National Flag of
DPRK
65
years have elapsed since the founding of the DPRK.
Greeting
the anniversary day the Koreans look up at the national flag flying
in the blue sky.
To
look back, deprived of the country by the Japanese imperialists, the
Korean people had to suffer all sorts of national humiliation.
A
Korean athlete who won an international game was forced to bear a
Japanese flag, instead of national flag.
Accused
of having erased Japanese flags from pictures, Koreans were
imprisoned and tortured.
After
liberating Korea from the colonial rule of Japanese imperialism on
August 15, Juche 34 (1945), President Kim Il
Sung set forth a
policy to set up a unified central government and wisely led the
struggle for it.
At
the same time he matured a plan to institute a national flag of a new
state.
At
the 3rd session of the North Korean People’s Assembly on
November 18, Juche 36 (1947) he advanced an issue of instituting a
national flag and in early February in Juche 37 (1948) acquainted
himself with a design of flag and gave precious teachings.
He
pointed out that a flag of the Republic to be established should have
Korean style form and contents, teaching the ideological contents of
flag and the ways of their expression.
He
suggested making a national flag by drawing a central red panel,
white and blue stripes above and below it, a white circle near the
hoist and a five-pointed red star in the circle, a symbol of future
victory.
Under
his meticulous guidance national flag of the DPRK was completed.
The
flag is a red-blue rectangle in the ratio 1:2. It consists of a
central red panel, narrow white and blue stripes above and below and
white circle near the hoist with a five-pointed red star in it.
The
red star is symbolic of the revolutionary traditions of the
anti-Japanese revolutionary struggle led by Kim
Il Sung and the
bright future of Korea.
The
red panel symbolizes the Korean people’s loyalty to the Party and
the leader, socialist patriotism, unbreakable fighting spirit and the
invincible might of single-minded unity.
The
white circle and white stripes represent that the Korean nation is a
homogeneous nation with 5 000 year long history and resplendent
culture and the Korean people are a resourceful, diligent and valiant
people and heroic people with patriotic, honest and sturdy spirit.
The
blue stripes are symbolic of the ardent desire of the Korean people
to steadfastly fight for peace, democracy, national independence and
socialism, united firmly with the revolutionary people of the world
under the banner of anti-imperialist independence.
The
Korean people love the national flag and work dynamically, flagging
it higher.
No comments:
Post a Comment