Izan zirelako, gara, eta girelako izango dira.

 


 Website of the North American Basque Organizations, Inc.


"Because they were, we are, and because we are they will be."

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SYMBOLS of the Basques


ikurrinaArticle 5 of the 1979 Statutes of Autonomy establishes the Ikurriņa as the national flag of the Basque Country and also recognises the flags and insignias of the Historical Territories or Provinces that make up the Basque Autonomous Community.

The flag or "ikurrina" of the Basque Country consists of a green diagonal cross, a white vertical cross and red background.

It was originally designed as the flag of Bizkaia by the brothers Luis and Sabino de Arana Goiri, who respectively inspired and founded Basque nationalism. As a consequence of its use during the first 30 years of the 20th century in all kinds of events and its widespread use throughout the Basque provinces of Gipuzkoa, Alava and Navarra, as well as in the French Basque Country, it ceased to be purely the flag of a political party and was adopted as the Basque flag. In 1936, the Basque Government declared it to be the national emblem.

According to its designers, the Ikurriņa was based on the flag of Bizkaia. The red background was taken from the coat of arms of Bizkaia. The green cross of St Andrew (the colour green was an allusion to the oak tree in the coat of arms of Bizkaia) was placed on this red background.  The white cross was also taken from the one superimposed over the oak in this same coat of arms. Its symbolism, according to the intentions of its authors, was simple: Bizkaia, its individual rights and religious faith hierarchically related

 
 The Official Basque Anthem was approved by the Basque Parliament in Law 8/1983 on April 14 1983. From that moment, the anthem, together with the Basque flag, has become one of the Basques' most representative symbols.

The anthem, which has no lyrics, is based on a popular melody that was played before dances as a sort of flag-salute. Later, Sabino Arana Goiri, the father of Basque nationalism, wrote some lyrics and adapted them to the old tune, thus creating Gora ta Gora, now the official anthem of the PNV, the Basque Nationalist Party.

In 1935, the first Basque Government, a coalition formed by the PNV, PSOE (Spanish socialist party), Partido Republicano, ANV and the Communist Party approved the Official Anthem as we know it today. Forty-eight years later, in 1983, the Basque Parliament decided that the melody shown below was no longer exclusively identified with any particular political party and could be accepted as the official anthem:


 


 
 

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