-Caveat Lector-

http://www.thescotsman.co.uk/international.cfm?id=1060392002
Tue 24 Sep 2002


Saltire hijacked by US far-right group

Paul Gallagher and Fiona Stewart

ONE of the fastest-growing white supremacist groups in the United States has hijacked 
the
Saltire to

symbolise its struggle for a political system run by Celtic "kith and kin".

Scottish tourists visiting Florida and the southern states on holiday have been warned 
that
displaying Scotland’s national flag on their clothes now runs the risk of association 
with the
extremist followers of the League of the South.

The league, founded in Alabama in 1994, has nearly 10,000 members who claim Celtic
roots and campaign for the "revitalisation of a general European cultural hegemony".

It has been described as "rife with white supremacists and racist ideology" by 
researchers
from the Southern Poverty Law Centre, a civil rights institution which investigates 
right-wing
activists in the US.

Last year, the league set up an inner Circle of St Andrew for members who agreed to
donate $600 (£400) towards the salary of a full-time president. Members are given a
Saltire lapel badge, and the symbol is also displayed on their website.

Euan Hague, a professor at DePaul University, Chicago, who has studied the League of 
the
South, said the group has recently adopted the Saltire and Scotland’s patron saint .

"This group is dedicated to southern independence, which is based on their view that 
they
are descendants of an Anglo-Celtic civilisation," he said. "They are particularly 
active in
Florida, but I have also seen them at Highland games events in Dallas, Texas. It is a 
small
but very active movement."

He added: "For Scots travelling to tourist locations in Florida wearing a Scotland 
T-shirt
may be understood to mean something other than patriotic pride - like support for this
unsavoury political organisation."

The League of the South was set up by Michael Hill, a former professor of Scottish 
history.
Members often wear kilts from the grey and red Confederate Memorial Tartan and play
bagpipes at meetings. The group has 96 chapters in 20 states and is distinguished from
other extreme right-wing groups because of the high number of academics, lawyers and
professionals among its hierarchy.

The league advocates the creation of a theocratic state in which ethnic minorities are
allowed to live but would be required to submit to the "cultural dominance of the 
Anglo-
Celtic people".

In 2000, the Southern Poverty Law Centre published a 53-page report on the League of 
the
South, which it described as a "hate group". Mark Potok, the author, wrote: "This is a 
group
that, when it began six years ago, said its purpose was to defend southern values, but 
they
defend slavery, segregation, and ... say how wicked black people are."

The starry rebel cross of Old Dixie, the flag of the breakaway southern states, was
modelled on the Saltire, and the white rebels in the deep south have mythologised their
imagined Scottish heritage ever since.

The Ku Klux Klan, set up in 1867 in an attempt to restore white supremacy, is said to 
be a
reference to the south’s Highland clan ancestry. Dr Hague, who moved to the US from
Edinburgh in 1994, added: "They believe the south is Anglo-Celtic, by which they mean
Celts who speak English. This is a group completely out of touch with Scotland’s 
inclusive
and cosmopolitan society that is making Scotland’s national emblems their own."

The League of the South did not return calls from The Scotsman.

A spokesman for the SNP said: "The saltire is a Scottish symbol. Scots are an 
open-minded
nation and this group should not be abusing this symbol for their own narrow-minded
means."

Kate Smith, who is researching nationalism at Glasgow University, said: "There has 
been an
increasing trend for US campaigners to adopt Scottish national symbols, since Scotland 
is
regarded around the world as an example of "good" nationalism. The Saltire is
representative of that identity .

"I think the league’s hijacking of the Saltire could cause the average American 
citizen to
confuse our nation’s flag with right-wing extremism."

Paul Scott, the chairman of the Saltire Society, said: "This is very unfortunate . 
Although it
is deplorable, there is not a lot we can do to stop them."

Origins in the mists of history

ACCORDING to legend, the Saltire appeared as a good omen in 832AD, just as King Angus
mac Fergus was about to lead his army of Scots and Picts into battle against the
overwhelming force of the invading Northumbrians in what is now East Lothian.

Two crossed lines of white appeared against the blue background of the Scottish sky -
representing the diagonal cross on which St Andrew was martyred - and inspired the
Scottish underdogs to win what was to become known as the Battle of Athelstaneford (the
invading army was led by Athelstane, king of Northumbria).

>From that day the Saltire became the national flag of Scotland, making it possibly 
>the oldest
national flag in the world.

It was later incorporated in the Union Flag, although the colour of blue is different 
- the
Saltire is azure while in the Union Flag, it is navy blue.

In a show of support for Scotland’s history, an increasing number of the country’s 32 
local
authorities are choosing to fly the Saltire, rather than the Union Flag, all year 
round,
ignoring Westminster guidance which suggests the Saltire be flown only on St Andrew’s
Day.

The Scottish Borders Council announced last year that the Saltire would be flown from 
the
flagpole at its headquarters in Newtown St Boswells. It was following local 
authorities in
Edinburgh, Glasgow, the Highlands, Aberdeenshire, Angus, Clackmannanshire and Perth
and Kinross.

The Saltire’s design is said to have originated from the story of how the apostle 
Andrew
successfully petitioned the Roman authorities who had sentenced him to death not to 
crucify
him on the same shape of cross as Christ.


This article:

  http://www.thescotsman.co.uk/international.cfm?id=1060392002

More St Andrew's Cross:

  http://www.news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=525

Websites:

  Scottish Flag Trust
  http://www.electricscotland.com/si/features/orgs/scottish_flagtrust.htm

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