the governor s office as was customary with all provincial flags The flag of Timor Timur as East Timor was officially called at the time displayed the provincial coat of arms on an orange background 10 When a Portuguese parliamentary delegation was due to visit East Timor in 1989 the Indonesian government distributed 30 000 Indonesian flags to be placed on the homes of Dili This was intended to demonstrate the integration of East Timor into Indonesia 2 nbsp nbsp Variant of the flag of Falintil in the National Museum of the ResistanceThe armed resistance against the Indonesians was led by Falintil which was originally the military arm of Fretilin In 1987 its leader Xanana Gusmao transformed Falintil into a national army of East Timorese resistance He designed a new blue white green black flag of the Falintil 11 The Conselho Nacional de Resistencia Timorense CNRT the umbrella organisation of East Timorese resistance founded in 1998 adopted the Falintil flag as a politically neutral symbol They replaced the lettering FALINTIL with CNRT and changed the symbols in the shield The Falintil used a yellow five pointed star two traditional swords suriks and three feathers The CNRT used a spear and two arrows instead of the feathers and the star was now white The Falintil adopted this version of the coat of arms for its flag relatively soon The shield in the flag of the CNRT is also found in slightly modified form with the same elements in the later first coat of arms of East Timor 2002 2006 after the restoration of independence In the Falintil camps it was strictly forbidden to walk through the shadow of the flag Allegedly this rule dates back to colonial times when Timorese were beaten up if they walked through the shadow of the flag of Portugal 12 In the 1999 independence referendum in East Timor the population could choose between full independence and remaining part of Indonesia as the Special Autonomous Region of East Timor SARET Article 20 of SARET s draft constitution provided for the possibility of adopting its own coat of arms but not its own flag Instead the flag of Indonesia was to continue to be used 13 Contemporary Era 1990 Present Edit nbsp International Stabilization Force flagWhen the United Nations took control in East Timor after the referendum they used the United Nations flag At the Sydney Olympics in 2000 four East Timorese athletes participated as Independent Olympic Athletes under the flag of the Olympic Games as East Timor was not yet independent and there was no National Olympic Committee The flag of East Timor was adopted in 2002 It is the same as the flag that was originally adopted when the country declared its independence from Portugal in 1975 nine days before being invaded by Indonesia 14 At midnight on 19 May 2002 and during the first moments of Independence Day the next day the United Nations flag was lowered and the flag of an independent East Timor was raised The flag was officially reinstated on 20 May 2002 when the United Nations flag was taken down at midnight and the East Timorese flag was hoisted According to the various local accounts people were in tears for days and produced a special hand woven textile Tais in which to wrap the downed UN flag 15 as if it was a death shroud but also to protect it and to preserve its mystical sacred power luli 16 This flag became a symbol of liberation and protection for the Timorese 16 After independence every village in the country received a copy of the new national flag which was handed over to them in a solemn ceremony Consciously or unconsciously this follows the Portuguese tradition of handing over the Portuguese flag to the vassals 17 During the celebrations of the seventh anniversary of independence on 20 May 2009 the national flag fell to the ground Many Timorese saw this as a bad omen At the flag raising ceremony in 2002 the flag did not flutter in the wind and violent riots broke out a few months later The opposition party Fretilin saw the renewed incident as a sign that the government was in trouble and one of the country s biggest newspapers the Timor Post reported the event on its front page 18 Since 1 August 2011 the national flag has been placed in front of public institutions on the first Monday of every month Likewise on 2 February East Timor Defence Forces Day FDTL 27 March East Timor National Police Day PNTL and 20 August FALINTIL Day The flag is always raised at 8 am with employees and officials of the institution all present and singing the national anthem 19 In 2016 MPs Manuel Castro Manuel Guterres and Natalino dos Santos Nascimento criticised the fact that more people were writing on the flag for example with signatures In the view of the politicians this is a crime against which the police should take action The flag which had been bought with bones and blood was thereby desecrated 20 Alternative flag debate Edit nbsp nbsp Flag of the CNRT semi official flag of East Timor 1998 2002 nbsp Flag of Fretilin A different flag had been suggested by the representatives of the Timorese political parties and organisations during the first East Timorese National Convention held in April 1998 in Portugal This flag was originally the flag of CNRT Conselho Nacional de Resistencia Timorense National Council of Timorese Resistance Because of CNRT s popularity there was a consensus of the participants of the convention to adopt their flag as a temporary flag for East Timor It was replaced by the former design of 1975 in 2002 A discussion began about which flag a future independent East Timor should use There were