
Last modified: 2024-11-16 by daniel rentería
Keywords: guaraní | guarany | guaranee | doubt | ñandutí | nandutí | spider web | lace | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
![[flag]](../images/x/xg.gif)
image by Francisco Gregoric, 08 May 2008
See also:
“El 
pueblo guaraní: unidad y fragmentos”, by Bartomeu Melià, 
says that: «En sus escuelas ondean las banderas de los países 
que se establecieron en su territorio; naturalmente no hay bandera 
guaraní», meaning that «In their schools, they 
fly the flags of the countries that have established themselves in their 
territory, naturally there is no Guarani flag.» 
Unless this is a convoluted and misleading way to say that the Guarany 
people has no independent state of its own, Bartomeu Melià seems 
to be quite wrong or at least outdated: 
There is a Guaraní flag. Even more than one, it seems. Most 
references to actual Guarany flags are from Argentina, 
not from Paraguay.
António Martins, 22 Apr 2008
There are variants of Guarani flags raised by Guarani people in 
Argentina.
Francisco Gregoric, 08 May 2008
There are two versions reported:
These accounts of use of a green-brown-red flag by Guaranies in 
northern Argentina dovetail with the red-green-coffee horizontal tricolor 
of the proposed Chaco Boliviano department, in 
(neighbouring) SW Bolivia, as put forward by the 
local Assembly of the Guarany Nation. 
The apparent contradiction green-brown-red vs. red-green-brown may be 
due to inaccurate reporting or an actual vexillological variation.
António Martins, 22 Apr 2008
Indeed this tricolor flag does exist. Also at 
Indymedia.ORG, 
a photo of the flag appears. However the order there is 
red-brown-green. Therefore there is a contradiction in the order of 
the colors: the flag in the photo may be upside down, or the description 
made before could be wrong. As reported before, the colors are the same 
ones of the proposed Chaco Boliviano department 
flag but with different order.
Francisco Gregoric, 08 May 2008
![[flag]](../images/x/xg2.gif)
image by Francisco Gregoric, 08 May 2008
At the 
Coaj.ORG, 
the necrology of Gloria “Chocha” Pérez, Cuña 
Campinta, of Fraile Pintado, Ledesma department, Jujuy 
province, Argentina. The 
photo 
is captioned as showing «Gloria portando la bandera 
Guaraní junto a su pueblo» («Gloria carrying 
the Guarany flag among her/its people»). It shows what seems to be 
a red over dark green flag, but too limp to show any more details.
António Martins, 22 Apr 2008
At another event held at the same village — Fraile Pintado, 
Ledesma department, Jujuy province, Argentina 
— a different (?) flag was used.
António Martins, 23 Apr 2008
![[flag]](../images/x/xg3.gif)
image by António Martins, 15 Nov 2017
In this 
article, an officially sponsored gathering of native peoples in 
Jujuy province, Argentina, held in April 2008, 
is reported. This included ceremonial hoisting of the 
Argentine national flag, of the «Bandera 
Whipala» in this case probably the Qulla 
Suyu western Inca — white-diagonal chequered flag, and of a 
Guarany flag (presented as «la Bandera Guaraní», 
the Guarany flag) — see 
photo.
The latter seems to be a red over light blue bicolor, although the photo 
is too unclear to be sure. It may be the mentioned red-green 
flag, oddly litten and/or bleached. Both events reported were held at 
the same village — Fraile Pintado, Ledesma department, 
Jujuy province, Argentina.
António Martins, 23 Apr 2008
![[logo]](../images/p/py_gua.gif)
![[logo]](../images/x/xg_nnt.gif)
image from Wikimedia Commons, modified by António Martins-Tuválkin, 15 August 2024
Other sites:
Clearly a derivative of the Paraguayan national 
flag, charged over all with a native artistic motive.
António Martins, 06 Nov 1999
The symbol in the middle of the Guarani flag appears to be a piece 
of nanduti or “spider web” lace. (To see examples of nanduti 
lace patterns, go to 
onParaguay.COM.)
I question whether this is a “real” flag. I spent several 
weeks in Paraguay on two separate occasions, and never saw the flag 
pictured here, though the Paraguayan flag was prominently displayed in many 
places. I realize that this doesn’t prove anything, but it does make 
me wonder if the flag pictured here is just a nice design to decorate a 
web page, rather than a flag the Guarani people consider their own.
Terry Jaisy, 27 Apr 2001
Has anyone actually seen this flag other than on the website referred 
to above? Is there any literature or news reports of its use? Is there a 
definition or construction sheet someplace?
Terence Martin, 29 Apr 2003
Apparently not. At worse this is the usual Paraguay 
national flag pattern (tricolor without the 
emblem) charged with a traditional Guarani ornament, used just once as 
a flag analogue. It might be something more solid than that, though. I 
don’t know.
António Martins, 29 Apr 2003
I saw no evidence that this flag exists in any form. It appears this 
design is used on just this website, and has never been created in 
cloth.
 
Terence Martin, 21 Apr 2008
It is not really a (officially recognized) flag. It is an invention 
of mine which uses a symbol of the Guarani culture based on a drawing 
realized by a member of a Guarani community, first published by the 
Hispano-Paraguayan scholar Bartomeu Meliá. 
I wanted it to symbolize and to recognize the Guarani roots of the 
Paraguayan nation, which actually are not at all represented through the 
official symbolism of the Paraguayan State.
Wolf Lustig (editor of the website where the flag design 
	appears), 21 Apr 2008
Wolf Lustig needed a Guarany language icon to go with the 
flags used to symbolize other language versions 
of his website, and he pasted a Guarany “national ornament” 
on the flag of that country where Guarany language enjoys the best status 
(Paraguay).
António Martins, 22 Apr 2008
The source for the second image (from Wikimedia Commons) is not from Wolf Lustig's personal webpage, but rather the
website of the South American chapter of N.F.-Board — the extra-FIFA
international soccer entity that caters especially to unrecognized non-independent territorial/cultural entities. Their domain, csanf.org,
was taken by squatters, and all the relevant archives don’t include the flag image. As archived in 2011, only an emblem is shown; certainly no flag. In practice, N.F.-Board stopped operating in 2012, for
what’s worth. Its South American members left for a rival outfit, the
CONIFA, even before that, but apparently no Guarany team ever made the
transition.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 15 August 2024 & 30 September 2024
![[emblem]](../images/x/xg)nnt.gif)
image from Wikimedia Commons, modified by António Martins-Tuválkin, 15 August 2024
Anything below this line was not added by the editor of this page.