SHARE
COPY LINK

FLAG

Danish family reported to police for flying US flag

A family from the town of Kolding in southern Denmark was asked to take down the American Stars and Stripes from a flagpole in their garden.

Danish family reported to police for flying US flag
Photo: Iris/Scanpix

Official flag rules in Denmark state that, unless special authorisation is given, it is not permitted to fly any other national flags than the Danish Dannebrog, a white Scandinavian cross on a red background.

Police visited the family at their home on Monday and asked them to lower the American flag, reports local media Jydske Vestkysten.

The flag has flown from a flagpole in the Hedegård family’s garden for the last month. Police received reports of a prohibited flag being flown at the address, according to the report.

The family was reportedly advised it could receive a fine of 2,500 kroner ($375) if it did not lower the flag.

READ ALSO: New Danish flag trend sparks outrage

Rikke Hedegård told Jydske Vestkysten that she was disappointed that nobody spoke to her before reporting the flag.

“My thoughts are that if someone was so offended, why didn’t they stop by and mention it? We go outside almost every day, so just stop by and listen to our story,” she said.

The family chose to fly the flag because they like American culture, Hedegård said.

“We feel we are a part of American culture in Denmark,” she told Jydske Vestkysten.

“I could understand if it was a Nazi or Isis flag, but an American flag, I don’t understand that at all. But it’s probably because [complainants] are not part of the culture,” she said.

There are some exceptions to Danish flag rules – the Greenland and Faroe Islands flags, along with flags of the other Nordic countries, the EU and the UN may be flown, according to Ministry of Justice guidelines.

If permission is given to fly other countries’ flags, this is usually on condition that a Danish flag of at least equal size be hoisted alongside the foreign flag.

The ban on flying foreign flags in Denmark dates back to 1915. 

READ ALSO: Danish PM in 'embarrassing' Faroes flag blunder

FLAG

Norwegian flag taken down in US town after being confused for Confederate banner

A guesthouse in the United States decided to take down a Norwegian flag which it had on display, after receiving complaints from people who confused it with the Confederate flag.

Norwegian flag taken down in US town after being confused for Confederate banner
Easy to confuse? Composite: AFP/Denise Jans on Unsplash

The Norwegian flag in question hung outside the entrance of a bed and breakfast in St. Johns, Michigan. The story was first reported by local media Lansing State Journal.

The Nordic Pineapple — an American Civil war-era mansion converted into tourist accommodation — displayed the Norwegian flag alongside the Stars and Stripes at its entrance.

Owners Kjersten and Greg Offenbecker decided to fly Norway’s flag as a nod to Kjersten Offenbecker’s Nordic heritage after opening the business in 2018, the Lansing State Journal writes.

But they recently took it down after receiving “at least a dozen hateful emails,” and twice as many comments, according to the report.

The Norwegian flag – a Scandinavian cross with a blue cross enclosed in a white on a red background – uses the same colours as the controversial Confederate flag – a blue x with white stars on a red background.

As such, confusion is arguably possible from a distance or when the flag is hanging downwards in calm weather, particularly for people not used to the sight of Norway’s flag.

Kjersten Offenbecker said she and her husband were new in the town and first heard of the mix-up when a local shop owner told them a customer had mentioned their bed and breakfast to him.

“I was so happy at first,” Offenbecker said to Lansing State Journal. Then he told her the customer thought we were flying the Confederate flag.

 

“We were panicked initially because we were like, ‘Oh my Gosh. This town thinks that we’re hanging the Confederate flag,” she said.

“I don’t see it because I grew up with the Norwegian Flag,” Kjersten Offenbecker said “To me they are two distinct flags.”

Greg Offenbecker told the paper he couldn’t understand the confusion.

“It bugs me as far as the stupidity of people,” he said.

“Even if the flag is blowing in the wind or laying limp, there are no stars on it. They look nothing alike.”

Both the Norwegian and US flags have now been removed by the guesthouse.

“Given the current cultural climate and the idea that people are judging us based on the misconception of the national Norwegian flag vs. the Confederate flag, this is what is best for our family and our Inn,” the couple wrote in a July 20th post on The Nordic Pineapple's Facebook page.

They also responded on Thursday to support they received after the story made national news in the US.

“We are overwhelmed by the positive messages and responses we have received and feel truly blessed. As we continue to pore over the comments of support and encouragement, we have been faced with a new decision about whether or not to re-hang our beloved flags,” they wrote in a new Facebook post.

READ ALSO: Nazi flag near Norway motorway causes road closure

SHOW COMMENTS