After the
Anglo-Boer War from 1899 to 1902 and the formation of the
Union of South Africa in 1910, the
British Union Flag became the national flag of
South Africa. As was the case throughout the
British Empire, the
Red and Blue Ensign with the
Union coat of arms were granted by
British Admiralty warrants in 1910 for use at sea.
These ensigns were not intended to be used as the Union's national flag, although they were used by some people as such, especially the
Red Ensign. It was only after the first post-Union
Afrikaner government took office in 1925 that a bill was introduced in
Parliament to make provisions for a national flag for the Union; this action immediately prompted three years of near civil war, as the
British thought that the
Boers wanted to remove their cherished imperial symbols.
Natal Province even threatened to secede from the Union.
Finally, a compromise was reached that resulted in the adoption of a separate flag for the Union in late
1927, and the design was first hoisted on 31 May 1928. The design was based on the so-called
Van Riebeeck flag or Prinsevlag ("
Prince's flag" in Afrikaans) which was originally the
Dutch flag, and consisted of orange, white, and blue horizontal stripes. A version of this flag was used as the flag of the
Dutch East India Company at the Cape (with the
VOC logo in the centre) from 1652 until 1795.
The South African addition to the design was three smaller flags centred in the white stripe. The smaller flags were the
Union Flag towards the hoist, the
Orange Free State Vierkleur hanging vertically and the
Transvaal Vierkleur towards the fly.
The choice of the Prinsevlag as the basis upon which to design the
South African flag had more to do with compromise than Afrikaner political desires, as the Prinsevlag was believed to be the first flag hoisted on
South African soil and was politically neutral as it was no longer the national flag of any nation. A further element of this compromise was that the Union Flag would continue to fly alongside the new
South African national flag over official buildings. This state of duality continued until
1957 when the Union Flag lost its official status as per an
Act of Parliament; the Red Ensign had lost its status as
South Africa's merchant flag in 1951.
Following a referendum, the country became a republic on 31 May
1961, but the design of the flag remained unchanged. However, there was intense pressure to change the flag, particularly from
Afrikaners who resented the fact that the Union Flag was a part of the flag.
The former
Prime Minister and architect of apartheid,
Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd, had a dream to hoist a "clean" flag over South Africa in the
1960s. The proposed design comprised three vertical stripes of the same colour of the Prinsevlag with a leaping
Springbok Antelope over a wreath of six proteas in the centre.
H.C. Blatt, then assistant secretary in the
Department of the Prime Minister, designed the flag. Verwoerd's successor,
John Vorster, raised the flag issue at a news conference on 30
March 1971 and said that in light of the impending
10th anniversary Republic Day celebrations, he preferred to "keep the affair in the background". This he said was done because he did not want the flag question to degenerate into a political football, as happened in the
1920s over the Union Flag, and that the matter would be considered again when circumstances would be "more normal". He also went on to say that "I only want to warn, and express hope, that no person should drag politics in any form into this matter, because the flag must, at all times, be raised above party politics in South Africa".
Despite the flag's origins predating the
National Party's ascension to power, the presence of the three little flags in the middle was internationally perceived as being an implied endorsement of apartheid. In this light it is possible to theorise that the end of apartheid may not have beckoned a change in national flag if a more neutral one had indeed been selected in the 1960s, or perhaps even if the three subflags had been merely excised before the Prinsevlag became the inadvertent
symbol of apartheid it did.
- published: 09 Mar 2008
- views: 26505