during the
2019–2020 Hong Kong protests Phrases equivalent to
liberty or death have appeared in a variety of other places. In the summer of 1787, the armed citizens' militia of the
Dutch Republic paraded and drilled beneath banners extolling "Liberty or Death". Soon after, amid the
French Revolution, the sentence that would become the national motto of
France "Liberté égalité fraternité" ("Liberty, equality, fraternity") was sometimes written as "Liberté, égalité, fraternité ou la mort" ("Liberty, equality, fraternity or death"). The
Society of United Irishmen in the 1790s and 1800s adopted 'Liberty or Death' as a slogan. During the
1798 rebellion appeals to the population were printed out featuring the heading "Liberty or Death!". It was also a rallying cry of the 1804
Castle Hill convict rebellion in Australia staged by United Irishmen convicts. During the
Greek War of Independence in the 1820s, "Liberty or Death" (
Eleftheria i thanatos) became a rallying cry for Greeks who rebelled against
Ottoman rule. During this same period, Emperor
Pedro I of Brazil purportedly uttered the famous Pedro I of Brazil#Independence or Death|"Cry from [the river] Ipiranga", "Independence or Death" (
Independência ou Morte) in 1821, when Brazil was still a colony of
Portugal. The 1833 national anthem of
Uruguay, "
Orientales, la Patria o la Tumba", contains the line
¡Libertad o con gloria morir! ("Liberty or with glory to die!").
Serbian Chetnik Organization, formed in early 20th Century, had "Sloboda ili smrt/Freedom or Death" as one of its mottos. During the
Russian Civil War, the flag used by
Nestor Makhno's anarchist
Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine had the dual slogans "Liberty or Death" and "The Land to the Peasants, the Factories to the Workers" embroidered in silver on its two sides. In March 1941, the motto of the public demonstrations in the
Kingdom of Yugoslavia against the signing of a treaty with Nazi Germany was "Better grave than slave" (
Bolje grob nego rob). During the
Indonesian National Revolution, the
Pemuda ("Youth") used the phrase
Merdeka atau Mati ("Freedom or Death"). In the 1964 speech "
The Ballot or the Bullet" in
Cleveland,
Malcolm X said, "It'll be ballots, or it'll be bullets. It'll be liberty, or it will be death. The only difference about this kind of death—it'll be reciprocal." In 2012, Ren Jianyu, a Chinese 25-year-old former college student village official, was given a two-year
re-education through labor sentence for an online speech against the
Chinese Communist Party. A T-shirt of Ren saying "Give me liberty or give me death!" (in Chinese) was presented as evidence of his guilt. In the 2022
COVID-19 protests in China, a man in
Chongqing was filmed giving a speech criticizing harsh lockdown measures, shouting "Give me liberty or give me death!" in Chinese repeatedly to the cheers of onlookers. == See also ==