Last modified: 2008-05-03 by bruce berry
Keywords: south africa | boere weerstandsbeweging | bwb | awb | afrikaner weerstandsbeweging | sevens: 3 | swastika: three legged | neonazi | nazi | boer | african student federation |
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The three black 7s (arranged in a fashion similar to the Three
Legs of Man but rotated so that the top seven is upright) is the emblem
of the
Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) (Afrikaner Resistance Movement in
English) which is a right-wing, neo-Nazi organisation) which appears
on its flag (on a white disc at the centre of a red field).
Theo Stylianides, Nov 1996
Notice the white disk is closer to the hoist (like the national
flag of Nazi Germany and unlike most modern
neonazi flags, which have centered discs). I would have expected this
flag to be orange, not red.
António Martins, 18 Apr 1998
[This flag and its symbol are] now also being used by European Nazis
as they have volunteered to fight in a race war in South Africa.
António Martins, 27 May 1998, quoting
Nazism
Exposed | Flags and Symbols (Pål’s site)
Illustrations of the two AWB flags can be found in my article "Flags
of Political Organisations in South Africa" SAVA
Newsletter 2/91, Nov. 1991, p. 7.
Theo Stylianides, Nov 1996
The Transvaal
vierkleur with
3 black sevens on the white stripe seems to be a once-off flag used on
some or other occasion by followers of the AWB.
Theo Stylianides, Nov 1996
The "777" might be like this or in one of the AWB's usual arrangements:
swastika
or
1+2.
António Martins, 29 Apr 1999
The three "7" are
arranged horizontally in your image while in the image that I have the 7s are arranged in form
of "Trinacria" (i.e. emblem of Isle of Man or Sicily).
I found the following note:
"In 1970, Eugene Terre'Blanche with 6 other kindred souls founded the
Afrikaner Resistance Movement (AWB). From this committee of seven, the
AWB emblem, "Three Sevens", was created in contrast with the number 666
of the satanic forces".
Jaume Ollé, 14 Mar 1999
This symbol is clearly a variation of the Nazi swastika, just one leg
less -- regardless of any other "symbolism" provided for it.
António Martins, 16 Apr 1999
image by António Martins, 04 Oct 1998
This was the flag of Boere Weersdandsbeweging (BWB) (Boer Resistance
Movement in English) which was black with white cross fimbrated red; in the center of the
cross is a white circle fimbrated red with three black "7"s. The BWB was initially
led by Eddie von Maltitz and subsequently by Andrew Ford. (I don’t know
if this organisation still exists).
Theo Stylianides, Nov 1996
The flag described above (black field with a white cross fimbriated
red (George, not Scandinavian); three black upright sevens, one above and
two below, on a white disc fimbriated red at the centre) was the original
flag of the BWB. A colour photograph of a crowd waving this flag appeared
in the Sunday Times, Johannesburg during 1990 (unfortunately I don’t have
the exact date).
Theo Stylianides, Nov 1996
When Andrew Ford took over the leadership the flag was replaced by a
similar one instead of having the three 7s, bears the letters BWB in white arranged in a triangular fashion (pointing downwards) on a similarly directed
black triangle.
Theo Stylianides, Nov 1996
Illustrations of the two BWB flags can be found in my article "Flags
of Political Organisations in South Africa" SAVA
Newsletter 2/91, Nov. 1991, p. 7.
Theo Stylianides, Nov 1996
The odal rune is used the by
the Afrikaner Student Federation.
António Martins, 18 Apr 1998
Details about the odal rune can be found at
http://www.symbols.com/encyclopedia/39/3922.html
Santiago Dotor, 04 Feb 2005
An odal rune is a "runic letter, (usu. traslit. "ö"), cognate to Greek
omega a.k.a. _ethel_ and _othalan_. .
The rune for odal, i.e. real estate, non-movable property. The odal rune
was the last letter of the runic alphabet, and (here runic letter "ᚠ",
usu. traslit. "f")
for fä (cattle), i.e. movable or personal property, was is the first.
This seems too focused in Viking book keeping; runes were letters, as such with
a lot of usages apart from plain writing down of sound utterances.
This rune, turned upside down, is the symbol of the Scottish Independence Party
and was used at the elections in Great Britain in 1992.
I wonder weather this is more than a coincidence. The saltire-like part of this
letter, BTW, is subjected to such a variation that it appears much less evident
in some instances.
It is also a Swedish twentieth-century graffiti sign conveying a nationalistic
message.
Not only Swedish, and not even primarily so: the Nazi usage of runes as symbols
is known - our site covers it well at naz_symb.html#odal. From there to
neo-Nazi symbolism it's a quick jump. (The referred Swedish usage was reported
to the list and appears in se}naz.html).
António Martins-Tuválkin, 05 Feb 2005
image by Clive Nel, 12 June 2006
I contacted you a few weeks ago to point out that the flag shown on your
website for the Afrikaans Student Federation differed from the one shown in a
book about flags that I had borrowed from the public library. I've just borrowed
the book again so can give you more information. The title of the book is
Illustrated Encyclopedia World Flags Identifier, by Alfred Znamierowski
(Lorenz Books 2000,2001). The Afrikaans Student Federation flag is shown in
colour
on page 118. The flag differs from that shown on your website in that the
Odal-Rune lacks the 'feet-like' bits sticking out at the bottom.
The type of Odal-Rune shown in the book was also widely used by
right-wing nationalist youth groups like the Wiking Jugend in Germany and
other counties but
was banned in Germany in 1994. The flag used by the Wiking Jugend
was black with a red Odal-Rune in its centre.
Arthur Read, 16 May 2006