The flag of South Vietnam was first introduced by the
Provisional Central Government of Vietnam, later served as the national flag of the
State of Vietnam (known as "South Vietnam" after 1954), and its successor, the
Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) from 1948 to 1975 until the
fall of Saigon. The design consists of a yellow background with three red horizontal stripes through the middle.[1] It is used to represent the "Vietnamese Heritage and Freedom Flag".
The flag was designed by
Lê Văn Đệ in 1948.[2] The flag consists of a yellow field and three horizontal red stripes, and can be explained as emblematic of the common blood running through northern, central, and southern Vietnam.
Although South Vietnam ceased to exist in 1975, the flag is still represented among private citizens in other countries by some
Vietnamese emigrés, particularly in
North America and
Australia of
refugee-descent. Since June 2002, several American governmental bodies adopted resolutions recognizing the former flag as "Vietnamese Heritage and Freedom Flag."[3][4][5][6]
During the reign of Emperor
Gia Long (1802–1820), the yellow flag was also used as the symbol of the Empire of Vietnam. This was continued as the emperor's flag when the court of
Huế became a
French protectorate. Later the flag added a red bend on two sides.
After the deportation and exile of the emperors Thành Thái and Duy Tân, the new pro-French puppet emperor
Khải Định introduced new imperial flag as a yellow flag with single horizontal band of red, following the
Imperial Order of the Dragon of Annam. Formally known as the "
Long Tinh Kỳ [
vi]", the flag was the official flag of the Nguyễn court.
In 1945 with the French ousted by Japan, Prime Minister
Trần Trọng Kim of the newly restored
Empire of Vietnam adopted another variant of the yellow flag. It included three red bands, but the middle band was broken to form the
Quẻ Ly Flag [
vi]. Derived from the
trigrams, Quẻ Ly is the third of the Bát Quái (the Eight Trigrams – Ba gua): Càn (乾), Đoài (兌), Ly (離), Chấn (震), Tốn (巽), Khảm (坎), Cấn (艮), Khôn (坤). It was chosen to symbolize the
sun,
fire, light, and civilization. And most importantly, it represents the southern lands under the "Later Heaven" order, that is Vietnam. This flag was used briefly from June to August 1945 when
Emperor Bảo Đại abdicated.
Provisional Central Government of Vietnam and the State of Vietnam
On 2 June 1948, the prime minister of the
Provisional Central Government of Vietnam, Brigadier General
Nguyễn Văn Xuân, signed the decree with the specifications for the Vietnamese national flag as follows: "The national emblem is a flag of yellow background, the height of which is equal to two-thirds of its width. In the middle of the flag and along its entire width, there are three horizontal red bands. Each band has a height equal to one-fifteenth of the width. These three red bands are separated from one another by a space of the band's height."[7]
The new national flag was raised for the first time on 5 June 1948 on a boat named Dumont d'Urville outside of
Hạ Long Bay during the signing of the
Halong Bay Agreements (Accords de la baie d’Along) by High Commissioner
Emile Bollaert and Nguyễn Văn Xuân.[8][9]
A detailed design of the flag appeared on the newspaper on 3 June 1948, and again on the next day (with correction to the flag ratio). The residents of Hanoi were requested to display the flag at their home on 5 June 1948 to celebrate the Hạ Long Bay event.[10]
When the former emperor Bảo Đại was made
chief of state in 1949, this design was adopted as the flag of the
State of Vietnam.
The three red bands have the divination sign of Quẻ Càn, the first of the Eight Trigrams mentioned above. Quẻ Càn represents heaven. Based on the traditional worldview of the Vietnamese people, Quẻ Càn also denotes the South (as of the "Earlier Heaven" order), the Vietnamese Nation, Vietnamese people, and the people's power. Another interpretation places the three red bands as symbols of the three regions of Vietnam: North, Central, and South.
