Last modified: 2023-06-03 by zachary harden
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image
by Tomislav Todorović and Mladen Mijatov from an image by M. Schmöger
In April 2004, protests against national defence
forces' taking part in the Iraq campaign took place
in Japan. In TV reports from these protests, broadcasted in Serbia
by the RTS 1 channel on 9 April 2004, Italian peace flags were seen. The
colour pattern was: purple, dark blue, light blue, green, yellow, orange and
red; white inscription PEACE was over light blue and green. English word PEACE
was used instead of the original Italian word PACE,
probably because it is more familiar to the Japanese people, which might be
true for some other cases of its use.
Tomislav Todorović, 7 July 2005
The flag [pictured above] with the same color pattern, but lighter shades of all colors
except yellow and red, as well as a different typeface (Arial Narrow
or very similar), was seen at pacifist demonstrations in Kyoto on
2006-10-15.
Tomislav Todorović, 23 May 2020
image
by Tomislav Todorović from an image by M. Schmöger 17 October 2017
The color pattern is: dark blue, light blue, very light blue, green,
yellow, orange and red; white word PEACE is over very light blue and
green. Dark blue inclines towards both purple and intermediate blue,
light blue inclines towards cyan, very light blue and green are
lighter and yellow is darker than on most of similar flags seen
elsewhere. (Source)
Tomislav Todorović, 17 October 2017
image
by Tomislav Todorović, 23 May 2020
Despite English being much more familiar language to the Japanese
people than Italian, flags with inscription PACE are being introduced
as well. At least one such flag was seen at the Tokyo Rainbow Pride
Parade on 2016-05-08. [This Flickr photo] clearly display the same copy of the flag, all of its surface being
covered with graffiti. This third photo might also display that copy, or a completely different one, tiny
details such as the graffiti not being recognizable due to distance
from which the photo was taken. Regardless of that, the color pattern
is clearly the same in all of these cases: violet, dark blue, light
blue, green, yellow, orange and red, with the word PACE inscribed in
white over light blue and green. The fact that the flag was seen at an
LGBT-related event, not a political Pacifist one, mirrors such use in
the USA, which seems to be spreading to other countries as well.
Anything below the following line isnt part of the Flags of the World Website and was added by the hoster of this mirror.