Disability flag
The Disability Flag, Disability Pride Flag or Flag of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities is a flag that represents people with any kind of disabilities. It was created by the disabled activist Ann Magill.
Disability Pride flag
The Disability Pride flag represents the Disability Pride Movement. The original Disability Pride flag was created in 2016 by Ann Magill, an American woman with cerebral palsy, and featured a zig-zag or lightning bolt design. After receiving input from people with visually triggering disabilities, the flag was changed in 2021 to have muted colors and straight diagonal stripes. The concept and design of the Disability Pride Flag were inspired and influenced by social movements such as LGBTQ pride and Black pride.The flag has been used at various events in the United States, Canada, and Australia. In 2024, a crosswalk in Alberta, Canada was painted with the colors of the flag.
The Disability Pride Flag is a charcoal grey flag bisected diagonally from the top left corner to the lower right corner by five parallel stripes in red, pale gold, pale grey, light blue, and green. The diagonal bands are intended to signify "cutting across barriers that disabled people face."
Meaning of the colors:
- Charcoal Grey: Mourning for people who have died due to ableist violence, abuse, suicide, and illness
- Red Stripe: Physical disabilities
- Gold Stripe: Neurodiversity
- Blue Stripe: Emotional and psychiatric disabilities
- Green Stripe: Sensory disabilities
- White Stripe: Undiagnosed and invisible disabilities