The Buddhist Flag, first
hoisted in 1885 in Sri Lanka, is a symbol of faith and peace used throughout
the world to represent the Buddhist faith.
There appears to have been a
controversy over as to who designed the Buddhist Flag.
Some give the credit to Henry
Steele Olcott, a retired American Army Colonel to Sri Lanka in May 1880.
Olcott embraced Buddhism and
joined the Buddhist revivalist movement and pioneered Buddhist education. He
initiated the establishment of close to 400 Buddhist schools and colleges in
Sri Lanka. Ananda, Nalanda, Mahinda and Dharmaraja stand as monuments to his
pioneering efforts.
In 1884, the Buddhists
succeeded in getting the British rulers to declare Vesak Poya Day as a Public
Holiday as from May 1885. At this stage the Buddhists established the ‘Colombo
Committee’, and Olcott was indeed one of its members, but there were also more
than ten other eminent members of the Sri Lankan laity and sangha.
This committee set about the
task of evolving a Buddhist Flag to be hoisted on Vesak Full Moon Day, 28th May
1885, the day declared as a Public Holiday, for the first time.
Thus it is this committee that
jointly designed the Buddhist Flag and the then Secretary of the Committee
presented it to the public as approved by the ‘Colombo Committee’ on 17th April
1885.
The design of the Buddhist flag is
based on six colours of the aura that are believed to have shone around the head
of the Buddha after his Enlightenment.
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Blue:
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Compassion
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Yellow:
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The Middle Path
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Red :
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Blessings
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White:
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Purity
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Orange:
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Wisdom
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The Buddhist Flag, so
designed, was hoisted for the first time on 28th May 1885, Vesak Full Moon Day,
by Ven. Migettuwatte Gunananda Thera at Deepaduththaramaya in Kotahena.
On a suggestion by Olcott the
flag was modified to be of the normal size of National Flags. The Buddhist Flag
so modified was hoisted on Vesak Full Moon Day in 1886. It remains unchanged to
this day and is used by all the traditions and schools of Buddhism throughout
the world.
Professor G .P. Malalasekera
was instrumental in making it the Flag of the Buddhist World. His proposal at
the meeting of World Federation of Buddhists held in Kandy on 25th May 1950, to
accept it as the official Buddhist Flag.
It was accepted as the
International Buddhist Flag by the 1952 World Buddhist Congress.
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