voices calling for the national flag to be changed as the 1975 flag was a symbol of Fretilin Already at the first East Timorese National Convention in Peniche Portugal from 23 to 27 April 1998 the delegates of the Timorese parties decided in favour of the flag of the CNRT as the provisional flag of East Timor In the 1999 referendum on independence the UN had accordingly depicted on the ballot papers the Indonesian flag for remaining with Indonesia and the flag of the CNRT for independence as a decision making aid 21 22 The veterans organisation CPD RDTL accused Fretilin of monopolising the current national flag The group Colimau 2000 demanded that a Christian cross be included in the national flag to symbolise the importance of Catholicism in East Timor However most parties and the majority of the population do not support a change They saw the national flag as a symbol of suffering in the struggle for independence regardless of its authorship 2 At demonstrations in and outside East Timor almost only the old 1975 flag and the Fretilin flag were displayed The very similarity of the two flags was recognised in respect for the merits of Fretilin in the struggle for independence 2 So in the end the flag of 1975 was used Another reason was probably the overwhelming majority of Fretilin in the new parliament The Socialist Party of Timor PST had also demanded the red yellow black flag The flag of the CNRT as a symbol of the unity of the East Timorese did not have the same popular support in the end 2 The Timor Leste Defence Force F FDTL which absorbed the FALINTIL now use the FALINTIL flag and coat of arms in the spear and arrows version Other flags Edit nbsp Sample ballot paper for the parliamentary elections with the flags of the parties runningOver the last few years more and more flags of authorities schools and other institutions have appeared Usually they are single coloured flags with the logo or coat of arms of the organisations The country s football clubs also adorn themselves with logos and flags The flags of East Timor s political parties are diverse They serve as advertising media at political events and were also depicted for illiterate people as an identifying sign on the ballot papers for the parliamentary elections on 30 June 2007 The importance of party flags for supporters was made clear by three incidents that took place during the unrest following the 2007 general election At that time Fretilin supporters had hung their flags in their eastern strongholds as a sign of protest against the new government Australian troops then allegedly denigrated and stole three Fretilin flags as souvenirs 23 The Australian commander Brigadier John Hutcheson personally returned one of the flags and expressed regret over the incident The other two flags were returned through other authorities Fretilin Secretary General Alkatiri nevertheless called for the withdrawal of the Australians saying they were no longer neutral 24 25 26 In Catholic processions and celebrations one sees blue white and yellow white flags the latter sometimes with red crosses Blue and white as also found on the former flag of Portugal are the traditional colours of Our Lady of the Conception Nossa Senhora da Conceicao Mary is considered the patron saint of the country Yellow and white are the colours of the Catholic Church see also Flag of Vatican City The veterans organisation CPD RDTL originally displayed the national flag of East Timor at its demonstrations 27 However at the end of 2012 flags were used whose design was reminiscent of the flag of the Bureau de Luta pela Libertacao de Timor in 1961 28 nbsp CPD RDTL nbsp National Directorate Partimonho Public Service nbsp Unidade de Patrulhamento de Fronteira nbsp East Timor Land Forces flag nbsp Infantry flag nbsp School flag of the Liceu Canossa Comoro nbsp Uniao Nacional dos Escuteiros de Timor Leste Flag nbsp Fire brigade in Same nbsp Decoration in the shape of the national flagGallery EditMain article List of East Timorese flags nbsp nbsp The flag of Portugal as adopted in 1667 was used in Portuguese Timor 1702 1707 nbsp nbsp The flag of Portugal as adopted in 1707 was used in Portuguese Timor 1707 1750 nbsp nbsp The flag of Portugal as adopted in 1750 was used in Portuguese Timor 1750 1816 nbsp nbsp The flag of Portugal as adopted in 1816 was used in Portuguese Timor 1816 1830 nbsp nbsp The national flag of Portugal as adopted in 1830 was used in Portuguese Timor 1830 1910 nbsp nbsp The flag of Portugal adopted in 1910 was used in Portuguese Timor 1910 1975 nbsp nbsp Flag of Japan used in during Japan s occupation of Portuguese Timor 1942 1945 nbsp nbsp Flag of Timor s Portuguese refugees flown in Lisbon after the occupation 1946 29 nbsp nbsp Flag of the Bureau de Luta pela Libertacao de Timor and the United Republic of Timor 1961 nbsp nbsp 1965 proposal for a flag of Portuguese Timor never adopted nbsp nbsp Flag of Indonesia used by the Provisional Government of East Timor 1975 1976 during the occupation 1976 1999 nbsp nbsp Provincial flag of Timor Timur 1976 1999 nbsp nbsp first version of the flag of the FALINTIL nbsp Flag of the F FDTL nbsp nbsp The Flag of the United Nations used by East Timor under UN administration 1999 2002 nbsp nbsp Flag of the Independent Olympic Athletes 2000Subnational flags Edit nbsp Flag of Dili until 1975Some of the Municipalities of East Timor have adopted their own flags Originally East Timor s municipalities did not have their own flags However during the colonial period between 1962 and 1975 Dili was the only place in Portuguese Timor