In 1958 the National council for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Tests changed its name to the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) and was ready to mobilize its members and start marching against nuclear issues in Great Britain. A textile designer, Gerald Holtom felt strongly about the CNDs mission. Aware that there would be a march soon he created a symbol for the marchers to carry, to symbolize their objective. Originally he wanted to base the design on the Christian cross but met with opposition from church leaders in Great Britain. Putting his creative mind to work he came across the Navy's semaphore chart and how the letters N and D were signaled. N was a figure standing tall with his arms held down at a 45 degree angle; D was the figure standing tall with one arm held vertically up, the other down. The Nuclear Disarmament symbol was born and accepted by the CND.
The symbol may have first appeared in the United States on a Committee for Nonviolent Action (CVNA) circular in Connecticut in 1960. After that it spread across Europe and America through its use at a number of nuclear oriented protests, marches and events. The hippies adopted it, soldiers in Vietnam wore it under their uniform shirts and displayed it on their helmets. The meaning changed from nuclear disarmament to a desire for world peace. Some have called it a protest symbol.
In 1970 the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office declared that no one owned the rights to the peace symbol; it was free for anyone's use. That released the symbol into the public domain. In Peace: The Biography of a Symbol, Ken Kolsbun and Michael S. Sweeney remind us that even the Lucky Strike cigarette company tried to use the peace symbol to spur more interest in their product by putting it on their packs. It didn't work.
The creative use and placement of peace symbols has made it a ubiquitous part of the world culture. It is found on clothing, flags, buttons, patches, posters, baby teething rings (see picture #3, it is the yellow peace symbol to the left of the peace sign), and a myriad of other things.
Don't confuse the peace symbol with the peace sign. The peace sign has a colorful history. Some Christian hardliners claim it is a Satanic symbol, Churchill used it to signal victory, and Richard Nixon, well . . . he just used it. It cannot be denied that the V sign made by the index and second finger now stands for peace.
The peace symbol. It is here to stay. Too bad peace is not.
Published by V. Hughes
As a fully ordained Buddhist monk (cleric) I offer Buddhist and meditation instruction through the Engaged Dharma blog on Wordpress.com, and through weekly meetings in St. Louis, MO, and at the Buddha Center... View profile
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- Some have called it a protest symbol.
- The creative use and placement of peace symbols has made it a ubiquitous part of the world culture.
2 Comments
Post a CommentThe peace symbol is a circle with a dove track in it. Not a chicken track.
This was very informative, thanks!