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An incident in Baghdad reported in the Washington Post of August 14, 2003, ("Flag Is Flash Point In A Baghdad Slum: Perceived Insult Ignites Anti-U.S. Unrest," by Anthony Shadid, p. 11) has some interesting information on religious flags displayed by Iraqi Shi'ites. The August 13 incident arose when a U.S. military helicopter knocked down a flag that Shi'ites had placed on a transmission tower in Sadr City (formerly Saddam City), the huge, Shi'ite populated slum in Baghdad. US commanders have apologized for the incident, which led to the killing of one Iraqi. The article mentions the following flags:
image by Eugene Ipavec, 23 Nov 2010
A flag sold on Ebay. The seller claims that his army team discovered that this fabric-banner was used as a 'battle flag' by the Iraqi-Shia-cleric 'Sadr Army' uprising against the U.S.-led military occupation forces in Iraq. True, M. Sadr (a young Shia religious-political leader friendly with the Iranian fundamentalist government) was also rebelling against the Shia-lead government of Iraq.
Anyway, this fabric item isn't so much of a
'flag' as it is a portion cut from a long bolt of cloth with a
repeating religious design. While I don't read Arabic, from my other
insights, this design appears to honor the tomb-shrine of the major
Shia 'saint': Imam Hussain/Husayin -- who was killed at the battle of
Kerbala/Karbala about 730 C.E. Perhaps this American soldier/unit
tore it off of some makeshift flagpole, or perhaps merely ripped it
down off some wall (because there appear to be tear marks in the upper
left & right corners of this item). Anyway, some Shia militiaman
might have just grabbed this (or any) religious fabric and made an
impromptu "flag."
William Garrison, 23 Nov 2010
image by Eugene Ipavec, 12 December 2010
A flag sold on Ebay. The seller claims his U.S. Army unit captured it during some
battle/raid involving Shia militants who were opposing the U.S.-led
military 'occupation' of Iraq. As I mentioned in an earlier email,
this piece of fabric contains some slogans honoring (most likely) some
Shia religious figure (saint), such as their Imam Hussain/Husyain
(depending upon your preferred spelling of Arabic words).
Interesting, this fabric/flag uses 3 different styles or script of
Arabic. Normally, this fabric comes from a bolt of cloth (as in
making a dress, etc.), from which you cut off the portion you want --
to hang in a mosque or at home. I'm not too sure how 'picky' you want
to be in defining what a 'flag' is; if a piece of design-cloth is
carried/waved by a militiaman does it make the fabric a 'flag'? I
suppose some enthusiastic militant could have torn this down off a
wall and tacked it to some makeshift flag-pole to taunt the soldiers.
William Garrison, 23 November 2010
This banner/flag pertains to the Shia/Shiite-Muslim martyr ("shaheed")
"Hazrat al-Abbas", who was killed at the battle of Karbala in 680 CE. "Al-Abbas
ibn Ali ibn Abi Talib" was also known as "Abu al-Fadl" ("Father of Virtue"). He
was the son of "Ali ibn Abi Talib", the fourth caliph in Sunni Islam and the
first imam in Shia Islam. Abbas fought as the standard-bearer of his
half-brother "Husayn/Hussain ibn Ali" in the "Battle of Karbala" in Oct. 680. He
was killed in a desperate attempt to bring water from the Euphrates River to
quench the unbearable thirst of besieged family members living in their tent
encampment. The top red line translates as: "Peace be upon you, O stalker of the
thirsty of Karbala". The middle green line reads: "May peace be upon you, Oh,
moon of Bani Hashim", as one of his epithets was "Qamar Bani Hashim" (lit. 'moon
of the Hashemites'), as he is often described as tall and handsome. The bottom
white line reads: "Oh, Allah, bless the martyr Imam Abbas."
William
Garrison, 6 January 2024
image located by William Garrison, 18 October 2017
Flag, Iraq, Shia Muslim, Popular Mobilization Militia Unit, outside Kirkuk,
c. Oct. 2017. Several different flags are shown. I believe that neither white
flag refers to a specific militia unit, but is a generic Shiite Muslim flag that
can be used in many different Shia religious parades. In general, these
religious-oriented flags are beseeching Shia martyr Imam Husain/Hussein (killed
at "Battle of Karbala/Kerbala") to help some Shiite cause in overcoming some
adversary.
Source:
http://www.al-monitor.com/
William Garrison, 18 October 2017
image located by William Garrison, 3 September 2021
From
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/war-flags-rages-divided-iraq:
Iraqi
Shiite militants wave flags near the town of Jurf al-Sakhr, Iraq on 30 October
2014. I believe the top green flag shows Hazrat Abbas, the left black one shows
Imam Husain, while I cannot translate the yellow one.
