Kurdistan's FlagThe modern flag of
Kurdistan first appeared during the Kurdish independence movement from the Ottomans. It is said to have been created in the 1920s by the organisation of
Xoybûn (Khoyboon). However, an earlier version of this flag was flown by the Republic of Ararat in Anatolia during the period 1927-1931. It was later the flag of the Kurdish state known as the Republic of
Kurdistan in 1946, encompassing of modern province of west Azarbaijan in Iran centered at Mahabad (this province is predominantly Kurdish and is known as the ''Kurdish Azarbaijan'' in contrast to the predominantly Turkish province of east Azarbaijan in Iran). The flag is now flown by the
Kurdistan Regional Government in southern
Kurdistan. The flag is banned in Syria, Iran and Turkey. The main Kurdish characteristic of the flag is the blazing golden sun emblem at the center, which is an ancient religious and cultural symbol among the Kurds. The sun disk of the emblem has 21 rays, equal in size and shape. And the sun resembles
Nawroz, which is the first day of Kurdish New Year. The red color on the bottom resembles the blood of Kurds, and the green color represents the green land, which is Kurdistan, and the white color represents peace.
This is the Komary Mahabad's flag, 1946.
This is the new Kudish flag: