(since 1947) is saffron, white, and green , the flag of the
Maratha Empire In
politics, it was used by the
Indian independence movement, and it was chosen as one of the three colours of the
Indian national flag after independence in 1947, and is used by
Hindus. India saffron, representing courage and sacrifice, was chosen for one of the three bands of the
National Flag of India, along with
white (peace and truth) and what is now called
India green (faith and chivalry). The Flag of India is officially described in the
Flag Code of India as follows:The colour of the top panel shall be India saffron (Kesari) and that of the bottom panel shall be India green. The middle panel shall be white, bearing at its centre the design of
Ashoka Chakra in navy blue colour with 24 equally spaced spokes.
Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, who later became India's first
Vice President and second
President, described the significance of the Indian National Flag as follows: The use of saffron in the national flag and as political symbolism has been opposed. Because Therevada Buddhist monks were at the forefront of the
2007 Burmese anti-government protests, the uprising has been referred to as the
Saffron Revolution by some in the international media.
Hindutva , Indian prime minister
Narendra Modi and the
RSS chief
Mohan Bhagwat in saffron robes The saffron flag (
bhagwa dhwaj) of the medieval Hindu warrior
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj was held in high esteem by
far-right Hindutva organisations such as the
Hindu Mahasabha and
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) in the 1920s as a supposed representation of Hindu resurgence and militaristic tradition. The saffron flag was the "true guru" to which
Hedgewar demanded obeisance from the RSS members. "The Gerva [saffron] Flag shall be the flag of the Hindu nation. With its Om, the Swastik and the Sword, it appeals to the sentiments cherished by our race since the Vaidik [Vedic] days," he said. The
Bharatiya Jana Sangh and its successor
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) both used saffron as their colour. The BJP used a saffron lotus on its flag, along with a green side band that possibly reflected an attempted image of accommodation with Islam. The
Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP), a Hindutva organisation affiliated with the RSS, also used saffron as its predominant colour, with its ascetic leaders clad in saffron robes and lay leaders wearing saffron scarves. During the
Ram Rath Yatra movement in 1990, the VHP and its affiliate
Bajrang Dal distributed saffron flags and saffron headbands to their followers by the millions. The predominance of the saffron symbolism in the BJP and its allies led to the BJP being referred to as the 'saffron party' in the 1990s, and the term '
saffronisation' came to be used describe the increasing influence of
Hindutva across India. This period saw phrases such as the "saffronisation of the coastal belt", "saffronisation of Karnataka" and "saffronisation of the Congress(I)". Academic and non-academic scholars wrote books with titles involving 'saffron' to refer to Hindu nationalism, such as the
Brotherhood in Saffron,
Khaki Shorts and Saffron Flags, and
The Saffron Wave. == Clothing ==