William Garrison,
3 September 2021
An Iraqi Shiite Muslim fixes a huge black flag beside
colorful ones in a street of Baghdad's Shiite neighborhood of Kazemiya 22
February 2004. Muslim Shiites in Iraq started preparations to mark Ashura, the
day when Imam al-Hussein, grandson of Prophet Mohammed was killed in Karbala,
100 kms south of Baghdad, in 680 AD. The Shiites will freely mark Ashura 02
March 2004 for the first time since the ouster of Saddam Hussein. AFP PHOTO/Marwan
NAAMANI (Photo credit should read MARWAN NAAMANI/AFP via Getty Images)
The middle line reads: "Ya, Hussain" or "Oh, Hussain", which is an appeal to
Shia religious martyr Imam Hussain (sometimes spelled "al-Hussein" depending
upon Arabic or Farsi) to come to the assistance of oppressed Shiite Muslims.
source:
https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/news-photo/an-iraqi-shiite-muslim-fixes-a-huge-black-flag-beside-news-photo/3003467
William Garrison, 11 November 2019
Seen at
https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/shiite-muslim-pilgrim-walks-carrying-a-flag-depicting-the-news-photo/1053759518?adppopup=true
A Shiite flag depicting the Muslim Prophet Mohammed's cousin Imam Ali
ibn Abi Taleb (center) and his two sons Imam Hussein/Husain (right) and his
brother, Abbas (left with the hat feathers), near Baghdad on the way towards the
central holy Iraqi city of Karbala on October 26, 2018, ahead of the Arbaeen
religious festival which marks the 40th day after Ashura, which commemorates the
seventh century killing and martyrdom of the revered Imam Hussein/Husain. (Photo
by Ahmad AL-RUBAYE / AFP) (Photo credit should read AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP via
Getty Images)
William Garrison, 3 September 2021
Seen at
https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/shiite-muslim-pilgrims-march-from-baghdad-to-the-shrine-news-photo/108214180?adppopup=true
A Shiite-Muslim religious flag depicting Imam Husain/Hussein; c. Jan.
2011 near Karbala, Iraq.
William Garrison, 3 September 2021
image located by William Garrison, 23 February 2022
From
https://imamhussain.org/english/newsandreports/19718
There are two flags (with the Iraq national flag in the middle) that
appear to be related to the [Shia-Muslim] "Imam Hussein Holy Shrine" at a
conference on March 28, 2017 at the Karbala, Iraq shrine. The red flag appears
to show a yellow logo of the shrine, while the green flag has a "khamsa" or "hamza"
(hand logo) of the Husayn/Hussain family. The "Imam Husayn Shrine" or the "Place
of Imam Husayn ibn Ali" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imam_Husayn_Shrine,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanization_of_Arabic: Maqām al-ʾImām al-Ḥusayn
ibn ʿAlīy) .
William Garrison, 23 February 2022
image located by William Garrison, 23 May 2024
A "Twelver Shiites" flag, showing the 12 Shiite imams (religious leaders), as seen in Karbala, Iraq; c. 2019. The top-right
figure wearing two white-feathers in his helmet is Hazrat Abbas, and at the left is an image of his half-brother, Imam Hussain (both were killed at the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE). Below Hussain's name is the red Farsi word "al-huda" meaning "guidance" (of the Shiite imams). Below Abbas' name is the red Farsi word of "al-imams" meaning "the (Shiite) Imams". Combined, these two words essentially make the slogan: "Follow the teachings of these religious leaders." I believe the Golden Dome building is that of the "Imam Ali Shrine" (sanctuary or mosque) in Najaf, Iraq.
William Garrison, 23 May 2024
image located by William Garrison, 22 March 2024
A green-field flag honoring the 7th and 9th Twelver Shia Imams; as seen at
the Al-Kazimiyya Mosque in the Kadhimayn suburb of Baghdad, Iraq; c. 2023. At
the top of the flag are the two golden domes atop the shrines of the 7th imam
"Musa ibn Jafar al-Kazim" (aka al-Kadhim) [died 799 CE] and his grandson the 9th
imam "Mohamad al-Jawad." Musa had the nickname of "al-Kazim" which means
"forbearing" in reference to his patience and his demeanor. "Al-Kazim" and the
Arabic wording "suppression of anger" appear in the middle line. Both imams were
religious leaders who served under the Abbasid caliphs (political rulers). The
bottom line reads loosely as: "We are followers of the Kazimiyya family".