Republic of Vietnam and later
With the foundation of the republic in 1955, the flag was adopted by the successor state, the
Republic of Vietnam (more commonly known as South Vietnam). It was the national flag for the entire duration of that state's existence (1955–1975) from the First Republic to the Second Republic. With the capitulation of
Saigon on 30 April 1975, the Republic of Vietnam came to an end and the flag ceased to exist as a state symbol. Afterwards, it has been adopted by many in the Vietnamese diaspora to symbolically distance themselves from the Communist government and continues to be used either as an alternative symbol for ethnic unity or as a protest tool against the current government.
Political significance
The flag of the former South Vietnam is popular with the case of
Vietnamese Americans,
Vietnamese Australians, and other Vietnamese around the world who fled Vietnam after the war, who call it the "Vietnamese Heritage and Freedom Flag", and they started the
Battle of Co Vang [
vi] movement to struggle for recognitions for their political identity.
In 1965, the South Vietnamese flag's design was incorporated into the
Vietnam Service Medal which was created by President Lyndon Johnson and designed by
Thomas Hudson Jones and Mercedes Lee.
In 2003, the Virginian state government rejected a bill that would have recognized the South Vietnamese flag.[12]
From 2002 onward, the lobbying efforts of Vietnamese Americans resulted in the state governments of Virginia, Hawaii, Georgia, Colorado, Florida, Texas, Oklahoma,[5] Louisiana,[13] Ohio,[14] California,[15] Missouri,[16] Pennsylvania,[17] and Michigan[18] recognizing it as the symbol of the Vietnamese American Community. Also, at least 15 counties and 85 cities in 20 states have also adopted similar resolutions.[4][6]
In early 2008,
Jason Kenney,
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, posted an announcement on his website, declaring that the Canadian government recognized the flag of the Republic of Vietnam as the symbol of the
Vietnamese-Canadian community. Further, he declared that "attempts to disparage [the flag] are a deeply troubling attack on one of Canada's ethnic communities and on the principles of multiculturalism."[19] In May 2008, he made a speech at an
Army of the Republic of Vietnam rally, lending support to the program.[20]
From 2015 onward in Australia, the City Councils of Maribyrnong,[21] Greater Dandenong,[22] Yarra,[23] Fairfield,[24] Port Adelaide Enfield,[25] and Brimbank,[26] respectively, have passed motions recognizing the "Cờ Vàng" Vietnamese Heritage Flag.
Controversies
When a Vietnamese American video tape store owner displayed the current flag of Vietnam and a photo of
Ho Chi Minh in front of his store in
Westminster, California, in 1999, a month-long protest against it climaxed when 15,000 people held a candlelight vigil one night, sparking the
Hi-Tek incident (Hi-Tek was the name of the store).[27]
A faux pas by the
United States Postal Service in using the current Vietnamese flag in a brochure to represent the Vietnamese American community that it serves caused outrage among Vietnamese Americans and resulted in an apology.
In 2004, many Vietnamese American students at the
California State University, Fullerton, threatened to walk out on their graduation ceremony when the university chose to use the current flag of Vietnam to represent its Vietnamese students. The Vietnamese American students demanded that the university use the former flag of South Vietnam instead. This resulted in the university scrapping all foreign flags for the ceremony.[28]
In 2006, Vietnamese-American students at the
University of Texas at Arlington protested against the use of the Vietnamese flag in the Hall of Flags in
Nedderman Hall and the exclusion of the South Vietnamese flag at a cultural diversity show during International Week.[29] After weeks of protests, the university decided to scrap all flags from the display.
During
World Youth Day 2008 in
Sydney, tensions flared between the 800 Vietnamese pilgrims who used the flag of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and the 2300 Vietnamese Australians pilgrims who used the Republic of Vietnam flag.[30]
In 2008, many protested against Nguoi Viet Daily News, a Vietnamese-language newspaper in
Orange County, California, for publishing a photograph of an art installation[31] depicting a foot spa bearing the colors of the flag.[32]
In October 2014, the
Vietnamese Student Association chapter at the
University of Arizona discovered that the university had removed the South Vietnamese flag from the campus bookstore's Flag Display (which includes flags from all over the world to celebrate the diversity found among students). Afterwards, the VSA chapter launched an online petition in protest to the decision.[33] The university then responded and explained that the removal was due to a misunderstanding amongst the staff. It then apologized and promised to reinstall the flag afterwards.
