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The420Guy
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All leaders wanted to do was celebrate the history of their small town by
creating a flag everyone would be proud to see flying above the rooftops.
Instead, they have been mocked on national television for making a local
plant their emblem. The local plant in question is cannabis. Some 250
kilometers southwest of Moscow in the Bryansk region, a yellow, green and
white flag now flies above the town hall.
In the top left-hand corner is the plant more widely known for its
hallucinogenic qualities and for being depicted on T-shirts and student
posters.
For Novozybkovo, a quiet provincial town of 43,000 that suffered greatly
from the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl, the plant is a symbol of a
long-gone glorious age when the town was a vital cog in the country's navy.
NTV television ran a gently mocking report on the new flag last week that
did not go down well with the townspeople.
"There are those who accepted it with humor and those who were offended,"
said Valery Kharkevich, the editor of the local Novozybkovskiye Vesti
newspaper, speaking about the program rather than the cannabis flag.
Town officials are flabbergasted at the fuss.
"We don't have people coming up and saying, 'No, no, no,'" said town
official Lyudmila Yefremenko. "We discussed it for a whole year."
"The color is jolly," Kharkevich said.
Cities all over the country have! been abuzz over what their flags should
look like after the government ordered that they should have their own
flags. The city of Penza stirred up controversy several months ago by
introducing a flag that bears the image of Jesus Christ.
In the 18th and 19th century, Novozybkovo was a major supplier of hemp, the
tough coarse fiber of the cannabis plant. A factory in the town supplied
the Russian Navy with the hemp used for ropes, and the plant was honored
when it was placed on the town's coat of arms in the first quarter of the
19th century.
Russia's defeat in the Crimean War in 1856 had a crippling effect on the
industry, and the decimated Russian Navy's need for hemp died out, said
Oleg Dunayev, who works at a local museum and helped the town pick the
flag's design.
Hemp was cultivated until the start of the 20th century but died out
completely with Stalin's campaign to set up collective farms.
Kharkevich denied that Novozybkovo has any particular drug problems! .
"Of course there are incidents," he said. "But this is a g! lobal tr end."
Indeed, the only protests in Novozybkovo, city officials said, have been
from local Communists. They didn't like the color of the flag and wanted it
to be red.
Source: Moscow Times, The (Russia)
Author: Kevin O' Flynn
Published: Friday, April 4, 2003 - Page 3
Copyright: 2003 The Moscow Times
Contact: oped@imedia.ru
Website: Издательский дом "Moscow Times"
creating a flag everyone would be proud to see flying above the rooftops.
Instead, they have been mocked on national television for making a local
plant their emblem. The local plant in question is cannabis. Some 250
kilometers southwest of Moscow in the Bryansk region, a yellow, green and
white flag now flies above the town hall.
In the top left-hand corner is the plant more widely known for its
hallucinogenic qualities and for being depicted on T-shirts and student
posters.
For Novozybkovo, a quiet provincial town of 43,000 that suffered greatly
from the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl, the plant is a symbol of a
long-gone glorious age when the town was a vital cog in the country's navy.
NTV television ran a gently mocking report on the new flag last week that
did not go down well with the townspeople.
"There are those who accepted it with humor and those who were offended,"
said Valery Kharkevich, the editor of the local Novozybkovskiye Vesti
newspaper, speaking about the program rather than the cannabis flag.
Town officials are flabbergasted at the fuss.
"We don't have people coming up and saying, 'No, no, no,'" said town
official Lyudmila Yefremenko. "We discussed it for a whole year."
"The color is jolly," Kharkevich said.
Cities all over the country have! been abuzz over what their flags should
look like after the government ordered that they should have their own
flags. The city of Penza stirred up controversy several months ago by
introducing a flag that bears the image of Jesus Christ.
In the 18th and 19th century, Novozybkovo was a major supplier of hemp, the
tough coarse fiber of the cannabis plant. A factory in the town supplied
the Russian Navy with the hemp used for ropes, and the plant was honored
when it was placed on the town's coat of arms in the first quarter of the
19th century.
Russia's defeat in the Crimean War in 1856 had a crippling effect on the
industry, and the decimated Russian Navy's need for hemp died out, said
Oleg Dunayev, who works at a local museum and helped the town pick the
flag's design.
Hemp was cultivated until the start of the 20th century but died out
completely with Stalin's campaign to set up collective farms.
Kharkevich denied that Novozybkovo has any particular drug problems! .
"Of course there are incidents," he said. "But this is a g! lobal tr end."
Indeed, the only protests in Novozybkovo, city officials said, have been
from local Communists. They didn't like the color of the flag and wanted it
to be red.
Source: Moscow Times, The (Russia)
Author: Kevin O' Flynn
Published: Friday, April 4, 2003 - Page 3
Copyright: 2003 The Moscow Times
Contact: oped@imedia.ru
Website: Издательский дом "Moscow Times"