Source:
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/540994973991186075/
William Garrison,
22 March 2024
image located by William Garrison, 29 April 2024
For a Shia-Muslim religious celebration, an orange-field flag with three white-lettered slogans that was paraded at an Imam Mahdi birth anniversary at the "Jamkaran Holy Mosque" (Masjed-e Jamkaran) that is located east of Qom City, Iraq; c. March 2024. The top slogan reads (translated into English): "Oh, Allah hurry up", the middle slogan reads: "Here you go, Mahdi", and the bottom slogan reads: "The world is waiting for you, Mahdi". The Muslim prophet Muhammad revealed the holy book: the Quran. Shias consider Muhammad's descendants (through Imam Ali and Imam Hussain) as the true source of religious and political guidance for Muslims (although Sunni-Muslims reject the leadership of the Hussain lineage). The last "Twelver Shiite" Imam was "Muhammad ibn Hasan al-Mahdi" who disappeared about 940 CE; Shiites believe he went into a physical state of theological hibernation or "occultation" [it is believed that he fell into a water well and disappeared] and will re-emerge at the "end of time" to establish peace and justice and redeem Islam. So, it is in the tradition of Shiites during their fasting month of Ramadan to appeal to Allah to allow the immediate return of "The Mahdi" so that he can finally establish world peace. Per Wikipedia: "In the rear of the mosque, there is a "well of requests" where it is believed the Twelfth Imam once "became miraculously unhidden for a brief shining moment of loving communion with his Creator." Pilgrims tie small strings in a knot around the grids covering the holy well, which they hope will be received by the Imam Mahdi. Every morning custodians cut off the strings from the previous day. Tuesday night is especially popular as it is said to be "the day the vision appeared and therefore the day of the week that [the Imam], although invisible, takes requests." The gathering "resembles a huge tailgate party where vendors set up in the parking lots and families set up picnic rugs and tens-of-thousands wander about the grounds as if waiting for the main event to happen. .... [W]omen are separated from men in their own special cordoned-off area and also have their own [wishing] well."
[Info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamkaran_Mosque and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Shia_Islam]
William Garrison, 29 April 2024
image located by William Garrison, 18 June 2024
Source:
https://iranpress.com/anniversary-of-beginning-of-imamat-of-imam-mahdi
A Shia-Muslim flag reading in Farsi: "Ya, Mahdi" or in English: "Oh, Mahdi".
Seen at the "al-Mahdi" mosque in Samarra, Iraq c. Sept. 2023. Al-Mahdi ("the
Guided") is a prominent figure in Islamic eschatology who is believed to appear
at the "End of Time" to rid the world of evil and injustice. This flag is to
alert The Mahdi that his servants on earth are awaiting his immediate return.
Wikipedia info:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
William Garrison, 18 June 2024
image located by William Garrison, 27 July 2021
From
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/01/04/mourners-chant-america-is-the-great-satan-over-death-of-soleimani.html,
caption: white-field flag with orange trim and slogan with "bleeding sword"
image --- usually associated with Shia-Muslims. Seen in Baghdad, Iraq; 4 Jan.
2020 during funeral procession for assassinated Iranian military commander Qasem
Soleimani. Possibly affiliated with Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary militia force.
William Garrison, 27 July 2021
image located by William Garrison, 5 June 2024
Source:
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/
A Shia-Muslim flag (c. 2024) reading" Ya/Oh, Fatima al-Zahra", which was a
nickname of "Fatima bint Muhammad" (c. 630 CE), the daughter of the Islamic
prophet Mohammad and his wife, Khadija. "Al-Zahra" means: "The radiant". She was
the mother of Imam Hasan and Imam Husayn/Hussain - the latter was killed at the
Battle of Karbala, Iraq, in 680 CE. Essentially, this flag represents an appeal
to Fatima for her spiritual support to some distressed Shiite. Wikipedia info:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatima
William Garrison, 5 June 2024
image located by William Garrison, 18 July 2024
A black-field flag with a Farsi slogan "Ya, Qaim fi Mohammad" or into English as: "Oh, Standing with [the family of] Mohammad", c. mid-July 2024 somewhere in Iraq. The leaders of Iran, being Shia or Shiites, believe that the Muslim prophet Mohammad bequeathed his "mantle" or "leadership" to his cousin Imam Ali [Shia = "followers of Ali"] and his family linage, which is intermixed with the religious and political leaders of Iran today (c. 2020s). Thusly, this Mohammad [Ali-family] flag is paraded by Shia militiamen in the "Islamic Resistance in Iraq" (IRI) or "al-Moqawamat al-Islamiat fi al-Iraq" which is a network of Iranian-backed Shia-Islamist insurgent groups in Iraq. It is a generic Shia-religious flag, being carried by Shia militiamen. Because of their family linage to Mohammad, the Shia-Muslims believe that they are the correct promoters of Islam rather than the Sunni-Muslim rulers in Saudi Arabia.