Some theories claimed the flag was first introduced by Emperor
Thành Thái via an imperial decree in 1890.[34] Some views even claimed this flag (called The Yellow Flag for short) is the first true "national flag" of the Vietnamese people for it reflects the aspiration and hope of the people, not just the emperors, for independence and unification of the Viet nation.[35][36][37] However,
Flags of the World opposed these claims, arguing that no such flag showed up in images from Thành Thái's era, and associated claims on the Internet are not credible.[38] Phạm Quang Tuấn, professor of Chemical Engineering from
University of New South Wales, traced the claim – that the yellow flag with three red stripes had originated during Thành Thái's reign – back, at the earliest, to Nguyễn Đình Sài, a former member of the anti-communist organization
Việt Tân, who had written the article Quốc Kỳ Việt Nam: Nguồn Gốc và Lẽ Chính Thống (The National Flag of Viet Nam: Its Origin and Legitimacy) in September 2004. To back up his claim, Nguyền Đình Sài cited a webpage from Worldstatesmen website by Ben Cahoon, an
American researcher affiliated with
University of Connecticut. However, Nguyễn Đình Sài admitted Cahoon "did not name any specific documents" for Cahoon's claim that the yellow flag with three red stripes was used between 1890 and 1920.[39][40]
During the
January 6 United States Capitol attack, many South Vietnamese flags were seen in the crowd of rioters.[41][42] There were mixed reactions among Vietnamese Americans in Southern California.[43] Forty-five Vietnamese American community advocates, politicians, and business leaders signed a statement condemning the use of the South Vietnamese flag in this context,[44] and various Vietnamese American government officials also wrote statements opposing such use.[45]
During a
2022 FIFA World Cup qualifying match in
Melbourne between
Australia and
Vietnam, Vietnamese broadcasters delayed showing the match by ten minutes due to several
Vietnamese Australians waving South Vietnamese flags in support of Australia, though local security did try to prevent the flags from going into the stands. A similar issue would occur when Vietnam also delayed broadcasting a qualifying match against
Japan that year when South Vietnamese flags were found in the crowd.[46][47]
In 2023, Vietnam took issue with an Australian coin featuring the flag in its design to honour Australians who fought in the Vietnam War.[48]
NewJeans member Hanni Pham faced backlash from Vietnamese fans in 2023 after her family had posted photos with the flag.[49]
Specifications
A 2 June 1948 ordinance defined the construction of the flag in the following way: The national emblem is a flag of yellow background, the height of which is equal to two-thirds of its width. In the middle of the flag and along its entire width, there are three horizontal red bands. Each band has a height equal to one-fifteenth of the width. These three red bands are separated from one another by a space of the band's height. [50] Hence it is blazoned as Or, three bars Gules.
List of Vietnamese flags
Protectorate flag of
Annam and
Tonkin, 1885 to 9 March 1945
^Nguyễn, Ngọc Huy. (March & April 1988) "National Flags and National Anthems of Vietnam" Tự Do Dân Bản magazine, issue: 27 & 28. Re-published in July 2015.
Archived from
original (in Vietnamese). p. 3 of 15
^Chế độ Cộng sản Việt Nam (4 June 2013).
"Tìm lại những lá cờ hoàng gia xưa ở Việt Nam". Kỷ vật lịch sử. Cuộc vận động Sưu tầm và Tuyên truyền Kỷ vật lịch sử Công an Nhân dân. Archived from
the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
^Guinto, Joel; Thư, Bùi (5 May 2023).
"Vietnam objects to Australian coin with war-era yellow flag".
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Retrieved 27 July 2023. "We regret and resolutely protest against the Royal Australian Mint's and Australia Post's releases and circulation of items containing the yellow flag with three stripes, the flag of a regime which is no longer in existence," said Pham Thu Hang, deputy spokesperson of Vietnam's foreign ministry.