to have a municipal flag that corresponded in design to the Portuguese municipal flags It was green and white with eight stripes and showed the town s coat of arms in the centre Red a sandalwood tree in silver between two bundles of arrows with halberds and hunting spears Above the escutcheon a brick crown with five towers representing Dili s status as the capital of an overseas province In addition a banner with the words O Sol logo em nascendo ve primeiro Where the sun was first born 30 31 As a sign of solidarity Dili s flag was hung in Lisbon s city hall in 1991 32 Since 2015 the municipalities have adopted logos and coats of arms as symbols which are then also presented on flags with a single colour background For example the Oe Cusse Ambeno Special Administrative Region has a green flag with a logo and the municipality of Manufahi has an orange flag with its coat of arms Baucau displays its coat of arms on a white background Municipalities Logo and Flags of East Timor nbsp Logo Aileu nbsp nbsp Flag of Baucau nbsp Logo of Cova Limas in Tetum und Portuguese nbsp Flag of Manufahis nbsp nbsp Symbol of Oe Cusse AmbenosSee also Edit nbsp Asia portalCoat of arms of East TimorReferences Edit a b CONSTITUTION OF THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF EAST TIMOR Constitution org Retrieved 9 January 2018 a b c d e f Arthur Catherine June 2018 From Fretilin to freedom The evolution of the symbolism of Timor Leste s National flag Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 49 via ResearchGate a b c Lei No 02 2007 Simbolos Nacionais deutsch Gesetz Nr 02 2007 Nationale Symbole PDF in Portuguese 6 March 2007 Archived from the original PDF 584 kB on 21 June 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2015 May 2002 ET Postings Menu Independence Ceremonies www etan org Retrieved 9 February 2023 Flagge bei der Unabhangigkeitsfeier in Suai Cova Lima Retrieved on 15 May 2015 Geoffrey C Gunn Archived 2009 03 24 at the Wayback Machine Technical University of Lisbon PDF Date 805 kB Monika Schlicher Portugal in Osttimor Eine kritische Untersuchung zur portugiesischen Kolonialgeschichte in Osttimor 1850 bis 1912 Abera Hamburg 1996 ISBN 3 931567 08 7 Abera Network Asia Pacific 4 Zugleich Heidelberg Univ Diss 1994 Os portugueses em Timor na II Guerra Mundial www jornaldenegocios pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 9 February 2023 East Timor flag proposal of 1967 www fotw info Retrieved 9 February 2023 Indonesian provincial flags www fotw info Retrieved 10 February 2023 Timor Leste builds National Park Kay Rala Xanana Gusmao Government of Timor Leste timor leste gov tl Retrieved 10 February 2023 Irena Cristalis East Timor A Nation s Bitter Dawn Zed Books Ltd 2013 1 at Google Books Indonesian occupation flags in East Timor www fotw info Retrieved 10 February 2023 Complete Flags of the World Dorling Kindersley 1997 p 279 ISBN 978 1 4093 5371 3 Cristalis Irena 2009 East Timor A Nation s Bitter Dawn Second Edition Revised and Updated 2nd ed USA exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan London New York NY Zed Books a b Molnar Andrea K 2006 Died in the Service of Portugal Legitimacy of Authority and Dynamics of Group Identity among the Atsabe Kemak in East Timor Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 37 2 335 355 doi 10 2307 20072713 uid 3737864 amp uid 2129 amp uid 2 amp uid 70 amp uid 4 amp sid 21103327209711 ISSN 0022 4634 Osttimor 16 Suai www hpgrumpe de Retrieved 13 July 2023 Nomad Radio 20 May 2009 Dropping the Flag Notes from Abroad amp Home Retrieved 13 July 2023 Press release of the Government of East Timor of 30 July 2011 Flying the National Flag on Solemn Days Agora Timor 4 August 2016 TIMOR AGORA RISKA BURADU BANDEIRA RDTL PN HUSU PNTL HALO KAPTURASAUN TIMOR AGORA Retrieved 13 July 2023 UNAMET tl011999 zettel PDF Database and Search Engine for Direct Democracy Retrieved 12 February 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link UN Poster Icon reject jpg UN org Archived from the original on 15 March 2003 Retrieved 12 February 2023 Diggers stole Fretilin flags ABC News 19 August 2007 Retrieved 28 July 2023 East Timor Australian troops provoke more unrest claims biggest party Adnkronos Politics 20 December 2015 Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 28 July 2023 via Archive org Darwin Lindsay Murdoch in 21 August 2007 Defence Force apologises for soldiers desecration of Fretilin flag The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 28 July 2023 Go home east timor ex pm tells australian troops Antara 20 August 2007 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 28 July 2023 The Dili Insider CPD RDTL Maliana Demo 29 June 09 thediliinsider blogspot com 1 July 2009 Retrieved 28 July 2023 Lere 2013 Rezolve Problema CPD RDTL Timoroman Timoran com 21 December 2012 Archived from the original on 12 January 2013 Retrieved 28 July 2023 via Archive org Os portugueses em Timor na II Guerra Mundial www jornaldenegocios pt in European Portuguese Retrieved 28 February 2022 Dili District East Timor www fotw info Retrieved 10 February 2023 Legislacao org Text of the law of 1 October 1962 Expectativa Municipal Ver O Hastear Da Bandeira De Dili Por Autarca Eleito Pelos Timorenses ANMP Boletins ANMP Editio Electronica 7 December 1991 Retrieved 10 February 2023 External links EditEast Timor at Flags of the World Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flag of East Timor amp oldid 1167495960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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