Source:
https://www.terrorism-info.org.il/en/spotlight-on-iran-july-10-17-2024/
William Garrison, 18 July 2024
image located by William Garrison, 3 September 2021
From
https://ashuraaa.wordpress.com/2012/12/05/ashura-006/. The red slogan on the
flag reads "Ya Hussain" ["Oh, Hussain"], which is an appeal that he intercede
favorably with the flag holder. He was the third Shia Imam, and who was martyred
in Karbala, Iraq c. Oct. 680 CE. The faintly readable wording above "Ya Hussain"
is a famous hadith of Prophet Muhammad that reads: "Inn al-Husain misbahul-huda
wa safinatun-najat" that symbolically means that "Husain is the lighthouse of
Islamic guidance for the lost ships [souls} and he is their rescue ship."
William Garrison, 3 September 2021
See also: Yā Hussain flag in Iran
image located by William Garrison, 9 January 2023
A rose-red-field Shia-Muslim flag beseeching in the middle green Farsi
slogan: "Oh, Hussain", with more slogans in the four yellow rectangular boxes.
The slogan in the top right yellow box reads: "Peace Be Upon Hussain", while the
other three remaining boxes all have the same slogan: "and the children of
Hussain"; c. 1999. A hidden flag-pole sleeve is at the right (hoist). Imam
Hussain was killed at the Battle of Karbala in 680 C.E. along with two of his
young sons, and other supporters. Essentially, this flag implores the spirit of
Hussain to assist the flag carrier to overcome some burden.
William Garrison,
9 January 2023
image located by William Garrison, 29 December 2023
A red-field flag with the white Persian/Farsi slogan "Ya Zinab
al-Kobra/Kubra" perhaps better known as "Zaynab bint Ali". Zaynab (c 626–682),
was the eldest daughter ("bint") of Fatimah and Imam Ali, and was the
granddaughter of the Muslim prophet Mohammad. She is best known for her role in
the aftermath of the "Battle of Karbala" (680CE), in which her brother
Hussain/Husayn and most of her male relatives were massacred by the forces of
the Umayyad caliph Yazid ibn Muawiyah. Women and children in Husayn's camp were
taken captive after the battle and marched to the Umayyad capital Damascus,
where Zaynab gave impassioned speeches, condemning Yazid and spreading the news
of Karbala. She was later freed and died shortly afterwards in 682. A shrine is
dedicated to her in Damascus. She is considered to be a symbol of sacrifice,
strength, and piety in Islam, and a role model for Muslim women, typifying
courage, leadership, and defiance against oppression. The flag's hoist is most
likely on its right. This flag was seen draping the coffin of Iranian Brig. Gen.
Razi Mousavi, a senior commander in the "Quds Force" of Iran's "Islamic
Revolution Guard Corps" (IRGC) [who was killed on December 25, 2023, in an
Israeli airstrike outside Damascus] during his funeral procession at the Imam
Ali shrine in Iraq's holy city of Najaf on December 27, 2023. During Mousavi's
burial ceremony in Tehran, his coffin was draped with the national flag of Iran.
Various Shiite militias operating in Iraq, Lebanon, and Syria are named after
her. Essentially, this flag is an appeal by its carrier asking Zaynab to
spiritually intervene in supporting the Shiite flag bearer's cause in overcoming
some disorder.
Source:
https://www.timesofisrael.com
William Garrison, 29 December
2023
image located by William Garrison, 13 November 2022
From
https://www.al-monitor.com
A white-field flag with a facial drawing of
Sayyid "Mohammad Mohammed Sadiq Al-Sadr" (or 'Sadir'} {b. 1943 - d. 1999}. He
was a Grand Ayatollah for Shia-Muslims in Iraq. During the reign of Iraq Pres.
Saddam Hussein (dictator: 1979-2003, and a Sunni-Muslim), Sadiq called for
government reform and asked for the release of detained Shia leaders. Saddam saw
Sadiq as a potential political threat, and allegedly had a "hit squad"
assassinate Sadiq and two of his sons on 23 March 1999. His youngest son,
"Muqtada al-Sadr" survived, (b. 1974) would oppose the U.S. intervention in Iraq
(c. 2003-2011) and later (c.2018-2022) was an influential political leader in
Baghdad. Below his portrait his name "Sadr" {in Arabic} appears, and the red
lettering reads: "the honor of the Arabs." This flag was paraded on March 9,
2022 to denounce rising prices of basic food items in Al-Haboby/Al-Habboubi
Square in the center of the city of Nasiriyah in the southern Dhi Qar province
of Iraq. While the flag honors Sadiq Al-Sadr and is more of a religious
Shia-Muslim flag, here it is being used as a "protest" flag against an
ineffective government.
William Garrison, 13 November 2022