Last modified: 2008-08-09 by ian macdonald
Keywords: indian national congress |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
The Indian National Congress flag (seen on television) was simply the Indian national flag with the party's symbol instead of the wheel. Their symbol is a right hand, and was seen at: http://www.indiavotes.com/parties/INC.shtml (link now lost). On the flag the hand was drawn in the same size, style, and colour as the wheel would normally be, i.e. dark blue lines, and with white instead of the 'skin' colour.
Kjell Roll Elgsaas, 22 February 1998
The Indian elections have resulted in some useful television coverage from a
vexillological point of view. The news programme on BBC4 called "The World" has
had extensive reporting from India, including good shots of the flag. I made
this one using the national flag image and the hand symbol from the Congress
Party's website. I have made the colours on this image darker than on the
front page because all the representations I have seen of
the flag, on television and on the web, seem to justify this. This then leads to
an inconsistency because the national flag is based on the flag of the Congress
and they ought to be the same. However, it is safe to say that, in practice,
there are significant variations in the colours of real flags and the image
above represents a flag which is actually used.
André Coutanche, 20 May 2004
I don't know when it was first used, but I can confirm that the flag of the
Congress Party does still have the spinning wheel in the center, as of the late
1990s. I received a small example from a visitor to New Delhi at that time when
I believe they were being waved in support of Congress candidate Sonya Gandhi.
Steve Kramer, 2 April 2003
There is no doubt from the television coverage that the hand is the current
symbol and is actually used, but the website of the
Congress Party does show a small logo
which has a flag with the spinning wheel, though the hand is dominant on its
site. Perhaps the hand has replaced the earlier spinning wheel, or perhaps the
spinning wheel remains the de jure symbol and the hand is used de
facto.
André Coutanche, 20 May 2004
The "Constitution and Rules of the Indian National Congress" seems to support
André's hypothesis - with a Charkah (spinning wheel):
"Article II - A Party
Flag The flag of the Indian National Congress shall consist of three horizontal
colours: saffron, white and green with a picture of a Charkah in Blue in the
Centre. It shall be made of certified Khadi."
http://www.aicc.org.in/Constitution%20FINAL%2012.6.08.pdf - Document last
amended on 17 November 2007, available on the party's website.
The use of
"certified Khadi" (cotton cloth) recalls Gandhi's call for the use of local
clothes and home spinning of "khadi".
Ivan Sache, 17 July 2008
My understanding was that a charkha a spinning wheel, as opposed to
the chakrah (simply "wheel") on the national flag.
Joe McMillan,
18 July 2008
See also: